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The Six-Day Hero

ebook
81 of 81 copies available
81 of 81 copies available
Motti knows that war is coming. Israel is only nineteen years old—the same age as Motti's brave older brother, Gideon—and the tiny country is surrounded by enemies. It's only a matter of time before Egypt, Jordan and Syria attack. Motti wishes he could join the Israeli army like Gideon and be a hero. But when his best friend's family flees the country and his brother goes off to fight, Motti realizes this war isn't a game. His family is in danger, and Israel's very survival is at stake. But hope comes to Motti in unexpected forms. In the kind Ethiopian priest who lives nearby. In his grouchy neighbor, old Mrs. Friedburg. In the young Germans who come to offer help. In his father's childhood friend, a Jordanian man who harbors none of the hate Motti expects. Even in a scrappy stray cat that roams the bombed city without fear. Motti knows his older brother is a hero—but through the six days of the war that will decide Israel's fate, he discovers other heroes in surprising places. He may even be a hero himself.
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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2017
      The Six-Day War, told from the point of view of an Israeli seventh-grader in 1967.Motti lives in Jerusalem in a country that's only 19 years old--just like his older brother, born on Israel's first day of independence. Pale-eyed, freckled Motti identifies as one of the "native Israeli Sabras," born in Jerusalem like his father, though his mother's Yiddish-inflected Hebrew implies an Eastern European origin. His Jerusalem neighborhood is populated by Jews from Hungary, Germany, Iraq, and Iran. The neighborhood even features Ethiopian monks. Indeed, all that's lacking is Muslims, as 19 years ago the Jews and Muslims of Jerusalem fled to the sectors defined by their new national border. As the governments of Israel and her neighbors jockey for position, Motti's father and older brother are called up for active duty. Soon war begins, and Motti huddles in air raid shelters; it's a claustrophobic week for an energetic boy, even given that it's one of the world's shortest wars. All the anger against Israel in Motti's world emanates from disembodied armies and governments; the Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem welcome the conquering Israelis like friendly neighbors: "smiling shyly" and waving; the Palestinian childhood friend of Motti's father even serves mint tea and cookies. Occasionally, narrator Motti's voice slips entirely into a textbook-style description of the war. A straightforward vehicle for a single viewpoint of recent history; supplement with other perspectives for a more complete story. (Historical fiction. 11-13)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2017
      Grades 5-8 Set in West Jerusalem during the 1967 Six Day War, this highlights the experiences of 12-year-old Jewish Israeli Motti. Generally, Motti's life is pretty routineschool, soccer, hanging with friend Yossi, and visiting neighbors, like Mrs. Friedburg, a Holocaust survivor. But threats to Israel from Egypt, Syria, and Jordan are escalating, and talk of war is everywhere. While worried, Motti also wishes he could serve in the army, like his older brother Gideon and heroes from Israel's past. Then military reserves, including his father, are called up; Yossi's family leaves the country; and soon Motti and others must take refuge in bomb shelters. As the brief war progresses, Motti discovers heroism takes many forms, but he also learns about war's tragic consequences, including for his own family. Motti's accessibly written, first-person narrative details the unfolding events as well as his efforts to stay brave despite fears, cope with grief, and retain hope for a peaceful future. While this individualizes war's impact from a Jewish youth's perspective, for broader understanding of the subject, it's probably best paired with additional reading.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2018
      Readers experience 1967's Six-Day War through the eyes of twelve-year-old Motti, an Israeli boy living near the Jordanian border. Secondary characters, including an elderly Holocaust survivor and Motti's beloved soldier brother, add dimension. Unfortunately, the reading level and subject matter are sometimes mismatched, and Motti's blinkered experience of the war, while conveyed with immediacy, lacks essential context and nuance.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.6
  • Lexile® Measure:680
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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