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Here is a passionate and eclectic collection of essays, poems, and
scholarship that brings to life Jerusalem, that most enigmatic and
compelling of cities, in its embattled, contemporary guise as well
as in its ancient history. The book begins in the immediacy of
today's Jerusalem--with its dispossessions and laws, its bloody
conflicts and massive skyscrapers--and moves backward in time to
Classical Jerusalem, working to disentangle the knots of the three
great monotheistic religions, and finally comes to rest in a
section that is a testament to the physical facts of Jerusalem: its
monuments and alleys, its smells, its music, its people. Throughout
it all, the Jerusalem that emerges is, as Mureed Barghouthy puts
it, "the Jerusalem of the people," for it is the people who live or
have lived there, who know the "Jerusalem of houses and cobbled
streets and spice markets...of our neighbor the nun and her
neighbor the "muezzin, who was always in a hurry." Tellingly, the
anthology begins and ends with the words of poets: "I'm not
interested in/Who suffered the most," writes Naomi Shihab Nye in
the introductory poem. "I'm interested in/People getting over it"
This book is about a beloved Jerusalem whose intricacies and human
inventions are ultimately larger than the current conflict.
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