

I've been meaning to read this book for a while. I bought the hardback last year but gifted it to my cousin before reading it. I found the ebook on hoopla so knew I'd be able to read it another time. Recently, I came across audiobook on hoopla and was so excited. I listened to it in two days since it's pretty short and it was a great way to take in the words of the late Dr. Refaat Alareer, may he rest in peace. I was happy to see the narrator is a Palestinian woman, but I would have liked her to pronounce some of the Arabic words and names more accurately. I finished reading the ebook as I wanted to make sure I didn't miss anything from listening, but it's harder for me to comprehend from text than it is from audio.
This collection of short essays, poems, and interviews gave important insight into what it's like to grow up and live in Gaza, and the framing of how many wars each person has lived through to denote their age (ex: Amal is 4 wars old). It's heartbreaking to hear how people have lost so many loved ones, their homes, schools, livelihoods. Every single person in Gaza is affected by the siege and bombardment of their homeland and the fact that we are currently witnessing a 2.5+ year old "war" is very tough. It would be easier in a sense if Palestine was free and this was a historical overview of these brutal massacres, but the fact that the zionist entity is continuing to murder Palestinians every day makes it a difficult read/listen.
Some of the text is repetitive because of the various sources, but it does a good job of emphasizing the details of these stories. I liked how Refaat noted the importance of storytelling and how it keeps us alive. Palestinians in Gaza do not need to be given a voice, they already have one and it just needs to be widely shared. I appreciated the mix of essays and poems, as well as transcripts from interviews done in the last months of his life. I particularly liked the essays about his brother and his cousin and how they were both senselessly killed while trying to help others. His reflection on the 2018 Great March of Return was enlightening as well. From that chapter "Every Palestinian Was a Target": "If Palestinians shoot rockets, fire rockets, or carry guns, Israel will destroy them and will criminalize and demonize them. If Palestinians carry stones and Molotov cocktails, if Palestinians fly kites, if Palestinians breathe, Israel will hate them. And Israel will want them to be submitting and abjectly kneeling." I was honored to listen to and read his words and it reminded me how sad I am that he is no longer with us and cannot provide current feedback on world events, or share his knowledge and talent. However, books like this bring our martyrs to life and it keeps them alive as we continue this material life without them.
From his poem "O'live Tree":
My twigs shall grow,
The oil shall flow,
My people shall glow,
And you, you will go.
I've been meaning to read this book for a while. I bought the hardback last year but gifted it to my cousin before reading it. I found the ebook on hoopla so knew I'd be able to read it another time. Recently, I came across audiobook on hoopla and was so excited. I listened to it in two days since it's pretty short and it was a great way to take in the words of the late Dr. Refaat Alareer, may he rest in peace. I was happy to see the narrator is a Palestinian woman, but I would have liked her to pronounce some of the Arabic words and names more accurately. I finished reading the ebook as I wanted to make sure I didn't miss anything from listening, but it's harder for me to comprehend from text than it is from audio.
This collection of short essays, poems, and interviews gave important insight into what it's like to grow up and live in Gaza, and the framing of how many wars each person has lived through to denote their age (ex: Amal is 4 wars old). It's heartbreaking to hear how people have lost so many loved ones, their homes, schools, livelihoods. Every single person in Gaza is affected by the siege and bombardment of their homeland and the fact that we are currently witnessing a 2.5+ year old "war" is very tough. It would be easier in a sense if Palestine was free and this was a historical overview of these brutal massacres, but the fact that the zionist entity is continuing to murder Palestinians every day makes it a difficult read/listen.
Some of the text is repetitive because of the various sources, but it does a good job of emphasizing the details of these stories. I liked how Refaat noted the importance of storytelling and how it keeps us alive. Palestinians in Gaza do not need to be given a voice, they already have one and it just needs to be widely shared. I appreciated the mix of essays and poems, as well as transcripts from interviews done in the last months of his life. I particularly liked the essays about his brother and his cousin and how they were both senselessly killed while trying to help others. His reflection on the 2018 Great March of Return was enlightening as well. From that chapter "Every Palestinian Was a Target": "If Palestinians shoot rockets, fire rockets, or carry guns, Israel will destroy them and will criminalize and demonize them. If Palestinians carry stones and Molotov cocktails, if Palestinians fly kites, if Palestinians breathe, Israel will hate them. And Israel will want them to be submitting and abjectly kneeling." I was honored to listen to and read his words and it reminded me how sad I am that he is no longer with us and cannot provide current feedback on world events, or share his knowledge and talent. However, books like this bring our martyrs to life and it keeps them alive as we continue this material life without them.
From his poem "O'live Tree":
My twigs shall grow,
The oil shall flow,
My people shall glow,
And you, you will go.