Completed reading,
'A Short History Of The Gaza Strip'
by #AnneIrfan.
This book is a concise yet devastating account of how one of the world’s most densely populated places became, over time, a space of near-permanent catastrophe. Written with clarity and restraint, the book avoids polemic while still making unmistakably clear that the present condition in #Gaza, often described as a 'hell on earth', is neither accidental nor inevitable, but the result of layered political failures and coercive power structures!
Anne Irfan traces Gaza’s transformation from a historically connected Mediterranean society into a sealed enclave shaped by colonial borders, war, and prolonged siege. What emerges most powerfully is not a portrait of inherent violence, but of a population repeatedly denied normal civic life. Gaza’s people appear in this history as merchants, teachers, laborers, artists, and refugees, who consistently sought stability, dignity, and the ordinary freedoms associated with modern life.
The book is particularly strong in showing how Gazans have been wronged from multiple directions. External military control, shifting regional politics, and international indifference form one layer of oppression. Another comes from internal political forces that have claimed to act in the name of resistance or religion, yet have narrowed social space and subordinated civilian well-being to ideology and power. Anne Irfan is careful not to conflate faith with politics, but she does not shy away from showing how militant Islamist movements and entrenched political elites alike have contributed to Gaza’s suffering by suppressing pluralism, silencing dissent, and prioritizing control over care.
What makes the book so unsettling is its insistence on continuity, which highlights the fact that today’s humanitarian disaster is not a rupture, but the culmination of decades of containment, misrule, and moral abdication. Gaza is portrayed less as a battlefield than as a pressure chamber, where ordinary people are crushed between geopolitics and absolutist politics.
In just a few chapters, Anne Irfan succeeds in restoring historical depth and human complexity to a place too often reduced to headlines.
A Short History of the Gaza Strip is not only an essential primer; it is a quiet indictment of how peace-loving civilians can be abandoned by both ideology and power, and left to endure the unendurable.
#Israel . #Palestine . #Hamas . #BenjaminNetanyahu . #YasserArafat