Skip to product information
1 of 1

My Little Library NZ

The Hundred Years' War on Palestine

The Hundred Years' War on Palestine

Regular price $35.00 NZD
Regular price Sale price $35.00 NZD
Sale Sold out

A History of Settler Colonial Conquest and Resistance

This is the story of Palestine told from the inside.

'Riveting and original ... a work enriched by solid scholarship, vivid personal experience, and acute appreciation of the concerns and aspirations of the contending parties in this deeply unequal conflict ' - Noam Chomsky

The twentieth century for Palestine and the Palestinians has been a century of denial: denial of statehood, denial of nationhood and denial of history. The Hundred Years War on Palestine is Rashid Khalidi's powerful response. Drawing on his family archives, he reclaims the fundamental right of any people: to narrate their history on their own terms.

Beginning in the final days of the Ottoman Empire, Khalidi reveals nascent Palestinian nationalism and the broad recognition by the early Zionists of the colonial nature of their project. These ideas and their echoes defend Nakba - the Palestinian term for the establishment of the state of Israel - the cession of the West Bank and Gaza to Jordan and Egypt, the Six Day War and the occupation. Moving through these critical moments, Khalidi interweaves the voices of journalists, poets and resistance leaders with his own accounts as a child of a UN official and a resident of Beirut during the 1982 seige. The result is a profoundly moving account of a hundred-year-long war of occupation, dispossession and colonialisation.
ISBN:  9781781259344
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
View full details

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
W
Walid
A Must Read

This is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the Palestinian experience and the deeper historical roots of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. This book beautifully blends scholarly rigour and personal narrative that highlights the Palestinian struggle with distinct clarity. I loved how Khalidi was able to weave his family's first-hand experiences, alongside meticulous historical analysis.