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End of Days Ethics, Tradition, and Power in Israel

Mikhael Manekin Maya Rosen

$552.95   $442.13

Hardback

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English
Academic Studies Press
28 February 2024
End of Days is both a meditation on Jewish morality in the age of Israeli Jewish power, and a cri du coeur by an Orthodox Israeli Jew, a former combat officer in the IDF, for Israelis to look into the Jewish religious ethical tradition for an alternative to the secular and religious Zionism that sanctifies power, statehood, and sovereignty. Appealing to a wealth of Jewish sources from the Bible to the present, including medieval Jewish ethical literature, rabbinic sources, Jewish law, and contemporary Israeli thought, the book presents an argument against Israel's occupation of the Palestinians and the suppression of their rights from the perspective of a modern Israeli religious Jew.
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Academic Studies Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 233mm,  Width: 155mm,  Spine: 9mm
Weight:   385g
ISBN:   9798887193236
Pages:   146
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  ELT Advanced ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface, by Shaul Magid Introduction Acknowledgments Remembering Patience Submission Devotion Contentment Listening Index

Mikhael Manekin is an Israeli activist against Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. He was the executive director of Breaking the Silence, a veterans' organization, and of Molad, the Center for the Renewal of Israeli Democracy. He is a founder and director of the Alliance Fellowship, a Jewish-Palestinian political leadership network, and a founding leader of the Faithful Left, a movement of religious Jews fighting oppression and inequality.

Reviews for End of Days Ethics, Tradition, and Power in Israel

“Drawing on an impressive range of sources—the Talmud, the writings of Ashkenazi and Sephardic medieval Jewish pietists, the Chofetz Chaim’s forgotten guide for Jewish soldiers, the Yiddish poetry of Jacob Glatstein—Manekin traces in compelling detail the traditional Jewish ethical disposition that recoils from pride, abhors violence, and views power with suspicion. He argues that this traditional Jewish ethics requires a radically different approach to the reality of Jewish political power instantiated by the Israeli state than the dominant view in Israel allows. By the book’s end, he leaves the reader with little doubt that not only is there no need to compromise one’s commitment to Jewish tradition in order to oppose Israel’s occupation, but that a commitment to traditional Jewish ethics requires active opposition to the occupation. Powerful yet unconventional, [this book] is a hybrid of memoir, mussar [morality], family history, halakhic argumentation, and social criticism. It is a manifesto for a new religiously committed Jewish left that is taking shape.” — Joshua Leifer, Tel Aviv Review of Books (on the Hebrew edition)


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