Moushabeck, Hannah. Homeland: My Father Dreams of Palestine. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2023.
My grandparents fled the USSR in the 1920s. My father was six years old. My mother was six months old. I grew up hearing stories of the revolution. Of soldiers, dressed in red, shooting men in front of my father, who as a result refused to wear anything red – not even the tie I once gave him for Christmas. He even returned a dictionary – which he’d said he wanted – because the cover was red. I grew up hearing about the soldiers who imprisoned my maternal grandfather and only released him after much pleading. He had to find his way home – in the middle of the night and in the middle of the winter – dressed only in long underwear. It was a miracle he survived. Never did I think of Russia as my homeland. Governments, I knew, could change and flight might be the only safe choice. So I shouldn’t get too attached to where I lived.
But Russia was home to my ancestors for only 130 years. What is it like when a land has been your home for thousands of years?
Homeland – illustrated by Reem Madooh – tells the story of a little girl listening to her father talk about Palestine. About how – as a boy – he visited his grandparents in the Old City of Jerusalem. About how he would walk through the market – hearing calls for prayer and ringing church bells – and sit in cafes where poets and storytellers gathered. She sees the key – hanging in her house – for the home that was left behind when the family had to flee. Homeland is a story of remembered joys, of longing, and of hope. A glossary of Arabic words, an author’s note and four family photographs accompany this thought-provoking picture book highly recommended for readers of all ages.
Middle East
Israel and Palestine
…
Abdel-Fattah, Randa. Where the Streets Had a Name. Scholastic Press, 2010, c2008.
“Thirteen-year-old Hayaat of Bethlehem faces check points, curfews, and the travel permit system designed to keep people on the West Bank when she attempts to go to her grandmother’s ancestral home in Jerusalem with her best friend.” – CIP.
…
Banks, Lynne Reid. Broken Bridge. London: Puffin, 1997, c1994.
“Nimrod and Nili are two Jewish teenagers growing up on a kibbutz. Their mother Lesley, goes to meet Nili on her return from a trip to London, and at Ben Gurion airport, learns that Nili’s plane has been blown up by terrorists. But Nili never boarded the plane, prevented by a mysterious stranger.” – CIP
…
Barakat, Ibtisam. Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007.
“In this memoir set in Ramallah during the aftermath of the 1967 Six-Day War, Ibtisam Barakat captures what it is like to be a child whose world is shattered by war.” – CIP
…
Carmi, Daniella. Samir and Yonatan. New York: Arthur A. Levine Books, c2000.
“Samir, a Palestinian boy, is sent for surgery to an Israeli hospital where he has two otherworldly experiences, making friends with an Israeli boy, Yonatan, and traveling with him to Mars where Samir finds peace over his younger brother’s death in the war.” – CIP.
…
Carter, Ann Laurel. The Shepherd’s Granddaughter. Toronto: Groundwood Books / House of Anansi Press, 2008.
“Amani longs to be a shepherd like her grandfather, Seedo. Like many Palestinians, her family has grazed sheep above the olive groves of the family homestead for generations, and she has been steeped in Seedo’s stories, especially one about a secret meadow called the Firdoos–and the wolf that once showed him the path there.” – CIP.
Clinton, Cathryn. A Stone in My Hand. Cambridge, Mass.: Candlewick Press, 2004, c2002.
“Eleven-year-old Malaak and her family are touched by the violence in Gaza between Jews and Palestinians when first her father disappears and then her older brother is drawn to a radical group.” – CIP.
…
Ellis, Deborah. Three Wishes: Palestinian and Israeli Children Speak. Toronto: Groundwood Books, 2004.
“Young people between the ages of eleven and eighteen share what it is like to live in the midst of the upheaval and violence of the Israeli – Palestinian conflict.” – CIP.
…
Kass, Pnina Moed. Real Time. New York: Clarion Books, 2004.
“Sixteen-year-old Tomas Wanninger persuades his mother to let him leave Germany to volunteer at a kibbutz in Israel, where he experiences a violent political attack and finds answers about his own past.” – CIP
…
Laird, Elizabeth. A Little Piece of Ground. London, UK : Macmillan Children’s Books, 2004.
“During the Israeli occupation of Ramallah in the West Bank of Palestine, twelve-year-old Karim and his friends create a secret place for themselves where they can momentarily forget the horrors of war.” – CIP
…
Macdonald, Margaret Read. Tunjur! Tunjur! Tunjur!: A Palestinian Folktale. New York: Marshall Cavendish, 2006.
“A childless woman’s prayers are answered by the arrival of a talking pot, but the new mother knows that Little Pot must learn right from wrong just like any child.” – CIP [Folklore; Humorous stories; Palestinian Arabs; Theft]
…
Maes, Nicholas. Crescent Star: a Novel. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 2011.
Avi is Jewish and Moussa is Palestinian. Both boys are fifteen years old and live in Jerusalem. They belong to the same soccer club but do not know each other. As they struggle to find their own paths in life, readers gain a better understanding of the complexity of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Recommended for young adults.
…
McKay, Sharon E. Enemy Territory. Toronto: Annick Press, 2012.
“Sam, an Israeli teen whose leg may have to be amputated, and Yusuf, a Palestinian teen who has lost his left eye, find themselves uneasy roommates in a Jerusalem hospital.” – back cover. While not the most memorable novel on this theme nor the best written, this story is nevertheless recommended for readers 11 to 16 years old who want to learn more about the conflict.
…
Miklowitz, Gloria D. The Enemy Has a Face. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, 2003.
“Netta and her family have relocated temporarily from Israel to Los Angeles, and when her seventeen-year-old brother mysteriously disappears, she becomes convinced that he has been abducted by Palestinian terrorists.” – CIP.
…
Zenatti, Valerie. Message in a Bottle. New York: Bloomsbury, 2005, translation c2008.
“Seventeen-year-old Tal of Jerusalem, dejected over the ongoing Arab-Israeli conflict, puts her hopes for peace in a bottle and asks her brother, a military nurse in the Gaza Strip, to toss it into the sea.” – CIP.














