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Preview of Ramzy Baroud's 'My Father Was a Freedom
Fighter'
By Stephen Lendman
ccun.org, November 6, 2009
Ramzy Baroud is a veteran Palestinian-American journalist and
former Al-Jazeera producer. He also taught Mass Communication at Australia's
Curtin University of Technology, is a frequent speaker, a regular media
guest, and is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Palestine Chronicle, a
leading resource for information on Israel/Palestine and much more.
He's also written numerous articles, commentaries, short stories, and
authored several books, including "The Second Intifada: A Chronicle of a
People's Struggle," and his latest and topic of this introductory review,
"My Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story." Baroud knows
his subject well, having been born and raised in a Gaza refugee camp where
he saw Israeli soldiers regularly oppress, harass, humiliate, and attack
young Palestinians like himself in an attempt to crush their spirit and
break their will to resist, to no avail no matter how hard they tried.
What follows is a snapshot of Baroud's forthcoming book titled, "My Father
was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story." As distinguished Palestinian
author, historian, activist and founder and president of the London-based
Palestine Land Society, Salman Abu Sitta, explained in the forward:
Ramzy is Mohammed Baroud's son, a heroic "freedom fighter, (and himself) a
gifted writer (who) eloquently unearthed the recent history of Beit Daras"
village, chronicled his family's struggle in exile, and recounted their
determination to survive and endure under siege and assaults that continue
to this day. Many books covered the early years, but most were in
Arabic. Baroud's is one of the few in English "about the life, depopulation
and (literal) struggle for survival of the people of a Palestinian village
in southern Palestine." In spanning over seven decades of history and
survivor recollections, "it stands out as an unblemished depiction of their
plight" as only those who experienced it can describe. As a freedom
fighter's son, Baroud's book is proof of a people's persistence to survive,
endure, and ultimately prevail in their historic quest for liberation,
because of heroic men like father and son Baroud who'll accept no less. Nor
should anyone wanting everyone to be free, especially the long-suffering
Palestinians and oppressed peoples everywhere. Born in Beit Daras,
Mohammed Baroud's beloved village was conquered, leveled, and erased, except
from the memory he took to his grave. One of seven children, he was born
during the 1938 turmoil that erupted a decade later in merciless war that
destroyed Beit Daras, 530 other villages, 11 urban neighborhoods in cities
like Tel-Aviv, Haifa and Jerusalem, and slaughtered or displaced about
800,000 Palestinians with tactics reminiscent of Nazi WW II ruthlessness.
Mohammed and his family survived, were exiled to the Gaza Nuseirat
refugee camp, dreamed always of going home, as a young man joined the
Palestinian unit of the Egyptian army, later fought heroically for the
Palestine Liberation Army (PLA) in the Six Day War, was wounded, and was
horrified that historic Palestine was gone, its people captives on their own
land, forced to endure Israeli occupation viciousness, that, for Gazans, is
in the world's largest open-air prison. Throughout his life, he
endured decades of struggle, conflict, violence, occupation, oppression,
what Edward Said called "a slow death," shattered hopes, and the
incalculable horror of it all. It took its toll. Yet he raised six children,
used his resources to educate them, believed occupation and poverty killed
his young son Anwar, and then his wife Zarefah at age 42. In his
early 50s, he grew frail, needed two canes to walk, was weakened by various
ailments by the late 1980s, and became increasingly disillusioned and
impoverished. Ill, in pain, and incapacitated, he was dying. The end
came on March 18, 2008. Thousands turned out for his funeral, oppressed
people like himself who shared his vision, struggles, and plight. "The
resilient (freedom) fighter had finished the battle for a well-deserved
moment of peace" while those left behind continue his courageous struggle,
his son Ramzy one of them through his heroic work the way many others are
equally committed and will be until Palestine is again free. (The
book is available for pre-orders at Amazon.com) - Stephen
Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago. Contact him at:
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
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