Too Many Enemies: The Palestinian Experience in Lebanon

دانلود کتاب Too Many Enemies: The Palestinian Experience in Lebanon

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کتاب دشمنان بسیار زیاد: تجربه فلسطینی ها در لبنان نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب دشمنان بسیار زیاد: تجربه فلسطینی ها در لبنان بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
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نام کتاب : Too Many Enemies: The Palestinian Experience in Lebanon
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : دشمنان بسیار زیاد: تجربه فلسطینی ها در لبنان
سری :
نویسندگان :
ناشر : Zed Books
سال نشر : 1994
تعداد صفحات : 383
ISBN (شابک) : 1856490564 , 9781856490566
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 11 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Contents
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Beginnings
Necessity and problems of Palestinian oral history
Notes
1. Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon A Historical/Political Overview
Israel and Lebanon
The United States: present/absent superpower
Lebanon as ‘host*
The regional framework
The Palestinian Resistance movement: external/internal factors
Notes
The First Decade: Remembering Palestine, Learning Lebanon
The founding of Shateela
The setting
The camp as habitat
Work, iacome, living standards
Neighbours
Internal potttks
‘The educational revolution’
Health: conditions, services, indigenous practices
Social stractve
Village customs
Shateela expuds
Notes
3. The 1960s, Rule of the Deuxième Bureau
The stole moves to
Transfer attempts
Arms and dandestinity
Plastic sandals and certificates
Popular culture
The Iasi days of the Deuxième Bureau
Notes
4. ‘Days of the Revolution’, 1969-82
Flags and euphoria
The new authority
Autonomy: trial and error
External attacks and internal clashes
BaUding a ’revolutionary environment’
Changes in popular culture
Families aad the Resistance movement
A separate economy
Farewell to the feda\'yeea
Notes
5. The Massacre
Notes
6. Lebanon in the Wake of the 1982 Invasion
He *Paz Americana*
Israel cots its losses
* At last there is a victor aad a vanquished*
The Syrian come-back
The Lebanese Resistance movement
Convergences and re-alignments
Notes
7. Amal Movement and the Shi’i Awakening
Historical backgrouad
‘A people oppressed in their own country’
Migration, urbanization, politicization
Mosa Sadr and Shi’ite sectarian mobilization
Amal Movement and the Civil War of 1975/6
Amal Movement from 1978 to 1985
Amal and the Palestinians
Drawing the battle lines
Notes
8. Endangered Species: Palestinians in Lebanon after 1982
Piecemeal pogrom
Hie PLO after 1982
National institutions: repression and survival
Cantk», dandesthdty, collaboration
Notes
9. The Siege of Ramadan (19 May to 22 June 1985)
‘It was a war of annihilation!*
‘What hick to have the chance to kill a Palestinian!\'
‘My son still hasn\'t reappeared\'
‘It was like the Paris Commue*
‘We didn\'t let the sbebab lack anything\'
‘We had no medical station’
The gun is written on our foreheads\'
T didn\'t accept being the \"woman in the base*\"
Their plan was to reach the Mosque and cot Shateela in half
The fall of Da’ouq
252 Living the Sieges Fighters and non-fighters
Organizing daily life
T cooked for all the sbebabV
After the siege
There are many enemies*
‘Aid now what?*
Notes
10. The One-Month Siege (29 May to 27 June 1986)
‘We began the operation of statistics*
‘Our mothers are stragglers*
‘I didn\'t tell them anything’
‘My biggest problem was the children’
‘We had to keep running\'
They forgot that there was a war outside*
‘Many more leaders got killed this time*
The camp is our only country\'
Notes
11. The Five-Month Siege (25 November 1986 to 6 April 1987)
Portrait of Emira
Umm Mohammad and her neighbours
‘We still don\'t have a saucepan\'
How the siege started
\'I didn’t worry about my children because everything is from God*
Digging for survival
A front-line family
‘Amal’s basic strategy was to destroy the camp’
la the Red Crescent hospital
*... there were people who had nothing\'
The drama of bread
Outside Shateeia
Internal politics
The death of ’All Abo Towq
‘It’s true Shateela was destroyed, but we were under the nibble*
Fighter in an advanced base
Children on the street
\'Hide us, mother!\'
A woman cadre
‘One would rather drink salty water than lose a child*
He bunting of a food lorry
The last days of the siege
Conclusion
Notes
Epilogue
Another kind of siege
The Ta’ef Accords and the Gulf War
Shateela people
Notes
Appendix: A Brief History of the Third Siege
An account by Abu Mujahed, Chairman of the Popular Committee
Notes
Select Bibliography
Other useful sources
List of Abbreviations
Linguistic Glossary
Political Glossary
Index




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