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Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid [1] is a book written by 39th president of the United States Jimmy Carter.It was published by Simon & Schuster in November 2006. [2]The book is primarily based on talks, hosted by Carter during his presidency, between Menachem Begin of Israel and Anwar Sadat of Egypt that led to the Egypt–Israel peace treaty.
The book Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2006) by former president Jimmy Carter has been highly controversial and attracted a wide range of commentary. The reception of the book has itself raised further controversy, occasioning Carter's own subsequent responses to such criticism.
In a 2006 book titled “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid,” the former president drew a direct equivalence between Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank and the racially based system of ...
His 2006 book “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid” drew widespread condemnation for its inflammatory title and its one-sided portrayal of the conflict. ... Carter not only alienated many of Israel ...
Many Jews and others were angered by his 2006 book, “Palestine Peace Not Apartheid,” which they saw as painting Israel as an aggressor and being overly sympathetic to Palestinians. Carter ...
Man from Plains (originally titled He Comes in Peace) is a 2007 American documentary film written and directed by Jonathan Demme, which chronicles former President of the United States Jimmy Carter's book tour across America to publicize his book Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.
Peace efforts languished after Carter. Although the Camp David agreements called for a transition to Palestinian self-government in the West Bank and Gaza, which Israel also seized in 1967, it was never carried out. Carter was voted out of office two years later amid the Iran hostage crisis, and Mideast peace efforts languished.
In his 2010 book We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land, Carter cites Israel's unwillingness to withdraw from the occupied Palestinian territories and settlement expansion as the primary obstacle to peace in the Middle East. [483] Carter refused to be interviewed by the Atlanta Jewish Times because it called him a "parasite" in a 2015 editiorial. [484]