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Drinking the Sea at Gaza : Days and Nights in a Land Under Siege

Drinking the Sea at Gaza : Days and Nights in a Land Under Siege

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A powerful and deeply disturbing book
Review: Written by an Israeli Jewish female journalist living in the Gaza strip, this book portraits the lives of ordinary gazans during the first intifada and the first couple of years of Palestinian autonomous rule. Dealing with the daily lifes of normal people and describing the consequences of the military occupation by Israel first, and the continuation of Israel complete, even if indirect, domination of all aspects of life in the strip after the beginning of self-rule, this book goes a long way to dispel the prejudice entrenched in the believe hold by many westerners that Gazans (and Palestinians in general) are but a bunch of terrorists bent on nothing more than throwing the Israelis into the sea. The humanity and compassion for the people of Gaza transmited in this book is accompanied by an uncompromizing lashing of the top level Israeli policies (either explicit or implicit) and of the pratical implementation of them by the rank and file men on the field (the direct military rulers first, the Liason Committee people - which just happen to be stafed by the same old guys...- after 1994.) But the arbitrary and undemocratic practices of the Palestinian Authority are not left untouched, and the part of the book dealing with the Palestinian State Security Court (supported by US and Israel) is a shilling reminder of how far the PA is from democratic principles and practices, and of how convenient it is for Israel that things stay just like that. At times the reading becomes almost unbearable. The poverty, the humiliation, the discrimination and repression that normal people are subject to, together with the sheer powerlessness that they feel, and the apparent hopelessness of their plight is all too transparent in this powerful and deeply disturbing book. At times it comes to mind South Africa's apartheid policies. In other occasions one can draw parallels with descriptions of anti-semitic policies in central and eastern Europe in the 19th and early 20th centuries. If any country in the world would treat the Jewish population under its sovereignty in the way the Israeli government behaves toward the Gazans (and the Palestinians in general) it would be classified as anti-semitic and the country would become a pariah state, and rightly so. Anti-semitism was outlawed in acceptable political discourse in Europe only after the Jews accross the continent suffered the most terrible catastrophe and were almost totally destroyed. Let's just hope that the Palestinians will not need to suffer a catastrophe of comparable proportions in order the outrageous policies they have been (and continue to be) submited be recognized as such by the international community.


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