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The West Bank Wall: Unmaking Palestine
 
 
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The West Bank Wall: Unmaking Palestine [Paperback]

Ray Dolphin (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0745324339 978-0745324333 March 20, 2006
What is the purpose of the West Bank Wall? Since Israel began its construction in 2002, it has sparked intense debate, being condemned as illegal by the International Court of Justice. Israel claims it is a security measure to protect Israeli citizens from terrorist attacks. Opponents point to the serious impact on the rights of Palestinians, depriving them of their land, mobility and access to health and educational services. In The West Bank Wall, Dolphin explores the Palestinian experience of the Wall and places the debate in its international context. Dolphin's writing is informed by his work for the UN, where for three years he monitored and compiled reports on the Wall's impact on the humanitarian conditions in refugee camps, towns and villages. With an introduction by Graham Usher, who has worked as Palestine correspondent for major international publications including the Economist, Middle East International, al Ahram English Weekly, the Guardian and Le Monde Diplomatique, this book puts the purpose of the Wall to the test. What are the real intentions behind the Israeli security argument? Is it a means of securing territory permanently through an illegal annexation of East Jerusalem? Ray Dolphin provides some answers, offering a unique critical account of the impact of the wall and how it affects plans for a Palestinian state and for future peace in the Middle East.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

The West Bank Wall is logically organized, covering the wall/fence system and its technologies and offering insightful analysis of the political genesis and significance of the route Isreali planners staked out, with a particular focus on Jerusalem. -- Journal of Palestine Studies The West Bank Wall: Unmaking Palestine is a top pick for any college-level Middle East collection. -- Internet Bookwatch The Wall Israel is presently constucting in Palestinian Territory constitutes a major stumbling block in the way of peace in the Middle East. The Wall has been held to be illegal by the International Court of Justice and condemned by the General Assembly of the United Nations but there is still a lack of understanding of its full implications outside the region. Ray Dolphin's study, based on personal experience of the Wall, provides a comprehensive picture of the Wall, its effect on the lives of Palestinians, and a consideration of its political implications. A great injustice is being perpetrated on the Palestinian people through the instrument of the Wall. Ray Dolphin's book is a timely account of this injustice. -- John Dugard, Professor of International Law, University of Leiden; Special Rapporteur to the Commission on Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory This valuable book gives a unique close-up on the deteriorating everyday life of Palestinians whose education, health, and livelihoods have been so dramatically affected by Israel's building of the illegal Wall which the international community has accepted so passively. It offers too a stark analysis of the history of this planned separation and encroachment -- the most audacious creation by Israel of facts on the ground intended to prevent the birth of any Palestinian state. -- Victoria Brittain, journalist and former Associate Foreign Editor of the Guardian

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Pluto Press (March 20, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0745324339
  • ISBN-13: 978-0745324333
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,503,575 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A critical account, September 23, 2006
This review is from: The West Bank Wall: Unmaking Palestine (Paperback)
THE WEST BANK WALL: UNMAKING PALESTINE is a top pick for any college-level Middle East collection: it surveys the purpose of the West Bank wall since Israel built it in 2002, using the author's work for the UN as a reporter on the Wall's impact as a foundation for analysis. Chapters survey the real intentions and imagery of the Wall, offering a critical account of its impact and affect on a Palestinian state.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
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6 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ...and important work., July 10, 2006
This review is from: The West Bank Wall: Unmaking Palestine (Paperback)
The review below is unfair and inappropriate. The subject matter is important and should not be dismissed by the racist and ignorant.
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4 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Horrible, April 30, 2006
By 
Jill Malter (jillmalter@aol.com) - See all my reviews
This is one of the more counterproductive works on the market.

First of all, it complains about the Israeli security barrier. That barrier is obviously disliked by everyone in the region, including the Jews and Arabs (although this book only appears to worry about the Arab dislike of it). But it is needed to reduce the number of murderers who would otherwise get into Israel more easily. With the barrier in place, the number of murders is significantly reduced. In addition, a military operation to cross the barrier could no longer be explained away as some sort error, where people simply got lost and wandered off the road by mistake. It would be seen as a serious and planned attack and it could be treated as such.

That's why I think that books such as this one simply do us all a disservice by refusing to condemn the murders that make this barrier necessary. Oh, by the way, not much of the barrier is a wall. Why do you suppose Dolphin calls it one?

Anyway, if we actually want to get rid of the barrier (and I think just about everyone on both sides probably wants to), then we need to make murder (including murder of Jews) against the law. We can't have non-stop incitement to kill and destroy (and applause when there is death and destruction) and still expect folks to refuse to defend themselves with at least a security barrier! If we do remove the wall, self-defence may require even more, um, annoying measures!

There is a nation in the Levant called Israel. Now, is it right on top of some other famous nation? Does it exist only to annoy the Arabs of some mythical state that it has replaced? No. Of course not. Modern Israel is actually a little West of Ancient Israel, in part because the Eastern part has more Arabs and fewer Jews. And even if there had been some ancient Arab nation, it too could have moved a few miles to the East or West. But there wasn't. The Levant did not have Arab sovereignty in centuries. The author is being very misleading by pretending, right in the title of his book, that there is some Arab nation whose existence is precluded by the fact that Jews are permitted to have human rights in parts of the Levant.

At one point, Dolphin tells of an Arab who boasts that he won't sell his home to a Jew for any price! That's outrageous. Is he trying to tell us that Good Arabs are heroes for not allowing their homes to be sold to folks with the Wrong Religion, or Wrong Skin Color, or Wrong Gender, or Wrong Sexual Preference, or whatever? If so, that's pretty racist of him! By the way, as a Pagan, I think it is a mistake (both morally and practically) for people in Monotheistic nations to refuse to sell their homes to Pagans, even when the Pagans are high bidders and are offering much higher than market prices.

Still, there is something I think we need to realize about this. Namely, sooner or later, people will indeed sell their homes, even to people with the "Wrong" religion or skin color, if the price is high enough. That happened in the Levant from 1878 to 1948 rather often. And it will happen in the future. The author ought not be implying that we humans all have a duty to stop the, um, contamination of Monotheistic lands by Pagans, or of White lands by Blacks, or whatever other anti-social ideas of this sort he refuses to denounce. And he ought to realize that sooner or later, societies that want to be more competitive and more prosperous will stop this sort of discrimination.

Meanwhile, rather than complain about the barrier, let's make it politically incorrect to murder people.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On 29 July 2003, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and US President George W. Bush met at the White House. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
major settlement blocs, expanded municipal boundary, fence route, revised route, separation fence, absentee property law, disengagement plan, separation barrier, second intifada, facto annexation, humanitarian impact, advisory opinion, native problem, wall route, separation wall, settlement expansion
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
West Bank, East Jerusalem, Green Line, United States, High Court, General Assembly, Alfei Menashe, United Nations, European Union, Gaza Strip, International Court of Justice, Maale Adumim, Palestinian Authority, Security Council, Abu Mazen, Jerusalem Post, Special Rapporteur, Aluf Benn, Fourth Geneva Convention, Jerusalem Envelope, Jerusalem Palestinians, Abu Azzam, Civil Administration, President Bush, Ras Atiya
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