"Unique . . . [Roy] is humanely rather than only professionally committed in ways that are unmatched by any other non-Palestinian scholar. . . . No one has reported more accurately and scrupulously on the economic devastation attendant on the Oslo process." Edward W. Said "Sara Roy's work has played a significant, sometimes unique role, in bringing [these] issues to life. . . . Indispensable." Irene Gendzier, Professor of History, Boston University This book is the culmination of 20 years of research, fieldwork and analysis on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and the impact of Israeli occupation. Discussion of Israeli policy toward Palestinians is often regarded as a taboo subject, with the result that few people -- especially in the U.S. -- understand the origins and consequences of the conflict. Roy's book provides an indispensable context for understanding why the situation remains so intractable. The focus of Roy's work is the Gaza Strip, an area that remains consistently neglected and misunderstood despite its political centrality. Drawing on more than two thousand interviews and extensive first-hand experience, Roy chronicles the impact of Israeli occupation in Palestine over nearly a generation. Exploring the devastating consequences of socio-economic and political decline, this is a unique and powerful account of the reality of life in the West Bank and Gaza. Written by one of the world's foremost scholars of the region, it offers an unrivalled breadth of scholarship and insight.
I've read about 40 books, from both the right and the left, on the Israel-Palestine conflict over the last few years. They usually start to repeat themselves -- but this one was different.
Roy documents how Israeli policy affects the economic and social conditions in Gaza. She explores how these conditions naturally lead to resistance movements and, while she certainly does not condone terrorism, she acknowledges that violent resistance is a foreseeable consequence of historic and current Israeli policy towards the territories. Does that mean that she thinks Hamas's terrorism is justified? Absolutely not. But she does argue that this foreseeability should inform how we assess the Israeli government's decisions. In particular, Roy argues that the Likud-led Israeli government's quest to indefinitely deny Palestinian statehood -- complete with its attendant unwillingness to sacrifice economic control over Gaza even without technically "occupying" it -- has virtually guaranteed that the current unrest in Gaza will continue with devastating consequence for both sides.
That's not a super novel hypothesis, but there are a few special things going on here. For one thing, we're focused entirely on Gaza, as opposed to the West Bank. The book also takes a deep dive into economic analysis in ways that I hadn't previously appreciated. Roy exhaustively documents the economic effects of various Israeli policies designed to control Gazans, including closures, curfews, permit systems, and trade restrictions (among many other policies). She explains how Israel's economic control over Gaza continued long after Israel technically withdrew from the territory, and she maintains that the Oslo and subsequent peace processes were destined to fail so long as Israel is not required to effectively cede this economic control over the territories.
A lot of this book is also about Hamas. As a starting point, Roy documents the ways in which Israel intentionally delegitimized and subverted the Palestinian Authority (PA) in order to weaken its ability to negotiate for Palestinian statehood. She then explores, in great detail, how the PA's failure to adequately provide services to Gazans directly led to the rise of Hamas, which gained popular support solely in its capacity as a provider of social services for Gazans. She documents the fact that the vast majority of Gazans that voted for Hamas also explicitly denounced its politico-nationalist platform, and that the meager support that Hamas *does* eke out for its politico-nationalist platform has virtually only spiked after Gazans viewed Israel as unresponsive to nonviolent protest. Perhaps most damning was the well-documented and often declassified evidence making clear that, behind the scenes, Likud leaders have viewed and treated Hamas as a natural ally in its capacity as the only substantive rival to the PA.
I can't stress how important I think it is for everyone to balance their media consumption, especially on this issue. If you shade more towards the pro-Israel side of things, then this book would be good for that. It is a responsible and intellectually honest assessment of how Gaza has gotten to where it is today. The author, Sarah Roy, is an Israeli Jewish woman who largely sticks to well-documented facts that can be cited to reputable sources. I've read Chomsky and Pappe, and, while they have their benefits, it's worth noting that this book is nothing like that. This is a serious academic book that is not intended to be inflammatory. It sticks to the facts and it acknowledges its weaknesses. It seeks to bridge the gap rather than inflame polarization. It is the real deal.
FWIW, here's my bias report on myself: I'm Jewish, and I technically see myself as a liberal Zionist that supports a 2-state solution. What does that mean? It means that I believe in Israel's right to exist as a Jewish-majority state within its pre-1967 borders. Put another way, I think there are two nations that each have valid and competing claims to the same stretch of land. I believe each should nation should compromise and claim a portion for its people. As a result, although I think the Nakba is a tragedy, I do not think there should be an *unlimited* Palestinian right to return **within Israel's pre-1967 borders** because any *unlimited* right to return would effectively undermine Israel's ability to exist as a Jewish-majority state. Some other stuff on my POV: I've taken an extended trip to Israel, I have numerous friends that live there, and I feel a deep historic and religious connection and respect for that land -- and my care for this land is exactly why I've felt the need to educate myself on this topic, especially so from varied sources both from the right and the left of my own opinions. I loudly and vocally denounce Hamas's terrorism, and I acknowledge and fear the rise in anti-Semitism that I see around me. But I also recognize that pro-Palestine protest is almost entirely not anti-Semitic, and I *strongly* denounce most of Bibi's policies and can clearly see how those policies have contributed to where we are today. Israel certainly has a very real right to defend itself (albeit in accordance with international law). But going forward, Israel must also make more responsible and humane decisions, even if only for its own citizens' long-term safety.
The vast majority of my American friends do not have a balanced factual understanding of this history. I know that their opinions would differ to some extent, even if just on the margins, if they did. This would be a good book for them to read.
It is less of an introduction or overview of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict in Gaza than I expected. Instead, Sara Roy presents a compelling case for why all attempts at a peace deal since the first Intifadah were doomed to fail so long as the occupation continues. As a collection of previously published essays, the book can get rather repetitive to read with many of the points Roy made during the first Intifadah being made again by the time of the second. The book can also feel outdated as nearly twenty years have passed since the second Intifadah. My biggest problem with the book, which thankfully doesn't emerge often, is Roy's continued commitment to a two-state solution that leaves the original UN partition relatively unquestioned.
Extraordinarily good. It's really important for Americans (and others - I'm just speaking about Americans because I am one) to understand what Palestinians were asked to accept over the course of the abortive "peace process"--the ongoing theft of land, the denial of basic human rights of refugees, the loss of basic conditions of being a nation like control over one's own borders and trade--to counteract the deeply under-evidenced ideas that so many people have absorbed that Palestinians are just a naturally combative people, or that the root of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is antisemitism. Sara Roy is a great messenger, both because her research is so thorough and so excellent and because she herself is so obviously not a radical. It's deeply valuable that Roy grounds this work in her own liberal Jewish humanism and experience as the child of Holocaust survivors, and it's also valuable that throughout this book she's so often speaking as the most mainstream American creature imaginable, a free-market-advocating economist.
Reading this book 20 years after it was written and knowing what has happened since was incredibly interesting but mostly heartbreaking. The author presents a compelling case for why all attempts at a peace deal since the first intifada were doomed to fail so long as the occupation continues. It is deeply saddening to see these points being made and the warnings that were given. It is a shame the west refused to listen.