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Living on Stolen Land

Par : Eric Lencher
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231312177
  • EAN9798231312177
  • Date de parution11/08/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

Living on Stolen Land is a fearless exposé of one of the most entrenched and controversial injustices of our time-the ongoing Israeli settler-colonial project in Palestine. Eric Lenchner strips away the myths, propaganda, and political spin to reveal the truth behind Israel's settlements: they are not outliers, they are the cornerstone of a system built on dispossession. From the drawing rooms of early Zionist leaders to the bulldozers carving out hilltop outposts, Lenchner traces how a movement marketed as liberation became a machinery of apartheid.
This is not the sanitized history of peace talks and "disputed territories"-it is the unflinching record of how villages were razed, families uprooted, and a native people systematically erased from their own land. With forensic precision, the book dismantles the slogans-"a land without a people, " "security needs, " "shared Jerusalem"-that have masked decades of expansion and ethnic cleansing. Each chapter pulls back the curtain on a different layer of the occupation: the ideological zeal of Gush Emunim, the racial hierarchies imposed on Mizrahi and Ethiopian Jews, the role of Western governments and Christian Zionists in bankrolling settlement growth, the settler militias who act with impunity, and the vast legal-bureaucratic web designed to make theft look lawful.
The human cost is laid bare-Palestinian farmers cut off from their fields, children growing up behind walls and checkpoints, and refugees still holding the keys to homes long since demolished. But Living on Stolen Land is more than an account of theft-it is also a testament to resistance. Lenchner amplifies Palestinian voices and honors the steadfastness (sumud) of communities who refuse to be erased.
He draws on the work of Israeli dissidents, anti-Zionist Jews, and historians of conscience who refuse to let the official narrative go unchallenged. Their stories show that the occupation is not inevitable-it is sustained by choices, and it can be ended by choices. This is not a neutral book, nor does it pretend to be. It names the occupation for what it is: colonialism enforced by military power and shielded by global complicity.
It demands that readers confront uncomfortable truths-that there is no meaningful difference between "Israel proper" and the settlements; that the so-called two-state solution has been a diplomatic mirage; and that peace without justice will always be a false peace. Meticulously researched yet written with urgency and moral clarity, Living on Stolen Land will challenge what you thought you knew about the Israel-Palestine question.
It is a call to break the silence, reject the myths, and stand with those whose very existence is an act of defiance. For anyone who believes in human rights, this book is essential reading-because stolen land cannot be the foundation for freedom, and history will not absolve the world's indifference.
Living on Stolen Land is a fearless exposé of one of the most entrenched and controversial injustices of our time-the ongoing Israeli settler-colonial project in Palestine. Eric Lenchner strips away the myths, propaganda, and political spin to reveal the truth behind Israel's settlements: they are not outliers, they are the cornerstone of a system built on dispossession. From the drawing rooms of early Zionist leaders to the bulldozers carving out hilltop outposts, Lenchner traces how a movement marketed as liberation became a machinery of apartheid.
This is not the sanitized history of peace talks and "disputed territories"-it is the unflinching record of how villages were razed, families uprooted, and a native people systematically erased from their own land. With forensic precision, the book dismantles the slogans-"a land without a people, " "security needs, " "shared Jerusalem"-that have masked decades of expansion and ethnic cleansing. Each chapter pulls back the curtain on a different layer of the occupation: the ideological zeal of Gush Emunim, the racial hierarchies imposed on Mizrahi and Ethiopian Jews, the role of Western governments and Christian Zionists in bankrolling settlement growth, the settler militias who act with impunity, and the vast legal-bureaucratic web designed to make theft look lawful.
The human cost is laid bare-Palestinian farmers cut off from their fields, children growing up behind walls and checkpoints, and refugees still holding the keys to homes long since demolished. But Living on Stolen Land is more than an account of theft-it is also a testament to resistance. Lenchner amplifies Palestinian voices and honors the steadfastness (sumud) of communities who refuse to be erased.
He draws on the work of Israeli dissidents, anti-Zionist Jews, and historians of conscience who refuse to let the official narrative go unchallenged. Their stories show that the occupation is not inevitable-it is sustained by choices, and it can be ended by choices. This is not a neutral book, nor does it pretend to be. It names the occupation for what it is: colonialism enforced by military power and shielded by global complicity.
It demands that readers confront uncomfortable truths-that there is no meaningful difference between "Israel proper" and the settlements; that the so-called two-state solution has been a diplomatic mirage; and that peace without justice will always be a false peace. Meticulously researched yet written with urgency and moral clarity, Living on Stolen Land will challenge what you thought you knew about the Israel-Palestine question.
It is a call to break the silence, reject the myths, and stand with those whose very existence is an act of defiance. For anyone who believes in human rights, this book is essential reading-because stolen land cannot be the foundation for freedom, and history will not absolve the world's indifference.