In The Fading Colors, Elie Melach throws an astonished and uncomprehending look at the unmistakable signs of deterioration and collapse of the fragile world balance: The Hungarian Revolution, the Prague Spring, the bellicose escalade in the Middle-East. And it is with overwhelming sorrow that he contemplates the gigantic fallacy that, for him, culminates with the Sabra and Shatila massacres, the Berlin Wall, the Lebanon War. Faced with his impotence...