Dark Hope: Working for Peace in Israel and Palestine
Autor David Shulmanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 mai 2007
For
decades,
we’ve
been
shocked
by
images
of
violent
clashes
between
Israelis
and
Palestinians
in
the
West
Bank
and
Gaza.
But
for
all
their
power,
those
images
leave
us
at
a
loss:
from
our
vantage
at
home,
it’s
hard
for
us
to
imagine
the
struggles
of
those
living
in
the
midst
of
the
fighting.
Now,
American-born
Israeli
David
Shulman
takes
us
right
into
the
heart
of
the
conflict
withDark
Hope,
an
eye-opening
chronicle
of
his
work
as
a
member
of
the
peace
group
Ta‘ayush,
which
takes
its
name
from
the
Arabic
for
“living
together.”
Though Shulman never denies the complexity of the issues fueling the conflict—nor the culpability of people on both sides—he forcefully clarifies the injustices perpetrated by Israel by showing us the human dimension of the occupation. Here we meet Palestinians whose houses have been blown up by the Israeli army, shepherds whose sheep have been poisoned by settlers, farmers stripped of their land by Israel’s dividing wall. We watch as whip-swinging police on horseback attack crowds of nonviolent demonstrators, as Israeli settlers shoot innocent Palestinians harvesting olives, and as families and communities become utterly destroyed by the unrelenting violence of the occupation.
Opposing such injustices, Shulman and his companions—Israeli and Palestinian both—doggedly work through checkpoints to bring aid, rebuild houses, and physically block the progress of the dividing wall. As they face off against police, soldiers, and hostile Israeli settlers, anger mixes with compassion, moments of kinship alternate with confrontation, and, throughout, Shulman wrestles with his duty to fight the cruelty enabled by “that dependable and devastating human failure to feel.”
WithDark Hope, Shulman has written a book of deep moral searching, an attempt to discover how his beloved Israel went wrong—and how, through acts of compassionate disobedience, it might still be brought back.
Though Shulman never denies the complexity of the issues fueling the conflict—nor the culpability of people on both sides—he forcefully clarifies the injustices perpetrated by Israel by showing us the human dimension of the occupation. Here we meet Palestinians whose houses have been blown up by the Israeli army, shepherds whose sheep have been poisoned by settlers, farmers stripped of their land by Israel’s dividing wall. We watch as whip-swinging police on horseback attack crowds of nonviolent demonstrators, as Israeli settlers shoot innocent Palestinians harvesting olives, and as families and communities become utterly destroyed by the unrelenting violence of the occupation.
Opposing such injustices, Shulman and his companions—Israeli and Palestinian both—doggedly work through checkpoints to bring aid, rebuild houses, and physically block the progress of the dividing wall. As they face off against police, soldiers, and hostile Israeli settlers, anger mixes with compassion, moments of kinship alternate with confrontation, and, throughout, Shulman wrestles with his duty to fight the cruelty enabled by “that dependable and devastating human failure to feel.”
WithDark Hope, Shulman has written a book of deep moral searching, an attempt to discover how his beloved Israel went wrong—and how, through acts of compassionate disobedience, it might still be brought back.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226755748
ISBN-10: 0226755746
Pagini: 236
Ilustrații: 1 map
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226755746
Pagini: 236
Ilustrații: 1 map
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
David
Shulmanis
the
Renee
Lang
Professor
of
Humanistic
Studies
in
the
Department
of
Comparative
Religion
at
the
Hebrew
University
of
Jerusalem.
He
was
born
in
Iowa
but
moved
to
Israel
in
1967
at
age
eighteen.
Named
a
MacArthur
Fellow
in
1987,
Shulman
is
the
author
or
coauthor
of
nineteen
books,
includingThe
Hungry
God:
Hindu
Tales
of
Filicide
and
Devotion,
also
published
by
the
University
of
Chicago
Press.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Jinba, Twaneh, the South Hebron Hills
3 Jerusalem: Isawiyya, Mount Scopus, ‘Anata, Silwan
4 Samaria: Salfit, Yanun, Banu Hassan
5 Saying No
6 The Wall: Maskha, Abu Dis, Ar-Ram, Bil‘in
7 Epilogue
Postscript Glossary Select Dramatis Personae
1 Introduction
2 Jinba, Twaneh, the South Hebron Hills
3 Jerusalem: Isawiyya, Mount Scopus, ‘Anata, Silwan
4 Samaria: Salfit, Yanun, Banu Hassan
5 Saying No
6 The Wall: Maskha, Abu Dis, Ar-Ram, Bil‘in
7 Epilogue
Postscript Glossary Select Dramatis Personae
Recenzii
“Beautifully
written
and
emphatic
in
its
calm
insistence
on
the
need
to
take
both
responsibility
and
action,Dark
Hopeis
notable
not
just
for
the
bleak
picture
it
paints
of
the
nightmare
that
the
settlers
and
their
sponsors,
the
Israeli
government,
have
brought
to
millions
of
Palestinians
but
also,
as
its
title
suggests,
for
the
faith
it
places
in
a
basic
human
decency
and
in
the
belief
that
there
must
be
another
way.
It
is
essential
reading
for
anyone
who
wants—or
hopes,
however
darkly—to
grasp
the
lay
of
this
punished
land.”--Adina
Hoffman,The
Nation
"During
what
he
calls
the
'unhappy
years'
from
2002
to
2006,
David
Shulman,
an
Israeli
professor
at
Hebrew
University,
did
some
of
the
harder
work
of
his
country's
peace
movement:
clashing
with
police
and
settlers
to
deliver
food
and
medical
supplies
to
Palestinian
villages.
In
his
excellent
record
of
these
years,Dark
Hope,
Shulman
vividly
describes
the
small
bands
of
Palestinians
who
live
in
caves
in
the
Hebron
Hills."
"A
personal,
but
deeply
disturbing
narrative...a
story
that
will
certainly
be
controversial
in
any
Jewish
community"