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WALKING TO JERUSALEM by Justin Butcher Kirkus Star

WALKING TO JERUSALEM

Endurance and Hope on a Pilgrimage From London to the Holy Land

by Justin Butcher

Pub Date: Sept. 3rd, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-64313-211-2
Publisher: Pegasus

A pilgrimage to Palestine brings a message of compassion and understanding.

Actor, director, and musician Butcher makes an impressive literary debut with a vibrant, moving chronicle of a five-month, 3,300-kilometer journey from London to Jerusalem to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, the 50th anniversary of Israel’s military occupation of Palestine, and the 10th anniversary of Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. Sponsored by Amos Trust, a London-based human rights organization, “A Just Walk to Jerusalem” began in June 2017 with the goal of expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people and to counter Theresa May’s public endorsement of the Balfour Declaration, which, Amos Trust asserts, “precipitated a century of dispossession, conflict and suffering.” The walk attracted some 40 participants of all ages, religious backgrounds, and nationalities, all eager to make the historic pilgrimage to protest injustice and stand for equal rights. For much of the book, Butcher recounts, in lyrical, radiant prose, sights and sounds, triumphs and discomforts as the group slogged on, blistered and sweaty, across France, Switzerland, Italy, Albania, Macedonia, Greece, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, and finally into Palestine. Here, for example, he conveys the thrill of witnessing a lightning storm from the deck of a ferry in Ancona: “Brilliant glimmers fleeting across the sky, now and then concentrated with intense radiance in soiling forks, now diffused in yellow splashes spilling behind, along and through the clouds.” On the moors in Greece, he records “a magical potpourri of sounds—tinkling goat bells and dogs woofing, bees buzzing, cicadas trilling and the silvery sliver of wrens and thrushes singing.” The author’s purpose, though, is far more consequential than to create a travel narrative: “A Just Walk” bore witness to a century of oppression. Welcomed warmly in Palestine, Butcher talked with residents whose lives had been cruelly circumscribed by Israeli settlements, who lost their homes, who were cut off from water and medicine, whose children were shot by Israeli soldiers—and who still harbored hope for peace and goodwill.

An urgent and impassioned plea for justice in the Middle East.