This is the story of Palestine told from the inside
Professor Rashid I. Khalidi is a Palestinian-American historian and the Edward Said professor of Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University and the co-editor of the Journal of Palestine. His previous books include Palestinian Identity, the Iron Cage, and Brokers of Deceit.
Khalidi is rigorous and lucid in assembling his argument, piling up
evidence but fair-minded to his opponents and withering about the
shortcomings of his side.
*FT*
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*
There are precious few English-language histories of Palestine, and
this is the latest, drawing on Khalidi's family archives and
experiences as an activist and peace negotiator. This cogent and
compelling Palestinian perspective is long overdue
*Guardian*
The best book to appear on the struggle for Palestine. It is
masterpiece and a milestone in modern scholarship on the
Arab-Israeli conflict ... a must read
*Avi Shlaim*
This is the first true people's history of the hundred year
struggle of the Indigenous Palestinian people, resisting and
surviving Anglo imperialism and Israeli state colonization, taking
a page from the United States' colonization of the Indigenous of
North America. In historian Rashid Khalidi's hands, this is a
beautifully written text, a tribute to the Palestinian people and a
call for justice and self-determination
*Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz author of A People's History of the United
States*
learned and clear-eyed ... a compelling summary of the long war to
deny Palestinian rights [which] exposes the blunders, misjudgments,
and willful deceptions that have denied Palestinians the rights
that most of us take for granted. Highly recommended
*Stephen Walt, Professor of International Affairs Harvard Kennedy
School*
A remarkable interweaving of three distinctive narratives. One is a
deeply researched history of the past century of struggle between
Zionist aspirations and Palestinian resistance. Newcomers and
specialists alike will learn much from reading this sweeping
account. Second is an analytical framework that places this
conflict within the frame of settler colonialism, albeit a variant
with its own special characteristics. Whether one agrees or not
with this framing, Khalidi's analysis must be taken seriously and
cannot be easily dismissed. Finally, there is the interweaving of a
personal history -- his own and that of his family and friends --
which has the effect of making this otherwise sad historical
narrative come alive with real people grappling with enormously
challenging issues, but doing so with intelligence, determination,
and a real concern for values of justice and equity. While Khalidi
is an unapologetic supporter of national rights for Palestinians,
he also recognizes, in his conclusions, that Zionism has succeeded
in the past century in creating a strong Hebrew-based national
movement in Palestine, and that the challenge for the future is for
these two peoples who claim the same land to find a way toward a
form of coexistence that is based firmly on equal rights and mutual
recognition of legitimate claims to national identity,"
*William B. Quandt, Professor Emeritus, University of Virginia*
For those who want to learn about the course of the
Israel-Palestine conflict up till now, and are open-minded: read
this book. It comes over as a brilliant synthesis of high
scholarship and experience, fair-minded despite its overtly
Palestinian leanings, and highly readable. Americans and Israelis
especially should read it, including the younger, more liberal
ones, into whose hands the fates of both of the legitimate nations
in this region must now pass. Please don't let this go on for
another hundred years
*Jacobin*
informed and passionate
*Guardian*
In this history that covers many angles and levels, Khalidi offers
a work of the greatest importance, in which he rewrites the history
of the war on Palestine from a novel colonial perspective,
providing an account whose analysis and documentation are masterful
in form, and whose organization and periodization are brilliant ...
The importance of this major work, which will occupy a prominent
place in the durable literature chronicling Palestinian history
over a full century, lies in its unapologetic and dispassionate
tone.
*al-Quds al-Arabi*
The Hundred Years' War is one of the best-researched general
surveys of 20th and early 21st century Palestinian life, but it's
also a deeply personal work. ...For a people whose history is all
but criminalized, this act of retelling is itself a form of
resistance.
*Nation*
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