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Leap of faith : Israels national religious and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

By: International Crisis Group.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Middle East report no. 147.Publisher: Brussels, Belgium : International Crisis Group, 2013Description: iii, 48 p. : map.Subject(s): Arab-Israeli conflict -- Religious aspects -- Judaism | Israel -- Politics and government -- 21st century | Political parties -- Israel | Religious Zionism -- IsraelAbstract: "Although the landscape of Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking might bear resemblance to that of a decade past, one change is unmistakable: the right is stronger within Israel and the national religious are stronger within the right. This has consequences, some already felt, whether in politics (the rise of Naftali Bennetts Jewish Home); negotiations (Prime Minister Netanyahus commitment to submit any putative agreement to a popular referendum); or on the ground (the rise in confrontational tactics among some young West Bank settlers). Adjusting to this reality means neither ignoring the national-religious agenda nor surrendering to it. It means acknowledging its importance and understanding ideological nuances within it. If the goal is a peace agreement that garners maximum legitimacy, including among the national religious, attention will have to be paid to the substance of the deal, the way in which it is ratified and eventually implemented. Born in the early twentieth century, the ...
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Reports and Studies Reports and Studies IPS Constantine Zurayk Library
Pamphlets
PF/Israel/POL/2013-1 (Browse shelf) 1 Available 0000047013

"Although the landscape of Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking might bear resemblance to that of a decade past, one change is unmistakable: the right is stronger within Israel and the national religious are stronger within the right. This has consequences, some already felt, whether in politics (the rise of Naftali Bennetts Jewish Home); negotiations (Prime Minister Netanyahus commitment to submit any putative agreement to a popular referendum); or on the ground (the rise in confrontational tactics among some young West Bank settlers). Adjusting to this reality means neither ignoring the national-religious agenda nor surrendering to it. It means acknowledging its importance and understanding ideological nuances within it. If the goal is a peace agreement that garners maximum legitimacy, including among the national religious, attention will have to be paid to the substance of the deal, the way in which it is ratified and eventually implemented. Born in the early twentieth century, the ...

Published 21 November 2013.

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