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My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story

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Gaza is the frontline in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians and rarely out of the news, this book explores the daily lives of the people in the region, giving us an insight into what is at risk in each round of violence.

Ramzy Baroud tells his father's fascinating story. Driven out of his village to a refugee camp, he took up arms and fought the occupation at the same time raising a family and trying to do the best for his children. Baroud's vivid and honest account reveals the complex human beings; revolutionaries, great moms and dads, lovers, and comedians that make Gaza so much more than just a disputed territory.

Críticas

"Ramzy Baroud's sensitive, thoughtful, searching writing penetrates to the core of moral dilemmas that their intended audiences evade at their peril. Few are spared his perceptive eye, and only the morally callous will fail to respond to his pleas to look into the mirror honestly, to question comforting beliefs that protect us from facing our elementary responsibilities, and to act to remedy the terrible misery and injustice that he exposes to our view, as we surely can." -- Noam Chomsky

Reseña

'A deeply moving chronicle of the persisting Palestinian ordeal. This book more than any I have read tells me why anyone of conscience must stand in solidarity with the continuing struggle of the Palestinian people for self-determination and a just peace'

'This book should be read by all who struggle to understand the Middle East and to find passage to a just peace in the region'

'Ramzy Baroud's sensitive, thoughtful, searching writing penetrates to the core of moral dilemmas that their intended audiences evade at their peril'

'This is a very fine book: both a loving tribute to the author's father and the struggle and pain of Palestine seen through the witness and insights of two generations. Together, they beckon freedom'

'A gifted writer'

Biografía del autor

Ramzy Baroud is a syndicated columnist, veteran journalist and Editor-in-Chief of PalestineChronicle.com. He has appeared on numerous television programs including CNN International, BBC, ABC Australia, National Public Radio and Al-Jazeera. His previous books include Searching Jenin: Eyewitness Accounts of the Israeli Invasion (2003) and The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto, 2006).

Extracto. © Reimpreso con autorización. Reservados todos los derechos.

My Father was a Freedom Fighter

Gaza's Untold Story

By Ramzy Baroud

Pluto Press

Copyright © 2010 Ramzy Baroud
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7453-2881-2

Contents

Acknowledgments,
Foreword Dr. Salman Abu Sitta,
Preface,
Map,
1 Happier Times,
2 Born into Turmoil,
3 Taking Flight,
4 A World Outside the Tent,
5 Lost and Found,
6 Zarefah,
7 Al-Naksa: The Setback,
8 An Olive Branch and a Thousand Cans of Tomato Sauce,
9 Strange Men at the Beach Casino,
10 Intifada: ... and All Hell Broke Loose,
11 Oslo on the Line,
12 The World as Seen From the Stone Staircase,
13 Dying, Again,
Notes,
Selected Bibliography,
Index,


CHAPTER 1

Happier Times


"Why bother to haul the good blankets on the back of a donkey, exposing them to the dust of the journey, while we know that it's a matter of a week or so before we return to Beit Daras?" he questioned his bewildered wife, Zeinab. Many years later, Grandma Zeinab would repeat this story with a chuckle, as Grandpa Mohammed would shake his head with an awkward mix of embarrassment and grief.

I cannot pinpoint the moment when my grandfather, that beautiful old man with his small white beard and humble demeanor, discovered that his "good blankets" were gone forever, that all that remained of his village were two giant concrete pillars, and piles of cactus. I know that he had never given up hope to return to Beit Daras, perhaps to the same small mud-brick house with the dove tower on the roof.

Beit Daras's inconsequential present existence would evoke little interest, save two concrete pillars, that once upon a time served as an entrance to a small mosque. Its walls, as those faithful to its walls, are long gone, yet somehow, they still insist on identifying with that serene place and that simple existence. On that very spot, on the shoulder of that small hill, huddled between numerous meadows and fences of blooming cactus, there once rested that lovely little village. And also there, somewhere in the vicinity of the two giant concrete pillars, in a tiny mud-brick home, with a small extension used for storing crops and a dove tower on the roof, my father Mohammed Baroud was born.

It isn't easy to construct a history that, only several decades ago, was, along with every standing building of that village, blown to smithereens with the very intent of erasing it from existence. Most historic references of Beit Daras, whether by Israeli or Palestinian historians, were brief, and ultimately resulted in delineating the fall of Beit Daras as just one among nearly 500 Palestinian villages that were frequently evacuated and then completely flattened during the war years of 1947–49. It was another episode in a more complicated tragedy that has seen the dispossession and expulsion of nearly 800,000 Palestinian Arabs. For Zionist Jews, Beit Daras was just another hill, known by a code battle name, to be conquered, as it were. But it should be more than a footnote in David Ben Gurion's War Diaries, or Benny Morris's volume, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem. It's more than a few numbers on an endless chart, whether one that documents victims of massacres, or estimates of Palestinian refugees still reliant on United Nations food aid. For Palestinians, its fall is one of many sorrows in the anthology which is collectively known as al-Nakba, or the Catastrophe.

My grandparents never tired of reminiscing about their beloved village. My grandfather, also named Mohammed, was often mocked for failing to understand the depth of his tragedy, by insisting that they leave the "good blankets" behind as he herded his children together to escape the village and the intense bombardment. He died 58 kilometers southwest of Beit Daras, in a refugee camp known as Nuseirat.

Beit Daras provided dignity; Grandpa's calloused hands and weathered, leathery skin attested to the decades of hard labor tending the rocky soil in the fields of Palestine. It was a popular pastime for my brothers and I to point to a scar on his battered little body so we could hear a gut-busting tale of the rigors of farm-life. Grandpa ran his fingers over the fading scar on the crown of his head and chuckled: "I got this one at dawn, I went to milk the cow, usually your grandmother's chore, and that cow had it in for me. I squatted behind her, and then everything went black." Tales of being trampled by the donkey or being run over by a plow: potentially life-threatening injuries were all reduced to humorous anecdotes sure to provoke a flood of laughter from his grandchildren.

Grandpa similarly enjoyed reminiscing on the good old days when he had land, a house, chickens, goats, a strong back — everything he needed to provide for his family. Camp life provided nothing from which to harvest a sense of self-respect. Food that once was the fruit of hours of toiling in his own fields was now provided in a burlap bag by some European country or by the United Nations. Perhaps one of the greatest challenges he faced was enduring a life of idleness. One activity, however, that occupied his time was sitting with other men in the camp and discussing the politics of the day, debating just from whom and when liberation would come. Would their lands back home be ready for planting? Would they be able to rebuild right away?

Later in life, someone would give him a small handheld radio to glean the latest news and from that moment, he would never be seen without it. As a child, I recall him listening to the Arab Voice news on that battered radio, which had once been blue but now had faded to white with age. Its bulging batteries were duct-taped to the back. Sitting with the radio up to his ear and fighting to hear the reporter amidst the static, Grandpa listened and waited for the announcer to make that long-awaited call: "To the people of Beit Daras: your lands have been liberated, go back to your village." In my life, I only heard my grandpa curse at one reoccurring scenario. His younger son Muneer would make sport of him by running into the room where he would sit and crying out, "Father, they just made the announcement, we can reclaim our land today!" My grandpa would jump from his chair and dash for the radio, but my uncle could not contain his laughter any longer. Knowing that his son had so maliciously fooled him once more, he would point his shaky finger at him and mumble under his breath, "You little bastard," and would return to his chair to wait.

The day he died, his faithful radio was lying on the pillow close to his ear so that even then he might catch the announcement for which he had waited for so long. He wanted to comprehend his dispossession as a simple glitch in the world's consciousness that was sure to be corrected and straightened out in time. He was not mindful of balances of power, regional geopolitics, or other trivial matters. But it is not as if Grandpa was not a keen man, for he certainly was in all worldly matters of relevance to his humble existence. But he decidedly refused to entertain any rationale that would mean the acceptance of an eternal divorce from a past that defined every fiber of his being. For him, accepting that the "good blankets" were gone was the end of hope, the end of faith, the end of life. Grandpa Mohammed was a hopeful man, with strong faith. I loved his company, and his pleasant stories of Beit Daras, its simple folk and much happier times.


BEIT DARAS

Located 46 kilometers to the north-east of Gaza City, Beit Daras was a village that was part of the Gaza Province, and mostly consisted of flat, arable meadows. The Gaza Province extended from the Sinai Peninsula in the south, to the alRamleh Province in the north, and from Hebron in the east to the Mediterranean Sea in the west. By the end of the British Mandate in Palestine in 1948, the Gaza Province was comprised of 54 villages and three major towns: Gaza City, alMajdal and Khan Yunis. It sat 50 meters above sea level, in a central location bordering the towns of al-Majdal and Isdud, and the villages of Hamameh, al-Sawafir and al-Batani.

It was also close to al-Ramleh and Hebron, and a few hours ride by donkey to the major port city of Jaffa, a trip that my grandfather would make many times during his life in Beit Daras. Before the war of 1948, that central location was a blessing to the people of the village. Unlike nearby villages, the residents of Beit Daras didn't seek distant markets to sell their produce and livestock. Two markets, Abu Khadra and Abu Kuffeh, the former specializing in produce and the latter in meat and livestock, were two major attractions that made Beit Daras a required journey for buyers and sellers from near and far.

But something else made Beit Daras different from its neighboring villages. To the east of the village, a British police station was erected soon after the British victory over the Turkish army in 1917, a military drive that began in southern Palestine, through Egypt. The station was hardly there to administer the daily affairs of the village, but rather to ensure the safety of a Jewish colony known as Tabiyya.

Fatima al-Haj Ahmed — known as Um 'Adel — is one of the village's survivors who was made a refugee in the Gaza Strip. There she lives a very difficult life. Eighty years old, Um 'Adel recalls her life in Beit Daras with a fondness that seems to grow with age. Her apolitical narrative transcends time. She told me that the residents of Tabiyya were peaceful, and generous. "They used to come to the market and buy meat and vegetables. Poor things, they knew nothing about agriculture. So we helped them," she told me, so nonchalantly, and as if nothing has occurred in the intervening years to mar this fond memory. When I asked Um 'Adel of the language the dwellers of Tabiyya spoke, she gave me a perplexed reply: "What do you mean? What other language would they speak but ours?"

Beit Daras's Jewish neighbors seemed to also excel in the local dialect spoken by the villagers of Beit Daras. But two issues puzzled the people of Beit Daras: the occasional sounds of gunfire coming from behind the colony's fortified walls, and the strong and strange bond that united the British police and the Jewish residents of Tabiyya, despite the fact that no communal violence had ever stained the thus-far neighborly relationship between the people of Beit Daras and those of Tabiyya. In a voice interrupted by an occasional nervous giggle, Um 'Adel told me:

Every night a bunch of English officers would come patrolling our streets from the direction of the kubaniya [the Jewish colony]. They would ride their horses recklessly in the village. Then we all start running into the alleyways seeking shelter. I used to stay late with my baby boy, visiting a neighbor lady, but once someone would yell: "the English are here," I would take my baby and start running.


But yet again, she would assure me, "that there were a few signs that would alarm us of the future intents of our Tabiyya neighbors. But why should we be scared of them, son?" She would add, "After all, we did so much to help them, and Dr. Tsemeh [a Jewish doctor who lived in Tabiyya] would come and treat our sick whenever we needed his help."

The name Dr. Tsemeh reoccurred in my readings about Beit Daras, and on more than one occasion. Palestinian novelist Abdullah Tayeh — himself from Beit Daras — made mention of the Jewish doctor in his historical novel, Moon In Beit Daras. A character in his novel, Abdul Aziz Mahmoud, in total despair flees the village with his family in 1948 following Tabiyya's last successful attack on Beit Daras and the expulsion of its inhabitants; he tells himself:

What happened? How did things reach this point? Didn't we buy and sell with the people of the kubaniya, and exchange seeds and livestock with them? And what about Dr. Tsemeh who has treated the people of the village and nearby villages, and the tibin [manure fertilizer] that I once sent him as a thank you gift, and how happy he was that day? Who was interested in destroying everything?


Prior to the successive attacks on Beit Daras in 1948, the village was hardly defined by its relationship to Tabiyya, or by the British presence at the outskirts. The village has been in place since as far back as any of its inhabitants can remember and despite growing suspicions in the 1930s and 1940s, the villagers had little doubt that Beit Daras would remain in place for generations to come. Indeed, invading armies came and went, and none destroyed Beit Daras. It remained a witness to history's violent and peaceful episodes, changes, progressions, defeats and victories. The place itself, its humble dwellings, might suffer or prosper, reside in anguish, or rejoice in salvation, but it had always remained largely intact as a physical entity, broken and suffering at times, true, but always standing.

Scattered in and about Beit Daras were ruins and monuments that reminded its people of unpredictable times. Beneath the village a one-kilometer-long tunnel ornately decorated with what are believed by some to be the art and script of the Canaanites was a popular destination for play by the children of Beit Daras, including my own father when he was a boy. The Crusaders (1099–1187) had left their mark; a fortified, now vulnerable and crumbling, castle on a hill that was visible from the village. The Mamluks who drove the last Crusaders out of Palestine, and defeated the Mongol hordes under Hulagu in the decisive battle of Ayn Jalut, near Nazareth in 1260, also left their mark: a small inn they erected in the center of the village to serve as a resting spot for those working on the mail route connecting Damascus to Gaza, through Beit Daras. Following the Ottoman conquest of Egypt in 1517, Palestine fell under the Turkish reign which ended the Mamluks' rule over Palestine. Initially, the new rulers changed little in the way Palestine was governed under the Mamluks, save the fact that they rearranged the country's provinces in a way that reflected their geopolitical priorities. For one reason or another, Beit Daras in 1596 was designated a village in the Gaza Province. But not long after the advent of the Turks, the rules of the game began changing. Now the villagers were commanded to pay heavy taxes on their crops, livestock and even beehives. The village suffered, like the rest of Palestine, as the Turks expected much and gave little in return, especially as the Ottoman Empire itself began to falter, struggling under the heavy cost of war on many fronts.

World War I created panic in the sickly empire, which for centuries had ruled most of the region of Western Asia: taxes increased at proportions that the poor villagers couldn't match; able men were driven to war fronts that they have never heard of, fighting battles in which they had little interest. In Tayeh's novel, Badr al-Din is a fictional Turkish commander who led a force consisting mostly of poor Palestinian peasants who were coerced to join the Turkish defenses of their falling Palestinian centers in the face of a determined British enemy. Badr al-Din thinks to himself:

The people are angry at the Turks for neglecting, impoverishing and starving them; for depriving them of all of their possessions. And now we come to force them to fight the British who came to topple our [Ottoman] Caliphate and claim its inheritance. The Turks forced these people to leave their homes, their farms, their villages, their towns, and head south, to the battlefront, to confront the British. The peasants were brought to fight a war that they know nothing of. All they were told was that they must fight until victory or martyrdom. They remained silent fearing retaliation. Villages are constantly raided [by Turkish soldiers] looking for runaway recruits. Many villagers no longer tend their fields, for they cannot afford the heavy taxes, and still pay for the seeds. Then they run away, escaping torture and prison. The peasants always ask themselves, "How can the Muslim Turks behave in such ways against their own Muslim brethren? Even the tax collectors, pray when its time for prayer, torture [the peasants] when it's time for torture."


But even those dark periods were now gone, with little evidence to prove that they had ever existed. Um 'Adel's uncle fought in the Turkish army for twelve years, but she knew nothing of his war destinations and he seemed little interested in sharing them with the family. Like many in Beit Daras, and thousands of Palestinians, her uncle hung up his military uniform in his closet, and resumed tending the family's farm when the war was over, as soon as Jerusalem was captured by British forces under the command of General Sir Edmund Allenby in December 1917, and the rest of the country by October 1918.

And now, Beit Daras had to put up with the British and their frightening nightly patrol while at the same time maintain an element of normalcy, as they, and their ancestors, had always done, for centuries. By 1945, Beit Daras had grown in size and population. Its inhabitants numbered 2,750, and its landholding spread to reach 16,357 dunums (a dunum is 1000 square meters, about one-quarter of an acre). While the inhabitants were living in a mere 88 dunums, the rest was land of which they had full ownership, either individually or collectively. Estimates for 1939 state that the village consisted of 401 houses.

Beit Daras had two mosques and a school that had been established in 1921 and hosted, in its first year, 234 students, in six classes, taught by five teachers. The villagers assumed the responsibility of paying the salaries of three of the teachers. Hundreds of villagers were literate, most astute amongst them was Grandpa Mohammed. His knowledge reached far beyond basic writing and reading. He grew to become a learned man of religion and a self-taught scholar.


(Continues...)Excerpted from My Father was a Freedom Fighter by Ramzy Baroud. Copyright © 2010 Ramzy Baroud. Excerpted by permission of Pluto Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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Palestinian-American journalist, author and former Al-Jazeera producer, Ramzy Baroud taught Mass Communication at Australia's Curtin University of Technology, and is Editor-in-Chief of the Palestine Chronicle.

"Ramzy Baroud's sensitive, thoughtful, searching writing penetrates to the core of moral dilemmas that their intended audiences evade at their peril. Few are spared his perceptive eye, and only the morally callous will fail to respond to his pleas to look into the mirror honestly, to question comforting beliefs that protect us from facing our elementary responsibilities, and to act to remedy the terrible misery and injustice that he exposes to our view, as we surely can." -- Noam Chomsky.

Baroud's work has been published in hundreds of newspapers and journals worldwide, including The Washington Post, The International Herald Tribune, The Christian Science Monitor, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Seattle Times, The Miami Herald, The Japan Times, Al-Ahram Weekly, Asia Times and nearly every English language publication throughout the Middle East.

He has been a guest on many television and radio programs including CNN International, BBC, ABC Australia, National Public Radio, Al-Jazeera and many others. He has contributed to many anthologies and his 2002 book, Searching Jenin: Eyewitness Accounts of the Israeli Invasion has received international recognition.

His 2006 book, The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People’s Struggle (Pluto Press: London) has won the praise of many scholars world-wide, such as Dr. Hanan Ashrawi who stated, “His volume presents a compelling narrative of Palestinian victimization without being defensive or apologetic, and with no attempt at disguising or denying internal weaknesses and shortcomings.” Professor Norman Finkelstein praised the work, saying, “In this curious blend of passionately subjective yet dispassionately objective journalism, Ramzy Baroud chronicles the unfolding of the second Intifada in masterful prose.”

His latest book: My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story, also published by Pluto Press, London (2010), narrates the story of the life of his family, (his family is used as a representation of millions of Palestinians in Diaspora) starting in the early 1940’s until the present time.

Richard Falk, Albert G. Milbank Professor of International Law Emeritus, Princeton University and Special Rapporteur for Occupied Palestinian Territories, UN Human Right Council wrote about Ramzy's Gaza book: "Ramzy Baroud has written a deeply moving chronicle of the persisting Palestinian ordeal that manages to interweave and bring to life the heart-wrenching experience of his family, particularly the heroics of his father, with the daily cruelties of the prolonged Israeli occupation of Gaza, the frequent horrors of refugee existence, and the disillusioning futility of seeking an end to a bloody conflict that goes on and on. This book more than any I have read tells me why anyone of conscience must stand in solidarity with the continuing struggle of the Palestinian people for self-determination and a just peace."

Ramzy Baroud has been a guest speaker at many top universities around the world, including George Mason University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Rutgers University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Manchester (UK), University of Ireland (Dublin), University of Washington, Penn State University and the University of Kwazulu Natal, Durban, South Africa, He has also been a guest speaker at the House of Commons in London, England.

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My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story
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Opiniones destacadas de los Estados Unidos

  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    One of the best books I’ve ever read
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 15 de febrero de 2024
    Baroud is a brilliant writer and I’m so thankful he shared his family’s story with us. I couldn’t put it down… I cried and I laughed. I didn’t want it to end. So I bought all his other books too. A MUST read.
    Baroud is a brilliant writer and I’m so thankful he shared his family’s story with us. I couldn’t put it down… I cried and I laughed. I didn’t want it to end. So I bought all his other books too. A MUST read.
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Palestine genocide
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 16 de mayo de 2010
    I feel that most people could identify with Palestinian neighborhoods whether they grow up in cities like Brooklyn in the 50s, 60s and many other places- even the country , but suburbia and sterile modern America it was not , and is not...what's left of it. This... Ver más
    I feel that most people could identify with Palestinian neighborhoods whether they grow up in cities like Brooklyn in the 50s, 60s and many other places- even the country , but suburbia and sterile modern America it was not , and is not...what's left of it.
    This book will hold your interest. Writer is calm and seems genuine. I am learning a lot. He understands the human heart. This book shows how we all have the same needs- family stability, jobs, places to gather, homes, a reason to live. Their world was shattered...somewhat resembles British genocide committed on Ireland- for a thousand years- but really culminating in the famine of the 1840s- that is when my father's ancestors came to America. One and one-half million Irish died from starvation while so called cultivated English enjoyed the deaths of poor, innocent people. No wonder the Irish can't stand them.
    I take the side of President Jimmy Carter who stood up for Palestinians. I am glad I bought this book.
    I think that Americans are brainwashed and that they hear the word Palestinian, and that automatically means terrorist. How far from the truth- Americans just fed horrible propaganda.
    I feel that most people could identify with Palestinian neighborhoods whether they grow up in cities like Brooklyn in the 50s, 60s and many other places- even the country , but suburbia and sterile modern America it was not , and is not...what's left of it.
    This book will hold your interest. Writer is calm and seems genuine. I am learning a lot. He understands the human heart. This book shows how we all have the same needs- family stability, jobs, places to gather, homes, a reason to live. Their world was shattered...somewhat resembles British genocide committed on Ireland- for a thousand years- but really culminating in the famine of the 1840s- that is when my father's ancestors came to America. One and one-half million Irish died from starvation while so called cultivated English enjoyed the deaths of poor, innocent people. No wonder the Irish can't stand them.
    I take the side of President Jimmy Carter who stood up for Palestinians. I am glad I bought this book.
    I think that Americans are brainwashed and that they hear the word Palestinian, and that automatically means terrorist. How far from the truth- Americans just fed horrible propaganda.
    A 18 personas les resultó útil
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Outstanding scholarship, riveting storytelling, and heartbreaking truths
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 21 de diciembre de 2023
    I picked up this book out of a feeling of helplessness and grief. As day after day the cruelty of retaliation for the October 7 attacks wore on and the Palestinian death toll continued to rise and rise, I needed to do something…but what? Bear witness. I began to educate... Ver más
    I picked up this book out of a feeling of helplessness and grief. As day after day the cruelty of retaliation for the October 7 attacks wore on and the Palestinian death toll continued to rise and rise, I needed to do something…but what? Bear witness. I began to educate myself. This thoughtful, heartfelt book brought the land of Palestine and its people to life in my mind’s eye. My understanding is forever changed. I am grateful to see beyond the lies that have been constructed, packaged, and sold to justify occupation, apartheid, and military hegemony. I wish I could hold the hand of old Mohammed and tell him that one day all the refugees will be free to return home at last. I can only commend his son Ramzy for weaving his family’s story into this heartbreaking, riveting, and outstanding work of scholarship. May it liberate the minds of its readers from the prison of deception and false ideals and herald the dawn of freedom for all Gazans.
    I picked up this book out of a feeling of helplessness and grief. As day after day the cruelty of retaliation for the October 7 attacks wore on and the Palestinian death toll continued to rise and rise, I needed to do something…but what? Bear witness. I began to educate myself. This thoughtful, heartfelt book brought the land of Palestine and its people to life in my mind’s eye. My understanding is forever changed. I am grateful to see beyond the lies that have been constructed, packaged, and sold to justify occupation, apartheid, and military hegemony. I wish I could hold the hand of old Mohammed and tell him that one day all the refugees will be free to return home at last. I can only commend his son Ramzy for weaving his family’s story into this heartbreaking, riveting, and outstanding work of scholarship. May it liberate the minds of its readers from the prison of deception and false ideals and herald the dawn of freedom for all Gazans.
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A Palestinian Son
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 27 de abril de 2010
    Ramzy Baroud grips the heart from the very beginning of this book. Through the prose, I saw Baroud's father, felt the sorrow of his fate as a refugee - an intelligent, compassionate man and father who had everything taken from him, including his ability to protect and... Ver más
    Ramzy Baroud grips the heart from the very beginning of this book. Through the prose, I saw Baroud's father, felt the sorrow of his fate as a refugee - an intelligent, compassionate man and father who had everything taken from him, including his ability to protect and provide for his family for the single reason that he was a non-Jewish native of Palestine. I felt Ramzy's shame at leaving his family behind even though it was his only choice if he hoped to get an education and live the life he and his father had wanted for him.
    My Father Was a Freedom Fighter is at once a history of Palestine and the story of one proud family, torn from its ancient roots and cast into oblivion to trod through the indignities of the refugee's life. It is at once an academic work of historic significance and a work of literary non-fiction. Baroud's historic accounts spring from meticulous research, and the story of his family is clearly poured from his heart.
    This book is a must read for anyone who cares to understand the foundation of the Palestine-Israel conflict; for anyone who cares to see the genocide happening before our very eyes. There will come a day when our children and grandchildren will ask us what did we do while Palestine was being wiped off the map. As Dr Abu Sitta points out in the preface, no one can honestly say "I did not know".
    Palestine lives through the words of people like Baroud and through the actions of so many of Palestine's sons and daughters, who, contrary to David Ben Gurion's prediction, have not forgotten.
    Ramzy Baroud grips the heart from the very beginning of this book. Through the prose, I saw Baroud's father, felt the sorrow of his fate as a refugee - an intelligent, compassionate man and father who had everything taken from him, including his ability to protect and provide for his family for the single reason that he was a non-Jewish native of Palestine. I felt Ramzy's shame at leaving his family behind even though it was his only choice if he hoped to get an education and live the life he and his father had wanted for him.
    My Father Was a Freedom Fighter is at once a history of Palestine and the story of one proud family, torn from its ancient roots and cast into oblivion to trod through the indignities of the refugee's life. It is at once an academic work of historic significance and a work of literary non-fiction. Baroud's historic accounts spring from meticulous research, and the story of his family is clearly poured from his heart.
    This book is a must read for anyone who cares to understand the foundation of the Palestine-Israel conflict; for anyone who cares to see the genocide happening before our very eyes. There will come a day when our children and grandchildren will ask us what did we do while Palestine was being wiped off the map. As Dr Abu Sitta points out in the preface, no one can honestly say "I did not know".
    Palestine lives through the words of people like Baroud and through the actions of so many of Palestine's sons and daughters, who, contrary to David Ben Gurion's prediction, have not forgotten.
    A 35 personas les resultó útil
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    And the whole world keep silent
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 23 de junio de 2010
    I have read other books on the subject but Ramsy Baroud is very well documented, acurate and touchy he definitely knows how to write. The problem with the Western world is that many people do not even know what is happening in the Middle East. The news-media keeps... Ver más
    I have read other books on the subject but Ramsy Baroud is very well documented, acurate and touchy he definitely knows how to write.
    The problem with the Western world is that many people do not even know what is happening in the Middle East. The news-media keeps silent in the face of those crimes against humanity that are occurring right now at this very moment.
    This is diabolical, because when you try to talk to people about it they even get mad. Where is the United Nations?, Where are all those Human Right Groups? and The International Red Cross?. Looks like the whole world has turned their back on the Palestinian people including the Arabs. Where are our politicians?.
    This is a very interesting book that has to be read by everyone.
    I have read other books on the subject but Ramsy Baroud is very well documented, acurate and touchy he definitely knows how to write.
    The problem with the Western world is that many people do not even know what is happening in the Middle East. The news-media keeps silent in the face of those crimes against humanity that are occurring right now at this very moment.
    This is diabolical, because when you try to talk to people about it they even get mad. Where is the United Nations?, Where are all those Human Right Groups? and The International Red Cross?. Looks like the whole world has turned their back on the Palestinian people including the Arabs. Where are our politicians?.
    This is a very interesting book that has to be read by everyone.
    A 12 personas les resultó útil
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    Opcional: ¿Por qué denuncias esto?

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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Gaza's Untold Story
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 3 de abril de 2010
    Though I've only begun reading this new release a few days ago, one feels as if he's walking with this author thru time and history --thru the memories of his grandfathers and extended family eyes..during the Ottoman Empire's end and British Mandate's rule,... Ver más
    Though I've only begun reading this new release a few days ago, one feels as if he's walking with this author thru time and history --thru the memories of his grandfathers and extended family eyes..during the Ottoman Empire's end and British Mandate's rule, transitioning from one form of oppression to the next until the time when their neighbors in nearby villages with whom they'd shared meals, had doctor visits become the hunters, expelling /clearing villages from the Gazan district turning friends into homeless landless refugees. Westerners hear little and know less about Gaza than any other part of Palestine but it is so central to all key issues of peace, war and negotiation. Daily accounts of bombings of an encaged people from daily paper becomes personal to the reader when experienced so intimately in this family of several generations in the Strip. Absolute must read this compelling account.
    Though I've only begun reading this new release a few days ago, one feels as if he's walking with this author thru time and history --thru the memories of his grandfathers and extended family eyes..during the Ottoman Empire's end and British Mandate's rule, transitioning from one form of oppression to the next until the time when their neighbors in nearby villages with whom they'd shared meals, had doctor visits become the hunters, expelling /clearing villages from the Gazan district turning friends into homeless landless refugees. Westerners hear little and know less about Gaza than any other part of Palestine but it is so central to all key issues of peace, war and negotiation. Daily accounts of bombings of an encaged people from daily paper becomes personal to the reader when experienced so intimately in this family of several generations in the Strip. Absolute must read this compelling account.
    A 37 personas les resultó útil
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    An excellent book, making one understand what happened in the ...
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 24 de mayo de 2016
    An excellent book, making one understand what happened in the Nakba and the refugee camps in Gaza. If you want to understand the Palestinians I certainly recommend this wonderful book.
    An excellent book, making one understand what happened in the Nakba and the refugee camps in Gaza. If you want to understand the Palestinians I certainly recommend this wonderful book.
    A una persona le resultó útil
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

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  • 5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    My Father aws a freedom fighter
    Calificado en Estados Unidos el 14 de junio de 2010
    My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story A book written with great passion and sensitivity. A really well-written and authoritative account of the harsh reality of life for the Palestinian people... Ver más
    My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story A book written with great passion and sensitivity. A really well-written and authoritative account of the harsh reality of life for the Palestinian people so brutally exiled from their homeland in 1948-49 at the hands of the Israeli military. It made me both sad and angry. A must-read for anyone wanting to understand the issues behind the Middle East conflict.
    Mike Griffin
    My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story A book written with great passion and sensitivity. A really well-written and authoritative account of the harsh reality of life for the Palestinian people so brutally exiled from their homeland in 1948-49 at the hands of the Israeli military. It made me both sad and angry. A must-read for anyone wanting to understand the issues behind the Middle East conflict.
    Mike Griffin
    A 13 personas les resultó útil
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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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Opiniones más destacadas de otros países

  • Gloria Behrens
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    I recommend this book
    Calificado en Canadá el 2 de agosto de 2015
    I am left with a deep sorrow and impotency in front of the enormous tragedy of the people of Gaza. Their struggle is a nightmare in the sea of “civilization”. I recommend this book, which humanizes the history of Gazan through the records of the authors’ father. Anyone who...Ver más
    I am left with a deep sorrow and impotency in front of the enormous tragedy of the people of Gaza. Their struggle is a nightmare in the sea of “civilization”. I recommend this book, which humanizes the history of Gazan through the records of the authors’ father. Anyone who wants to learn the facts from 1948 when the state of Israel was established in the land of Palestine and the continuous heartbreaking occupation of Gaza must read this book.
    I am left with a deep sorrow and impotency in front of the enormous tragedy of the people of Gaza. Their struggle is a nightmare in the sea of “civilization”.
    I recommend this book, which humanizes the history of Gazan through the records of the authors’ father. Anyone who wants to learn the facts from 1948 when the state of Israel was established in the land of Palestine and the continuous heartbreaking occupation of Gaza must read this book.

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    No es acerca del producto

    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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  • E. M. Barratt
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Thorough, searing masterpiece.
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 14 de marzo de 2011
    My Father Was A Freedom Fighter is a searing little masterpiece that is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the situation in Palestine. Set alongside the personal tale of his father's and grandfather's lives Baroud presents a thorough and...Ver más
    My Father Was A Freedom Fighter is a searing little masterpiece that is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the situation in Palestine. Set alongside the personal tale of his father's and grandfather's lives Baroud presents a thorough and meticulously referenced history of the Gaza Strip from the days of the British mandate to the time of his father's death during the second intifada. This isn't the scholarly history-from-a-distance as told by Avi Shlaim in his equally thorough but somewhat impersonal (in places) Israel and Palestine, this is a history book written by a man whose country's history is his people's history is his family's history. Thus Baroud describes the ethnic cleansing of the Nakba, the occupation of the 1967 war, the injustices of occupation and the machinations of Gazan politics in the same clean efficient prose which he uses to describe the lighter moments of his father's courtship of his mother, of his wheeling and dealing money making schemes and of his own childhood, of the fear and the adventure of life as a teenage boy during the first intifada. The prose is efficient but never stark, emotion is barely restrained and Baroud's lightness of touch allows the true import of events he recalls to sting as he tells them to you. The personal tales will make you laugh and will break your heart. The larger historical facts will make you rage. Baroud does not attempt to make this a 'non-biased' history of Israeli-Arab interactions, but he does this not as a conscious editorial decision, he simply writes what he knows. My Father Was A Freedom Fighter is simply the history of Gaza and the story of his family told as it was.
    My Father Was A Freedom Fighter is a searing little masterpiece that is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the situation in Palestine.

    Set alongside the personal tale of his father's and grandfather's lives Baroud presents a thorough and meticulously referenced history of the Gaza Strip from the days of the British mandate to the time of his father's death during the second intifada. This isn't the scholarly history-from-a-distance as told by Avi Shlaim in his equally thorough but somewhat impersonal (in places) Israel and Palestine, this is a history book written by a man whose country's history is his people's history is his family's history. Thus Baroud describes the ethnic cleansing of the Nakba, the occupation of the 1967 war, the injustices of occupation and the machinations of Gazan politics in the same clean efficient prose which he uses to describe the lighter moments of his father's courtship of his mother, of his wheeling and dealing money making schemes and of his own childhood, of the fear and the adventure of life as a teenage boy during the first intifada. The prose is efficient but never stark, emotion is barely restrained and Baroud's lightness of touch allows the true import of events he recalls to sting as he tells them to you. The personal tales will make you laugh and will break your heart. The larger historical facts will make you rage. Baroud does not attempt to make this a 'non-biased' history of Israeli-Arab interactions, but he does this not as a conscious editorial decision, he simply writes what he knows. My Father Was A Freedom Fighter is simply the history of Gaza and the story of his family told as it was.

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    No es acerca del producto

    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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  • Mummy Dee
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Personal and compelling account of a true Palestinian
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 18 de marzo de 2010
    This book is excellent, the author's father is the hero of the story and Ramzy Baroud leaves no stone unturned in this account of his father. It shows the history of the Palestinians from an ordinary Palestinian viewpoint, anyone who wants to learn about the history of...Ver más
    This book is excellent, the author's father is the hero of the story and Ramzy Baroud leaves no stone unturned in this account of his father. It shows the history of the Palestinians from an ordinary Palestinian viewpoint, anyone who wants to learn about the history of the Palestine conflict should read this book - its definetly worth it.
    This book is excellent, the author's father is the hero of the story and Ramzy Baroud leaves no stone unturned in this account of his father. It shows the history of the Palestinians from an ordinary Palestinian viewpoint, anyone who wants to learn about the history of the Palestine conflict should read this book - its definetly worth it.

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    No es acerca del producto

    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

    Otra cosa

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  • foeser
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    A vital Palestinian viewpoint
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 14 de diciembre de 2012
    This is not a sparkling piece of English which is a pity as the content is deeply absorbing. Baroud can, I know, do better! The book is special because it feelingly presents a history of the dispossessed often in graphic form, always engaging, deeply moving. I was apalled...Ver más
    This is not a sparkling piece of English which is a pity as the content is deeply absorbing. Baroud can, I know, do better! The book is special because it feelingly presents a history of the dispossessed often in graphic form, always engaging, deeply moving. I was apalled by the suffering, the worldwide lack of engagement and the nobility of Palestinians' dreams. The media would represent Baroud's father as a terrorist. A "freedom fighter" he most certaily was - dignified, civilised and admirable. So much for the misused term, "Terrorist". Our turning a blind eye on the Palestinian situation is unjustified and shameful.
    This is not a sparkling piece of English which is a pity as the content is deeply absorbing. Baroud can, I know, do better!
    The book is special because it feelingly presents a history of the dispossessed often in graphic form, always engaging, deeply moving. I was apalled by the suffering, the worldwide lack of engagement and the nobility of Palestinians' dreams.
    The media would represent Baroud's father as a terrorist. A "freedom fighter" he most certaily was - dignified, civilised and admirable. So much for the misused term, "Terrorist". Our turning a blind eye on the Palestinian situation is unjustified and shameful.

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    No es acerca del producto

    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

    Otra cosa

    Verificaremos si esta opinión cumple con nuestras normas de la comunidad. Si no las cumple, la eliminaremos.

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  • Joyce
    5.0 de 5 estrellasCompra verificada
    Five Stars
    Calificado en Reino Unido el 14 de mayo de 2018
    An important book in relation to the historical context of the situation in Israel/Gaza well written.
    An important book in relation to the historical context of the situation in Israel/Gaza well written.

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    Irrespetuosa, con odio, obscena

    Pagada, no es auténtica

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