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A Month by the Sea

Encounters in Gaza

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Over the summer of 2011, Dervla Murphy spent a month in the Gaza Strip. She met liberals and Islamists, Hamas and Fatah supporters, rich and poor. Through reported conversations she creates a vivid picture of life in this coastal fragment of self-governing Palestine. Bombed and cut-off from normal contact with the rest of the world, life in Gaza is beset with structural, medical and mental health problems, yet it is also bursting with political engagement and underwritten by an intense enjoyment of family life. During her month by the sea, Dervla develops an acute eye for the way in which isolation has shaped this society. Time and again she meets men who have returned to the Strip as an act of presence. Yet the mosque is often their only daily activity, as difficulties obtaining supplies mean few opportunities for creative work. This acts as a recruiting sergeant for the Islamist Qassam brigades and a pressure cooker for the creation of domestic tyrants. In this situation, Dervla becomes a shameless supporter of women's rights -acting as agony aunt and feminist mentor by turn. The ironies of Western and Israeli attitudes to the Strip are ever present: most notably the championing of democracy yet the refusal to recognize the legitimacy of Hamas; and the way in which violent attempts to eradicate terrorism breathe life into the very monster they aspire to destroy. Even so, there is a still, small note of hope. For underlying the book is Dervla's determination to try to understand how Arab Palestinians and Israeli Jews might forge a solution and ultimately live in peace.
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    • Booklist

      September 15, 2013
      Typically, the ruined landscapes and epic tragedies in Murphy's latest nonfiction account are reserved for postapocalyptic novels. But in Palestine's infamous Gaza Strip, Ireland's beloved octogenarian travel writer exposes harsh truths that are often stranger than fiction. Using a combination of history and her personal experiences, Murphy uncovers the intricate social and political realities of the Gazan people that are often glossed over by headlines. On a series of day-trips that range from the quietly tragic to the abjectly horrifying, she visits extended families living in squalor, sheltering in and around their bombed-out homes and desperately trying to keep a few olive trees alive as a symbol of hope. As children starve, rich patrons at a fine restaurant nearby use precious lemons to clean their hands between courses, and every desk at an oil-funded school needlessly bears its own electric pencil sharpener. Although Murphy's occasional lead-thick, date-heavy lectures on history aren't the best introduction to Palestine, the light she sheds on one of the world's greatest humanitarian crises is as moving as it is invaluable.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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