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Eating in Times of War: How a Cookbook Flips the Narrative on Gaza

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In 2010, at the aftermath of Operation Cast Lead, Laila El-Haddad and Maggie Schmitt traveled to Gaza to compile traditional Palestinian recipes for a cookbook they were planning to write. They went from door-to-door and from kitchen-to-kitchen in historic Gaza, using food as “a narrative device to explore the impact of the Palestinian exodus and the stories of those erased towns and villages,” as they say in a recent article.

As Ramadan is over and yet another round of bombardment falls on the “most tortured little strip of land” in the world, the question once more arises: how do these women manage to feed their families when there is no access to markets and farms?

Their cookbook, “The Gaza Kitchen: A Palestinian Culinary Journey”, published by Just World Books in 2010, may give it an answer: with extreme frugality, elasticity and determination. “They make the kitchen a stronghold against despair, and they craft necessity into pleasure and dignity,” the authors say.

Far from a victimizing standpoint, this award-winning documentary book portrays the strength and endurance of Gaza’s women, who stretch meager ingredients to craft elaborate dishes and develop peculiar methods for conservation, storage and heating.

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Eating in Times of War: How a Cookbook Flips the Narrative on Gaza

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