Defy the Stars: The Life and Death of Tom Hurndall

Defy the Stars: The Life and Death of Tom Hurndall

by JocelynHurndall (Author)

Synopsis

Defy the Stars is the story of a young man who went to the Middle East as an observer and lost his life through a single selfless human act. In April 2003, twenty-one-year-old Tom Hurndall, an English photojournalism student, was shot in the head as he carried a Palestinian child out of the range of an Israeli army sniper in the town of Rafah in the Gaza Strip. Tom was unarmed, and wearing the internationally recognised peaceworker's fluorescent orange jacket. Severely wounded, he never recovered consciousness and died nine months later in a London hospital. A year after his death, following the family's own investigation and their determined and impartial fight to see justice done after a cover-up by the Israeli Defence Force, a soldier was sentenced to eight years for Tom's manslaughter. It was an unprecedented outcome, and a case that made legal history in bringing the IDF to account for its killing of an unarmed civilian. Tom's mother tells the story of this courageous young Englishman's quest, of its tragic end and its effect on his family. Defy the Stars is an elegy for a son, a story of loss but also of hope, for out of the tragedy have come projects in Gaza and friendships with both peace-loving Palestinians and Israelis. Her moving book gives a vivid picture of the realities of day-to-day life in Israel and in the bleak and beleaguered towns of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. It puts a human face to a situation that affects us all, and speaks for the plight of countless forgotten people in the Middle East who suffer such losses on a daily basis.

$3.28

Save:$18.21 (85%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 02 Apr 2007

ISBN 10: 0747589445
ISBN 13: 9780747589440
Book Overview: Channel 4 will air a Talkback-produced, full-length TV documentary of Tom's life and death in 2007 to coincide with publication Anglo-Israeli relations have never been more newsworthy. This powerful and very human account will offer a personal and accessible take on the Middle East crisis A heartbreaking true story that combines the political immediacy of Terry Waite's bestselling Taken on Trust with the emotional poignancy and commercial scope of Sheila Hancock's The Two of Us or Gloria Hunniford's Next to You

Author Bio
Jocelyn Hurndall was born in Winchester in 1951. In the early 1970s she worked as kibbutz volunteer on the Israeli/Lebanese border and travelled through the West Bank to Jerusalem, where her father had worked as a pioneer of wave energy in the early 1960s. She began a career as a teacher in 1974, eventually becoming Head of Learning Support in a multi-cultural school. She lives in London with her family.