*****   Al-Ahram Weekly 19 - 25 December 2002
Issue No. 617

Not kid stuff

A book by a 15-year-old girl on Palestine is causing a sharp outcry
by anti-Semitism activists in France. Amina Elbendary reports

Intellectual and journalistic circles in France -- and to an extent
in Germany -- have been up in arms protesting the publication of
15-year-old Randa Ghazy's book Rêver La Palestine [Dreaming of
Palestine]. The book, aimed at young adults, deals with the
frustrations and anger of young Palestinians living under Israeli
military occupation in the West Bank and Gaza.

The original Italian text, Sognando Palestina, was published in Italy
last March, where Ghazy lives with her Egyptian parents, Ibrahim
Ghazy and Sanaa Mohamed, and her sister and brother. The saga began
when Ghazy wrote a short story for a competition. Upon winning first
prize, she was encouraged by an Italian publishing house to develop
her ideas into a novella. The book did not cause much protest in
Italy where it has sold some 13,000 copies so far and is on its fifth
reprint. It has already been translated to French, German and
Norwegian. Officials at the Egyptian publishing house Dar Al-Shorouk
confirmed to Al-Ahram Weekly that they have bought the Arabic rights
for the book and will be publishing an Arabic translation shortly --
hopefully in time for the Cairo International Book Fair next month.

Yet last week Jewish and Zionist lobbies and pressure groups in
France and Germany protested the publication of the French
translation of the book by the French publishers Editions Flammarion
as part of a series for adolescents. The organisations have called on
the French government to order the withdrawal of the novel from
circulation. Opponents argue that the novella, in which one of the
characters blows himself up in the course of killing five Israeli
soldiers, promotes anti-Semitism and hate and glorifies Palestinian
suicide bombers who attack Israelis. They also complain that the
language in the 207-page volume is inflammatory and reject its
depiction of Israeli soldiers defiling mosques and raping Arab women.

Speaking (in Arabic) to Al-Ahram Weekly from her home near Milan,
Randa Ghazy explained that her detractors had seized upon certain
paragraphs in the book and read them out of context. "The novel talks
about youth living in Palestine, but it's not true that it promotes
violence. But there [in France] they take a single word from the book
and say it encourages young people to kill themselves and so on. They
take a word out of an entire book."

As Ghazy explains, Sognando Palestina "talks about young people
living in Palestine and what happens there. It shows for example how
they can't leave their homes [because of curfews] to go to work and
live [a normal life]. Everyone in the story loses family members; for
example, the character Ibrahim loses his father, Nidal, and his
mother and sister. Everyone has a story of someone in their family
having died in the war. Two or three of the characters join the
resistance movement. And most of the friends die in the novel." Only
Ibrahim, the main protagonist, remains alive at the end.

Although she has spent her entire life in Italy, Ghazy is
well-informed about the Palestinian cause owing to her parents'
efforts to teach her about the issue. "My father used to talk to me
about the 1973 War and my mother also talked to me about the
Arab-Israeli conflict, which encouraged me to study Palestine to
learn exactly what happened there," she explained. Watching on TV
footage of the atrocities committed against the Palestinians during
the ongoing Intifada, including the brutal murder of Mohamed
Al-Dorra, prompted her to learn more about the Palestinian question.
"After I wrote the book I got to know many Palestinians and they all
told me that it tells about things that actually happen in Palestine;
they've lived there and know what it's like," she added.

The reception of the book in Italy has been more positive than that
in France. In Italy it appears to have raised awareness among the
general public about the Palestinian cause. Ghazy has been invited to
speak on several television programmes and in public venues. Yet
despite the relatively high sales and degree of publicity it
generated, only two of Ghazy's classmates have read it. "They don't
care much about the Palestinian cause and don't know what's going on
there," she said.

The Los Angeles-based pro-Israeli Simon Wiesenthal Centre, the
Representative Council of Jewish Institutions in France and the
International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism (LICRA) have
variously asked for Flammarion to withdraw the book from circulation,
for the Internet retailers Amazon France to remove it from its Web
site, as well as for France's Interior Ministry to ban its
circulation. Several dozen people also protested outside Flammarion's
Paris offices last Tuesday.

William Goldnadel, a French lawyer and president of the group Lawyers
Without Frontiers, told The New York Times he had asked France's
interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, to take measures against the book
under a 1949 law aimed at protecting minors, which prohibits any form
of expression that promotes violence, crime and hate. He said he was
awaiting the minister's response before deciding whether to take the
case to court.

Meanwhile, Flammarion, France's third largest publishing house which
is owned by the Italian publishing group Rizzoli Corriere della Sera,
has defended the work. "At the end of the story, several of the
protagonists in the book express a rejection of war and manage to
overcome the prejudices that had locked them in personal distress,"
the publishers argued in a statement indicating that they would not
withdraw the book from circulation. An executive at Flammarion told
Reuters that Ghazy's book portrayed both extremists and moderates and
therefore did not constitute an incitement to hatred and violence.
This other side of the story has predictably been absent from Jewish
organisations' protest statements. "The novel depicts Palestinian
teenagers who fight 'bloodthirsty Jews who assassinate children and
old people, profane mosques and rape Arab women'" -- is just one case
in point.

"The publisher would like to point out, in a spirit of appeasement,
that this is a work of fiction that should not be interpreted in
ideological terms," said the Flammarion official, who asked not to be
named. "I don't think the French publishers will remove the book,
no," Ghazy added, "this is normal in France -- it often happens."

Elisa O'Neill, spokeswoman for the French division of Amazon.com told
Reuters that though the company had received protest letters it did
not plan to withdraw the book since it was not banned. French
distributors FNAC are also following the same policy.

Two concurrent developments are worth mentioning. Flammarion is also
the publisher of French writer Michel Houellebecq's controversial
book Plateforme (The Platform). French courts have recently acquitted
Houellebecq of inciting racial hatred after he called Islam "the
stupidest religion" during an interview and have rejected a bid to
ban the book La Rage et l'orgueil (Rage and Pride) by Italian author
Oriana Fallaci in which she attacks Islamic fundamentalism and
asserts that Muslims "multiply like rats".

The recent rulings could indicate that the French judiciary is
standing by a strong tradition of freedom of expression. Whether
these judicial authorities will act in a manner that is even-handed
with respect to an Arab work will soon be evident with their
decisions on the Ghazy case. Will freedom of expression be accorded
to texts perceived as anti-Israeli in the same measure that such
tolerance has been extended to texts viewed as anti-Muslim? Legal
procedures aside, another question is whether publishers and book
sellers will stand firm in the face of pressure by Zionist groups.

<http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2002/617/re11.htm>   *****

Frank Bruni, "Dreaming of Palestine, Teenager Writes a Novel," _New
York Times_ 28 December 2002,
<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/28/international/middleeast/28FPRO.html>.

"Intervista a Randa Ghazy Scrittrice: 'Gli europei indifferenti
davanti al dramma della Palestina,'"
<http://www2.varesenews.it/articoli/2002/aprile/sud/4-4randa.htm>.

*****   Titolo: Sognando Palestina
Autore: Ghazy Randa
Prezzo
Sconto 20%
EURO 7,20 (Prezzo di copertina EURO 9,00 Risparmio EURO 1,80)
Dati: 216 p.
Anno: 2002
Editore: Fabbri
Collana: Contrasti

<http://www.internetbookshop.it/ser/serdsp.asp?shop=1107&c=GHXXUAZO4YBAB>
*****

*****   Rêver la Palestine
de Randa Ghazi, Anna Buresi (Traduction)

Notre prix :  EUR 10,00  /  65,60 FF
Disponibilité : 3 à 4 jours
Livraison gratuite à partir de 20 euros (131 FF) d'achats (lire nos conditions)
Broché - 206 pages (4 novembre 2002)
Flammarion; (.) ; ISBN : 2081616262

<http://www.amazon.fr/exec/obidos/ASIN/2081616262/qid%3D1041143225/171-4756643-9718625>
*****
--
Yoshie

* Calendar of Events in Columbus:
<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>
* Anti-War Activist Resources: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/activist.html>
* Student International Forum: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osudivest.org/>

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