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From the
Publisher:
"Her memoir is the story of a fascinating woman . . . If it is a truism to
say that no one endures such a catastrophe as that of 1948 with anything
except great difficulty, it is certainly not always true that special
individuals can make something humanly rich and interesting out of such dire
stuff." - Edward Said
Very few diaspora Palestinians have written memoirs as intimate as Ghada
Karmi's frank account of her life: her childhood in Palestine, the flight to
Britain after the catastrophe of 1948, and coming of age in the coffee-bars
of Golders Green, the middle-class Jewish quarter in North London. A gentle
humor describes the bizarre and sometimes tense realities that mask her life
in 'Little Tel Aviv' and, later, her struggle, like that of many other women
in the late fifties, to get a university grant to study medicine.
The intimacy of the book is set against the continuing crisis in the Middle
East. In her case it is not an account of physical hardships and abuse. Her
immediate family was lucky. But as she grew older, memories of the lost
homeland began to haunt her. Her anger grows at the self-deception of most
Israelis, who justify the appalling actions of their governments by
pretending that what is taking place isn't actually happening.
In Search of Fatima reminds us that the only crime the Palestinians
committed was to be born in Palestine. Its author, a committed physician, is
desperate for the wounds to heal, but grim-visaged History refuses to
oblige.
Ghada Karmi was born in Jerusalem and trained as a doctor of medicine at
Bristol University. She established the first British-Palestinian medical
charity in 1972 and was an Associate Fellow at the Royal Institute for
International Affairs. Her previous books include The Ethnic Health
Factfile and Jerusalem Today. |