Sara Roy is a Senior research scholar at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University. She lived in the Gaza Strip for several years in the 1980s.1 Her research and over 100 publications on Palestinian politics and economics and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict focus on the economy of the Gaza and more recently on the Palestinian Islamic movement.2 Reviewing her 2007 Failing Peace: Gaza and the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict, Bruce Lawrence writes that "Roy is the leading researcher and most widely respected academic authority on Gaza today."3 She serves on the Advisory Boards of American Near East Refugee Aid and the Center for American and Jewish Studies at Baylor University.2 Roy has drawn criticism as well. Phyllis Chesler called her one of "the most savage critics—of America and Israel."4 In a Holocaust Remembrance lecture at Baylor that has been reprinted several times, Roy said that "the Holocaust has been the defining feature of my life."5 Both her parents survived the Holocaust, which killed over 100 members of her extended family from the Jewish shtetls of Poland. Her father, Abraham, was one of the two known survivors of the Chelmno extermination camp, while her mother, Taube, survived Halbstadt (Gross Rosen) and Auschwitz. Having visited Israel many times when she was growing up, she writes "It was perhaps inevitable that I would follow a path that would lead me to the Arab-Israeli issue."6 Public attentionRoy drew public attentioncitation needed when a book review she had written of Mathew Levitt's book Hamas: Politics, Charity, and Terrorism in the Service of Jihad was rejected by Tufts University’s Fletcher Forum on World Affairs. After the editor-in-chief accepted the piece, he wrote Roy that the article had been reviewed for "objectivity," and that "all reviewers found the piece one-sided" and then rejected it, but apologized "for the way in which this process was carried out."7 Middle East Policy later published the review with Roy's note on the affair which described the rejection as a "blatant... case of censorship."7 Publications
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