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Those who follow the news know that history is made every day. But to appreciate the significance of history usually requires the distance of a little time, the benefit of hindsight.
While a twenty-two-year span is but a flash in the history of time, it is just about a wide-enough prism through which to view events in some perspective. This book therefore adds valuable context to our collective understanding of the making and unraveling of a peace process. To revisit these events is important not just for history’s sake, but to inform the journey ahead.
Twenty-two years ago much of the world appeared to be on the verge of better things.
The collapse of the Berlin Wall symbolized the end of the Cold War and the possibility of reconciliation for Europeans driven apart since the 1940s by ideological dogma. The release of political prisoners in South Africa, including Nelson Mandela, and the peaceful negotiations that followed, bringing apartheid to an end, demonstrated that seemingly intractable racial chasms could be crossed. And the end of the terms of office of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and President Ronald Reagan promised a more people-centered approach to power relations on earth.
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