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تداعيات في الترجمة | يوسف أبو لوز
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قتلة الفلسطينيين يبكون على فلسطين | إبراهيم الزبيدي
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إبراهيم الزبيدي: قتلة الفلسطينيين يبكون على فلسطين
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Attempts to cast Said as the consummate New York intellectual miss the point that his milieu was one of global, and specifically Palestinian, anticolonial struggle.
Places of Mind: A Life of Edward Said
Timothy Brennan
On February 2, 1977, Palestinian poet Rashid Hussein died in his New York apartment. Hussein had been born forty-one years earlier in Musmus, a town not far from Nazareth. Politics for Hussein, Edward Said remembered, “lost its impersonality and its cruel demagogic spirit.” Hussein, Said wrote of his dear friend, “simply asked that you remember the search for real answers, and never give it up, never be seduced by mere arrangements.” Sharply critical of his own society and its rulers he had a map of the Middle East on his wall with “thought forbidden here” scrawled across it in Arabic Hussein was also a partisan of the Third World. “I am from Asia,” he pronounced in an early poem, “The l
Transformations in Palestinian Literature
Leo Tolstoy prefaced his
Anna Karenina with the following statement: Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. Palestinians today are unlucky enough to be counted among the world s leading families of multifarious misery, the Zionist project having transformed them, time and again, into refugees in far-flung places-and also into refugees on the land of Palestine in which they were born.
Some of them have had to live through the experience of exile and alienation, of refugee camps and endless waiting. Others have been obliged to live the lives of impossible citizenship, since the Arab who lives on the Land of Israel can never be the equal of an Israeli citizen. And, ever since the Oslo Agreement, and despite the media s ability to hold forth at length on the virtues of the Peace Process, the process itself has offered Palestinians only unprecedented varieties of misery. This evidently has been fu