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Patricia Martin Holt Patricia Martin Holt Patricia Martin Holt Patricia Martin Holt
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Books

Committee of One

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When I married a retired hydrologist, I had no idea how our travels to the Middle East would change my perspective. Initially interested in the fine crafts of the area, I was led to Leila Wahbeh. The day I met her was the day my life changed forever.

Her story unfolds with her family’s flight from Jerusalem to Egypt in 1947 to avoid the terrors of the war with Israel, and their return four years later to find they had lost everything. Despite suffering terrible hardships and deprivations, Leila finishes school and marries a doctor. All goes well until the 1967 War. Her husband, because he renders aid to war victims, is deported, leaving Leila and their four children in Jerusalem as pawns for his good behavior and hers. Despite the probability of her own imprisonment, with circumstances weighed against her, she continues her crusade for the poor.

Leila moves mountains of red tape in her efforts to transform the helpless into the helpful. In Committee of One, you’ll meet, as I did during our stays, some of the people whose dignity and pride she has single-handedly restored: Um Rafila, born in a cave as her mother fled her village in 1948; Um X who can’t read or write but whose ten children will graduate from college; Um Ghassan, whose piecework provides the medical care needed by her dying pre-school daughter; and Mustafa, a young engineer, who is jailed for preventing renewed garbage dumping at the first cleared site for Leila’s new sanitation center in Baqa’a Camp. With unflagging energy and donations of money and materials, Leila helps her people to become self-sufficient. One family survives, then 100. As those 100 educated families reach out to hundreds more, thousands of families cross the bridges built by a Committee of One.

Want to read a sample of Committee of One right away? Download excerpts from first chapter or visit Amazon and “search inside the book“!

Book Reviews

I want you to know I have been strongly touched by the story of Leila Wahbeh – and you – and the Palestinian refugees.  Your writing touches my head and my heart – there is so much to the story that I haven’t known . . . .  My understanding and my caring are growing because of  the story you’ve told.  I crossed a bridge last night as I read ~ Judy K

“Committee of One” is an inspiring story of an incredible woman in the midst of an impossible situation.  A book worth reading – it gives  new insight into the Palestinian dilemma. ~ Ann O

Although I lived in Saudi Arabia for a period of time and we heard stories about the Palestinians, I never realized what the true situation was. Now I know and I am truly shocked. Thank you for educating me in your book, “Committee of One.” ~ Lorraine, Brooklyn, N.Y.

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Empower a Refugee: Peace of Thread & the Backyard Humanity Movement

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Refugees who have fled famine and violence and resettled in the US too often are isolated, disconnected, living in despair. They typically have housing, food, clothing. Yet they miss the large inter-connected families, the all-embracing social fabric, the living culture in which they were raised. This book tells the unknown story of ordinary Americans who saw a need, created an ingenious solution, worked hard, asked nothing in return and found that their own lives were uplifted. Patricia Martin Holt writes about fabric . . . the fabric of lives as well as the woven material that women can use to create garments and accessories. In Amman, Jordan, in 1982, Holt visited Palestinian refugee camps and met women who created intricate textiles and restored themselves and their families in the process. Holt describes this experience in her first book, Committee of One. Decades later in the Atlanta suburbs, Holt discovered Peace of Thread, an enterprise founded by a local resident Denise Smith who learned Arabic during six years of mission work in Lebanon. After returning to the Atlanta area, Smith s language skill enabled her to befriend refugee women who had resettled nearby. Holt found that, again, refugee women working with fabric and selling their creations overcame isolation, strengthened their families, made some money, and imbued their lives with purpose. Holt recognized that we can all work for world peace without grand gestures, photo ops, or foreign travel. All that is needed is to lend a hand to people in need people who live in the same cities, counties, and communities where we live.

Let’s Get In Touch

  • Patricia Martin Holt
  • patriciamartinholt@yahoo.com

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