Saturday, September 28, 2024

The Haj

 After several very crazy weeks, my life slowed down this past week.  Summer 2024 has been the year of the drought in our area.  HOT!  DRY!  And this past Wednesday it began to rain.  No golf on Tuesday because there was state senior men's tourney and then it has rained steadily since Wednesday morning so no golf.  That frees up a lot of hours.  And then Sarah and Mark came for a visit and that leads to hours sitting on the porch.   A very nice respite after a bunch of craziness.  


But last night we sat on the porch after dinner and our talk ended up being influenced by the book Jason is listening/reading right now:  


Mark actually knows quite a lot about the middle east as he flew in and out of the area for many years.  And has first hand knowledge of places such as:  Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, the Dead Sea, Jordan:Amman, , Jericho,  Petra (Mark says Petra is amazing)., Pyramids in Egypt as well as seeing Cairo, Alexandria, within Iraq:  Baghdad, Mosul, Erbil, Kuwait, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: Riyadh, Jeddah, Damascus in Syria.

Mark was an army jet pilot who did VIP transport.  His job was to provide air transport to the US military and US government top brass and elected officials.

We talked about believers and infidels....and Mark commented that the only place he felt somewhat safe was in Jordan








I found myself thinking about the areas that Mark talked about and remembered that I had read the book The Haj by Leon Uris many years ago and liked it a lot at the time....could I walk right to the book now?  Yep....there it was on the shelf in the living room.  So I picked it up to give to Mark.  But before I gave it to Mark, I decided to take photos of the maps on the front and back covers.  And needed a place to put the maps....so here they are.






And a simple map that I took from the internet:




I can't remember much about the book.  I read it many years ago.  So I looked on Amazon for a synopsis.

The story of a Palestinian Arab family during the historic events of the 1920s-1950s as seen through the eyes of Ismael, the youngest son. Of the intent of the book, Uris said," It is urgent that we know what goes on behind the door of an ordinary Arab family…only by such understanding will we have the clues to mutual survival"

and

“The narrative is fast paced, bursting with action, and obviously based on an intimate grasp of the region, its peoples, their tradition and age-old ways of life.”—John Barkham Reviews




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