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  • A form of genocide

    San Antonio Express
    May 5 2012


    A form of genocide

    By Roberto Bonazzi
    Published 04:35 p.m., Thursday, May 3, 2012

    Readers must approach this deeply touching, heartbreaking memoir with
    the understanding that Jacob Nammar, a Palestinian living in San
    Antonio, has not written a political screed and while objectivity
    remains impossible for humans, he reveals that being humane and fair
    in one's viewpoint can be accomplished.

    The narrative unfolds in four distinct sections: an idyllic portrait
    of a boy's charming remembrances of family life in Jerusalem; the
    horrific onslaught by Zionist terrorists and the cruel, illegal
    removal of a population from its millennial homeland; the adaptations
    and successes of a young athlete and his family despite desperate
    circumstances; and, finally, a mature man looking back on it all.

    The first section about boyhood features loving portraits of Nammar's
    Arab father (who drove a tourist bus and met his wife in Beirut), an
    Armenian mother (whose family had been murdered by the Turks), an
    adopted half-brother from her first marriage and six siblings - all
    born in West Jerusalem and raised as Catholics. These chapters are
    replete with the sights, sounds and smells of a fabulous Holy City
    during an era when Arabs and Jews and everyone else lived peacefully
    in one community.
    All was changed by senseless destruction and ethnic cleansing, and
    Palestinians were stripped of their land, homes, possessions and
    culture (including their estimable dignity).

    Nammar found support in the Catholic schools, mastered several
    languages, and became a top swimmer once he joined the YMCA. He was
    among the basketball stars (and only Palestinian) on the national
    team. But as more Jews flooded into Israel, he was cut from the team
    and siblings were fired from jobs, because `you do not belong here,'
    said the Jewish immigrants and Israeli officials - exiling them from
    their birth city, where his extended family had been prominent
    landowners and businessmen. They lost everything, and Jacob decided to
    leave at age 23.

    `I was never vengeful against Jews,' he writes, but `I was against the
    racist policies directed toward us. The Jewish religion has many
    remarkable qualities, but few of them were reflected in Israel's
    militaristic society.'

    His `last experiences of Israel were sour. It was a state that didn't
    afford me a voice, economic independence, or a future. It had torn
    apart my home, my family, and my sense of a cohesive self,' and it had
    dispossessed a once healthy society. He `could not live in a state
    that had been created by terror and illegal confiscation of my home,
    land, and personal freedom.'

    If we perceive reality without political agendas and strictly from the
    perspective of human rights, it becomes impossible not to view the
    decimation of Palestinian society as equivalent to the Nazi Holocaust
    or the Turkish genocide of the Armenians (just to name two of the
    obvious fits of military madness in recent history). Yet since we are
    inculcated by racism and propaganda in every society, it is easier
    always to believe that we are innocent bystanders.

    In the `Epilogue,' Nammar writes of his `process of healing and
    self-liberation that brought a renewed sense of hope.' He also relates
    his mother's last years with them. `Mama had endured the Armenian
    genocide, the Palestinian ethnic cleansing, a Zionist prison zone,
    poverty, dispossession of her home and land, and the death of her
    soulmate. But she never lost her love for life, or hope, or her faith
    in God.'

    Roberto Bonazzi's Poetic Diversity column runs occasionally in S.A.
    Life. Reach him at [email protected].


    http://www.mysanantonio.com/entertainment/books/article/A-form-of-genocide-3532844.php

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