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Hope is a Woman’s Name by Amal Elsana Alh’Jooj book review: A feminist’s battle for peace

This autobiography by the Israeli-born human rights activist powerfully conveys the inner life fuelling her achievements

July 21, 2022 14:42
Hope Front cover only FINAL
1 min read

Amal means “hope” in Arabic. As in English, it is a girl’s name.

In this autobiography by the Israeli-born human rights activist, it refers, not to the newborn child, but to her parents’ hope that subsequent children might be boys.

Five boys follow, joining Amal’s seven sisters: 13 siblings sleeping nights with the extended family under a camelhair tent where, from the age of five, Amal spent her days herding sheep in the Negev desert.

Born in 1972 inside a Bedouin settlement, she describes herself as “a Palestinian Arab, a citizen of the State of Israel and a Bedouin in culture. The sky is the limit for the Arab and Bedouin society in Israel and for Bedouin Women in particular”.

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