|
Company
C
A vivid dispatch from the front lines
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
June 2005
ONE
OF THE 25 BEST BOOKS OF 2005
-Kirkus Reviews
Hadassah
National Book Club selection for 2006
Listen
to Haim Watzman talk about Company C on public
radio.
When American-born Haim Watzman immigrated
to Israel, he was drafted into the army and, after eighteen
months of compulsory service, assigned to Company C,
the reserve infantry unit that would define the next
twenty years of his life. From 1984 until 2002, for
at least a month a year, Watzman, who had never aspired
to military adventure, was a soldier.
Watzman was a soldier as he adjusted to
a new country, married, raised his children, and pursued
a career as a writer and translator. At times he defended
his adopted country's borders; at other times he patrolled
beyond them, or in that gray area, the occupied territories.
A religiously observant Jew who opposed Israel's presence
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, he served in uniform
in conflicts that he demonstrated against in civilian
clothes. Throughout, he developed a deep and abiding
bond with the diverse men of Company C—a fellowship
that cemented his commitment to reserve service even
as he questioned the occupation he was enforcing.
In this engrossing account of the first
Intifada, the period of the Oslo Accords, and Israel's
reoccupation of the West Bank as lived by citizen-soldiers
in the field, Watzman examines our obligations to country,
friends, family, and God and our duty to protect our
institutions even as we fight to reform them.
top of page
|