Raja Shehadeh
Forfatter af Palestinian Walks: Forays into a Vanishing Landscape
Om forfatteren
Raja Shehadeh is a Palestinian lawyer practicing in Ramallah since 1979 and is a barrister of Lincoln's Inn
Image credit: Courtesy of Allen and Unwin
Værker af Raja Shehadeh
Where the Line Is Drawn: A Tale of Crossings, Friendships, and Fifty Years of Occupation in Israel-Palestine (2017) 38 eksemplarer
Language of War, Language of Peace: Palestine, Israel and the Search for Justice (2015) 21 eksemplarer
The law of the land: Settlements and land issues under Israeli military occupation (1993) 2 eksemplarer
Civilian administration in the occupied West Bank : analysis of Israeli Military Government Order No. 947 : a study 2 eksemplarer
The Sealed Room: Selections from the Diary of a Palestinian Living Under Israeli Occupation, September 1990-August 1991 (1992) 2 eksemplarer
What Does Israel Fear From Palestine? 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Kanonisk navn
- Shehadeh, Raja
- Fødselsdato
- 1951
- Køn
- male
- Nationalitet
- Jordan (birth, West Bank then part of Jordan)
Palestine - Fødested
- Ramallah, West Bank, Palestine
- Erhverv
- lawyer
writer - Organisationer
- Al-Haq (founder)
Medlemmer
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Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 22
- Also by
- 3
- Medlemmer
- 759
- Popularitet
- #33,504
- Vurdering
- 3.9
- Anmeldelser
- 22
- ISBN
- 85
- Sprog
- 7
- Udvalgt
- 1
The six sarhat in the book mix description of the walk itself and the surrounding land features, and the politics of land ownership and seizure.
Sarha 1: takes place in 1978, a walk to the qasr of Shehadeh's grandfather's cousin. A qasr was a small stone structure built for farmers to live in when they needed to be away from their home in a populated area to tend to their land. Shehadeh describes the hills as already being abandoned in some respects by Palestinians, as the land had declined in its ability to support farming. Such land no longer being used by Palestinian farmers formed a basis for the Israeli settlement project, as Israeli law said any land no longer being lived on by its Palestinian owner ceased to belong to him and reverted back to its original owners, the Jewish people, as represented by the State of Israel.
Sarha 2: A hike to an isolated, small village and its nearby hilltop. The hilltop has since been taken by Israel for a settlement. Shehadeh in this chapter discusses one of his first land cases, where he represented a Palestinian Christian whose land had been taken over for a settlement. Shehadeh says it was well documented in legal terms that his client owned the land, and he still thought he could legally fight the settlement project in Israeli courts through such cases. However the attitude of the court was essentially that the land was gone, and his client should take what monetary payout he could get. His legal efforts to resist were going to prove unfruitful.
Sarha 3: Set in the mid-1990s after the Oslo Agreement. Shehadeh describes a walk to the Dead Sea with a Fatah official allowed in to the West Bank under the deal, and describes his opposition to the Oslo Agreement as a surrender and a defeat. It did not challenge Israeli town planning, which drew circles around existing Palestinian population centers and did not allow them to expand. Meanwhile it claimed vast areas of land for future settlement expansion. The PLO displayed little understanding of the legal aspects of Israeli land policies and did not seem to care. He was frustrated by the blind optimism of his Fatah companion as they walked along the rugged, salty landscape towards the Dead Sea.
Sarha 4: A walk towards the oldest continually inhabited city in the world, Jericho, from near Jerusalem. The walk went along a lush green valley that contains lots of water, making it the favored pathway for centuries of pilgrims and conquerors making their way to Jerusalem. One of Shehadeh's companions on this walk is an archeologist, who notes the absence of the Bedouin tribes that until recently roamed these areas, but who had now been chased away by the Israelis. Shehadeh stops at the Monastery of St. George, built into the rocks in the 5th century and still an active monastery.
Sarha 5: A walk on a constrained path in the hills near Ramallah with his friend Mustafa Barghouti, a well known Palestinian doctor and politician. They share an analysis of Oslo that it is a failure, and Barghouti describes the immense pressure he is under to join the Palestinian government and drop his criticism. As they walk they see and hear almost everywhere around them new Israeli construction of buildings and roads. Shehadeh says he has accepted that the Palestinians have been defeated, and that the land has been and will continue to be overwhelmingly transformed, and his efforts have been in vain.
Sarha 6: A solitary walk near an Israeli settlement results in an encounter with a young Israeli along a creek. The Israeli is unexpectedly friendly, but Shehadeh cannot hold back his bitterness over the settlements as they talk, and complains that the Israeli has internalized and parrots back the official dogma he has learned about the rights of the Jews to the land of the West Bank, and the lack of rights the Palestinians should have. Shehadeh recognizes their mutual love of the land, about the only time in the book the Israeli point of view has any sort of sympathetic hearing.
… (mere)