Free Palestine
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8230450801
- EAN9798230450801
- Date de parution30/07/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIndependently Published
Résumé
What can a witness do, thousands of kilometers away from the horror? What value does a solitary voice have in the face of the bombs?Free Palestine is a book written from the Argentine Atlantic coast, while Gaza burns and the world remains silent. It is not a war chronicle or a journalistic investigation. It is an affective and ethical testimony to the power of memory, everyday dignity, and the urgency of not becoming an accomplice through omission.
From his apartment in San Bernardo, Benjamin, a freelance graphic designer and an involuntary witness, writes what he sees, what he feels, and what others choose to silence. With an old notebook and an unstable connection, he comes across images, news, and voices that rarely appear on television. And in the face of this, he makes a simple and radical decision: not to look the other way. Through intimate scenes, interwoven stories, poetic moments, and fragments of quiet protest, this book builds with words what others seek to erase with rubble: a people.
A history. A resistance. Free Palestine does not seek to explain. It seeks to accompany. Its voice is not neutral, but it is profoundly human. It doesn't preach, but it draws a moral map. It is the echo of those who cannot scream. It is a window opened from the south of the world, welcoming a wind that comes from another land-a land besieged, yet alive. This book is not a solution, but it offers a certainty: as long as someone is writing their names, Palestine continues to exist.
From his apartment in San Bernardo, Benjamin, a freelance graphic designer and an involuntary witness, writes what he sees, what he feels, and what others choose to silence. With an old notebook and an unstable connection, he comes across images, news, and voices that rarely appear on television. And in the face of this, he makes a simple and radical decision: not to look the other way. Through intimate scenes, interwoven stories, poetic moments, and fragments of quiet protest, this book builds with words what others seek to erase with rubble: a people.
A history. A resistance. Free Palestine does not seek to explain. It seeks to accompany. Its voice is not neutral, but it is profoundly human. It doesn't preach, but it draws a moral map. It is the echo of those who cannot scream. It is a window opened from the south of the world, welcoming a wind that comes from another land-a land besieged, yet alive. This book is not a solution, but it offers a certainty: as long as someone is writing their names, Palestine continues to exist.
What can a witness do, thousands of kilometers away from the horror? What value does a solitary voice have in the face of the bombs?Free Palestine is a book written from the Argentine Atlantic coast, while Gaza burns and the world remains silent. It is not a war chronicle or a journalistic investigation. It is an affective and ethical testimony to the power of memory, everyday dignity, and the urgency of not becoming an accomplice through omission.
From his apartment in San Bernardo, Benjamin, a freelance graphic designer and an involuntary witness, writes what he sees, what he feels, and what others choose to silence. With an old notebook and an unstable connection, he comes across images, news, and voices that rarely appear on television. And in the face of this, he makes a simple and radical decision: not to look the other way. Through intimate scenes, interwoven stories, poetic moments, and fragments of quiet protest, this book builds with words what others seek to erase with rubble: a people.
A history. A resistance. Free Palestine does not seek to explain. It seeks to accompany. Its voice is not neutral, but it is profoundly human. It doesn't preach, but it draws a moral map. It is the echo of those who cannot scream. It is a window opened from the south of the world, welcoming a wind that comes from another land-a land besieged, yet alive. This book is not a solution, but it offers a certainty: as long as someone is writing their names, Palestine continues to exist.
From his apartment in San Bernardo, Benjamin, a freelance graphic designer and an involuntary witness, writes what he sees, what he feels, and what others choose to silence. With an old notebook and an unstable connection, he comes across images, news, and voices that rarely appear on television. And in the face of this, he makes a simple and radical decision: not to look the other way. Through intimate scenes, interwoven stories, poetic moments, and fragments of quiet protest, this book builds with words what others seek to erase with rubble: a people.
A history. A resistance. Free Palestine does not seek to explain. It seeks to accompany. Its voice is not neutral, but it is profoundly human. It doesn't preach, but it draws a moral map. It is the echo of those who cannot scream. It is a window opened from the south of the world, welcoming a wind that comes from another land-a land besieged, yet alive. This book is not a solution, but it offers a certainty: as long as someone is writing their names, Palestine continues to exist.