Relative Taboo

€23.00

In 'Relative Taboo', Jerusalem reveals itself not through monuments or headlines, but through the intimate voice of Huriya, a woman shaped by the city’s wounds and its stubborn beauty. What is spoken publicly rarely matches what unfolds in private; what is condemned aloud is often practiced in silence. Between these fractures, Huriya carves out her testimony—of love shadowed by occupation, of desire struggling against suffocation, of a life lived beneath layers of expectation and unspoken rules.

Moving through the Old City’s stone alleys and the neighborhoods beyond its ancient walls, Huriya narrates a Jerusalem trembling with history yet aching under the weight of the present. Her observations—at once tender, ironic, and unsparing—reveal a world where laughter is a form of defiance, where sorrow becomes a daily inheritance, and where a woman’s longing for freedom becomes an act of quiet resistance.

A companion to 'Shabbos Goy' and 'Half Ashkenazi' yet luminous as a standalone work, 'Relative Taboo' forms the second movement in a triptych that captures the pulse of a divided city and the souls who endure it. Through Huriya’s fierce humanity, Aref F. Husseini offers a portrait of Jerusalem as intimate as it is universal—where love and loss, dignity and despair, rebellion and tenderness all coexist in the same breath.

A haunting, courageous novel that transforms the personal into the political, and the political into a profoundly human song.