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Aaronsohn's Maps: The Untold Story of the Man
who Might Have Created Peace in the Middle East
Patricia Goldstone לקטלוג
Aaronsohn's Maps: The Untold Story of the Man<br> who Might Have Created Peace in the Middle East
Scientist, diplomat, and spy, Aaron Aaronsohn was one of the most extraordinary figures in the early struggle to create a homeland for the Jews. Born to Jewish settlers in Palestine, he ran a network of spies during World War I with his sister Sarah that enabled the British to capture Jerusalem and made Aaron T.E. Lawrence's rival in an astonishing triangle: There is evidence that beautiful, rebellious Sarah, who died tragically in 1917, was the only woman Lawrence ever loved.

A rugged adventurer, Aaronsohn became convinced during his explorations of the Middle East that water would govern the region's fate. He compiled both the area's first detailed water maps and a plan for Palestine's national borders that predicted and - in its insistence on partnership between Arabs and Jews - might have prevented the decades of conflict to come. If Aaron had lived to carry out his vision, the course of modern history might have been different. But the taste for power that drew Aaron from science to politics led to his premature and mysterious death in 1919. His maps were lost, his library was destroyed, and his story obscured.

A history that speaks directly to the present, Aaronsohn's Maps reveals for the first time Aaronsohn's key role in establishing Israel and the enduring importance of Aaronsohn's maps in Middle Eastern politics today.

Patricia Goldstone has been a reporter for the Los Angeles Times and has written for the Washington Post, Maclean's and the Economist Intelligence Unit, among others. She is the author of Making the World Safe for Tourism. She lives in New York.