Description of On the Border.
Available for the first time in English, this award-winning memoir chronicles
a radical political education in a time and place charged with idealism and danger.
One of the most renowned figures of the Israeli Left, Michel is known commonly
by his nom de guerre Mikado. A Polish Frenchman and a rabbis son,
he went to Jerusalem as a young man to study the Talmud. Warschawski recounts
how he became radicalized, and muses on the vibrancy of border cultures that welcome
and engage with strangerswhere languages exchange phrases and people trade
foods.
Warschawskis involvement in radical politics led to inspiring alliances
with Jews, Muslims, Christians, and Marxists. Yet as the border lines hardened
and Mikado became a movement leader, he became targeted by the Shin Bet, Israels
notorious intelligence agents, who eventually arrested him. Incarcerated and
interrogated for 20 days, Mikado gives his readers an insiders view of
the psychological and political pressures that Shin Bet brought to bear, even
on Jews, and never lets you forget the severity of treatment that his Palestinian
colleagues faced.
Throughout his story, Warschawski remains something of a scholar, a philosopher
schooled in Talmudic reasoning, ready to argue, always searching for the larger
meaning of justice and decency. The lessons he draws from his experience on
the border between Israel and Palestine should be instructive for all the places
where cultures rub against each other for better and worse. Warschawskis
perspective offers hope for the rich cultural and political exchange that these
places offer their inhabitants, and hope indeed for his adopted land.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part 1 The Desert Interlude: The Discourse About the Border
1 Border Cities
2 David Becomes Goliath
3 Preaching in the Wilderness
4 Socialism Without Borders
5 Against the Current
6 Smugglers
7 Encounters
8 Prisoners and Banished
Part 2 Openings Interlude: The Two Rabbis
9 Earthquake
10 "There is a Limit!"
11 Together
12 No-Man's Land
13 The Trial
14 The Settler of the Left
Part 3 The Internal Borders Interlude: M. Danker and M. Shemesh
15 Separation at Last?
16 Jews and Israelis
17 The Periphery Becomes the Center
18 Hallel's Prayer
19 Beyond Judea and Israel
20 Homecomings
21 Border Identities
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Praise
"Profoundly moving, beautifully written, intellectually penetrating, On The Border … is an outstanding political memoir of the generation of sixties radicals. Warschawski is the most eloquent and effective anti-colonialist leader Israel has produced."
—International Socialist Review
"Michel Warschawski, 'Mikado' as he is universally known to Israelis
and Palestinians, is a powerful voice that deserves to be heard in this country.
His courageous critique—in On the Border—of the forces he believes
are systematically destroying Israel, even as they harm the Palestinians, should
be carefully considered by all those who want peace and justice, or who care for
the future of the Israeli and Palestinian peoples."
—Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies, Columbia University
"On the Border is the passionate cry from the heart of Israeli anti-Zionist
activist and lover of Israel, Michel Warschawki. It is a memoir and a history
and a voice crying in the wilderness all at once, beautifully written and compellingly
argued, a clarion call for a new movement of justice, brotherhood, and peace
to save both the Jewish People and its intimate Others, the Palestinians. Telling
the thrilling story of Matzpen (and later the Alternative Information Center),
the tiny saving remnant of Israelis who ...
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Reviews
The Journal of the Lincoln Heights Literary Society
Book Review by Allison
Burnett, April 7, 2005
Before the United States declared its global war on terror, no subject could
more quickly inflame and divide a gathering of the politically aware than the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Today, it's a tie. Hardly surprising, when you
consider how much the two conflicts have in common. After all, both involve
questions of national security, religious fundamentalism, terrorism, colonialism,
and the struggle for basic human rights, and more recently, since the invasion
of Iraq, the two conflicts are entwined to the point of being almost indistinguishable.
The best evidence that the real or imagined security needs of Israel lay near
the heart of the neo-conservatives' drive to topple Saddam Hussein is the simple
fact that Israel is almost never mentioned by U.S. policymakers in any discussion
of the war. It's almost as though Israel did not exist. When, last year, Israel
was cited, by General Anthony Zinni, as one of the reasons for the war, he was
roundly attacked as an anti-Semite and the discussion moved on.
For this reason, Michel Warschawski's book On The Border could not have
come at a better time for the American reader, because its bold and honest examination
of the dangerous schisms that the Palestinian question has opened in Israeli
...
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