Tariq al-Jafari grows up in a small Palestinian village where life moves to the timeless rhythm of the land. His father teaches him to harvest olives beneath ancient trees. His mother fills the courtyard with the smell of fresh bread. His sister chases chickens through the dust while his grandmother sings songs older than memory.
For a time, the world feels safe. Permanent.
But beyond the hills, tensions simmer. Soldiers begin appearing on the roads. Neighbors disappear. Fields that once belonged to families for generations fall silent behind fences and watchtowers.
At first, Tariq watches these changes the way children watch storms on the horizon—distant, frightening, but unreal.
Until the storm arrives.
In a single violent moment, Tariq loses the life he thought would last forever. The boy who once dreamed beneath the olive trees must grow up in a world defined by grief, anger, and unanswered questions.
As the years pass, the memories of that morning refuse to fade. They harden, deepen, and shape the person Tariq becomes.
The Long Madness is a powerful and unsettling exploration of how ordinary lives are transformed by violence and loss. It is a story about family, memory, identity, and the slow, painful way hatred can take root in the human heart.
More than anything, it is a reminder that history is not made by monsters.
It is made by people.
People who once had families, homes, and childhoods of their own.