3.5 

Israel

By Omer Bartov
Israel by Omer Bartov digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A leading Israeli American scholar of the Holocaust explores and explains his native country's intensifying turn toward violence and exclusion.

The distinguished historian Omer Bartov was born on a kibbutz, grew up in Tel Aviv, and served in the Israel Defense Forces during the Yom Kippur War. He went on to become a leading scholar of the German army and the Holocaust, before turning his attention to his native country.

In Israel: What Went Wrong?, Bartov sketches the tragic transformation of Zionism, a movement that sought to emancipate European Jewry from oppression, into a state ideology of ethno-nationalism. How is it possible, he asks, that a state founded in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust, an event that gave legitimacy to a national home for the Jews, stands credibly accused of perpetrating large-scale war crimes? How do we come to terms with the fact that Israel’s war of destruction is being conducted with the support, laced with denial and indifference, of so many of its Jewish citizens?

Tracing the roots of the violent events currently unfolding in Israel and the occupied territories, Bartov tracks his country's moral tribulations and considers the origins of Zionism, the intertwining of Israel’s independence with Palestinian displacement, the politics of the Holocaust, controversies over the term "genocide," and the uncertain future. The result is a searing and urgent critique that addresses today’s debates over Zionism and the future of Israel with rigor and depth.

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Israel Reviews

3.5
“O wzajemnej spirali nienawiści i dehumanizacji, która przyszła, choć miało być nigdy więcej. Dużo odwołań do Zagłady i antysemityzmu, warto przeczytać, by zrozumieć kiedy kończy się granica.”
“This explains some of the history and events that range from the creation of Israel up to mid 2025. This is basically the only positives I can attribute to this book unfortunately. To think that the conflict and genocide can cease with pressure from outside forces and afterwards everyone will just hold hands and sing koombiya is delusional. It felt like the horrors of the Nakba (as well as the continuous destruction) were glossed over while being extremely outraged by October 7th. October 7th was presented as an attack out of the blue and not as a culmination of events that lead up to it. There will not be a resolution for peace without accountability. To think otherwise is extremely naive.”

About Omer Bartov

Omer Bartov is the Dean’s Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Brown University and the author of many books, including Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town Called Buczacz, which won the National Jewish Book Award; Tales from the Borderlands: Making and Unmaking the Galician Past; and Genocide, the Holocaust and Israel-Palestine: First-Person History in Times of Crisis.

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