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“The historian in me takes the long view of the conflict,” says Gorenberg, and 1948 — the war that began all Arab-Israeli wars — is a logical starting date: the moment Israel was created ...
Both individuals lived in the same house in al-Ramla, with the Khairi family fleeing their home during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and the Eshkenazi family moving into their vacated house. The book follows the family's histories in the context of the wider conflict, leading up to the meeting of Bashir and Dalia.
Israeli–Palestinian conflict books (1 C, 62 P) Pages in category "Books about the Arab–Israeli conflict" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
The institute's library is located at the institute's headquarters in Beirut. It is the largest in the Arab world specializing in Palestinian affairs, the Arab–Israeli conflict, and Judaica, with more than 40,000 volumes, 400 current periodicals, 5,000 reels of film plus newspapers, maps, documents, and a large collection of private papers.
[1] [2] The book also contains hundreds of photographs, several maps, and appendices. [2] The book also traces the Hebraization of Palestinian place names. [1] As Ann M. Lesch notes, "In the Jerusalem district alone, twenty per cent of the 38 destroyed villages now have Hebrew names: Kasla became Kesalon; Sar'a is Tzor'a; Saris is Shoresh; Suba ...
Pages in category "Israeli–Palestinian conflict books" ... 1948: A History of the First Arab–Israeli War; A. A Day in the Life of Abed Salama; All That Remains ...
The making of the Arab-Israeli conflict 1947 - 1951 (Reprinted ed.). London: Tauris. ISBN 978-1-85043-819-9. Sela, Avraham (2012-02-01). The Decline of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: Middle East Politics and the Quest for Regional Order. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-1939-8.
Mark Lewis, writing for The New York Times Book Review, writes that "The Case for Peace is faithful to the title: Dershowitz says Yasser Arafat's death makes peace possible, if the Palestinians accept a state based in Gaza and 'nearly all of the West Bank,' with a division of greater Jerusalem."