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The Hebrew Republic: How Secular Democracy and Global Enterprise Will Bring Israel Peace At Last


The Hebrew Republic: How Secular Democracy and Global Enterprise Will Bring Israel Peace At Last  
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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 956.9405
EAN: 9780151014521
Edition: 1
ISBN: 0151014523
Label: Harcourt
Manufacturer: Harcourt
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 304
Publication Date: 2008-04
Publisher: Harcourt
Studio: Harcourt


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Editorial Review:
Political economist Bernard Avishai has been writing and thinking about Israel since moving there to volunteer during the 1967 War. now he synthesizes his years of study and searching into a short, urgent polemic that posits that the country must become a more complete democracy if it has any chance for a peaceful future. He explores the connection between Israel’s democratic crisis and the problems besetting the nation—the expansion of settlements, the alienation of Israeli Arabs, and the exploding ultraorthodox population. He also makes an intriguing case for Israel’s new global enterprises to change the country’s future for the better. With every year, peace in Israel seems to recede further into the distance, while Israeli arts and businesses advance. This contradiction cannot endure much longer. But in cutting through the inflammatory arguments of partisans on all sides, Avishai offers something even more enticing than pragmatic solutions—he offers hope.


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating:  out of 5 stars - Reality-Based Journalism
Bernard Avishai has written an important book about present realities in Israel, not by delivering yet another partisan tract but by interviewing leading figures among the warring parties and ethnic groupings within Israel. He poses to them the question of what "nationality" and nationalism should mean in Israel. He explains that Israeli law assigns to everyone a nationality, and as in Jim Crow America this assignment is not voluntary. Citizenship is a separate status, and only those assigned to ... Read More



Rating:  out of 5 stars - A future for Israel
This is an essential book for anyone who cares about Israel. Bernie Avishai goes beyond the usual shibboleths to open up a more attractive vista.

The book has two main parts: (1) the great diversity within Israel, and (2) the economy and other attractions of the secular part of Israel that are its great hope. Perhaps the latter can become a beacon that shines brightly enough to overcome the centrifugal forces produced by the diversity.

The Israeli economy is strong, especially ... Read More



Rating:  out of 5 stars - A New and Pragmatic Vision for Israel and Palestine
Bernard Avishai is a thinker and writer I've admired for some time. His rather unfortunately-titled 1985 book, The Tragedy of Zionism, was not, as one might think, a statement of opposition to Zionism. Rather, it harkened back to the roots of Zionism, calling for their ideological re-establishment while offering an insightful analysis of how out-moded Zionist institutions, mixed with the ongoing conflict with the Arabs, were impeding the full establishment of Israeli democracy.

In Avishai's ... Read More



Rating:  out of 5 stars - A wake up call for the true democrats in Israel
It takes courageous authors as Avishai to stimulate a dormant generation of Israelis and Jews in Israel and around the world to confront the delicate issue of Jewish/Israeli national identity. The author, ahead of his time, presents the readers with a vivid and relevant description of the major problem that Israel faces today and more so in the future - the lack of a unifying and modern national identity definition that can support the entire citizen population of Israel, Jewish or not.

Since ... Read More



Rating:  out of 5 stars - Who Is Afraid of A Jewish State?
The author of the book is a self-described member of the Israeli "elite" that has sunk into deep despair in recent years with the collapse of the so-called "peace process" they foisted on Israel and the demographic rise of groups they fear such as the Zionist and non-Zionist Religious communities and the working class people of non-European origin. This "elite" are the successors of the secular, largely Ashkenazic Labor Zionists who controlled the Jewish community in Eretz Israel both before and after the creation ... Read More


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