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Nora Lester Murad

    Nora Lester Murad is an author whose works delve deeply into personal and cultural experiences, often focusing on the transformative impact of place on identity. Her writing is informed by a profound immersion in Jerusalem and life with her Palestinian family, allowing her to offer unique insights into complex social and political landscapes. Murad's prose emphasizes women's narratives and is crafted to resonate with a broad audience, from adults to upper middle grade readers. Through her novels and essays, she seeks to illuminate human connection and the power of place in shaping our lives.

    Ida In The Middle
    Rest in My Shade
    • Rest in My Shade

      • 48 pages
      • 2 hours of reading
      4.8(13)Add rating

      Rest in My Shade is a poetic story about displacement, identity and loss recited by an ancient olive tree. Rest in My Shade features art created in various media by Palestinian artists living around the world including Suleiman Mansour, Nabil Anani, Ismail Shammout, Tamam Al-Akhal, Steve Sabella, Michael Hallak, and more. Millions of people are being uprooted, separated from their families, and risk losing their culture as a result of war, poverty, repression, and climate injustice. Rest in My Shade is a tool for building understanding, compassion and dialogue. Together, we can build a world in which we can all live without fear, move freely, value and share the cultures and traditions that make us who we are, and feel dignity and acceptance everywhere.For more information, see www.restinmyshade.com.

      Rest in My Shade
    • Ida, a Palestinian-American girl, eats a magic olive that takes her to the life she might have had in her parents’ village near Jerusalem. An important coming of age story that explores identity, place, voice, and belonging. Every time violence erupts in the Middle East, Ida knows what’s coming next. Some of her classmates treat her like 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’ll never fit in. Ida wishes she could disappear. One day, dreading a final class project, Ida hunts for food. She discovers a jar of olives that came from a beloved aunt in her family’s village near Jerusalem. Ida eats one and finds herself there—as if her parents had never left Palestine! Things are different in this other reality—harder in many ways, but also strangely familiar and comforting. Now she has to make some tough choices. Which Ida would she rather be? How can she find her place? Ida’s dilemma becomes more frightening as the day approaches when Israeli bulldozers are coming to demolish another home in her family’s village…

      Ida In The Middle