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‘Mormon Land’: Palestinian Latter-day Saint weighs in on the war, the gathering of Israel and the need for peace

Scholar — who grew up near Bethlehem, attended BYU and converted to Mormonism — discusses the current crisis, the tensions that led to it, and what Americans often get wrong about the conflict.

As the war in Israel and Gaza rages on with civilians caught in the violent crossfire, those watching from across the globe are asking what it must be like to live in such a conflict-ridden space. What does it mean to face possible violence every day?

Sahar Qumsiyeh can offer a firsthand description of how routine activities were affected by such a fraught environment.

Qumsiyeh is a Palestinian born in Jerusalem and raised Orthodox Christian outside of Bethlehem. She converted to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while receiving a master’s degree from Brigham Young University in statistics. She earned a doctorate from the Middle East Technical University in Turkey in the same subject, taught at various universities in the West Bank and worked for four years as a data analyst with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency in Jerusalem.

(Courtesy) Sahar Qumsiyeh, author of “Peace for a Palestinian: One Woman’s Story of Faith Amidst War in the Holy Land.”

She currently teaches in the mathematics department at BYU-Idaho. She is also the author of “Peace for a Palestinian: One Woman’s Story of Faith Amidst War in the Holy Land.”

On this week’s show, Qumsiyeh talks about the current crisis, the tensions that led to it, and what Americans, and particularly Latter-day Saints, should know when discussing it. Her views are her own and do not represent those of her employer or The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Listen here: