"For Sabri Jiryis and Aziz Shehadeh, that initial episode of ethnic cleansing would shape the course of their lives, their political organizing, and their intellectual labor. Both of them treated the law as their entry point into political engagement."

#TareqBaconi reviews the memoirs of #RajaShehadeh and #FidaJiryis

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2024/10/03/living-the-nakba-raja-shehadeh-fida-jiryis/
https://archive.ph/epZUB
#WeCouldHaveBeenFriendsMyFatherAndI #StrangerInMyOwnLand #books #Palestine #Nakba #PalestineQuestion #oPt @palestine

Living the Nakba | Tareq Baconi

In his memoir Going Home (2020), the Palestinian human rights lawyer Raja Shehadeh recalls taking a walk around Ramallah and standing outside the house

The New York Review of Books
Has anyone ever reacted to the Dune books the way China Mieville? After seeing Mieville mentioned by Justin Podur in a blog post I got into Perdido Street Station and worked through other books in that series. On-line articles and interviews told me that his books were a reaction against the fantasy conventions set by J.R.R. Tolkein with the Lord of the Rings books. In response to all-white, rural, and fuedal settings  he decide to write diverse, urban, and polyarchic(?)  settings.

The idea for a reversed Dune setting came to mind while reading about Samid on Noam Chomsky's Fateful Triangle. What if the inhabited universe had been overtaken by the non-violent, long-suffering, forbearing ones instead of the mass-killing, Messia-following militaries?

The idea of an anti-Dune, or Dune-reversal, series came to mind again while reading Madison Smartt Bell's account of a Haitian Vodou ceremony:

The vessel was a curious affair, a pot of white enameled tin fitted into a similar tin plate, like a cup and saucer for a giant. The pot held a large amount of clear, clean, potable-looking water, as much as half a gallon. Clean water, water of any kind, is in scarce supply in Haiti, and this lack is at the bottom of many problems: communicable diseases, environmental deterioration, starvation. For such reasons, the ceremony of jété dlo was a genuine, terrible sacrifice—the unconditional offering of the most valuable thing you possessed. I took the pot and poured water three times on the ground before each portal, and when I had completed the circuit, I poured what was left on the spot of earth where I had previously been sitting. This too was an offering to Legba, and I poured in a counterclockwise circle, drawing the vévé for my journey in water on the ground.

- https://creativenonfiction.org/writing/soul-in-a-bottle/

Shehadeh distinguishes three ways of responding to occupation. The first is that of “blind hate,” the second, “mute submission.” To the captive population, the first way is that of the freedom fighter, the second, that of the quisling. To the conqueror, the first way is that of the terrorist, the second, that of the moderate. The paymasters keep to the rhetoric of the conqueror, naturally. What then is “the third way”? That is the way of the Samid, “the steadfast one,” who watches his home turned into a prison. “You, Samid, choose to stay in that prison, because it is your home, and because you fear that if you leave, your jailer will not allow you to return. Living like this, you must constantly resist the twin temptations of either acquiescing in the jailer’s plan in numb despair, or becoming crazed by consuming hatred for your jailer and yourself, the prisoner.” To be Samid...
- Fateful Triangle Noam Chomsky

#ChinaMieville #DuneBooks  #AntiDune #DuneReversal #LordOfTheRings #LordOfTheRIngsReversal #FantasyBooks #HatianVodou #Vodou #MadisonSmarttBell #NoamChomsky #RajaShehadeh #Samid

#^Soul in a Bottle - Creative Nonfiction



It was normal and usual for a foreigner, a blan, to go through a period of anxiety and fear while planning a trip to Haiti. Perhaps it was even sensible. For Haitians of the diaspora, the risk of visiting their country was much greater, but I had taken to observing certain Haitian practices before I […]
Soul in a Bottle - Creative Nonfiction

It was normal and usual for a foreigner, a blan, to go through a period of anxiety and fear while planning a trip to Haiti. Perhaps it was even sensible. For Haitians of the diaspora, the risk of visiting their country was much greater, but I had taken to observing certain Haitian practices before I […]

Creative Nonfiction
[Edit - now found it.]
I've lost it. I saw a good post with a link to a Palestinian booklist, and lost it. Probably 7 days old, from someone in the Philippines. Any help with reconnection would be great ..
Meanwhile, here are two from my own reading pile.
• The Parisian, by Isabella Hammad (recently mentioned in the FT and by @indianewswatch )
• Palestinian Walks, by Raja Shehadeh (recommended by @pvonhellermannn )
#Palestine #IsabellaHammad #RajaShehadeh @bookstodon
https://www.orwellfoundation.com/book-title/palestinian-walks-notes-on-a-vanishing-landscape/
Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape | The Orwell Foundation

Palestine is a land of biblical beauty – of olive groves, grapevines, stone buildings, rolling hills, wadis and cliffs.  It is also a land of violence and war. Human rights lawyer and writer Raja Shehadeh has lived on the West Bank since his family fled Jaffa in 1948. A peace activist of independent temper, he... <a class="excerpt-read-more" href="https://www.orwellfoundation.com/book-title/palestinian-walks-notes-on-a-vanishing-landscape/" title="ReadPalestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape">Read more »</a>

The Orwell Foundation

L'occupazione israeliana e l'amicizia, tutt'altro che facile, dell'autore, #RajaShehadeh, con un ebreo di origine canadese, dal 1953 al 2013, tra cambiamenti e disillusioni.
Molto "vero".

#Libri #Leggere #21novembre #ApartheidIsrael #IsraeliOccupation

Era convinzione di mio padre che, senza la pace con i palestinesi, Israele non potrà mai vivere in pace. Su questo, ha avuto ragione. Questa settimana, 2 soldati israeliani sono stati uccisi in 4 giorni." 11🔚

#RajaShehadeh, scrittore, avvocato e attivista palestinese per i diritti umani.