VivaciousGPSMapsLanguagesLuggageVideoVivaciousTravel - Booking
Middle East
Home

Maps

Middle East

From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map: Essays

 
 
From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map: Essays
View larger imageEmail a friend

 
 
 
 
 

From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map: Essays

In his final book, completed just before his death, Edward W. Said offers impassioned pleas for the beleaguered Palestinian cause from one of its most eloquent spokesmen. These essays, which originally appeared in Cairo’s Al-Ahram Weekly, London’s Al-Hayat, and the London Review of Books, take us from the Oslo Accords through the U.S. led invasion of Iraq, and present information and perspectives too rarely visible in America.

Said is unyielding in his call for truth and justice. He insists on truth about Israel's role as occupier and its treatment of the Palestinians. He pleads for new avenues of communication between progressive elements in Israel and Palestine. And he is equally forceful in his condemnation of Arab failures and the need for real leadership in the Arab world.

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
Only 4 left in stock, order soon!
List Price: $14.95
Our Price: $11.96 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $2.99 (19%)

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Product Details:
Author: Edward W. Said
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Vintage
Publication Date: August 09, 2005
Language: English
ISBN: 1400076714
Package Length: 7.9 inches
Package Width: 5.2 inches
Package Height: 0.9 inches
Package Weight: 0.6 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 12 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

5incredibly insightful and important essays  Dec 08, 2008
This book is a last collection of essays on events of the times. It is critical and important and to the point. Dr Said so clearly and importantly talks about how bad the events have become. These are timely and still important today, and will always be. I highly recomment these brilliant essays, as informative, imaginative and very insightful and thought provoking by one of the most important and humble intellectuals in history.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

5History has no mercy  Apr 26, 2006
Edward W. Said's basic principles are that 'human beings make history' and that 'reliable information is the greatest enemy of oppression and secret justice.'
His comments written between 2000 and 2003 are hammerings on the same nails: the Israel-Palestine conflict, the US state of the union and the Arab world.

For the Israel-Palestine conflict he sees no military solution. He castigates relentlessly Israel's discriminatory policies against the native Palestinians, based on religious and ethnic grounds. Its policies forbid native people to own or keep land. It violates basic human rights by killing civilians and stone-throwers. But, he also condemns severily suicide-bombings.
His analysis of the Oslo and Camp David agreements, as well as the roadmap, shows that they are disastrous for the Palestinians. However, his own solution - one secular state of jews and Palestinians - will never be accepted, because demographic trends favour one party.
Said is extremely harsh for the Palestinian authorities, which he calls autocratic, corrupt and hypocrite (only interested in their own power).

Said calls the US a country of lawyers, not laws. Its election system is a 'frightening antiquated, inequitable and undemocratic hodgepodge of rules and regulations designed to keep the poor and the disadvantaged out.' In order to maintain the disproportionalities in wealth (2 % of the population owns 80 % of the total wealth), the majority of the population must be kept under control ideologically through the media and / or be kept out of the system.
The US defense budget attains monstrous heights while 40 million citizens have no health insurance.
For Said, the US is a lethal combination of money and power, controlled by the great corporations and lobbying groups.
The US Middle East policy, e.g. Iraq - an old-fashioned colonial occupation -, is based on the security of Israel and the control of plentiful supplies of inexpensive oil.

The Arab world is in an abysmal state. Most countries wallow in corruption, have undemocratic rules and a fatally flawed education system that still has not faced up to the realities of a secular world. The result is illiteracy, poverty, unemployment, unproductivity, and greater degrees of tyranny and mafia-style rule.

The book ends with a glimmer of hope for an independent Palestinian state.

Said's proud, remarkably free and vehement secular voice will be tragically missed, not only by the Palestinians.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5Edward Said, we miss you already  Feb 19, 2006
This collection of essays ends with Said's death, and the brutal ceremony of the Iraq war, including Rachel Corrie's crushing by an armored Israeli bulldozer.

Damn right Said's battle with cancer was tenacious because he had something to say, whereas Ariel Sharon stuffed himself with food into a coma, having nothing to say except the language of the gun.

It would indeed take a Said to express our disgust with the way the American media made a second, Jew-on-Jew Shoah out of the removal of Israeli settlers from their lavish but illegal dwellings last year, while remaining completely silent about fifty years of Palestinian homelessness and dispossession.

It would take Ed Said to put into simple words, accessible to tbe busy layperson going to work, his instinctive disgust with the huge cash awards these settlers received for violating the law of their own country and international law, while daily in Gaza, people struggle to survive.

Said is the kid who in current events class flips the bird at the propaganda film. Here, the film is the narrative of the simple, honest, passionate, sexy Jew who becomes a way for effete and disconnected Americans to exhibit their own simplicity, honesty, and way with the ladies: a sort of Modernist gesture. The problem is that this gesture dispossessed a people unnamed because multiple: Christian, Moslem, Druze and so forth, who had the bad taste to live in the Jewish "homeland".

In my own experience, the Judaic PR blitz started in 1966 when we were assembled to watch a film about the foundation of the state of Israel.

The problem is that any reaction to this propaganda immediately becomes anti-Semitism UNLESS you read and study the facts.

Today, and thanks I believe to Said's work, Stephen Spielberg's Munich is somewhat fair to the Palestinians and his hero sickens at what he has to do. Said, ever since he was diagnosed ten years ago with leukemia, struggled to put the cause of his people before America. Guy deserves a post-humous Nobel prize.

As if Josephus narrative controls after 2000 years, in a world where dispossession, primarily for economic reasons, is the norm.

Said repeatedly returns to the central obscenity, which is the Ersatz Gesture of a completely bogus tough-minded compassion, in which a state (that can neither write a constitution or draw its own map) earns the rewards of American guilt and American religious insanity.

Said remains in this book someone willing to "speak truth to power", whether this is the combined power of the US and Israel, or the much less powerful PLO and Arab governments, whose flaws Said enumerates repeatedly.

But we need Edward to speak to us about Hamas, and how it is that only a religious party can speak, anymore, for The Wretched of the Earth.

Has it become a species of controlled speech, political pornography, to speak up for people who are too often called "losers"?

2 of 3 found the following review helpful:

4Objectiveness with agenda  Jan 23, 2006
Said takes the middle ground between Chomsky and Finkelstein, between idealism and antagonism to Jews. Said, however, eventually drifted from intellectual rejectionism to antiimperialism toward Palestinian nationalism, and this book definitiely, if understandably, leans toward Muslims. Objectivity and lack of passions being unavailable in this field of study, I recommend an honest advocate of another side, such as Obadiah Shoher's Samson Blinded: A Machiavellian Perspective on the Middle East Conflict. Shoher, at least, doesn't idealize America and Israel.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5An under-represented viewpoint and a must-read  Jan 08, 2006
On September 25th, 2003, the Palestinian people lost their most outspoken, influential, and, perhaps, only voice in the United States when Edward Wadie Said lost his battle with leukemia.

I have, regrettably, only recently discovered Professor Said's work so it would be foolish to think that I could possibly draft a fitting obituary. However, the timing and significance of Said's death cannot be overlooked. Within the last three years of Said's life, the world has witnessed the beginning of the Palestinian al-Aqsa intifada, the attacks of September 11th, 2001, and the subsequent US invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq. It is in this context that the essays within From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map have been written.

From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map is a collection of essays written by Mr. Said for the periodicals Al-Ahram, Al-Hayat, and the London Review of Books. The book is aptly split into three sections:

* The Second Intifada Begins, Clinton's Failure
* September 11, The War on Terror, the West Bank and Gaza Reinvaded
* Israel, Iraq, and the United States


Because this book is a collection of essays, the reader enjoys the added benefit of being able to view the tumultuous events of the past three years as a collection of snapshots rather than as one larger portrait. For example, in the essay, "Propaganda and War", Said expresses optimism regarding plans by the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) to launch a massive public relations campaign on behalf of the Palestinian people:

"I was pleased to learn from ADC president Ziad Asali that his organization is about to embark on an unprecedented public information campaign in the mass media to redress the balance and present the Palestinians as human beings, as people who have had years and years of military occupation and are still fighting back. This effort has never before been made in the United States: there have been fifty years of silence, which is about to broken."

Unfortunately, "Propaganda and War" was published in Al-Hayat on September 9th, 2001, only two days before those plans were surely scrapped.

Said's willingness to break with the conventional wisdom on the topic of Palestinian autonomy has made him quite a controversial figure. From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map is no different. While his criticism of US foreign policy and leadership in the War on Terror are certainly no surprise, it is his scathing indictments of Arab and Palestinian leadership that may be most surprising to a Western reader. At a time when many in the Western world are trying to paint the world, and especially the Middle East, as black and white, Said offers a more complex view. As the world wrestles with the legacy of Yasir Arafat, for example, Said complains in November 2001 that Arafat is neither really a terrorist nor a visionary, but is simply an ineffective leader more concerned with his own grip on power than with the plight of his people:

"In short, there is no reason at all why Yasir Arafat and his ever-present coterie should grovel at American feet. My suggestion is that Arafat should stop his world tours and come back to his people (who keep reminding him that they no longer really support what he does: only 17 percent say they back what he is doing) and respond to their needs as a real leader must... He must lead the nonviolent protest marches on a daily, if not hourly, basis and not let a group of foreign volunteers do our work for us. It is a self-sacrificing spirit of human and moral solidarity with his people that Arafat's leadership so fatally lacks. I am afraid that this terrible absence has now almost completely marginalized him and his ill-fated and ineffective Authority..."

Said is also unflinching in his appraisal of Arab leadership throughout the crisis. In his early 2002 essay, "The Screw Turns, Again", Said offers the following:

"As for the Arab nonresponse, that has exceeded in disgrace and shamefulness the already abysmally low standards set by our governments for the past fifty years. Such a callous silence, such a stance of servility and incompetence in facing the United States and Israel, is as astonishing and unacceptable in its own way as what Sharon and Bush are about. Are the Arab leaders so fearful of offending the United States that they are willing to accept not only Palestinian humiliation but their own as well? And for what? Simply to be allowed to go on with corruption, mediocrity, and oppression..."

Some of the arguments that Said presents can seem repetitive at times but it does not damage the overall value of his unique perspective as a Palestinian-American. In fact, this repetition serves to, not only illustrate the author's exasperation, but also to remind the reader of the brutal occupation at a time when much of the West appears to have forgotten.

Said's essays, while controversial, present a perspective not often considered. At the very least, the essays contained in From Oslo to Iraq, are sure to spark heated debate and conversation in an arena sorely lacking alternate views and new energy. At most, these essays are a call to action; a call that must be answered.

 
 
You may also like ...
Garmin nüvi 350 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator
Garmin nüvi 350 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator
List Price: $329.99
Our Price: $160.49
You Save: $169.50 (51%)
Add to Cart
Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition
Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition
List Price: $27.99
Our Price: $18.47
You Save: $9.52 (34%)
Add to Cart
Garmin nuvi 200 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator
Garmin nuvi 200 3.5-Inch Portable GPS Navigator
List Price: $419.98
Our Price: $139.99
You Save: $279.99 (67%)
Add to Cart