What a strange book/experience/travelogue/political commentary/indictment....
Imagine your favorite Bill Bryson (or Tim Moore) book about walking (or traveling) in a familiar land, randomly meeting people, and chronicling unusual stories. But, no, that's not the right place to start, because Bryson and Moore are masters of self-deprecation, relentlessly poking fun at themselves, their surroundings, and their experiences. It's all about the laugh, and it's great fun. And, sure, there are a handful of yucks here, but this is too close to investigative journalism, too political, and - far more importantly - too sad, if not pathetic, to sustain any semblance of humor. Here the topic is Israel, Palestine, Antisemitism, and the bizarre forces percolating beneath some (but by no means all) of the tension in the Middle East.
It's a modern, unique, and, in some ways, refreshing take on the unlikelihood of achieving peace and resolving any number of ongoing conflicts between Israel, Jews, Palestine, and the Arab community. But it's much more. And - and this may be the most compelling aspect of the book - it appears to conclude at at very different place from where it began. My sense - and I concede my perspective may not be authoritative - was that the book began as an ex-pat/ex-insider's travelogue of his journey to where was once home but is no more. By the end, however, it read like (just another) expose of long-simmering, intractable, perverse, and, sadly inexplicable, elitist European antisemitism.
I don't expect that Tenebom's book is going to change anyone's opinion. The stereotypical self-hating Jew/Israeli, no doubt, is immune to this. I doubt that Arabs, generally, Palestinians, specifically, or anti-Israeli-inclined (or ardently antisemitic) Europeans will be reading the book. And I'm guessing that, no matter how many examples Tenenbom articulates of Arabs/Palestinians, having been educated (at no charge) at Israel's universities, spewing venom at their "occupiers," while European-supported Arab/Muslim institutions (from entire cities to holy sites) exclude and suppress Jews will change anyone's minds. The positions - and the hatred - runs too deep....
Tenebom's style of reporting or journalism is somewhere between unconventional, unethical (in that he consistently misrepresents his status, among other things), and anecdotal to meet any professional standards, but that's not his concern. As a result, however, it's hard to take him seriously, which is a shame, because, by the end, in his bizarre way, he assembles a case - of European, and particularly, German, funding and fueling of not only antisemitism, but strange and irrational pro-Palestinian priorities and misinformation - that's as depressing as it is compelling.
I'd be remiss if I didn't mention that, assuming he's sane, Tenebom has guts. Part of me thinks the book should be sold with a bright orange sticker that reads: Kids, don't try this at home! It's quite an undertaking/enterprise/project, but it's just too depressing for me to recommend without hesitation....