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The Words of My Father

Love and Pain in Palestine

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
A Palestinian American recalls his adolescence in Gaza during the Second Intifada and how he made a commitment to peace in this transformative memoir.
In the Gaza Strip, growing up on land owned by his family for centuries, fourteen-year-old Yousef Bashir was preoccupied with soccer, school pranks, and meeting his father's impossibly high standards. Dignified and empathetic, kind yet strict, Yousef's father was a pillar of strength for his family and community. Though he and Yousef butted heads fiercely, they loved each other unconditionally. Despite an Israeli settlement hovering on its periphery, the Gaza of Yousef's childhood could only be described as a paradise.
That all changed when the Second Intifada exploded, and Israeli soldiers seized the Bashir family home. Yousef was forced to learn the rules of a new life in captivity and to watch his father treat the invading soldiers as honored guests—a testament not only to his father's desire for peace between Palestine and Israel but also to his unshakeable belief that it was truly within reach. Yet nothing could prepare Yousef or his father for the Israeli bullet that would instantly transform both of their lives . . .
A riveting tale of a father and son, of reckoning and redemption, Yousef's story is a heart-wrenching reminder in these troubled times that forgiveness is a gift—and a choice.
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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2019
      Bashir delivers an urgent, impassioned call for peace between Palestine and Israel. The words of the Palestinian peace activist's father are, on the surface, incontestable: Strive for peace, he insisted, for "violence only leads to more violence." Yet, during the second intifada and in the face of the intransigence of Israel's government in dividing the Gaza Strip from the West Bank and barring movement between the two Palestinian areas, striving for peace became a difficult proposition to hold up--and one that was particularly difficult to defend in a time of growing militance. By Bashir's account, the plot of land that his educator father had so carefully improved, building the soil, planting trees by the hundreds and crops by the row, became a dust bowl under a de facto Israeli siege. Moreover, an Israeli soldier shot him for reasons that he finds inexplicable today, paralyzing him for a long period and requiring multiple surgeries. Years later, writes the author, even as he mourns the passing of his father and the loss of the land that his father took pains to tell him was his forever, he found himself thinking obsessively of that transformational event and the Israeli soldier behind the gun. "That single shot had changed my whole life," he writes, "and I wondered if it had changed his." In the end, the story comes full circle, as Bashir travels the world to convey the message of peace in the Middle East, the bullet in his back, as he puts it, moving him forward and not restraining him. There is some bitterness nonetheless, especially when he recounts that Israeli soldiers commandeered all the cooking vessels in his family home and then left them behind, each full of feces. Even with that insult, in this eloquent and affecting memoir he adopts another remark of his father's as his own: "What happened to me makes me believe even more in peace." An inspiration to peace activists in all theaters of war and struggle and a book that deserves a wide audience.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 10, 2019
      Bashir’s candid and deeply felt coming-of-age story unfolds largely during the Second Intifada. Starting when Bashir was 11, Israeli soldiers occupied his family’s farm on the Gaza Strip. He led a fairly average adolescent life—playing video games and watching soccer—while witnessing abuse, such as when soldiers would force his father, a respected school headmaster who advocated for peace with Israel, to submit at gunpoint to a daily strip search. Bashir’s father remained a pacifist, even after 15-year-old Bashir was shot by an Israeli soldier from a watchtower outside his house just minutes past curfew. He was left paralyzed from the waist down for a year, and despite his anger, he recognized the complexities of his country: “It was a Jewish soldier who had shot me, but the nurses were also Jewish.” Three years later, attending college in Boston, Bashir advocated for Israeli-Palestinian peace and later became a member of the Palestinian Diplomatic Delegation to the U.S. Throughout, his father’s words resonated: “Violence only leads to more violence.” Even in the face of great adversity, Bashir prevails as an optimistic champion of peace, as he eloquently and subtly writes, “all I had to offer this world were my little words about the need for peace.” This moving meditation of a young man’s struggle to find peace amid turmoil will resonate with readers concerned with Israeli-Palestinian relations.

    • Booklist

      April 1, 2019
      Bashir's memoir follows a young Palestinian man's development into an advocate for peace. His family had owned and lived on a farm in Gaza for generations. During the Second Intifada, a Palestinian uprising that lasted from 2000 to 2005, Israeli soldiers tried to seize the Bashir family's house. The author's father, Khalil, refused to leave, and so the soldiers set up a command post in the house's top two floors while the family lived below. The Bashir family's situation attracted international attention, and Khalil often spoke of his belief in peace between the Israelis and Palestinians. After a visit from UN officials one afternoon, a soldier shot 15-year-old Bashir in the back while he and his father stood in their front yard. He was paralyzed from the waist down for more than a year and had to relearn how to walk. Despite his injury, Bashir focused on his father's words of peace and found in them a new direction for his life. His memoir provides a fascinating look at growing up in extreme circumstances.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2019

      Palestinian peace activist Bashir was 11 when Israeli soldiers seized the top two floors of his family home during the Second Intifada, and he began to question his pacifist father's stance. Then he was shot in the back by an Israeli soldier. Complementing Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor; with a 50,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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