Review of A Dream For Peace
- havillah108
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Review of A Dream For Peace
In the book, A Dream for Peace, Ghoulem Berrah suffers racial discrimination and injustice, as a boy, at the hands of the French pioneer settlers in his native country, Algeria. To help liberate his country from colonial rule, he leaves for France to continue his medical studies there. He rises to fame for his passionate, political activism at the university. He is apprehended as a troublesome French fugitive and is sent to the most dreaded prison of the Rojas in Spain. After he is bailed out from incarceration, he gains admission to the prestigious Columbia academy of law in New York, again he transfers to the University of Indiana to enhance his medical skills. Upon meeting the chairperson of Côte d'Ivoire in America, he sacrifices his medical career and goes back to Africa to serve the continent. He becomes the special adviser to the chairperson of Côte d'Ivoire, counseling him on complex, top-secret matters. He further risks his life as a diplomat by working hard to support peace, dialogue and conjunct understanding between antagonist countries in the Middle East and all over Africa.
The novel is a moralizing book instructing the youth that peace isn't a dream; instead, we must make the pursuit of peace a constant reality, and we must embrace people of all creeds as being special and unique in the eyes of the Almighty. The book definitely points out that peace begins with each one of us, and that success is borne out of hard work. The book is a monument to life with detestation to none, but with charity for all humankind. What I took to hear from this book is to incorporate others in my life and be sensitive to the needs of others.
The book is so good that it's so hard to find any hostile points. The readability ranking of the book is complex, as the book is written in a political way. Apart from that, the book was precisely pored and edited.
I rate this book four out of four stars; as it is an excellent read, worthwhile picking up and will clearly not underwhelm its readers. The book is perfectly edited, with rare offenses. The book offers common sense to people from all circles of culture.
I enormously recommend this book to people with passion for foreign, peace, collaboration and harmony among nations. People with a zeal to serve humanity and leave a better society for the coming generations, and civil leaders entrusted to serve for the good of all citizens in a country. This book is likewise recommended to those with a keen interest in Africa's history of the struggle for freedom from colonial rule.
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A Dream For Peace
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