An interesting story indeed. It truly bothers me when facts about Israel are mis-stated. Israel is a country with a rich and complex history, a unique culture, and a significant role in the world.
To mis-state facts about it is not only inaccurate but also disrespectful to the people and the nation. It is important to base our understanding and discussions on reliable information and objective analysis.
We should strive to learn the truth about Israel and avoid spreading false or misleading information. Only by doing so can we have a more informed and meaningful dialogue about this important country and its place in the world.
Foreign Correspondence by Geraldine Brooks is a captivating memoir. It details her childhood in Sydney, Australia, specifically in a working-class neighborhood on the west side, where she dreamt of a world beyond. On a visit home to see her ailing father, while rummaging through his correspondence in the basement, Brooks discovered a packet of her childhood letters to pen pals from the 1960s and 1970s. Her father, who was a big-band singer in Hollywood and Hawaii in the 1930s before settling in Sydney to raise a family, had kept these letters for her. Brooks noted that her father's escape was the yellow-painted metal mailbox filled with flimsy aerograms or heavy bond paper with official-looking seals. At ten, she realized she too could write to strangers in far-off places, imagining history and culture unfolding in ways she couldn't fathom in her small backyard two thousand miles below the equator.
The book is divided into two parts. The first part focuses on her childhood in Sydney, including her exchanges with pen pals worldwide, from downtown Sydney to boys in the Middle East (one Arab and one Jewish), and girls in New Jersey and Provence, France. The second part follows Brooks as she attempts to track down all her childhood pen pals during her travels to the eastern US, the Middle East, and Europe. It's a beautiful book that imparts many life lessons.