Journalism



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Reporting from Ramallah : An Israeli Journalist in an Occupied Land
       by Amira Hass

      


5 out of 5 stars Editorial Review
by a Reader from Washington, DC, posted on Tuesday, Sep 30, 2003

More than any other journalist, Amira Hass has intimate knowledge of the
experience of both Israelis and Palestinians. The daughter of concentration
camp survivors, Hass has chosen to live in a Palestinian town to provide a
firsthand description of what daily life is like for the population, in
particular, how the Israeli army behaves and the effects of the army's
presence. Writing for the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz and other journals,
Hass presents unsettling truths: As the Israeli government measures its
success in Palestinian deaths, many Palestinians can chart their victory
only in terms of the fear they can inspire. "The game is now who is more
afraid, and who is less afraid of dying," Hass writes.

5 out of 5 stars From Publishers Weekly
by a Reader from Washington, DC, posted on Tuesday, Sep 30, 2003

Hass, a Jewish Israeli journalist for the newspaper Ha'aretz, has chosen to
live on the West Bank-and her intimate knowledge of the plight of the
Palestinians illuminates this book. Culled from her dispatches during the
past five years, these pieces offer a three-dimensional portrait of the
daily experiences of the Palestinians under Israeli occupation. The early
pieces, written while serious peace talks were being conducted in the late
'90s, shows the roots of the current violence: most notably, Palestinians'
frustration that the Oslo peace accords hadn't produced many tangible
results. As Hass presciently wrote: "The distance from here to private and
collective acts of despair is not great." As the book wends its way through
the outbreak of violence in September 2000, that despair is increasingly on
display. Her pieces illustrate how Palestinian frustration-over detentions,
house demolitions, a life so riddled with restrictions that "hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians are criminals or potential criminals"-erupted into
suicide bombings and other forms of terrorism. But what distinguishes this
book is its emphasis on the personal-and how the conflict has created a
logic that has driven both sides to violence. In an in-depth interview, an
Israeli sharpshooter discusses the rules of when to open fire ("Every day,
the regulations... change"). Members of Palestinian society discuss the
difficulty of keeping children healthy and educated under the pressures of
violence and occupation. Members of Palestinian resisteance groups discuss
what drove them to their acts and the internal rivalries among competing
factions. Anyone who wants an in-depth, humanizing portrait of the
Palestinians should look no further.



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Occupied Voices: Stories of Everyday Life from the Second Intifada
       by Wendy Pearlman, Laura Junka (Photographer)

       In 2000, Pearlman, a Jewish doctoral student in Middle East politics and longtime human rights activist, spent six months living and studying in the West Bank. Her book grows out of her sojourn and "provide[s] a window into the human dimension of their struggle" by letting the Palestinians speak for themselves.


5 out of 5 stars Editorial Review
by a Reader from Washington, DC, posted on Tuesday, Sep 30, 2003

When the occupied territories exploded following the collapse of the Camp
David talks and Ariel Sharon's inflammatory visit to the Al-Aqsa Mosque in
Jerusalem, Wendy Pearlman, a young Jewish woman from Nebraska, immersed
herself amongst ordinary Palestinians and, a la Studs Terkel, recorded their
lives. A remarkable oral narrative emerges from the school principals,
professors, TV reporters, school kids, mothers, doctors, engineers,
filmmakers, shop owners, victims of shellings and forced house removals that
spoke to her: "The personal stories and heartfelt reflections that I
encountered did not expose a hatred of Jews or a yearning to push Israelis
into the sea. Rather, they painted a portrait of a people who longed for
precisely that which had inspired the first Israelis: the chance to be
citizens in a country of their own." Containing over thirty searing oral
testimonies, this is one of the first books to tell the Palestinian story
from the point of view of Palestinians living in the occupied territories.

5 out of 5 stars From Booklist
by a Reader from Washington, DC, posted on Tuesday, Sep 30, 2003

After the peace process in the Middle East broke down in 2000, the author,
"a Jewish girl from Nebraska," was moved to visit Israel and speak to
ordinary Palestinians living in the middle of the second Intifada (mass
uprising). She spoke with doctors and educators, journalists and
businessmen, homeowners and students, assembling a collage of memory and
emotion. Each interview is preceded by a lengthy introduction that supplies
historical and social contexts.



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Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People
       by Jack G. Shaheen

      




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Portraits of Israelis and Palestinians, for my parents
       by Seth Tobocman

      


5 out of 5 stars "Is She an Arab, or a Jew"?
by a Reader from Washington, DC, posted on Tuesday, Sep 30, 2003

Written by an American Jewish artist, this collection of sketches and portraits begins with a challenge. A question is scribbled next to the portrait of an attractive, smiling woman: "Is she an Arab, or a Jew?" Very often the conflict in the middle east is portrayed to us in media snippets as an irresolvable conflict between extremists that has been going on and will go on for centuries. Unsatisfied with this shallow depiction, Tobocman resolved to go to Israel/Palestine and penetrate the layers of journalistic obfuscation to get to the heart of the conflict: the people behind the news. We get to see images of people, on both sides. We get to see what they look like, hear what they say, and understand their fears. Before I bought this book, I browsed through a few pages. It starts with a scene of Israelis boarding a plane going to Israel, then reading the "reports of the latest bombings", and then the Teddy Bear Incident: "El Al Security Checking the Bear". Considering I have actually, believe or not, experienced that incident myself, I decided immediately to buy the book. I'm glad I did.

Artistically, the book is visually appearing and an enjoyment to read. The sketches are much more raw and unfinished than, e.g., Joe Sacco's masterpiece "Palestine". Yet this book is somewhat easier to read and perhaps contains a more positive, hopeful, message about the spirit of humanity.

Factual and accurate, it is written with a good purpose. To quote the author's introduction: "I don't claim to be an expert on the Middle East. I am neither an Israeli nor a Palestinian. But in many ways, the fate of that region has been in the hands of Americans who aren't experts. Americans like you and me. That's why it's important for us to come to a better understanding of the situation. I hope we make the right decisions.

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