Arab Times

Award-winning authors take on Israeli occupation

‘This book … is our brick’

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JERUSALEM, June 19, (Agencies): A group of award-winning authors on Sunday launched a book highlighti­ng Israel’s 50-year occupation of the Palestinia­n territorie­s, raising money for an NGO hated by the Israeli government.

Featuring chapters penned by more than two dozen writers including Dave Eggers, Colm Toibin and Geraldine Brooks, “Kingdom of Olives and Ash” was edited by American Jewish husband and wife duo Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman.

Chabon, winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for his novel “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay”, said the aim was to start a conversati­on about the impact of the occupation on both Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

“We felt like we had to find some way of drawing people’s attention, at least some people’s attention, to this,” he told AFP ahead of the launch in Jerusalem Sunday evening.

By using famous authors, including the winners of three Pulitzers and a Nobel, they were aiming to “sort of trick” people “into paying attention to the occupation by baiting the trap, in a way, with the work of a really amazing writer”.

Proceeds from the book will go to Breaking the Silence, an NGO that documents alleged abuses by Israeli forces in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s and publishes testimonie­s of soldiers, much to the chagrin of Israeli officials.

Accused

In 2016 the then defence minister accused the NGO of treason and the current government — the most right-wing in Israel’s history — has sought to curtail their work and ban them from speaking in schools.

The book, which is published in English, French, Arabic, Hebrew, Spanish and Italian, takes the form of individual chapters by the authors, most of which centre around their trips to Israel and the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s in the past two years.

Chabon’s chapter touches heavily on the “arbitrary” nature of the occupation in the West Bank, with Palestinia­ns often caught up in bureaucrac­y and subject to the whims of individual soldiers and commanders.

The purpose, he said, was “proving to the people you are conquering that they have absolutely no control over their fate or their destiny”.

Author Dave Eggers, who visited Gaza in his chapter, details life in the Palestinia­n enclave and how residents try to survive in the territory often labelled the world’s largest prison.

Two million Palestinia­ns live in the Gaza Strip, coralled by a decade-long Israeli blockade, with Egypt also sealing its border.

Israel says the occupation is necessary to protect its citizens, with Palestinia­ns often carrying out attacks against Israelis in the West Bank and elsewhere.

Eggers details peoples’ frustratio­ns with their lives, including with the Islamists Hamas who run the strip and restrict cultural freedoms.

Waldman, who was born in Jerusalem and holds Israeli citizenshi­p, said she had to try to tackle the occupation because it was done in her name as a Jew.

“The occupation is an edifice and those of us who care have to do what we can to chip away at it. This book — this is our brick that we are pulling out of the edifice of the occupation.

“Eventually enough bricks will be gone and it will fall.”

Israel values its relationsh­ip with the diaspora highly, highlighti­ng itself as the home for all Jews from across the globe.

Both Waldman and Chabon said there was a growing gap between young American progressiv­e Jews and Israel.

Seventy-one percent of US Jews voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election compared with just 24 percent for Donald Trump — despite the latter promising to be the most pro-Israel president ever.

Also:

LONDON: Paul McCartney and J.K. Rowling just got promoted, so to speak, in Britain’s hierarchy.

Twenty years after he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, Sir Paul McCartney is being upgraded with a Companion of Honor award for services to music, alongside J.K. Rowling for her services to literature and philanthro­py, in the queen’s Birthday Honors list.

The former Beatle and the Harry Potter author join a raft of heroes, luminaries and other notables being recognized for their contributi­ons to life in Britain.

“I’m very happy about this huge honor and with the news coming on my birthday weekend and Father’s Day it makes it colossal!” McCartney said.

Others winning recognitio­n included Police Constable Keith Palmer, who was killed as he confronted an attacker with a knife outside Parliament, and Bernard Kenny, a passer-by who tried to protect lawmaker Jo Cox from being stabbed and killed.

 ??  ?? Israeli-American novelist Ayelet Waldman (right), and her spouse American novelist Michael Chabon pose for a picture in Jerusalem on June 18. (AFP)
Israeli-American novelist Ayelet Waldman (right), and her spouse American novelist Michael Chabon pose for a picture in Jerusalem on June 18. (AFP)

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