Wednesday, February 27, 2013

"[…] when you lose your furniture, household items, you can replace them. But with his books, it was really as if he lost the woman he loved most in his life..." — Rasha Barghouti


From: Al Jazeera English

"As war came to Jerusalem in May 1948, Palestinian Omar Saleh Barghouti fled his home, leaving behind hundreds of his books, including years worth of his diaries. He would never see them again.
      Unknown to him, as the battle over the creation of the Jewish state raged, teams of Israeli librarians and soldiers were collecting tens of thousands of books from Palestinian homes in Jerusalem, Haifa, Jaffa and elsewhere -- including 256 from Barghouti's home in the Katamon neighbourhood.
     For Israel, the effort was a way to preserve books which would eventually be returned to their owners. But for the Palestinians, it was theft.
     Omar's granddaughter Rasha Barghouti remembers his stories about his books.
     "He was a lawyer who had an office on Jaffa Street," she told AFP. "He used to write a lot — his diaries, the history of Palestine, of Palestinian families, the Jordanian regime, the tribal law."
     After two years in exile in Egypt, Barghouti moved to the West Bank city of Ramallah, reaching out to Jewish friends in what was now Israel to try and get his books back."
— Agence France-Presse, (via globalpost)
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