Laila El-Haddad takes us into the intense life and world of a busy Palestinian journalist who is both covering the story of Gaza and living it, with her young son. El-Haddad was in Gaza City in 2005, watching hopefully as the Israelis prepared a troop withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. She covered the January 2006 Palestinian electionsâjudged âfree and fairâ by international monitors. But then, she watched aghast as the Israeli government, backed by the Bush administration, moved in to punish Gazaâs 1.5 million people for the way they voted by throwing a tough siege around the Strip.
Gaza Mom provides a wealth of detail (and some charming photographs) that inform readers about the daily lives of Gazaâs Palestinians, along with El-Haddadâs reporting and political analysis.
What People Are Saying
âWritten by a heart-wrenched mother, Gaza Mom is nevertheless matter of fact and more than occasionally bitterly funny. The tales of El-Haddadâs day-to-day sufferings as a resident in a conflict-laden area are tough. In 2005, writing from Gaza City, she muses, âYou know things ainât right when a child has become so accustomed to warplanes that he confuses them with birds.â Sometimes there are sonic booms that shake the house. Neighborhood children are shot in the face. Besides the horrors of war and the joys of parenting, El-Haddad also talks about her struggle to maintain a life as an independent woman within a culture that can often be restrictive. While conducting serious phone interviews with hot-button political figures, sheâs breastfeeding her child or cleaning up a mess. When she touches on this juggling act in her writing, she conveys an impressive sense of ease, but also reveals, naturally, some pride in all that she has managed. El-Haddadâs sweet anecdotes about parenting are enjoyable to read. The firsthand accounts of life in a city under siege, with a rapidly growing population and seemingly endless tensions, are gripping. This book directly points at the self-destructiveness of any kind of war. El-Haddadâs stories cut past bias and plainly show how stupid and brutal it really is out there.â M.J. Corey, make/shift: feminisms in motion
âAs I write this, I have never met Laila al-Haddad, but yet I have known her for yearsâfirst through her blog Raising Yousef, her journalism, and by her handle @Gazamom on Twitter. It was through Lailaâs pioneering blog that I made my first âvisitsâ to Gazaâa place I have never physically been precisely because of the situation she describes. The journey she chronicles in this book is intensely personal, and yet it is one Palestinians, exiles and wandering souls all over the world will recognize. The realities of life in Gaza are hard. But Lailaâs razor-sharp observations, tenderness, and humor make her throughout this bookâa wonderful traveling companion. Itâs a journey I highly recommend.â Ali Abunimah, founder of Electronic Intifada
âLaila El-Haddad writes with passion and uncompromising honesty revealing a personal narrative that encapsulates a collective Palestinian experience. Making no pretense at objectivity, Laila challenges the limits of the genre to create for the reader an experience of total immersion beyond his/her comfort zone and shattering the complacency of simply ânot knowing.â Occupation and exile, siege and incursions, oppression and dehumanization, the tragedy of the Palestinian experience unfolds in the fullness of its human expression through Lailaâs intense and captivating revelations. Her sense of self and identity, sometimes presented with critical distance and irony, remains the dominant vehicle of expression in the multiplicity of Lailaâs roles as mother, daughter, wife, journalist, blogger, activistâor simply a Gazan Palestinian grappling with her plight as with the fate of her nation.â Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinian parliamentarian and member, PLO Executive Committee
âThrough the pulse of the people in a besieged ghetto, and through her voice as a young Palestinian woman navigating the delicate trenches of motherhood, Laila El-Haddadâs writing illuminates Gazaâs inextinguishable culture of struggle and determination for a better world. Her assessment of the personal and collective impacts of Israelâs occupation policyâfrom trudging through the endless bureaucratic labyrinths of identification papers and travel restrictions, to her everyday conversations with people picking up the pieces of their lives after a bombingâand the piercing analysis of her own personal journey has created a text not often found in current literature on Palestine. It is exactly the kind of documentation that is needed in these times of dehumanization of the Palestinian people.â Nora Barrows-Friedman, author of In Our Power
âGaza Mom is humanly moving and politically explosive, vividly illuminating the cruelties of everyday life for Palestinians living under occupation for decades. Laila El-Haddad writes with disciplined passion and conveys a powerful sense of authenticity. This book should become required reading for Americans who have yet to comprehend the prison camp conditions that prevail in Gaza.â Richard Falk, author of Palestine: The Legitimacy of Hope
âAs far as I am concerned, should be required reading in every classroom in America. Through her personal journey over a six-year period beginning in 2004, Laila El-Haddad opens a crucial and much needed window into the life of her people, into a daily reality that has to be lived defensively, whether in Gaza, Cairo, or the United States. She helps us navigate and experience a world far beyond our own and unknown to us, of what it means to own âa passport that allows no passage.â Perhaps most critically, this book does what few do: it allows us to understand Palestinians as we understand ourselves and in so doing affirms our common humanity. An extraordinary, eloquent work.â Sara Roy, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University
âAmericans are often blissfully unaware of the human impact of US foreign policy, because we rarely listen to the voices of those who must live with those consequences on a daily basis. Nowhere is this more evident than in American perceptions of the Palestinians, whose cruel treatment continues to be ignored or dismissed in the so-called Land of the Free. We treat them as abstractions, rather than as human beings with children, parents, husbands, or wives, bound together by enduring dreams and many disappointments. Laila El-Haddadâs brings the realities of Palestinian existence to life with wit, anger, passion, love, and most of all keen eye for the cruel absurdities of life under occupation. Read it, reflect, and reconsider.â Stephen Walt, professor, Harvard UniversityÂ
About the Author
Laila El-Haddad is the coeditor of Gaza Unsilenced (2015), coauthor of the award-winning ethnographic cookbook The Gaza Kitchen: A Palestinian Culinary Journey (2013), and the author of Gaza Mom: Palestine, Politics, Parenting, and Everything In Between (2010). She is a talented blogger, journalist, political analyst, social activist, and a policy advisor for Al-Shabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network. Born in Gaza, El-Haddad currently lives in Columbia, Maryland with her husband and their three children.