Palestine speaks Narratives of life under occupation

Book - 2014

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  • Introduction: Between Us Bread and Salt
  • Executive Editor's Note
  • Map of West Bank and the Gaza Strip
  • Cultural center director
  • Journalist
  • Farmer, day laborer
  • Lawyer
  • Chemistry professor, blogger
  • Executive of the Eli Settlement
  • Homemaker
  • Physics professor
  • Fisherman
  • Computer technician
  • NGO worker
  • Shop owner
  • Artist
  • English-Hebrew translator
  • Homemaker student
  • Semi-professional runner
  • Appendices
  • I. Timeline of Modern Palestine
  • II. Glossary
  • III. Palestine and International Law
  • IV. Gaza's Tunnel-Based Economy
  • V. Palestinian Demographics
  • VI. In Waiting
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Editors
Review by Choice Review

This very informative collection of 16 narratives is another in the Voice of Witness organization's series of oral histories with people in difficult circumstances. It engages readers in life under Israeli occupation in both Gaza and the West Bank, including two interviews with Israelis (not Israeli Palestinians). Remarkable in capturing their hopes and despair, as well as the struggle to make a life under extraordinary difficulty, these narratives (assembled from several interviews to create each narrative) provide an excellent introduction to the Israel/Palestinian nation-building process, with all its conflicts and injustices. People from all walks of life discuss their situations with candor and insight. The two Israeli interviews are particularly arresting. Although the authors have deep sympathy for the Palestinians, living and working as they did in the occupied territories while collecting interviews, footnotes are fair and informative. Key to making this a good book for those with little awareness of the Palestinians' situation is 50 pages of appendixes, including a time line of modern Palestine, a ten-page glossary, and informative descriptions of major background facts. Educators using this book can access a common core-aligned curriculum and curriculum support from Voice of Witness. Summing Up: Essential. All public and undergraduate levels/libraries. --Garth M. Massey, University of Wyoming

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This eloquent study shows the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the West Bank and Gaza through the eyes of the people who live it each day. Hoke and Malek have transcribed 15 interviews, out of many more conducted over the course of four years, to convey a diverse cross-section of Palestinian life. They begin with the director of a West Bank children's center, whose disabilities, caused by childhood polio, prove unexpectedly linked to the political impediments placed on her mobility. They go on to cover a young female Gaza journalist's uncomfortable attempts to negotiate the patriarchal Hamas government and a Bethlehem defense lawyer's memories of two decades within an Israeli prison. Since Israelis now make up an estimated 10% of the occupied territories' population, the editors also include two Israeli voices-one belonging to a security officer for an Israeli settlement and the other to an activist opposed to the West Bank wall. Though the book's somewhat narrow focus excludes Palestinian experiences within Israel or the wider diaspora, its grounding in personal experience and the contours of daily life still makes for an excellent introduction to a controversial subject. Hoke and Malek's work should prove a sturdy and revelatory resource for those looking for a deeper understanding of an intractable conflict. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Starred Review. Malek and Hoke spent nearly four years interviewing more than 50 individuals while working on this compilation. Their focus is on the experiences of Palestinian people. Those interviewed-16 of whom were chosen to be represented in this collection-narrate their stories, offering their experiences living, working, and struggling to survive in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Two of the accounts are offered by Israeli citizens, who comprise roughly ten percent of the population in the occupied territories. Each person's narrative shows pervasive exposure to ongoing violence. A common theme throughout the Palestinians' heartbreaking descriptions is a lack of optimism or hope for an improved future while currently surviving on exiguous means. In some cases, these voices suggest fighting for the future but ultimately speak as though failure is inevitable. In contrast, both Israeli citizens indicate that they see the situation improving and believe that there is hope ahead. The stark differences in the citizens' lives that develop these opposite mind-sets is made clear as these people share their most intimate struggles. VERDICT An absolute must for anyone interested in the Arab-Israeli conflict or with an interest in human rights. This book, similar to the other titles in the series, is an excellent way of developing a deeper understanding of people living the encounters about which we read in the papers and watch on the news.-Brenna Smeall, AtoZdatabases, Omaha, NE (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An oral history of life in Gaza and the West Bank, obtained through interviews conducted over a period of nearly four years, lets a diversity of Palestinians speak their minds about their situations. Hoke (English/Bethlehem Univ.) and Malek are journalists with Voice of Witness, a nonprofit organization dedicated to examining human crises around the world. With the aid of translators and transcribers, they recorded the voices of 50 interviewees and then edited the transcripts for clarity. Of the 16 people selected to tell their stories here, only two are Israelis, for the object is not to provide balance but to illustrate what life is like for Palestinians. Male and female, young and middle-aged, educated or not, mostly but not all middle class, these Palestinians narrate their experiences growing up and living next to Israelis or in areas where Israel controls major aspects of their lives. Some took part in the Intifadas, some spent time in prison, and some lived for years outside Palestine and then chose to move there. Some are resigned to the restrictions of their lives, while some are hopeful of a brighter future. About 50 pages of appendices give context to their personal stories. The first, "Timeline of Modern Palestine," opens with the date 8000 B.C. and ends with 2014 but has no mention of the events of that explosive summer. Appendix III is an essay on Palestine and international law by Allegra Pacheco, the wife of one of the Palestinian interviewees, and Appendix IV is a piece by journalist Nicolas Pelham on the Gaza tunnels that focuses on their economic importance to Hamas. The oral histories that make up the bulk of the book paint a harsh picture of Israeli restrictions on the lives of Palestinians; however, failure of the lengthy appendices to discuss the necessity for such restrictionsuicide bombers, rocket attacks, Hamas' stated goal of the destruction of Israelis a serious flaw. A sympathetic view of Palestinians not to be mistaken for objective reporting. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.