Holy Land, Unholy War: Israelis and Palestinians
Author: Anton La
Guardia
Anton La Guardia was the Middle East correspondent
for the Daily Telegraph throughout most of the 1990s and
is now its Diplomatic Editor.
Paperback 464 pages (September 26, 2002)
Publisher: John Murray
Language: English
ISBN: 0719562082
Book Description Featuring an experienced
journalist's eye for irony, anecdote and the telling
detail, Anton La Guardia here provides a portrait of the
people behind the headlines in Israel and Palestine. The
book is part iconoclastic history and part contemporary
political reportage.
About the Author Anton La Guardia was Middle East
correspondent for The Daily Telegraph from 1990 to 1998
and is now its Diplomatic Editor. He lives in London.
Synopsis Writing dispassionately about the Holy Land,
said Mark Twain, is as hard as being dispassionate about
your own wife or children. Today, more than a century
after Twain led the way for mass tourism to what was
then a remote corner of the Ottoman Empire, the
difficulties are redoubled. The modern struggles of the
Israelis and Palestinians - with their larger-than-life
stories of disaster and redemption - command the
obsessive attention and passion of sympathizers around
the world. The 1993 Oslo accords promised to end more
than a century of conflict between Jews and Arabs, but
the Palestinian uprising that began in October 2000 has
raised fears that the fighting could destabilize the
whole region. With the experienced journalist's eye for
the telling detail and anecdote, Anton La Guardia offers
an intimate portrait of the people behind the headlines.
He explores their histories and cultures: from the
religious upheavals of Jerusalem to the extremism of
Jewish settlers and Islamic suicide bombers, from the
first Zionist pioneers to the post-Zionist generation in
Tel Aviv, from the stirrings of Arab nationalism to the
Lebanon War. The author explains how the searing traumas
of the Holocaust and the Palestinian exodus have shaped
Israeli and Palestinian societies. He also looks at the
role of the outside world, from the awe-struck visits of
medieval Christian pilgrims to the scheming of world
powers. He traces how the promise of peace has turned
into the curse of war, drawing on his reporter's
notebooks from years spent covering the peace accords,
Islamic suicide bombings, the assassination of the
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the outbreak of
the latest Palestinian uprising. This book is part
contemporary political reportage and part iconoclastic
history. A dispassionate account of Israel and Palestine
may be impossible, but this book is written with the
first-hand knowledge, affection and exasperation of one
who writes about embittered relatives.
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