57 pages • 1 hour read
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The lemon tree that Ahmad, Bashir’s father, plants in his house in al-Ramla/Ramla in the 1930s has several meanings in the book. First, it symbolizes the Khairi family’s connection to their land. The tree takes several years to bear fruit, and Ahmad plants it with the thought that he and his family will remain on their land to see it bear fruit. Later, when Dalia’s family moves into the house, they enjoy the lemons and plant other trees, symbolizing their own connection to the house and the land. Dalia gives several lemons to Bashir when he visits in 1967, and Ahmad keeps these as prized possessions, memories of his lost house, and a hope to return home. Later, the lemon tree dies, symbolizing the withering of Dalia’s and Bashir’s friendship, but Dalia plants another tree, hoping for the regrowth of her relationship with her friend.
The house where Dalia grows up in Ramla was built by Bashir’s father, Ahmad. It was a sanctuary for Bashir and the Khairi family, and, later, it became a sanctuary for the Eshkenazi family, who arrived as Jewish refugees from war-torn Europe in the late 1940s. When Bashir visits the house again in 1967, he realizes that he and Dalia had the same room, symbolizing The Parallels Between the Jewish and Palestinian Experiences.
After Dalia’s parents die, she wants to acknowledge Bashir’s family’s connection to the house. She is forbidden by Israeli law to give the house to Bashir, but she decides, with Bashir’s blessing, to turn it into a kindergarten for Arab children. Later, Open House, as the center she develops is named, becomes a center for Jewish-Arab dialogue, making it key to the book’s depiction of The Power of Individuals to create change.
Many years into their friendship, Bashir divulges to Dalia that his left palm and several of his fingers were blown off when he touched an explosive in Gaza as a young child. He believes that the explosive was left there as a kind of “toy” by Israeli troops and that they were intending to maim children. He hides his hand in his pocket, but the memory of what happened to him as a child is still fresh in his mind. He nurses this injury, and it fuels his resistance to Israel. In this way, it symbolizes his anger and trauma.
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