Freedom and Despair: Notes from the South Hebron Hills

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Product Details
Price
$26.40
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
Pages
224
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.4 X 0.6 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780226566658

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About the Author
David Shulman is professor emeritus at the Hebrew University. He is a long-time activist in Ta'ayush, an Israeli peace group working in the occupied Palestinian territories. He is the author of Tamil: A Biography, More Than Real: A History of the Imagination in South India, and Dark Hope: Working for Peace in Israel and Palestine, the last published by the University of Chicago Press. He is a regular contributor to the New York Review of Books.
Reviews
"Artful yet often passionately angry. . . . An earnest and valuable jeremiad insisting, reasonably, that ethical behavior is imperative when parsing the nearly impossible Israeli-Palestinian conundrum."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"[Shulman] sees injustice perpetuated by his neighbors, he sees his government defend the indefensible, and he knows that he must act, speak, and fight for better. His righteous sensibilities carry throughout Freedom and Despair, a persuasive, moving, and crucially needed account of resistance in these contentious times."-- "Foreword"
"For fifteen years, David Shulman, a renowned scholar of South Asian languages and religion has been involved with Ta'ayush, whose name is the Arabic word for coexistence. The group has been protesting in the South Hebron Hills, in Area C of the West Bank, where some 300,000 Palestinians, most of them farmers and shepherds, live, in about thirty villages. . . Freedom and Despair is an account of his experiences there and an attempt to understand the deep antipathy that drives the violence and destruction in the region."-- "New York Review of Books"
"Shulman is a master storyteller. . . . His reflections are a thought-provoking and touching ode to activism and action--even when such activism is not, or cannot be, ultimately victorious. Freedom and Despair celebrates activism in the face of crushing odds."-- "Foreign Policy"
"Shulman eloquently and sensitively captures the beauty and the horror of the occupied West Bank. He is deeply attuned to the particularities and the paradoxes of the place."-- "Jewish Currents"
"Poetic and filled with empathy. . . Compelling."-- "The Jerusalem Post"
"An important new book by Shulman, who has been trying to help Palestinians resist cruelty, abuse, and land theft by settlers and the military in the South Hebron hills for decades . . . [this is a] powerful moral interrogation of himself and others."-- "Hussein Ibish, Bloomberg"
"No brief review of Freedom and Despair can adequately capture the richness of Shulman's thinking and writing in the book. Page after page of this gripping account of Ta'ayush's work sings of the hard-won rewards of a dogged persistence. . . . [t is the] barrier-busting expansiveness of heart and mind, that utterly disarming generosity of spirit as the very basis of non-violent action, that Shulman explores so beautifully in this book. Human rights practitioners should demand that those responsible for their organization's next big planning exercise immerse themselves in a copy well before the first PowerPoint slide is crafted, and before that oft-times rather unthinkingly worshipped word 'strategy' is spoken."-- "Journal of Human Rights Practice"
"With the skills of a novelist, Shulman effortlessly shifts from vivid thumbnail sketches of individuals to beautifully rendered depictions of the stark landscape to relentless self-interrogation. For all Americans in the new Trump era who are asking themselves, 'What can I do and how do I deal with my despair?'--Freedom and Despair is essential."-- "Gabriel Levin, author of The Maltese Dreambook"
"Beautifully written and emphatic . . . . essential reading for anyone who wants--or hopes, however darkly--to grasp the lay of this punished land."--The Nation

"From 2002 to 2006, Shulman did some of the harder work of his country's peace movement: clashing with police and settlers to deliver food and medical supplies to Palestinian villages. In his excellent record of these years, Dark Hope, Shulman vividly describes the small bands of Palestinians who live in caves in the Hebron Hills."--Slate-- "Praise for Dark Hope"
"Shulman's spell-binding narrative offers a captivating introduction to philosophical ideas extracted from the least likely of places--the remote and rugged hills of southern Hebron. Freedom and Despair is a meticulous soul-searching effort to articulate meanings that have captured the attention of philosophers throughout history: evil, distress, freedom, conscience, truth, and the mysterious state of being acquired by daring to say no to injustice."-- "Sari Nusseibeh, professor of philosophy and former president, Al-Quds University, Jerusalem"