
In My Mother's Footsteps
A Palestinian Refugee Returns Home
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Narrated by:
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Lameece Issaq
About this listen
1948, Jerusalem. Zakia is forced to flee the only home she’s ever known as war rips through the leafy streets and the bustling spice-filled souqs. Taking just one suitcase, Zakia thinks she’ll be able to return soon. But within weeks, she realizes she won’t be allowed back to her beloved homeland.
2007, California. Mona grew up with her mother Zakia’s memories of Palestine, imagining the muezzin’s call for prayer and the medley of church bells her mother so vividly described to her. So, when Mona gets the opportunity to teach conflict resolution in Ramallah, she also embarks on a personal pilgrimage to find her mother’s home in militarized and occupied Jerusalem.
With cherished letters from her mother who writes to Mona regularly, sharing her story of Jerusalem, Mona dreams of one day being guided by her through the winding cobblestone alleys of the Old City. Yet it is Mona who instead holds her mother’s hand as they finally visit Jerusalem together. After 59 years of exile, her mother is returning to the place she once called home – but can a lifetime of loss ever be healed?
A moving and heartbreaking journey of a daughter discovering her Palestinian roots and recovering her mother’s beloved past. It’s also an intimate and tender account of daily life for Palestinians as never seen before. Perfect for fans of The Bookseller of Kabul and The Beekeeper of Aleppo.
©2021 Mona Hajjar Halaby (P)2021 Thread, an imprint of Storyfire Ltd.Critic reviews
"Utterly heart-breaking, absorbing, and tender...will stay with you long after you finish the last page." (Christy Lefteri, best-selling author of The Beekeeper of Aleppo)
"An intimately detailed and moving account of what’s lost and found when human beings are displaced." (Sahar Mustafah, author of The Beauty of Your Face, a 2020 New York Times Notable Book)
a moving memoir
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If you asked me what a Palestinian was I’d have said a Muslim.
If you had said why did Israel have the right to occupy the region I would have said because the war councillors were ashamed by the atrocities that the Jews suffered & felt that the surviving Jews deserved a country they could call a homeland and this “ Barren” area could be cultivated to provide this.
I didn’t consider the complexity of those dispersed and ravaged people’s inability to consider their needs retrospectively with those whose homes, rights, and dignity where being disenfranchised to fulfil the birth of this new state Israel !
Proportioning blame is to presume that we think there is a solution.
I stand a little more informed of the road that brings us to this conflict of present day.
I heard the refugees heart cry in this story and thank you for your contribution to furthering my understanding
I pray for the martyrs that suffer worldwide in this manner! If your war is small or in view of the world media know I will pray for your peace.
God will judge in His righteousness.
Not in the name of God!
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Beautiful description of Palestine
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In mothers footsteps
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Highly recommend
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Really eye opening as to the complexities of the situation and injustice . Something that many of us take for granted…safety, dignity and respect as a human being - something that should be given to Palestinians too.
Details of the culture and roots of Palestinian people - learned a glimpse into the depths of the history.
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So beautiful
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Interesting. I didn’t know all this
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motherhood and loss
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My eyes were filled with tears, my laughter beamed my face, while my heart was overflowing with nostalgia. Thank you for sharing the narrative of a refugee, for sharing the tales of the Palestinian diaspora, and for enlightening the world with the truth. One of the best biographies.
Outstanding heart quenching memoir of a beautiful soul
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