A reason not to despair: few players have navigated the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with more integrity than Sari Nusseibeh.

AuthorHammer, Joshua
PositionOnce Upon a Country: A Palestinian Life - Book review

Once Upon a Country: A Palestinian Life

by Sari Nusseibeh, with Anthony David Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 560 pp.

At the height of the second Palestinian intifada five years ago, Sari Nusseibeh was a welcome--and lonely--voice of moderation. As the president of Al-Quds University and Yasser Arafat's administrator in East Jerusalem, Nusseibeh used his influential position as a bully pulpit to denounce the wave of suicide bombings that Palestinian militants were carrying out with quotidian regularity across the Green Line. Nusseibeh didn't exonerate the Israelis in the conflict; he sharply criticized Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and blamed Israeli revanchists for pushing Palestinians to despair through the relentless colonization of the West Bank. But his articulate denunciations of Palestinian nihilism were what most defined him--and what drew the ire of the "fanatics" who were setting the agenda. In a memorable interview with New Yorker editor David Remnick in 2002, Nusseibeh talked of the Palestinians' need to "resurrect the spirit of Christ" and restrain the impulse to respond to Israeli attacks and humiliation with more bloodshed. "They have to realize that an act of violence does not serve their interest," he said--an opinion that was, to say the least, not widely shared among Palestinians at the time.

Nusseibeh has been trying to find a way out of the Middle Eastern wilderness for decades, and that often frustrating, sometimes hopeful journey is chronicled in this absorbing new memoir. At one level Once Upon a Country: A Palestinian Life serves as a useful primer on the history of Israeli-Palestinian relations--a tale of wars, uprisings, progress, and dashed hopes--told with the immediacy and sometimes gossipy tone of an insider. But it's also the story of an Arab intellectual drawn against his better nature into the combative world of political activism. Nusseibeh was present, in body or in spirit, at every step of the conflict (he was studying at Oxford when the Six-Day War broke out, but returned days later to find Jerusalem transformed), and he came to play a critical role as a negotiatior for a two-state solution. How Nusseibeh got there, and how he continued the search for common ground in the face of repeated setbacks and appalling violence, is at the heart of this inspiring book.

Nusseibeh was destined to play a key role in shaping the future of his people. The scion of one of the most venerable clans in Jerusalem, Nusseibeh was...

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