Two books pertinent to the
Israel -- Palestine conflict that I would like to read:

Hamas Contained:
The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance --
Tareq Baconi
https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=26309

The War of Return:
How Western Indulgence of the Palestinian Dream Has Obstructed the Path to Peace --
Adi Schwartz and Einat Wilf

https://www.wilf.org/English/

#IsraelPalestine #Hamas #RightOfReturn

Hamas Contained: The Rise and Pacification of Palestinian Resistance - Tareq Baconi

Hamas rules Gaza and the lives of the two million Palestinians who live there. Demonized in media and policy debates, various accusations and critical assumptions have been used to justify extreme military action against Hamas. The reality of Hamas is, of course, far more complex. Neither a democratic political party nor a terrorist group, Hamas is a multifaceted liberation organization, one rooted in the nationalist claims of the Palestinian people. Hamas Contained offers the first history of the group on its own terms. Drawing on interviews with organization leaders, as well as publications from the group, Tareq Baconi maps Hamas's thirty-year transition from fringe military resistance towards governance. He breaks new ground in questioning the conventional understanding of Hamas and shows how the movement's ideology ultimately threatens the Palestinian struggle and, inadvertently, its own legitimacy. Hamas's reliance on armed struggle as a means of liberation has failed in the face of a relentless occupation designed to fragment the Palestinian people. As Baconi argues, under Israel's approach of managing rather than resolving the conflict, Hamas's demand for Palestinian sovereignty has effectively been neutralized by its containment in Gaza. This dynamic has perpetuated a deadlock characterized by its brutality—and one that has made permissible the collective punishment of millions of Palestinian civilians.

@jemmesedi Two others I'd recommend (though they're both quite old now) are Mohammed Heikal's 'Secret Channels' and Avi Shlaim's 'The Iron Wall'.

@Arindam

There is so much to read, isn't there?

I would particularly like to read more of and about Mohammed Heikal. The birth, life and death of Panarabism interests me, and I have a feeling that reading Heikal would give me a better understanding of that topic.

#MohammedHeikal #Panarabism #ArabNationalism
#Egypt #EgyptianWriters