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Tomorrow, When Apricots Come

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  • Tomorrow, When Apricots Come

    TOMORROW, WHEN APRICOTS COME

    The Economist
    http://www.economist.com/node/16690879?story_id=16690879&fsrc=rss
    July 29 2010

    Crossing Mandelbaum Gate: Coming of Age Between the Arabs and
    Israelis, 1956-1978. By Kai Bird. Simon & Schuster; 448 pages; $30
    and £17.99. Buy from Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk

    QUITE a few unfortunates have been bitten by the pernicious Jerusalem
    bug. Unless dealt with firmly at an early stage, the infection can lead
    to too much time spent fussing over the seemingly impossible problem
    of how to split the land that has Jerusalem as its capital between
    two peoples, Israeli and Palestinian, who each know themselves to be
    the rightful owner. Kai Bird, infected as a small boy, clearly tried
    to take remedial measures (living in south Asia, producing several
    biographies to do with atomic warfare) but has now given in, writing a
    book of childhood memories embedded in chunks of historical narrative.

    With so much injustice in the world, why does the injustice done to
    the Palestinians still rank so high? Partly, of course, because it
    contributes to Islamic anger and, consequently, terrorism. But also
    because of the cruelty of the irony: Palestinians are plain unlucky
    to have Jews as adversaries, a people who have suffered a more awful
    tragedy. For Israelis, as Mr Bird remarks, "the Shoah [the Holocaust]
    always trumps the Nakba [the catastrophe, or dispossession]". The
    author himself, though deeply sympathetic to the Palestinian cause,
    is aware through his wife Susan, the daughter of Holocaust survivors,
    that there is another side.

    He was too little to have many direct memories of Jerusalem, where
    his father was America's vice-consul for a couple of years in the
    mid-1950s. He recollects being driven each day from his family's
    house in the Palestinian-Jordanian east through the Mandelbaum Gate,
    a grim, heavily guarded passageway in no-man's-land, to his school in
    the Jewish-Israeli west. He remembers the ringing of bells, the call
    to prayer and the braying of donkeys in the street; his best friend,
    Dani, had a Palestinian father and a Jewish mother.

    But mainly he draws on his parents' letters, particularly his
    mother's. They came to Jerusalem as innocents from Oregon but the
    unfairness hit them and soon she was writing "I now find it difficult
    to understand the refusal of the Israelis to regard themselves as the
    aggressors". They had several aristocratic, cosmopolitan Palestinian
    friends. But many Palestinians resented the American government,
    not in those days because of its tight links to Israel, but because
    of the support, together with fat CIA brown envelopes, that it gave
    to their ruler at the time, Jordan's King Hussein.

    After Jerusalem, the family moved to Saudi Arabia and, later, Egypt.

    Mr Bird is amusing about the Aramco oil company reservation in
    Dhahran in the 1960s, where the all-American oil families lived
    a comfortable colonial life in a desert camp as exclusive as any
    white gated suburb (though minus teenagers and the elderly), their
    main hobby distilling forbidden alcohol. Diplomats came low in
    the pecking order, inferior to oil officials with their excellent
    access to Saudi royals and way behind the CIA, kingmakers in those
    cold-war days. But the Birds did make friends with Salem bin Laden,
    Osama's witty, free-spending eldest brother who died in 1988 flying
    his plane into a power line. "No one in the family," Salem remarked,
    "understands why Osama became so religious."

    Later Mr Bird recounts the terrifying story of his wife's mother. A
    beautiful teenage Austrian Jew, Helma escaped from Graz to spend the
    war hiding from her persecutors in Yugoslavia and Italy, working for a
    time for the Italian resistance. She never talked of her tribulations
    but Susan somehow absorbed her fears. At different points in his story,
    Mr Bird tells of two visits to old homes. Arab-Armenian friends went
    back to their family house in west Jerusalem; Helma took Susan to
    see her old home in Graz. Both the Armenians and Helma were allowed
    to see what they had lost. But that was it.

    Mourning all the opportunities missed through the years, Mr Bird
    looks, without silly optimism, to a post-Zionist era when a secular
    Hebrew republic is open to all, when victimhood is pushed into the
    past and territorial compromise achieved between Hebrew-speakers and
    Arabic-speakers. Improbable, but then the solution to the Arab-Israeli
    stalemate has long been startlingly simple--if only there were trust
    and goodwill.




    From: A. Papazian
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