Tasting the sky : a Palestinian childhood

by Ibtisam Barakat

Hardcover, 2007

Status

Available

Call number

956.95

Collection

Publication

New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007.

Description

"When a war ends it does not go away," my mother says. "It hides inside us . . . Just forget!" But I do not want to do what Mother says . . . I want to remember. In this groundbreaking 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. With candor and courage, she stitches together memories of her childhood: fear and confusion as bombs explode near her home and she is separated from her family; the harshness of life as a Palestinian refugee; her unexpected joy when she discovers Alef, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet. This is the beginning of her passionate connection to words, and as language becomes her refuge, allowing her to piece together the fragments of her world, it becomes her true home. Transcending the particulars of politics, this illuminating and timely book provides a telling glimpse into a little-known culture that has become an increasingly important part of the puzzle of world peace.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member abbylibrarian
This beautifully written memoir gives us a glimpse into the childhood of Ibtisam Barakat, a Palestinian refugee. Although Ibtisam grew up in a country ravaged by war, not all of her memories are unhappy ones. She held on to a strong sense of home and family and her love for writing helped her deal
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with some of the scary things that happened to her. Although a lot of things about her childhood were very different from an American child's, many things were the same. I think this book is a great starting point for introducing the Israel-Palestine conflict and for showing kids that they can have something in common with kids halfway around the world.
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LibraryThing member debnance
I never considered what would be like for Palestinians to have their land taken away and given to Israel. This book is a memoir of a girl who experienced the war between the Palestinians and Israel. The author writes beautifully and honestly of what it was like to live through the conflict. It's
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not a diatribe against Israel; it is just the story of a child living through turmoil in her world. I decided to get the book for my school library, though it may be a little too much for all but the upper grades.
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LibraryThing member emgalford
Barakat, I. (2007). Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.

In Ibtisam Barakat’s Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian Childhood, the author shares the story of her childhood experiences during the Six Day War. Detained by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint in the
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West Bank, Barakat shares her memory of her war-torn childhood. Only three-years-old during the war, she talks about the fear she experienced as she is separated from her family at the beginning of the war. Barakat does an excellent job recalling the feelings and experiences of the war. She also gives a first-hand view of the Palestinian culture. Readers of different times and places can appreciate Barakat’s story. She gives a first-hand view of a historical event. Her experiences will stand as a testament to the war for years to come. This book is a Arab American Book Award winner for children and young adults.

In a school library, this book could be used with a fifth or sixth grade class when teaching about biographies and memoirs. This is a compelling memoir that students will find very interesting. You could also use other types of biographies for examples. This book can also be used as a tool for teaching about the Palestinian culture. The story conveys the author’s love of her country. Reading this book could give students a new appreciation for the Arab culture.
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LibraryThing member mcrotti
Tasting the Sky, an Arab American Book Award winner for children and young adults, gives insight into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the eyes of a child. The author, Ibtisam Barakat, was just three years old when the Six Days War began, and the book follows her from childhood into
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adolescence. She recounts being separated from her family and seeing soldiers occupy her neighborhood, among other things, from the perspective of a very young child.
This book would be useful for older children (probably middle school age) to learn basic facts about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Libraries could use it in a book club for older children if information on Arab culture is desired. The book is a moving first-hand nonfiction account, and would provide an interesting perspective for young learners.
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LibraryThing member kerriwilliams
A story that everyone should read. It is important to realize how many children are affected by the war in Palestine and how many families are torn apart becasue of it. I think the story has given me a deeper understaing and a small glimpse of how terrifying it must be to live in such a place. Made
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me that much more greatful to be living in America. I would share this story with high school students who may be studying about the middle east in social studies class.
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LibraryThing member ctmsjadi

In this action packed and depressing biography, a Palestinian girl, Ibtisam Barakat, fights her way through a war she could not control.

This starts off as the reader meets a girl named Ibtisam, who is coming home from her postal box, where she writes to her pen-pals, on a bus that is traveling to
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a Palestinian city called Ramallah. She soon finds herself in an Israeli roadblock, and is sent, with the other passengers, to a military compound. During this time, Palestine was under Israeli influence. When she is at the compound, some soldiers had the chance to search the passengers. Only one went to choose, and he chose a boy. When the soldier was searching him, the boy started laughing hysterically. The soldier then beat the boy very badly in front of everyone and allowed them to go home.

When Ibtisam got home you got introduced to her family. Her Father was named Suleiman, her Mother’s name was Miriam. She also had two brothers named Basel and Muhammad. Her Mother in particular throughout her memory accounts, wasn’t the nicest person in the world. Her Mother beat her too just like her Father if she had done something wrong. Ibtisam soon apologized for going on that bus to begin with and suddenly remembers the hard times of going through war at age six.

Her memory starts out at the beginning of the war. Her Mother was making dinner and they waited for her Father to come home from work. When her Father came home he was running towards the house. He said that the war had started and for Ibtisam to turn back. They soon gathered their supplies and ran into the garden and made a trench. Soon the sirens began to wail, her sister was crying from the loud noises, and they heard many explosions and planes above them. Ibtisam Mother realized that she did not have enough food for all of them, so she gunned it back to the house. Shots buzzed everywhere near her Mother and then she fell down. Her Father came to her and said that the shots had missed. They soon found other groups running away in the woods so they decided to go with them because they knew they weren’t safe in the trench anymore. When they rushed to get out, Ibtisam was still putting on her shoes and didn’t realize they had left. She soon ran into the woods after them, but she had left her shoe behind so her foot was getting cut and bruised from the objects on the ground. She soon found her parents and they tried to find refuge elsewhere. From that point on she had loads of adventures.

In the book Ibtisam also had a lot of adventures. When she and her family were looking for refuge, her father hijacked a passerby’s car and banded together with other refuges to force the driver to obey. Ibtisam Mother soon started having a great friendship with the driver’s wife, Hamameh. They soon found themselves in a safe house for refuges, and stayed there for a week while her father left with the other men to help more refuges. By that point, Ibtisam foot had swelled as big as a melon, so when they left they took her to the hospital.

When they were at the hospital, the Doctor helped Ibtisam. He treated her foot by injecting a syringe in her foot and put it into a cast. When the cast finally came off she danced and played in the streets out of joy. Soon after, her parents decided to move to a large school complex for a safer refuge.

When the time was right, they all went back to their original home. They noticed that their home was damaged by the war, and bullet holes ravaged the inside. A part of the house that was affected was the roof, which had been blown to pieces, but her father fixed it. Later that afternoon soldiers set up a training camp in front of their home. This made Ibtisam Mother very angry and told Ibtisam Father that they should place them in an orphanage. Out of worry, her father agreed and drove them to the Dar El-Tifl’s orphanage in Jericho.

At the orphanage, Ibtisam’s brothers were transferred to a boy’s school called Jalazone Boys School. This made Ibtisam very angry because she used her brothers as protection against bullies, and they were the only family she had there, besides her mother. Her only friend was a piece of chalk from the playground that she named Alef. Her parents soon went back and got her and brought her to see her brothers. Then on June 1st they all got to go home together again.

From that point on at their home, the boys had to get ready for their circumcisions, which is a Palestinian ceremony that makes a boy a “man”. They received a goat that gave birth to another named Zuraiq, they all went to an normal school, and final they moved away from their house into a newer and safer one.

I gave this book five stars for a lot of “good” reasons. The first reason is, when I read this book, my mind had gotten so into the story I would lose track of time and where I was. I would soon realize that I had read more pages than I was supposed to, and I thought that was very “strange”, in a good way. This meant that my brain was so engaged in everything in this story, I didn’t want to stop. It’s almost like watching a movie when your parents say “You’ve got to go now, you can watch it later!” When your mind says “no” and tunes out the voice, so it keeps watching because of the engaging storyline. In this case it was a book, and the voice was Mr. Bronson’s assignment. The authors writing also contributed most inevitably also.

The way the author, Ibtisam Barakat, writes is “totally killer”, quote Mr. Bronson. Her writing is so “killer” because she writes in the deepest detail in every sentence, so it actually seems like you’re standing next to her when she was a child. A quote that shows this is, “We sat on the red earth, talking and laughing, the setting sun a bonfire before us.” When I read that line, I immediately saw the setting sun, bright as could be, and I could feel the cool earth engulf my body. From your perspective you might say to yourself, “Gee that line just sounds like poetry. I don’t think I would want to listen to a poetry book!” I now tell you that you’re wrong because she writes in many other forms, mostly dark. For example, “The soldier punches him again. The boy’s laughter now zigzags up and down like a mouse trying to flee and not knowing which way to turn. But a kick on the knee from the soldier’s boot finally makes the boy cry.” The author showed in this quote that most people were beaten by the Israel soldiers no matter who they were. This type of writing takes practice and a strong memory of the past, but Ibtisam was not a trained author and she just wrote down her true experiences. She also incorporates this type of writing in reconnecting her past emotions and then translating them into the pages in this book. I even twitched when a bad “event” happened, for example when Ibtisam’s mother was getting shot at. The whole suddenness and the realization that this actually happened to this girl’s mother, and that this girl witnessed this happen, I just found it ironic. Great writers usually always have a drastic change in their lives or depressing time in their lives that compelled them to write a book about it. Her whole character and story idea was another important point also.

Another reason why I gave this book five stars is because of Ibtisam’s character and her whole story. In my opinion, I love Ibtisam in every part of the story. She is very headstrong and is very attached to her family. This relates to me as I am attached to my family as well. Although she has her ups and downs with her parents who beat her for discipline, I find that she is very humorous and childish. This is the reason why I like her, because in this memory she has the eyes of a child. This is an awesome experience if you have the right author to translate every detail into his or her character, and in this case you do.

When I read her accounts, the child in me fluttered like a bird as I saw the same traits in Ibtisam’s world as in my own. For example, in the chapter “Lentils” she does not want to eat her Lentil vegetables because they, in her opinion, were terrible but she had to eat them or her mother would chastise her. It is that childishness that reflected on me when I did not want to eat my applesauce because it was laced with cough medicine when I was sick, when I was younger. Another reason why I love Ibtisam is because of what she went through. It will never compare to anyone else’s experiences in the world. She, in my opinion, was the bravest girl that experienced war in this story. She even was a little better than Anne Frank handling her Nazi troubles. All of the other girls were scared, but it was Ibtisam that had a swollen foot for four weeks and never complained about it. Just what she went through brings a tear to my eye because she suffered greatly and this war is still going on between Palestine and Israel today.

No one would suffer any more if they only read this incredible story today!
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LibraryThing member moonbridge
Good book for middle schoolers, this is an apolitical story of the displacement of a close-knit Palestinian family during the time around the 6-Day War. Several events are a bit rough for sensitive readers. Adults will wish for a more indepth look at the Palestinian experience.
LibraryThing member mochap
I checked this book out of the library as a beginner's attempt to try to understand the Arab-Israeli conflict and its complicated history. Didn't help much with that, but it's a moving story of a child's experience of living in a war-torn country.
LibraryThing member ctmsjani
The book Tasting the the sky was a not so interesting read. I found myself blankly read as I went on and when I wasn't blankly reading it still seemed dull. The author did not use words that she could have. If she did she could have really brought the book to life and it would have made it much
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more tolerable. I would strongly recommend not reading this book

In the book Tasting the Sky by Ibtisam Barakat is about a Palestinian child growing up in a country infected with violence, death, and war. In the book the main character of the story is trying to learn and write as much as she can in order to have a bright future. She does this by writing letters to those all around the world and learning about the countries that they live in.

In conclusion the book tasting the sky is a book that lacks the enjoyable read experience. It is also not easy to follow and may render the reader confused. the book tasting the sky is a not so good biology about a Palestinian girl.
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LibraryThing member Lukesilvera
For Middle School and High School students. Great for helping older students understand the culture of Palestinian. Great for discussions with your classes.
LibraryThing member Salsabrarian
A collection of the Palestinian author's memories during the Six Day
War and beyond when she was a child. The family flees for Jordan during the war but even after returning to their home in Ramallah, they are considered refugees. Israeli soldiers train near their home, so
frightening the mother that
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she puts her kids into orphanages so they
will be cared for. Later, the kids are educated through the aid of the
United Nations. Amidst the uncertainty of their situation, there are
moments of joy, humor and family tradition. Includes bilbio of
recommended titles.
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LibraryThing member quondame
Most of the book is the recollections of the 6 day war and a few following years in the authors early childhood. A picture of the life of a family deeply disturbed by war and threats of violence and made rich with cohesive and resourceful family and love of learning and life.

Language

Physical description

x, 176 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

9780374357337
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