I, Palestine
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8231202072
- EAN9798231202072
- Date de parution28/07/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurWalzone Press
Résumé
In I, Palestine, the raw and poetic voice of Farah-a Palestinian woman trapped in the ruins of Gaza-cuts through the silence of a world that prefers to look the other way. Across twelve chapters that blend chronicle, testimony, and denunciation, this book portrays daily life under fire, hope among the rubble, and memory as the only form of resistance. From the silence before the next bombing to the writing of the last names on a wall that no longer bleeds, Farah records-with a trembling pencil-the life of a people that others are trying to erase.
But there is also bread, poetry, children's games, and the songs of elderly women who refuse to die quietly. Written with rawness, tenderness, and courage, I, Palestine is a restrained cry. It is not just a book. It is a notebook rescued from the ruins. A final word that demands to be read. A deeply human literary work. A memory that challenges. A narrative act of justice.
But there is also bread, poetry, children's games, and the songs of elderly women who refuse to die quietly. Written with rawness, tenderness, and courage, I, Palestine is a restrained cry. It is not just a book. It is a notebook rescued from the ruins. A final word that demands to be read. A deeply human literary work. A memory that challenges. A narrative act of justice.
In I, Palestine, the raw and poetic voice of Farah-a Palestinian woman trapped in the ruins of Gaza-cuts through the silence of a world that prefers to look the other way. Across twelve chapters that blend chronicle, testimony, and denunciation, this book portrays daily life under fire, hope among the rubble, and memory as the only form of resistance. From the silence before the next bombing to the writing of the last names on a wall that no longer bleeds, Farah records-with a trembling pencil-the life of a people that others are trying to erase.
But there is also bread, poetry, children's games, and the songs of elderly women who refuse to die quietly. Written with rawness, tenderness, and courage, I, Palestine is a restrained cry. It is not just a book. It is a notebook rescued from the ruins. A final word that demands to be read. A deeply human literary work. A memory that challenges. A narrative act of justice.
But there is also bread, poetry, children's games, and the songs of elderly women who refuse to die quietly. Written with rawness, tenderness, and courage, I, Palestine is a restrained cry. It is not just a book. It is a notebook rescued from the ruins. A final word that demands to be read. A deeply human literary work. A memory that challenges. A narrative act of justice.



