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July 2009

6 x 9 in.
205 pp., 6 photos, 3 maps, 1 chart

ISBN: 978-0-292-71931-6
$45.00, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $30.15

 
 
 
     

A Young Palestinian's Diary, 1941-1945
The Life of Sāmī ‘Amr

Translated, annotated, and with an introduction by Kimberly Katz
Foreword by Salim Tamari

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"An important contribution to the field. . . . Unlike most of the few published diaries and memoirs of Palestinians from that period, it does not bring the voice of an upper-class nobleman or PLO leader; it brings a voice that comes to us from the margins of Palestinian society. It provides the reader with information on a variety of daily life topics such as prices, relations between members of different religions, love, social life, and entertainment and constitutes a valuable source on Palestinian social and cultural history."

—Issam Nassar, Associate Professor of History, Illinois State University

Writing in his late teens and early twenties, Sāmī ‘Amr gave his diary an apt subtitle: The Battle of Life, encapsulating both the political climate of Palestine in the waning years of the British Mandate as well as the contrasting joys and troubles of family life. Now translated from the Arabic, Sāmī's diary represents a rare artifact of turbulent change in the Middle East.

Written over four years, these ruminations of a young man from Hebron brim with revelations about daily life against a backdrop of tremendous transition. Describing the public and the private, the modern and the traditional, Sāmī muses on relationships, his station in life, and other universal experiences while sharing numerous details about a pivotal moment in Palestine's modern history. Making these never-before-published reflections available in translation, Kimberly Katz also provides illuminating context for Sāmī's words, laying out biographical details of Sāmī, who kept his diary private for close to sixty years. One of a limited number of Palestinian diaries available to English-language readers, the diary of Sāmī ‘Amr bridges significant chasms in our understanding of Middle Eastern, and particularly Palestinian, history.

Kimberly Katz is Associate Professor of Middle East History at Towson University in Towson, Maryland. She is also the author of Jordanian Jerusalem: Holy Places and National Spaces.

Jamal and Rania Daniel Series in Contemporary History, Politics, Culture, and Religion of the Levant

 Of Related Interest Rejwan, The Last Jews in Baghdad
Tergeman, Daughter of Damascus

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