Top 26 Quotes & Sayings by Susan Abulhawa

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Susan Abulhawa.
Last updated on November 23, 2024.
Susan Abulhawa

Susan Abulhawa is a Palestinian American writer and human rights activist. She is the author of several books, and the founder of a non-governmental organization, Playgrounds for Palestine. She lives in Pennsylvania. Her first novel, Mornings in Jenin, was translated into 32 languages and sold more than a million copies. Her second novel, The Blue Between Sky And Water, was sold in 19 languages before its release, and was published in English in 2015. Against the Loveless World, her third novel, was released in August 2020, also to critical acclaim.

No matter who you are, no matter what greatness you've achieved in your life or what gifts you've given to the rest of humanity, if you criticize Israel, you must expect to become persona non grata. You should expect an utter onslaught of attacks.
A persistent breeze lifted the thin curtains, fluttering a few moments of tranquility into the turbulent day.
Nima Shirazi is a rare voice of rational analysis and political insight that provides an eloquent counter to the pervasive absurdities that make up popular political discourse.
Love cannot reconcile with deception — © Susan Abulhawa
Love cannot reconcile with deception
We come from the land, give our love and labor to her, and she nurtures us in return. When we die, we return to the land. In a way, she owns us. Palestine owns us and we belong to her
For I'll keep my humanity, though I did not keep my promises. ... and Love shall not be wrested from my veins.
I know she is crying. Her tears fall on the wrong side, into the bottomless well inside her.
Always" is a good word to believe in.
How can one find the first moment of love? When, in what instant, does the night's dark sky become blue?
I feel sad for him. Sad for the boy bound to the killer. I am sad for the youth betrayed by their leaders for symbols and flags and war and power.
Death, in its certainty, is exacting its due respect and repose before it takes my hand.
Amal,I believe that most Americans do not love as we do. It is not for any inherent deficiency or superiority in them. They live in the safe, shallow, parts that rarely push human emotions into the depths where we dwell.
Israeli occupation exposes us very young to the extremes of our emotions, until we cannot feel except in the extreme.
Do you know, Mother, that Haj Salem was buried alive in his home? Does he tell you stories in heaven now? I wish I had had a chance to meet him. To see his toothless grin and touch his leathery skin. To beg him, as you did in your youth, for a story from our Palestine. He was over one hundred years old, Mother. To have lived so long, only to be crushed to death by a bulldozer. Is this what it means to be Palestinian?
Under the broken promises of superpowers and under the worlds indifference to spilled Arab blood.
I watch life trickle from the bullet wound of a sixteen-year-old "example" and marvel how things weak, even words, will turn vicious and merciless to gain power,despite reason or history
The roots of our grief coil so deeply into loss that death has cometo live with us like a family member who makes you happy by avoidingyou, but who is still one of the family. Our anger is a rage that Westerners cannot understand. Our sadness can make the stonesweep. And the way we love is no exception
Toughness found fertile soil in the hearts of Palestinians, and the grains of resistance embedded themselves in their skin. Endurance evolved as a hallmark of refugee society. But the price they paid was the subduing of tender vulnerability. They learned to celebrate martyrdom. Only martyrdom offered freedom. Only in death were they at last invulnerable to Israel. Martyrdom became the ultimate defiance of Israeli occupation.
the reverse side of love is unbearable loss.
We're all born with the greatest treasures we'll ever have in life. One of those treasures is your mind, another is your heart.
Would words shatter the immensity of life and death so close to one another?
An instant can crush a brain and change the course of life, the course of history. — © Susan Abulhawa
An instant can crush a brain and change the course of life, the course of history.
The land and everything on it can be taken away, but no one can take away your knowledge or the degrees you earn
For if life had taught her anything, it was that healing and peace can begin only with acknowledgment of wrongs committed.
love is what we are about, my darling," she says. "Not even in death has our love faded, for I live in your veins.
They had bombed and burned,killed and maimed,plundered and looted.Now they had come to claim the land.
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