First
off, I am so glad to have the experience of reading this book with such
wonderful and thoughtful people, what luck! In
Search of Fatima is very
interesting and sentimental for me, because my dad, Mahdi is a displaced Palestinian,
and I go there a lot. Because of my heritage, I have been rather well schooled
on Palestinian history, and if you guys like I would be glad to bring in some books
on the subject (of which I have lots). Now let’s get down to business. My
family is from Tulkarm; the village where Fatima is from, which the Ottoman Turks
sort of upgraded into what is called a qaimmaqamiyya (Town) when they were in
power. I am proud to say that my family were fellaheen (peasants)- because of
this, I am only familiar with how the village folk lived at this time in Palestinian
history, and I have been finding the new, upper-class perspective of Ghada
quite interesting. Although I have
passed the remains of villas where families like hers lived, I personally have
not met anyone from the Karmi family (but my dad has). In the book, Ghada talks
about how her mother has mimicked the westernized Egyptian superstars in her
clothing and hairstyle- this is interesting, because my mother (who has a
degree in Near Eastern studies, so she is credible) informs me that the goal of
the Egyptian film industry was to duplicate Hollywood, so Ghada’s mother was basically
mimicking western culture. Another very interesting thing about this book for
me is that Ghada and her family viewed the European Jews before Al-Nakba (The Catastrophe; what Palestinians call Israeli independence, and the expulsion of thousands of
Palestinians) as foreigners- which they were, and completely different from the
Arab Jews with which the Palestinians had always lived side-by-side.
Jumping
to a whole different theme, Ghada’s mother’s reminds me a lot of my Great Aunt
Najwa, and her sister, my grandmother- with her really oily Palestinian cooking
and love of all things new and western. Much Like Ghada, my father and his
siblings where packed off to Tulkarm for holidays, even though my grandparents
had become educated, urban city dwellers- this is because they wanted the
children to understand village life, and be in nature.
It’s
amazing to me that the word “terrorist” was first used to describe the Jewish
Israeli groups Irgun and Stern Gang. Today, when most people picture a
terrorist, it is a Muslim Arab. The World sure can flip itself around.
Thanks Amin, loved all the insightful background stories and info. I will probably be asking you for more :)
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