Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

About

Rosine Nimeh-Mailloux

Rosine Nimeh-Mailloux was born in Bethlehem, Palestine, and raised in Jerusalem until 1948, when war forced her family to move back to Bethlehem. In 1951, she was among the 18 girls who petitioned the local government to open the first high school for girls. That made 1955 a memorable year for the first graduating class, and an important milestone in the education of women. After two years of teaching in Hebron, she received a scholarship to study at Arizona State University, where she received her BA and MA in English Language and Literature. Since then, she taught English in Ramallah at the teacher Training Centre for Refugee girls, and in Schenectady, New York, before moving to Ontario, Canada, where she taught for 28 years. After retirement, she embarked on her new adventure of writing. The Madwoman of Bethlehem is her first novel.