A Line in the Sand Front Cover

Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9780889223752
Pages: 128
Pub. Date: January 1 1997
Dimensions: 9" x 6" x 0.4375"
Rights: Available: WORLD
Categories
Non-Fiction / HIS027160

  • DRAMA / Canadian
  • HISTORY / Wars & Conflicts / Persian Gulf War (1991)
  • HISTORY / Military / Canada

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A Line in the Sand

By Guillermo Verdecchia

In the autumn of 1990, during Operation Desert Storm, two young men, one a troubled Canadian soldier, the other a teenage Palestinian black-marketeer, meet in the scorched Qatari desert. Breaching the divide of a profound cultural misunderstanding and against a backdrop of massive global conflict, these two become unlikely and secret friends. This tenuous friendship is severed by the torture and murder of the 16-year-old Palestinian inside the Canadian base—an act to which the Canadian soldier was at least a witness and perhaps a willing participant.

Weaving poetic drama with myriad documentary sources, A Line in the Sand rips the benevolent mask off recent western peacekeeping operations and challenges Canada’s long treasured national mythology that it is a nation of quiet diplomats. It asks us to imagine how horrors like these could be perpetrated with our money, in our name and by people much like us.

Cast of 3 to 5 men.

Winner 2009 MECCA Awards

Winner 2010 MECCA Award

Winner 1997 Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award

“Mesmerizing … compelling and ambiguous … Verdecchia and Youssef pull off the tricky task of crafting a complex interpersonal drama that is also a potent allegory. … A reference to the then-recent Oka crisis creates provocative parallels between the Israel/Palestine divide and the ongoing effects of North American colonization. … [In 2016] A Line in the Sand inarguably remains relevant. Given its content, it seems likely that Verdecchia and Youssef will celebrate the day when this play doesn’t need another revival.”
Toronto Star

"Verdecchia and Youssef pull off the tricky task of crafting a complex interpersonal drama that is also a potent allegory."
- Toronto Star

Winner of 3 MECCA Awards (2009-2010)
Winner of the 1997 Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award