Posted in Books, Reviews

Review: We’re in This Together: A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders by Linda Sarsour

Sarsour, Linda. We’re in This Together: A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders
Salaam Reads / Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Nov. 2022. 240. Tr $17.99. ISBN  9781534439290.

In this Young Readers’ edition of her 2020 memoir We Are Not Here To Be Bystanders, Linda Sarsour narrates and reflects upon the events that shaped her into the person and activist she is today. Outlined in chapters, Sarsour makes connections to her life experiences and her work with a multitude of communities that she is a part of and influenced by, her role as co-chair of the Women’s March on Washington and continuous fight for people’s rights.

Recalling her summer visits to Palestine, and her family’s village of El Bireh, she expresses a deep generational, sensory, and spiritual connection to its people, history, and land. Particularly rich are the depictions of tastes and smells, and the strong sense of memory, belonging, tradition, love, and loss. It is through this framing that she discusses her parents’ sacrifice as immigrants to America, and who herself as a Palestinian American, from a young age often had to assert the legitimacy and existence of her people. Often perceived as Latinx or Italian, this racial ambiguity often led Sarsour to feel “almost invisible.” 

As a student at John Jay High School in Brooklyn, Sarsour first makes the connection between the Occupation in Palestine and similar over-policing excessive force experienced by her Black and Brown peers. “For all my life up to that point, I had trusted the police, but the more I discussed the situation with my Black and Brown classmates, I learned that most feared the police and had experienced injustice at the hands of the cops”(69). Though a young Linda sees elements like padlocked and bars on windows at John Jay, she admits that she did not learn that this was not the case in high-performing, white, or suburban schools until she was an adult. 

It is after 9/11 that Sarsour witnesses the surveillance of the Muslim community, and becomes an advocate for social services with the Arab American Association of New York, in the footsteps of her mentor Basemah Atweh, and whose passing shaped Sarsour’s broader community organizing, activism, and collaborating with other organizations advocating for change, particularly for communities of color. 

Linda’s memoir is easy to understand, accessible and full of emotions—loss, joy, belonging, change. Sarsour shares many powerful memories of coming into her multifaceted identity. One such moment is when she chose to wear the hijab—”Finally, I appeared to the world exactly how I felt on the inside: generous, courageous, humble, compassionate. Unapologetically Muslim.” Sarsour weaves in information about notable activists and civil rights leaders, and through her own experiences, addresses and guides readers through shaping their own activism and processing trauma, grief, and healing. Backmatter includes a glossary of Arabic terms and endnotes. 

Everything Comes Next: Collected and New Poems by Naomi Shihab Nye

Everything Comes Next: Collected and New Poems by Naomi Shihab Nye
Greenwillow Books

This celebratory book collects in one volume beloved and acclaimed poet Naomi Shihab Nye’s most popular and accessible poems from the past forty years. Also features new, never-before-published poems, an introduction by bestselling poet and author Edward Hirsch as well as a foreword and writing tips by the poet, and a stunning jacket and interior spot art by bestselling artist Rafael López.

In a starred review, Kirkus Reviews calls Everything Comes Next “emotionally resonant and stirring.” Everything Comes Next is essential for poetry readers, classroom teachers, and library collections.

Everything Comes Next is a treasure chest of Naomi Shihab Nye’s most beloved poems, including favorites such as “Famous,” “A Valentine for Ernest Mann,” and the widely shared “Kindness” and “Gate A-4.” This collection, which also includes new poems, will serve as an introduction to the poet’s work for new readers as well as a comprehensive edition for classroom and family sharing.

Cover image and summary via Edelweiss

 

We’re in This Together : A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders by Linda Sarsour

We’re in This Together:
A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders by Linda Sarsour
Salaam Reads / Simon & Schuster

An inspiring and empowering young readers edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders, the memoir by Women’s March co-organizer and activist Linda Sarsour.

You can count on me, your Palestinian Muslim sister, to keep her voice loud, keep her feet on the streets, and keep my head held high because I am not afraid.

On January 17, 2017, Linda Sarsour stood in the National Mall to deliver a speech that would go down in history. A crowd of over 470,000 people gathered in Washington, DC, to advocate for legislation, policy, and the protection of women’s rights—with Linda, a Muslim American activist from Brooklyn, leading the charge, unapologetic and unafraid.

In this middle grade edition of We Are Not Here to be Bystanders, Linda shares the memories that shaped her into the activist she is today, and how these pivotal moments in her life led her to being an organizer in one of the largest single-day protests in US history. From the Brooklyn bodega her father owned to the streets of Washington, DC, Linda’s story as a daughter of Palestinian immigrants is a moving portrayal of what it means to find your voice in your youth and use it for the good of others as an adult.

Cover image and summary via Edelweiss

We’re in This Together : A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders by Linda Sarsour

We’re in This Together : A Young Readers Edition of We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders
by Linda Sarsour
Salaam Reads / Simon & Schuster

An inspiring and empowering young readers edition of We Are Not Here to be Bystanders, the memoir by Women’s March co-organizer and activist Linda Sarsour.

You can count on me, your Palestinian Muslim sister, to keep her voice loud, keep her feet on the streets, and keep my head held high because I am not afraid.

On January 17, 2017, Linda Sarsour stood in the National Mall to deliver a speech that would go down in history. A crowd of over 470,000 people gathered in Washington, DC, to advocate for legislation, policy, and the protection of women’s rights—with Linda, a Muslim American activist from Brooklyn, leading the charge, unapologetic and unafraid.

In this middle grade edition of We Are Not Here to be Bystanders, Linda shares the memories that shaped her into the activist she is today, and how these pivotal moments in her life led her to being an organizer in one of the largest single-day protests in US history. From the Brooklyn bodega her father owned to the streets of Washington, DC, Linda’s story as a daughter of Palestinian immigrants is a moving portrayal of what it means to find your voice in your youth and use it for the good of others as an adult.

Summary via Edelweiss (cover pending)

Ida in the Middle by Nora Lester Murad

Ida in the Middle
by Nora Lester Murad
Interlink Publishing Group

Every time violence erupts in the Middle East, Ida knows what’s coming at her school near Boston. Some of her classmates treat her as if it’s all her fault—just for being Palestinian. In eighth grade, Ida is forced to move to a different school, but people still treat her like she’s a criminal.

One day, wishing she could just disappear, Ida discovers a jar of olives that came from a beloved aunt in her family’s village near Jerusalem. She eats one and finds herself there—as if her parents had never left Palestine! Things are different in her alternate, “what if” reality—harder in many ways, but also strangely familiar and comforting. Now Ida has to make some tough choices. Which Ida would she rather be? Where exactly is home? What does it take to really belong to a people?

Ida’s dilemma becomes more frightening when, in the same week, she has to talk about her life’s passion in front of the whole school and Israeli bulldozers are coming to demolish another home in her family’s village in Palestine…

Summary via Edelweiss (cover pending)

Wishing Upon the Same Stars by Jacquetta Nammar Feldman

Wishing Upon the Same Stars by Jacquetta Nammar Feldman
Harper/HarperCollins

This is a poignant coming-of-age middle grade debut about Yasmeen Khoury, an Arab American girl who befriends the Jewish-Israeli girl next door. Perfect for fans of Front Desk and American as Paneer Pie.

When twelve-year-old Yasmeen Khoury moves with her family to San Antonio, all she wants to do is fit in. But her classmates in Texas are nothing like her friends in the predominantly Arab neighborhood back in Detroit where she grew up. Almost immediately, Yasmeen feels like the odd girl out as she faces middle school mean girls and tries to make new friends. Then Yasmeen meets her neighbor, Ayelet Cohen, a first-generation Israeli American. The two girls gradually grow closer, and Yasmeen is grateful to know another daughter of immigrants who understands what it feels like when your parents’ idea of home is half a world away.

But when Yasmeen’s grandmother moves in after her home in the West Bank is destroyed, Yasmeen finds her family and Ayelet’s suddenly at odds, forcing them both to grapple with how much closer the events of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict are than they’ve realized. As Yasmeen begins to develop her own understandings of home, heritage, and most importantly, herself, can the two girls learn there’s more that brings them together than might tear them apart . . . and that peace begins with them?

Jacquetta Nammar Feldman’s evocative debut reminds us that friends can be found in unexpected places.

Summary and image via Edelweiss