Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Leon Uris’ world-bestselling novel Exodus became a profound influence on thoughts and feelings about the state of Israel. In The Haj , the author once again portrays a tormented nation through its living people. Haj Ibrahim - known as the Haj - is leader of the small but strategically placed village of Tabah. Sworn enemy - and secret friend - of Gideon Asch, Israeli settler, pioneer, fighter, the Haj and his men are seen first in all their false courage and manic ambition. Theirs is a world of oaths, blood, death and vengeance. But then his association with Asch takes him elsewhere - into diplomacy, and towards leadership of another kind…In Exodus , Leon Uris told of the birth of a new nation. In The Haj , he foretells the death of a race, of a faith, of people who have no greater enemies than themselves, in a novel that is as violent and turbulent as the times in which we live…
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Leon Uris’ world-bestselling novel Exodus became a profound influence on thoughts and feelings about the state of Israel. In The Haj , the author once again portrays a tormented nation through its living people. Haj Ibrahim - known as the Haj - is leader of the small but strategically placed village of Tabah. Sworn enemy - and secret friend - of Gideon Asch, Israeli settler, pioneer, fighter, the Haj and his men are seen first in all their false courage and manic ambition. Theirs is a world of oaths, blood, death and vengeance. But then his association with Asch takes him elsewhere - into diplomacy, and towards leadership of another kind…In Exodus , Leon Uris told of the birth of a new nation. In The Haj , he foretells the death of a race, of a faith, of people who have no greater enemies than themselves, in a novel that is as violent and turbulent as the times in which we live…