Claire Hajaj is the author of the new novel Ishmael's Oranges, which is based in part on her own family history with a Jewish mother and Palestinian father. She has worked for the United Nations and the BBC World Service. She lives in Beirut, Lebanon.
Q: How did you come up with your main characters, Jude and
Salim?
A: The characters were inspired partly by my parents, and
partly by the many other stories I heard growing up from Jewish and Palestinian
families.
I wanted to answer the question – “what happens when a Jew
or a Palestinian chooses to take a different course, to shape a life that
doesn’t conform to the traditions of those tribes?" How hard do they have to
fight to escape the gravity of the conflict.
There’s a big diaspora not actually fighting, but still very
much affected by a kind of referred pain from their people in Gaza, in the West
Bank, in Ashkelon. And many other migrant families could identify with these
themes, I’m sure.
Q: How was the title “Ishmael’s Oranges” chosen for the
book?
A: Great question! I chose it because it reflects many
levels of the story I wanted to tell. At one point in the novel a character
reminds another of the original Old Testament myth – that Abraham’s original
heir, Ishmael, was disinherited and even cast out when Isaac was born. Ishmael
became father of the Arabs, as Isaac became father of the Jews. And that first
disinheritance has somehow followed the two peoples down through history ever
since.
I wanted to capture these tangled themes – rivalry and
ownership, the sweetness of the lost inheritance, and the fruits we bear
through our actions. Ishmael is the original Ishmael, the Arabs in general and
the main protagonist, Salim Al-Ishmaeli – who loses his precious orange trees.
Q: One of the quotes you include in the book is from the late Egyptian president Anwar
Sadat, “Peace is more important than land.” What is the significance of this
quote to you?
A: Sadat was a brave man, a peacemaker who paid for his
courage with a bullet. What he said in that speech is as important as WHERE he
said it – to the Knesset, after years of enmity.
He had come to realize a truth that others in the region
still struggle to see: Peace – whether between peoples or within the heart and
mind - may become impossible if you are constantly seeking to redeem the
past. And without peace, life is miserable, dangerous and exhausting.
Jude and Salim, the two main characters in the book, live
those words at first – and then come to see that their other dreams and fears
and desires are harder to cast away than they thought. The struggle between
“peace” and “land” forces them to challenge every belief and test every
allegiance.
Q: Given the current situation, do you think peace is
possible in the Middle East?
A: Peace is a word that means many things. Will there
eventually be some sort of political settlement? Probably. But will it bring
people the happiness, security and dignity they need? Only if there’s a
profound revolution in leadership and in how these communities view each other.
I did get hope from the #JewsAndArabsRefuseToBeEnemies
initiative though. Interfaith families and friendships from around the world
posting pictures together, rejecting a narrative of hate. Signs of light at a
dark time.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: Very excited about my new novel, The Well, based on some
of my experiences in remote Nigeria. A naïve young Englishman volunteers for a
year a nameless African village, looking to redeem a past wrong – but makes a
single catastrophic decision that unleashes devastating consequences on all
he’s come to love.
The book explores what happens to a well-meaning people when
their moral compass suddenly can’t find “north” any more, what humanity becomes
on its own.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Am thrilled that you’re reading Ishmael’s Oranges and I
very much hope that your readers enjoy it too.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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