Palestine 1936
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Palestine 1936
Palestine 1936
"Kesslerβs history is key to understanding the current situation between Israelis and Palestinians." βBooklist, Starred Review Palestine 1936 chronicles the 1936β1939 Great Arab Revolt, a seminal but forgotten uprising a decade before Israelβs birth that has cast the trajectory for the Middle East conflict ever since.
2024 Winner, Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, The Sami Rohr Jewish Literary Institute. One of the Wall Street Journal's 10 Best Books of 2023. Named a Booklist Editors' Choice in History: Adult Books, 2023. Finalist, Writing Based on Archival Material: National Jewish Book Awards. Finalist, Sophie Brody Medal, American Library Association.
"[Kessler] has done an exceptional job and opened new vistas on troubles past and present." β Wall Street Journal
"Kesslerβs history is key to understanding the current situation between Israelis and Palestinians." β Booklist, Starred Review
A gripping, profoundly human, yet even-handed narrative of the origins of the Middle East conflict, with enduring resonance and relevance for our time.
In spring 1936, the Holy Land erupted in a rebellion that targeted both the local Jewish community and the British Mandate authorities that for two decades had midwifed the Zionist project. The Great Arab Revolt would last three years, cost thousands of livesβJewish, British, and Arabβand cast the trajectory for the Middle East conflict ever since. Yet incredibly, no history of this seminal, formative first βIntifadaβ has ever been published for a general audience.
The 1936β1939 revolt was the crucible in which Palestinian identity coalesced, uniting rival families, city and country, rich and poor in a single struggle for independence. Yet the rebellion would ultimately turn on itself, shredding the social fabric, sidelining pragmatists in favour of extremists, and propelling waves of refugees from their homes. British forcesβ aggressive counterinsurgency took care of the rest, finally quashing the uprising on the eve of World War II. The revolt to end Zionism had instead crushed the Arabs themselves, leaving them crippled in facing the Jewsβ own drive for statehood a decade later.
To the Jews, the insurgency would leave a very different legacy. It was then that Zionist leaders began to abandon illusions over Arab acquiescence, to face the unnerving prospect that fulfilling their dream of sovereignty might mean forever clinging to the sword. The revolt saw thousands of Jews trained and armed by Britainβthe worldβs supreme military powerβturning their ramshackle guard units into the seed of a formidable Jewish army. And it was then, amid carnage in Palestine and the Hitler menace in Europe, that portentous words like βpartitionβ and βJewish stateβ first appeared on the international diplomatic agenda.
This is the story of two national movements and the first sustained confrontation between them. The rebellion was Arab, but the Zionist counter-rebellionβthe Jewsβ military, economic, and psychological transformationβis a vital, overlooked element in the chronicle of how Palestine became Israel.
Today, eight decades on, the revoltβs legacy endures. Hamasβs armed wing and rockets carry the name of the fighter-preacher whose death sparked the 1936 rebellion. When Israel builds security barriers, sets up checkpoints, or razes homes, it is evoking laws and methods inherited from its British predecessor. And when Washington promotes a βtwo-state solution,β it is invoking a plan with roots in this same pivotal period.
Based on extensive archival research on three continents and in three languages, Palestine 1936 is the origin story of the worldβs most intractable conflict, but it is also more than that. In Oren Kesslerβs engaging, journalistic voice, it reveals world-changing events through extraordinary individuals on all sides: their loves and their hatreds, their deepest fears and profoundest hopes.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781538193709
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 07 January 2025
Country: United States
Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Illustration: 20 b-w illustration
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 22.0mm
Width: 152.0mm
Height: 229.0mm
Weight: 472g
Pages: 334
About the Author
Oren Kessler is a journalist and political analyst based in Tel Aviv. He has served as deputy director for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, Middle East research fellow at the Henry Jackson Society in London, Arab affairs correspondent for the Jerusalem Post, and an editor and translator at Haaretz English edition.
Raised in Rochester, New York, and Tel Aviv, he holds a BA in history from the University of Toronto and an MA in diplomacy and conflict studies from Reichman University (IDC Herzliya).
Kesslerβs work has appeared in media outlets such as Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and Politico. Palestine 1936, his first book, was named winner of the 2024 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and among the ten best books of 2023 by the Wall Street Journal.
Visit his website here: orenkessler.com.
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