Price £16.99
Format Paperback and ebook
Published 23 June 2022
Length 480 pages
ISBN 978191260013
ISBN 9781912600120 (ebook)

 

Reviews

The Jewish Chronicle, July 2022
Tel Aviv Review of Books, September 2022
Policy Magazine, October 2022
The Jerusalem Report, February 2023
Haaretz, February 2023
Montreal Review of Books, October 2024

Interviews

Democrat TV (Hebrew), December 2022
New Israel Fund Zoom Interview, December 2022

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Hope is a Woman’s Name

Amal Elsana Alh’jooj

The fifth daughter in a patriarchal society, and an indigenous Bedouin in Israel, Amal came into this world fighting for her voice to be heard in a community that did not prize girls. At birth it was only her father who looked at her and said “I see hope in her face. I want to call her Amal [hope] in the hope that Allah will give us boys after her.” Five brothers were indeed to follow.

Hope is a Woman’s Name is a rare look at Bedouin life from the even rarer perspective of a Bedouin girl. Amal challenged authority from birth, slowly learning where her community’s boundaries lay and how to navigate them.

As a shepherd at the age of 6, Amal led her flock of sheep across the green mountains of Laqiya, her village in the Negev in southern Israel. Given such responsibility, though rarely recognition, Amal came to understand her community and forge her skills as a leader.

Aged 13 and frustrated by the constraints put on her education as a girl, Amal set up literacy classes for the adult women in her village. She aimed to teach them not only how to read, but to value education itself: “I wanted them to taste an education so that they would never again deprive their daughters of one.”

This was the beginning of a lifelong career initiating projects that would help create change for the Bedouin – a minority within Israel’s Palestinian minority – and for their women in particular. She established economic empowerment programmes for marginalized women, helped found an Arab-Jewish school, and created organizations to promote shared society.

At every turn she had to face the challenges of tradition – as well as the prejudices of Israeli society – to create new possibilities that would allow women to empower themselves.

Amal has learnt to embrace every aspect of her complicated identity – Bedouin, Arab, woman, Palestinian and Israeli citizen – to help create social change, build bridges with other communities and inspire hope.

Hope is a Woman’s Name is an intimate portrayal of a little-known culture and its strengths, values, morals and boundaries. It is a rare and moving story.


“her passion and determination infuses every page”
The Jewish Chronicle

“a trailblazing Israeli Bedouin women's activist”
Tel Aviv Review of Books

“there are times when Amal’s descriptions are so vivid, you can feel the sand on your skin”
Policy Magazine

“an important book… a reflective autobiography of an exceptional woman”
The Jerusalem Post

“Amal Elsana Alh’jooj’s memoir is testment to her seemingly inexhaustible optimism and endurance, and ability to live up to her name [‘Hope’]“
Haaretz

"Haunting beauty, tenderness, anger, courage and endurance: all of this awaits you when you join Amal on a life’s journey that began in a Bedouin tent in the Negev deserts of Israel and concludes with her leaving for a new life in Canada. Truly extraordinary.”
—Michael Ignatieff

"Told with courage, softened with humour, and delivered with refreshing candour, Hope is a Woman’s Name is a poignant collection of personal essays presented in narrative form and weaved with academic discourse. Alh’jooj’s memoir serves to educate, inspire, and provide nuance to complex sociopolitical issues, advocating for education and women’s rights in speaking truth to power – as well as the powerless – and then taking action."
Montreal Review of Books


About the author

From an early age Amal had to fight for a good education. She proceeded to get a BA in social work from Ben Gurion University in Israel and a PhD in social work and community organizing from McGill University, Montreal, where she now lives and works.

Amal became an activist very young and went on to found several NGOs, including the Arab-Jewish Centre for Equality, Economic Empowerment and Cooperation. She is the recipient of many international prizes, was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize (2006), included in Genius 100 Visionaries of the Future (2017), and awarded the New Israel Fund’s Human Rights Award (2013).


Jewish Book Week 2023

Amal in conversation with Bidisha Mamata and later signing books at Jewish Book Week, 6 March 2023. You can watch the recorded interview here.

Photo by Viktor Sugeng