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This is an archive article published on March 11, 2007

Hamas withdraws ban on book

The Hamas-run Education Ministry on Saturday rescinded a controversial decision to pull an anthology of Palestinian folk tales from school libraries and destroy copies...

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The Hamas-run Education Ministry on Saturday rescinded a controversial decision to pull an anthology of Palestinian folk tales from school libraries and destroy copies, reportedly over mild sexual innuendo, following a widespread public outcry.

Education Minister Nasser Shaer, of Hamas, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that he had not been informed of this week’s decision to ban the book, Speak Bird, Speak Again. Some 1,500 copies of the book were destroyed— the most direct attempt by the militant Muslim group to impose their beliefs on Palestinian society.

“I have decided to correct the illegal measures that were taken regarding disposing the book,” Shaer said.

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A group of prominent intellectuals planned to protest the book ban in Ramallah on Saturday. They said they intended to proceed with the march, even after Shaer’s announcement.

The 400-page anthology of folk tales narrated by Palestinian women was first published in English in 1989 by the University of California at Berkeley. It was put together by Sharif Kanaana, a novelist and anthropology professor at the West Bank’s Bir Zeit University, and by Ibrahim Muhawi, a teacher of Arabic literature and the theory of translation.

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