
Spies in Palestine
Love, Betrayal and the Heroic Life of Sarah Aaronsohn
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

A brief history of Jewish spies aiding the British in Palestine.In the late 19th century, Ephraim and Malkah Aaronsohn and their children settled in Zichron Ya'akov, one of many Palestinian villages established in the 1880s by Baron Edmond James de Rothschild, a convert to Zionism, who aspired to grow vineyards in the desert. Srodes (On Dupont Circle: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and the Progressives Who Shaped Our World, 2012, etc.) traces the family's history as they confronted an inhospitable climate, turmoil in the Ottoman Empire, anti-Semitism, infighting among Zionists, and World War I. Despite the subtitle, the main character in this tense narrative is Aaron Aaronsohn, the feisty, often overbearing eldest brother. Drawing on sources such as Patricia Goldstone's Aaronsohn's Maps (2007) and Ronald Florence's Lawrence and Aaronsohn (2007), Srodes offers little new. Aaron was a prodigy who taught himself botany, geology, and hydrology; noting his intelligence, the baron sent him to agricultural college in France, hoping to reap the rewards of his learning. Later, he was invited to study in America, where he connected with some prominent Jews, among them Felix Frankfurter, Henry Morgenthau, Louis Brandeis, and Oscar Straus. Besides developing his knowledge of agriculture, Aaron proved a stellar fundraiser for Jewish settlements. Srodes devotes much of the book to revealing the spy network in which Aaron and his sister Sarah played a major role. Facing the Turkish army, the British lacked accurate maps of the region. Aaron provided them and also intelligence gathered from dozens of Jewish spies. In 1917, with Aaron away, Sarah took over and expanded this network. She and a colleague traveled throughout the area posing as Germans, gathering what Srodes deems "priceless details." Later in 1917, Sarah was tortured and died, making her a martyr for Israel. The author claims that T.E. Lawrence dedicated his Seven Pillars of Wisdom to her, although he has found evidence that Lawrence never met her. Srodes establishes Sarah's bravery, but she remains a mysterious presence, overshadowed by her brother. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

September 15, 2016
The Aaronsohn family was part of the first wave of Jewish immigrants to settle in Palestine in the 1880s. The prominent family sparked suspicions in 1914 as WWI commenced and the Ottoman Turkish Empire, allied with Kaiser Wilhelm II, began oppressing Jewish settlements. Sarah Aaronsohn, a young woman confined by the social strictures of the nineteenth century, was only beginning to plot a course for her life when she joined others committed to the Allies. She helped to form the NILI organization to spy on the Turkish Army, later taking command. The intelligence they gathered helped the British take control of Palestine. Srodes (On DuPont Circle, 2012) offers an account of a family and province caught up in the intrigues of war, lives disrupted and lost in the upheaval. In this engaging story of the woman called the Flame of Israel, a woman greatly admired by the fabled Lawrence of Arabia, Srodes also details the lost opportunity for a peaceful alliance between the new Israel and the indigenous people of the region.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)
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