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Under the Crescent - by Bat Ye'or (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- A sweeping epic of exile, endurance, and truth forgotten.
- About the Author: Bat Ye'Or is an Egyptian-born British-Swiss author and historian best known for her influential and controversial writings on the status of religious minorities under Islamic rule and on the relationship between Europe and the Arab world.
- 500 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Historical
Description
Book Synopsis
A sweeping epic of exile, endurance, and truth forgotten.
From one of the most courageous and controversial historians of our time comes an electrifying trilogy of novels--Moïse, Élie, and Ghazal--that bring to life the vanished world of Middle Eastern Jewry and its dramatic dissolution under the rising tide of Arab nationalism and Islamist totalitarianism.
Bat Ye'or--"Daughter of the Nile," exile of Nasser's Egypt, and indomitable witness to the historical fate of Jews and Christians under Islam--has spent a lifetime unearthing hidden truths. Her nonfiction has challenged prevailing myths. Now, in this monumental work of fiction, she turns to the intimate and epic, portraying the human faces behind the centuries of dhimmitude--a status of legal and spiritual inferiority imposed on non-Muslims--and the slow, devastating collapse of a civilization.
Spanning the Cairo of the 19th century through the cataclysms of the World Wars to the final expulsion of Jews from Egypt in the 1950s, the trilogy follows three generations of one Jewish family whose members fight--through faith, rebellion, or resignation--to remain anchored in a homeland that steadily unravels around them. At once historical document and literary masterwork, this is a tale of memory and mourning, of identities stifled and voices rising, of lives swallowed by the Nile's muddy tide and yet luminous in their witness.
With the moral clarity of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the historical rigor of Primo Levi, and the lyrical power of Elsa Morante, Bat Ye'or renders an unforgettable account of the "numberless victims of history" and restores them to their rightful place in our collective memory. This is a story that had to be lived to be told--and must be told to be understood.
Review Quotes
"A superb novel of her youth skinned alive." --Le Point
"Epic and overwhelming... A novel that haunts you." --Revue des deux mondes
"The facts have shown Bat Ye'or to be right." --France catholique
About the Author
Bat Ye'Or is an Egyptian-born British-Swiss author and historian best known for her influential and controversial writings on the status of religious minorities under Islamic rule and on the relationship between Europe and the Arab world. Forced to flee Egypt with her family in 1957 after the Suez Crisis, she became a stateless refugee before settling in London and later Switzerland, where she married historian David Littman. Under her pen name, which means "Daughter of the Nile," Bat Ye'Or has popularized the term "dhimmitude" to describe the treatment of non-Muslims in Islamic societies and is widely recognized for her book Eurabia: The Euro-Arab Axis, which argues that European culture and politics have been significantly influenced by Arab and Islamic interests.