bookishmillennial's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective sad medium-paced
disclaimer: I don’t really give starred reviews. I hope my reviews provide enough information to let you know if a book is for you or not. Find me here: https://linktr.ee/bookishmillennial

Yet another incredible book that reads as part memoir, part historical text from Raja Shehadeh❤️‍🩹

If you haven't read more of RS's backlist, I highly encourage you to do so. I've learned so much, and have felt so moved by his stories and his narrative voice. 

Free Palestine! End the occupation! 

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arkwen452's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective sad medium-paced

3.75

{The only reason I have rated this book this way is due to my frustration from the fact that I cannot do anything to change the circumstances that happened in this book.}

 
Firstly, I will state repeat that reading books about Palestine does a number of things to my mind, heart and mood. Therefore, my review and reflection on this book are emotionally charged. I do not deny this. However, I do my best to maintain a clear overall review of Palestinian Walks: Forays into Vanishing Landscapes by Raja Shehadeh for all interesting in this book. 

The history of the Palestinian people and their country since the Nakba is unimaginable. Yet, they have been enduring these atrocities for decades.  And if I could summarize Raja’s experience during the span of the narrative, it would be corruption, lies, stealing, colonization and terrorist acts by the Zionist illegal occupied state known as Is Not Real. 

In Palestinian Walks, Raja takes readers on ‘walks’ that explore the changing landscapes around him in Palestine.  As the narrative progresses the ease and peacefulness of the ‘walks’ dims with the rise of more segregation, mobility laws and freedoms of the Palestinian people are stripped away by an illegal government authority given its ‘power’ by the United Kingdom.  Given the vivid descriptions of the easiness of most of the Palestinian citizens and the beautiful Palestinian landscapes of hills, long sand stretches of areas one might forget the essence of the book. But the appearance of empty structures and houses that were forcefully abandoned during the Nakba and then more losses of those simply stepping out for the day only to return and find they have been barred from returning home. Raja accounts for the changes rapidly happening in just twenty-eight years around the Palestinian people. Growing numbers of settlements being built around Gaza and the West Bank divided and separated them and at the same time took more and more of their land, homes, legal rights and resources from them. 

Raja clearly feels despondent with his work and the struggle. There is also a point where Raja seems to be shunned by is own people, many of whom seemed to have relented in trying to fight the colonizers to keep their rights and homes. To me, this speaks on who defeated and helpless those Palestinians must have felt. To choose to give into your oppressor isn’t living, it is existing. And even conforming to the Zionist cruelty, their rules and their actions, as proof of the last seven decades and the last 170 DAYS, it seems, was never enough.  What I feel Palestinian Walks most reveals to the reads is the stark dissonance and detachment its people saw unfold in front of their eyes. The clear, open and spacious land that they may have once known from one hilltop to another utterly changed from one day to the next as settlements, concrete walls and wired fences erected across their land separated them not only from each other but also from their connection to their country. 

 

Now, I cannot quite remember if this book was published before or after Raja’s We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I, but we are given more details about some of his family in Palestinian Walks. As well as learn more of how hard he tried to get property and land back that was illegally taken by the colonizers. Endless loopholes in the Zionist favors, corruption and secret deals and plans in place for the stolen land with impossible fee requests to halt the ‘developmental’ plans. As if Raja and his clients were stirring up last minute inconveniences to plans that have been in the works for years. Even if paying the bogus fees were an option, they never were, the money the Zionist ‘had’ was also stolen from the Palestinians after the Nakba and they were (still are) being funded by the US. 

Writing these details and facts that have happened feels like an absurd fictitious tale spun from the most outlandish form of reality. Knowing that it is all true rattles something within my blood and bones that is something like rage. But it is more than rage; I am sadden and sickened by these actions. I know that repeating the questions of how and why repeatedly will not lead any of us anywhere. Which is why I am pushed into actionable steps that are in my ability to achieve: Read. Speak up. Support. Share Information. Be An Advocate. 

Palestinian Walks is a poignant and profound exploration of the Palestinian experience through the lens of Raja’s personal narrative. If this is the first book you ever pick up by a Palestinian author, it may teach you something, it may make you think, but it will stay with you. 


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hanhantap's review

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challenging dark emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced

5.0

In the past week, I have been desperate to shut off my phone and no longer consume the horrible footage coming out of Palestine. In that same aspect, I did not want to shut off my brain and become apathetic; this is a notion of privilege that the innocent civilians in Palestine and Israel do not have. Instead, I am learning and reflecting and trying to better understand the homeland that is shrinking, both in Gaza and in the West Bank.
This memoir is a beautiful and heartbreaking collection of essays and history told through Raja Shehadeh's walks through his homeland. It details different points in the conflict through his own familial experience and his time as a land attorney. Putting this on as an audiobook during a run or walk was a way to better understand the struggle of the Palestian people and the tension between them and the Israeli government constantly expanding their borders and establishing settlements on tranquil and untouched land.
If you are like me and are looking to escape the horrific news coming out of Palestine and Israel while also wanting to engage in a thoughtful and productive way, I recommend reading or listening to this book. It is a quick read, but take your time with it. Take a walk. Go for a run. Pedal a bike. Take in your own landscape around you, your home, and listen to Raja speak of his.

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