Preview

Ari Shavit's My Promised Land

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
146 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Ari Shavit's My Promised Land
In his book My Promised Land(2013), Ari Shavit elucidates the history of Zionism and that it has allowed the Jewish people to create the nation of Israel. Shavit, being a descendant of one of the people involved heavily with the first members of Zionism, Herbert Bentwich, uses family history, and when needing more information, conducts interviews with many people involved in the modern history of Israel. Shavit uses interviews, personal anecdotes, quotations from figures in the past, and historical accounts of Jewish history. Ari Shavit deeply studies the history of Israel and the Jewish people in order to understand the present day conflict and hopefully attempt to solve some of the many problems. Shavit writes to a reader who is experienced

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    In the novel “Jews in Post-Holocaust Germany, 1945-1953” By Jay Howard Geller, Geller tells the often-untold story of Jews after the Holocaust. Geller through this novel lays lot a historical outline of Jews after the Holocaust. His historical timeline not only shows the trouble and struggles of surviving victims of holocaust but also shows the climax of the creation of Palestine. Geller takes of advantage of numerous primary resources to support his historical timeline of Jews from 1945 to 1953. Along with being informative this book takes away the veil that was created after the holocaust. Geller takes this veil away and tells it how it is without cover up this vital and yet overlooked time period in German history. The creation of the state of Palestine was a long process and this is main thing expressed in Gellers Novel. Through the historical timeline, he lays out he starts out with the struggle and builds up chronologically to a positive ending.…

    • 1964 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of the book In Search of the Promise Land the authors Franklin and Schweninger introduces Sally. Sally was a quisi-slave this is the reason why Sally’s services were demanded. According to Franklin, Schweninger p. 13). ‘The term “quasi-slave” was used to describe slaves who had been permitted freedom by their masters but who had not obtained a formal deed of emancipation from the state’1.…

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author, Peter Beinart, is author of The Crisis of Zionism (Times Books, 2012) and editor of the Daily Beast blog, Open Zion, which fosters an open and unafraid conversation about Israel, Palestine and the Jewish future.…

    • 523 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    One morning at breakfast, Rueven mentions to Reb Saunders that many Jews were saying it was time that Palestine became a Jewish homeland instead of a place where “pious Jews went to die”. Reb Saunders replied in an outrage, “his eyes suddenly wide with rage, his beard trembling” (Potok 197). He yells that “When the Messiah comes, we will have Eretz Yisroel, a Holy Land, not a land contaminated by Jewish goyim!” (Potok 198). His outburst reflects the anti-Zionist belief of the time that a secular Jewish state would be a sacrilege, a violation of the Torah. His outrage would not surprise most anti-Zionists of the time, who believed that “Zionism [was] an insidious effort to transform the religion into a kind of statism, replacing its focus on God with a focus on building a kind of state”…

    • 1773 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the story “ A Long Way Gone” the main character Ishmael Beah demonstrates a lot of violent actions. His actions begin to change throughout the entire book. One of Ishmael’s violent changes that really taught and helped me understand the many consequences that will happen when you choose to act in a violent manner is when he was going back to his village and noticed that they were being invaded, and they were getting low on food he sacrifices his life to make sure his village is ok. It teaches me that when things happen you sometimes have to change to make things better. When Ishmael and his friends were sent to participate in the war,they got addicted to drugs and started using them way more frequently now. As a consequence the boys were…

    • 277 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The conflict began in the late 1800’s when a group in Europe decided to colonize this land. This group was known as Zionists, who represented an extremist minority of the Jewish population. Zionism is a movement for the re-establishment and protection of a Jewish nation. The zionists considered locations in Africa and the Americas before choosing Palestine as their place of settlement. In the beginning, the immigration of Zionists did not cause any issues.…

    • 615 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Due to this, there is a tendency amongst scholars to show a disproportionate amount of attention to the Jewish historical context, such has the Yishuv and Zionism. The majority of information that has been accumulated has been pieced together post 1948 and 1967, after the forced dispersions of Arabs from their lands. The forced removal of Arabs resulted in the destruction of important historical documents from archives, libraries, and personal property that would have contained important information regarding Palestinian ways of life. Consequently, while the relational paradigm is more suitable for accuracy in depicting how Jews and Arabs interacted with one another than the dual society paradigm, it does not provide scholars and historians with all the answers they need to fill in all the blank spaces in Arab life; economics, politics, culture, and social norms. According to Lockman, the most important factor that led towards the relational paradigm came into existence because once the state of Israel was “established,” they were no longer able to completely deny the presence of the Arab population living within their midst. The Jewish scholars wanted to know more about them and to what extent they were effecting Jewish…

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Set from 1944 until 1951, the world for all people was changing, especially the Jews. Hitler is coming to the end of his reign of terror in Germany, the holocaust was not on the decline, and the treatment of the Jews remains incomparable. One of the main conflicts that directly links itself to the history of the time period is Zionism. Zionism, an international political movement that promotes the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine, fueled the creation of the state of Israel. David Malter becomes an active Zionist after reports of 6,000,000 million Jews being executed by German dictator, Adolf Hitler. At one point in the story, when Malter is in the hospital and Reuven stays with the Saunders', Reuven mentions this movement at dinner and immediately strikes a nerve with Reb Saunders. Just one example of the difference between Hasidism and Orthodox Judaism, Zionism provides and obstacle for Danny and Reuven in the middle of what might be called the high-point…

    • 855 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “The Future is Now,” Joel Achenbach exposes our inability to foresee the next big thing in science and technology. Achenbach refers to the internet as being an entity that was not foreseen. Within a relatively short period of time the internet has forever changed the way in which we live our lives. We buy, shop, learn, and enjoy entertainment differently since the inception of the internet. Achenbach uses the fact that the internet was not predicted to support his stance by explaining the origins of the word “internet” and how quickly the internet grew. As the pursuit of knowledge becomes increasingly stratified; applied science produces a series of inventions, heavily used by the masses, in which very few people fully understand how those…

    • 335 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In order to bring about the nature of Nelson’s poignant style, she creates an atmosphere of hostility, mystery and suspense in her story that allow readers to evoke a feeling of isolation and despair. She garners an inventory of true experiences into fictional ideas, in which she transforms, metaphorically into her images of life fiction. Undoubtedly, when it comes to the philosophical concerns of morality, rape is execrated. In Antonya Nelson’s ‘In The Land Of Men”, she utilizes several literary styles that focus on the negativity and struggles of one's state of mind when defined by violence to illustrate themes of guilt and shame.…

    • 204 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Goal: Zionism seeks to establish a home for the Jewish people in Palestine, secured under public law…

    • 1861 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He fails to touch on the notion of Eastern Zionism. Eastern Zionism sees Zionism as aligning to a true, strong and unified Jewish culture. If a Jewish State is to be just that, a Jewish State, it is necessary for it to grow organically through a strong and powerful sense of Judaism. Being that Judaism is a Religion, this requires a revival of religious and spiritual life and culture. Once this has come about in the holy land then a Jewish State can grow through natural methods and retain its authentic Judaism. If however, a state for the Jewish people is created only through mass immigration of Jews, with little attention to cultivation of a real and authentic Jewish spirit, this state will inevitably become a blend of various national influences from which the immigrants come, with perhaps a small side of a hodgepodge form of Judaism for good measure. The secret to our peoples continued survival lies in the power of the spirit not in the material. A purely political idea however, based only on a political identity will inevitably fail to include this spiritual and cultural aspect. This spiritual aspect can only be retained through the blossoming of a spiritual culture. In order for Judaism to remain intact, we as Jews must cultivate our Judaism. “Hibbat Zion looks to a Jewish State to provide only a…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Humbert's The Awakening

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages

    His tactic is crystal clear: if the child is too scared to be separated from him, she will keep her mouth shut regarding anything that could compromise her (and by extent Humbert). He begins by mentioning that she is an orphan therefore all alone without him which is meant to scare her into not wanting to be abandoned. Moreover, the man is appealing to things that she enjoys like clothes and makeup and threatening to have those things removed from her. He is also implying that there is something wrong with her, something that only he will put up with, and that otherwise, she would be “analyzed” and “institutionalized” by the rest of society. Considering how he has already broken her at this point, she is most likely to believe him when he says…

    • 341 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    On the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Palestinian land has been increasingly taken over by Israel for years. An extremist Jewish group called the Zionists, emerged in the late 1800s , seeking to find a homeland for the Jews, and searching in both Africa and the Americas before finally settling on Palestine. This did not appear as a problem or threat at first but as many more Zionists immigrated to Palestine with the intention of taking over the land to create a Jewish state, fighting broke out with the Palestinians, increasingly surging with Hitler’s rise to power during World War I. To this day, Palestinians have very minimal control of what mere land they have left, especially with Israel’s military forces using extremely oppressive methods.…

    • 1378 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Brownfeld, Allan. Anti-Semitism: Its Changing Meaning, Journal of Palestine Studies, Bol.16, No. 3 (Spring, 1987), pp. 53-67. Published by University of California Press on behalf of the Institute for Palestine Studies Article DOI: 10:2307/2536789 Article Stable URL:http://www.jstor.org//stable/2536789…

    • 821 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays