Reviews:
"In
2004, Hilda Reilly became aware of how little she knew about the Palestinian
people, apart from the images of conflict that are constantly in the
news. She was shocked by a Glasgow University Media Group report which
showed that, despite the constant coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, most people had little understanding of the basic issues.
Many, for example, thought that the occupied territories were occupied
by the Palestinians. The majority had no idea where Palestinian refugees
were from - some suggested Afghanistan, Iraq or Kosovo. Most thought
that the Palestinians were the aggressors, trying to grab Israeli land,
and that Israel's military action was a response to Palestinian attack.
Reilly decided
to spend some time in Palestine to try to provide a human perspective
for the bewildered news consumer. She volunteered to work at An-Najah
University in Nablus, helping to edit texts for a website, and contacted
the London branch of the International Solidarity Movement (which provides
non-violent support for Palestinians) for orientation and briefing.
She then
set off for Nablus, starting her journey in Jerusalem's Old City, visiting
the sites of Christ's route to Calvary. Reilly, raised as a Catholic,
had become a non-believer, but she is moved by the Holy Land and feels
that its ancient sites should be treated with reverence. This helps
her understand how even the secular Jews that she is surprised to find
living in Israeli settlements have a deep sense of belonging to this
ancient land of the biblical stories of their childhood.
Most of Prickly
Pears of Palestine describes Reilly's time living among the students
and their families and friends. She experiences a constant stream of
generous hospitality and uses these opportunities to ask people, young
and old, what they think of suicide bombers, of Hamas and Fatah, and
of Yasser Arafat, who died while she was living in the occupied territories.
The book is well worth reading for the answers to these questions alone,
which Reilly relays simply and straightforwardly, giving us insight
into the feelings and thinking of a wide range of Palestinians.
Young people
tell her openly of how they admire Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein.
They know that Hussein was a cruel dictator, but they honour anyone
who stands up to the Americans, whose unconditional support for Israel
they hold responsible for their predicament. Blair is not liked or respected
any more than Bush. The balance of opinion is critical of Fatah and
Arafat because so much has been promised and so little achieved. There
are discussions with young women students who are supporters of Hamas
that make the outcome of the Palestinian election completely predictable.
Reilly is surprised to find no anti-Semitism, but a strong sense of
anger about the endless shootings, killings and imprisonment that are
the everyday experience of all families.
Anxious to
investigate alternative points of view, Reilly encounters some American
Christian Zionists and finds them quite loveable, although their fervour
and ignorance is truly frightening. But her contact with Jewish Israelis
helps emphasise the Israeli yearning for peace, the fear the suicide
bombings have caused and the reasons why Jews are drawn to live in Israel.
Prickly Pears of Palestine gives a human face to the terrible suffering
caused by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and makes thought-provoking
reading for all who are concerned."
Rt Hon Clare Short
"At
last a book that acknowledges that there are two sides to every story.
Hilda manages to present a fair and accurate picture of an oppressed
nation that has been so often demonised in Western Media.
At the end of the day, her story shows that behind the headlines, the
Palestinians are no different from any other nation. Hilda does not
patronise nor pass judgement, she simply observes. The power of the
story lies in the ordinariness of Palestinian life; they are ordinary
people trying to lead an ordinary life under extraordinary conditions.
It is a timely piece that goes a long way to explaining how the world
has arrived at what is euphemistically called clash of civilisations.
A must read for anyone wanting to understand the extraordinary juncture
of history at which we find ourselves." Waseem Mahmood OBE
"Reillys
writing is a powerful example of sympathy combined with dispassion"
Amazon
"Prickly
Pears of Palestine is a moving and vivid introduction to the realities
of life in Palestine/Israel." Bruce Kent
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