Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/other/1428517-palestine-by-joe-saco
https://studentshare.org/other/1428517-palestine-by-joe-saco.
Analysis of ‘Palestine’ by Joe Sacco In the past, I chose the comfort of avoiding concerns about global crises where politics, culture, and economy play vital functions that are often manipulated by the power bearers especially during war between nations. These are issues that appear too complicated to handle, but Palestine-Israel conflicts are equally exhausting issue to deal with that it loses appeal and makes large peace-making bodies lose interest themselves and I understand how exhausting it must have been.
On reading Joe Sacco’s graphic creation ‘Palestine’, I had my personal encounter of Palestinians under tumultuous state of oppression. It was as if I inevitably swam from the surface down to depths and depths of grievances which the Palestinian nation has every right to raise against the bureaucratic Israel. For one, Palestinians must be delivered from taking the ordeal of battling with armed Israeli soldiers who ruthlessly torture them to psychological, emotional, and physical deaths. Second of all, they deserve more than to grieve or wail at occupied territories which drove them out of their homes since the 1960s, making them live in inhumanely poor shelter conditions as refugees dwelling in camps without paved roads, proper roofing nor toilets as depicted in Sacco’s reports – a picture worse than an abandoned civilization.
Moreover, I personally advocate support for Palestinians who express grievance for the absence of fair trial when their family members are put to jail at Israeli’s unjust discretion. The enemy’s brutish behaviour of inflicting extreme physical harm against the innocent in jail who barely know the grounds for their suffering must be highly condemned indeed. Hostile criticisms of the Jewish state is yet another source of legitimate grievance for Palestinian people who do not have a state of their own which when granted to them would help in governing these oppressed people to possess their legal rights.
Through the five chapters covered, it is quite tormenting to learn and come to imagine the reality of the daily collective sufferings of Palestinian lives among the students, farmers, the unemployed, businessmen, neighbors, fathers, mothers, and their children who at the hands of Israeli Defense Forces have become destitute, anguished, and anxious yet whose hopes remain undying. By all these excruciating experiences, Sacco managed to effectively convey and bring out from the reading audience feelings of sympathy for the Palestine and deep hatred toward Israel.
Even in the relief which the comic piece offers through graphics and artful rendition, a sense of hurting is felt as one realizes the actual nature of the enemy’s character. It is even tempting to use the most foul language or fitting description against the wicked forces of Israel at least based on Sacco’s sketches that come with the light of the new perspective in discerning whose side of the conflict must be won and greatly favored.
Read More