This book made me feel better about the guilt I was always made to feel about my distrust and disgust for Israel. The distrust garnered while listening to Netanyahu talk about Peace as he approves a new swathe of settlements; the disgust I felt as I watched on my social media feed the unreported killings of young Palestinians by heavily armoured Zionist soldiers on a weekly, or daily basis. I was made to feel - because of the revulsion I felt of a so called modern democracy that treats its non Jewish citizens as second class, or worse - like an anti-Semite. This book, written by a journalist from the same media that generally protects Israel, who had lived in Israel for six years, gave me justification to feel that what I was seeing in alternative media was not simply anti-Semitic propaganda. There is in fact a real problem with the modern dream of Zionism.
The most important thing about this book is that it's mainstream, written by a credible mainstream journalist and presented in mainstream book stores. It presents Israel in all it's warts. The history of the settlements, the racism of the Zionist dream, the asymmetric atrocities in its name. Pro Israel supporters may argue that the book lacks context, but with this I would disagree. The book is written from the point of view of a journalist living amongst it, within the very community he writes about. There is plenty of context.
The book is not simply about Israel. It is really very much about Lyon's own personal journey as a journalist and is as much about his reckonings with the Australian Israeli lobby and its unfair use of bullying to hinder fair reporting that might put Israel in a bad light. Their justification? It would make people dislike Israel.
Lyons memoirs takes us not only around Israel but also to other problematic nations around the region such as Syria, Egypt and Iran. It is as much a journalistic travelogue as it is a plea to sanity.
This is a book I hope everyone in Australia reads, mainly because Australia is possibly one of the most pro Israel nations and not surprisingly, also one of the most media controlled nations by a pro Israel lobby.
Whether you are pro Israel or anti settlements, if you are Jewish or not, this is a book every Australian must read, probably more so if you are Jewish as it is this sector of Australian society which blindly supports Israel unconditionally more than any other.
The truth needs to be read and it won't be found in the pages of a media that is threatened and strangled by the Israeli lobby of Australia, so pick this book up. It's an easy read, even enjoyable at times, but ends on a sober note that if the status quo remains, many of the friends he has left there, both Jewish and Palestinian, will suffer the consequences of decades of Zionist intransigence.
This must be read.