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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > General > Religious intolerance, persecution & conflict > General
The Jewish community in Turkey today is very diverse with extremely
different views as to whether Jews are reluctant or enthusiastic
about living in Turkey. Many see themselves primarily as Turks and
only then as Jews, while some believe quite the opposite. Some deny
there are any expressions of antisemitism in Turkey while others
would call it xenophobia and would claim that the other non-Muslim
communities in Turkey share the same antagonism. 'Antisemitism and
Anti-Zionism in Turkey' provides a comprehensive history of the
extent of antisemitism in Turkey, from the time of the Ottomans,
through the establishing of the Turkish Republic, and up to recent
times and the AK Party. It also provides an in-depth analysis of
the effect of Israeli military operations on antisemitism, from the
Second Lebanon War in 2006 to Operation Protective Edge in 2014.
Much emphasis is given to the last decade, as scholars and local
Jews assert that antisemitism has increased during this period. An
illustrated overview of antisemitism in Turkish media, covering
newspapers, books, entertainment, and education, is provided. The
book also analyses Turkish society's attitude towards Jews in
contrast with other minorities, and examines how the other
minorities see the Jews according to their experience with Turkish
society and government. A unique poll, data collected from personal
interviews and the use of both Turkish and Israeli research
resources, all help to provide a fresh insight into antisemitism in
Turkey. This book will therefore be a key resource for students and
scholars of antisemitism and anti-zionism studies, Turkish Studies
and Middle East Studies.
In Resilient Communities, Jana Krause focuses on civilian agency
and mobilization 'from below' and explains violence and
non-violence in communal wars. Drawing on extensive field research
on ethno-religious conflicts in Ambon/Maluku Province in eastern
Indonesia and Jos/Plateau State in central Nigeria, this book shows
how civilians responded to local conflict dynamics very
differently, evading, supporting, or collectively resisting armed
groups. Combining evidence collected from more than 200 interviews
with residents, community leaders, and former fighters, local
scholarly work (in Indonesian), and local newspaper-based event
data analysis, this book explains civilian mobilization, militia
formation, and conflict escalation. The book's comparison of
vulnerable mixed communities and (un)successful prevention efforts
demonstrates how under courageous leadership resilient communities
can emerge that adapt to changing conflict zones and collectively
prevent killings. By developing the concepts of communal war and
social resilience, Krause extends our understanding of local
violence, (non-)escalation, and implications for prevention.
In Resilient Communities, Jana Krause focuses on civilian agency
and mobilization 'from below' and explains violence and
non-violence in communal wars. Drawing on extensive field research
on ethno-religious conflicts in Ambon/Maluku Province in eastern
Indonesia and Jos/Plateau State in central Nigeria, this book shows
how civilians responded to local conflict dynamics very
differently, evading, supporting, or collectively resisting armed
groups. Combining evidence collected from more than 200 interviews
with residents, community leaders, and former fighters, local
scholarly work (in Indonesian), and local newspaper-based event
data analysis, this book explains civilian mobilization, militia
formation, and conflict escalation. The book's comparison of
vulnerable mixed communities and (un)successful prevention efforts
demonstrates how under courageous leadership resilient communities
can emerge that adapt to changing conflict zones and collectively
prevent killings. By developing the concepts of communal war and
social resilience, Krause extends our understanding of local
violence, (non-)escalation, and implications for prevention.
Religious terrorism poses a significant challenge for many
countries around the world. Extremists who justify violence in
God's name can be found in every religious tradition, and attacks
perpetrated by faith-based militants have increased dramatically
over the past three decades. Given the reality of religious
terrorism today, it would seem counterintuitive that the best
weapon against violent religious extremism would be for countries
and societies to allow for the free practice of religion; yet this
is precisely what this book argues. Weapon of Peace investigates
the link between terrorism and the repression of religion, both
from a historical perspective and against contemporary developments
in the Middle East and elsewhere. Drawing upon a range of different
case studies and quantitative data, Saiya makes the case that the
suppression and not the expression of religion leads to violence
and extremism, and that safeguarding religious freedom is both a
moral and strategic imperative.
In popular culture and scholarship, a consistent trope about
Mormonism is that it features a propensity for violence, born of
the religion's theocratic impulses and the antinomian tendencies of
special revelation. Mormonism and Violence critically assesses the
relationship of Mormonism and violence through a close examination
of Mormon history and scripture, focusing on the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Element pays special attention to
violence in the Book of Mormon and the history of the movement,
from the 1830s to the present.
'Wonderfully learned, wonderfully written, a microscopic
examination of the acorn from which a truly mighty oak would
spring. I learnt a huge amount.' - Tom Holland, author of Dominion:
The Making of the Western Mind 2020 sees the 400th anniversary of
the sailing of the Mayflower - the ship that took the Pilgrim
Fathers to the New World. It's a foundational event in American
history, but it began as an English story, which pioneered the idea
of religious freedom. The illegal underground movement of
Protestant separatists from Elizabeth I's Church of England is a
story of subterfuge and danger, arrests and interrogations, prison
and executions. It starts with Queen Mary's attempts to burn
Protestantism out of England, which created a Protestant
underground. Later, when Elizabeth's Protestant reformation didn't
go far enough, radicals recreated that underground, meeting
illegally throughout England, facing prison and death for their
crimes. They went into exile in the Netherlands, where they lived
in poverty - and finally the New World. Stephen Tomkins tells this
fascinating story - one that is rarely told as an important piece
of English, as well as American, history - that is full of
contemporary relevance: religious violence, the threat to national
security, freedom of religion and tolerance of dangerous opinions.
This is a must-read book for anyone interested in the untold story
of how the Mayflower came to be launched. 'A rattling good read' -
The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu
To allow or restrict hate speech is a hotly debated issue in many
societies. While the right to freedom of speech is fundamental to
liberal democracies, most countries have accepted that hate speech
causes significant harm and ought to be regulated. Richard Moon
examines the application of hate speech laws when religion is
either the source or target of such speech. Moon describes the
various legal restrictions on hate speech, religious insult, and
blasphemy in Canada, Europe and elsewhere, and uses cases from
different jurisdictions to illustrate the particular challenges
raised by religious hate speech. The issues addressed are highly
topical: speech that attacks religious communities, specifically
anti-Muslim rhetoric, and hateful speech that is based on religious
doctrine or scripture, such as anti-gay speech. The book draws on a
rich understanding of freedom of expression, the harms of hate
speech, and the role of religion in public life.
For three centuries, a mixture of religion, violence, and economic
conditions created a fertile matrix in Western Europe that
racialized an entire diasporic population who lived in the urban
centers of the Latin West: Jews. This Element explores how religion
and violence, visited on Jewish bodies and Jewish lives, coalesced
to create the first racial state in the history of the West. It is
an example of how the methods and conceptual frames of postcolonial
and race studies, when applied to the study of religion, can be
productive of scholarship that rewrites the foundational history of
the past.
"Persecution, Polemic, and Dialogue" follows the interaction
between Jews and Christians through the ages in all its richness,
complexity, and diversity. This collection of essays analyze
anti-Semitism, perceptions of the Other, and religious debates in
the Middle Ages and proceed to consider modern and contemporary
interactions, which are marked by both striking continuity and
profound difference. These include controversies among historians,
the promise and challenge of interfaith dialogue, and the explosive
exchanges surrounding Mel Gibson's film on the passion. This volume
will engage scholars, students, and any reader intrigued by one of
the longest and most fraught intergroup relationships in history.
This book springs from the Bristol-Sheffield Hallam Colloquium on
Contemporary Antisemitism at the University of Bristol in September
2015. International experts in Religious Studies, Law, Politics,
Sociology, Psychology, and History came together to examine the
complexities of contemporary antisemitism. Recent attacks on Jews
in European cities have increased awareness of antisemitism and, as
this collection shows, such attacks cannot be separated from wider
geo-political and ideological factors. One distinct feature of
antisemitism today is its demonization of the State of Israel.
Older ideas also feature Jews being blamed for all the world's
ills, thought to possess almost supernatural levels of power and
wealth, and conspiring to harm the non-Jewish other. These and
other ideas forming the background to antisemitism in Europe and
North America are unpacked in this book with a view to
understanding - and thereby combatting - contemporary antisemitism.
A key concern is how unifying features might be isolated amid the
diverse manifestations of this oldest of hatreds.
The most devastating attacks against the Jews of medieval Christian
Europe took place during the riots that erupted, in 1391 and 1392,
in the lands of Castile and Aragon. For ten horrific months,
hundreds if not thousands of Jews were killed, numerous Jewish
institutions destroyed, and many Jews forcibly converted to
Christianity. Benjamin R. Gampel explores why the famed convivencia
of medieval Iberian society - in which Christians, Muslims and Jews
seemingly lived together in relative harmony - was conspicuously
absent. Using extensive archival evidence, this critical volume
explores the social, religious, political, and economic tensions at
play in each affected town. The relationships, biographies and
personal dispositions of the royal family are explored to
understand why monarchic authority failed to protect the Jews
during these violent months. Gampel's extensive study is essential
for scholars and graduate students of medieval Iberian and Jewish
history.
This Element reviews the state of the question regarding theories
of cultic violence. It introduces definitions and vocabulary and
presents relevant historical examples of religious violence. It
then discusses the 1960s and 1970s, the period immediately before
the Jonestown tragedy. Considerations of the post-Jonestown (1978),
and then post-Waco (1993) literature follow. After 9/11 (2001),
some of the themes identified in previous decades reappear. The
Element concludes by examining the current problem of repression
and harassment directed at religious believers. Legal
discrimination by governments, as well as persecution of religious
minorities by non-state actors, has challenged earlier fears about
cultic violence.
The global persecution of Christians is an urgent human rights
issue that remains underreported. This volume presents the results
of the first systematic global investigation into how Christians
respond to persecution. World-class scholars of global Christianity
present first-hand research from most of the sites of the harshest
persecution as well as the West and Latin America. Their findings
make clear the nature of persecution, the reasons for it, Christian
responses to it - both non-violent and confrontational - and the
effects of these responses. Motivating the volume is the hope that
this knowledge will empower all who would exercise solidarity with
the world's persecuted Christians and will offer the victims
strategies for a more effective response. This book is written for
anyone concerned about the persecution of Christians or more
generally about the human right of religious freedom, including
scholars, activists, political and religious leaders, and those who
work for international organizations.
One morning in October 2013, nineteen-year-old Ayan Juma and her
sixteen-year-old sister Leila left their family home in Oslo. Later
that day they sent an email to their parents. 'Peace, God's mercy
and blessings upon you, Mum and Dad ... Please do not be cross with
us...' Leila and Ayan had decided to travel to Syria, 'and help out
down there as best we can'. They had been planning for months. By
the time their desperate father Sadiq tracks them to Turkey, they
have already crossed the border. But Sadiq is determined to find
them. What follows is the gripping, heartbreaking story of a family
ripped apart. While Sadiq risks his own life to bring his daughters
back, at home his wife Sara begins to question their life in
Norway. How could her children have been radicalised without her
knowledge? How can she protect her two younger sons from the same
fate? Asne Seierstad - with the complete support of the Juma family
- followed the story from the beginning, through its many dramatic
twists and turns. It's a tale that crosses from Sadiq and Sara's
original home in Somalia, to their council estate in Oslo, to
Turkey and to Syria - where two teenage sisters must face the
shocking consequences of their decision.
For half a century, S Perry Brickman harbored a deep and personally
painful secret... On a late summer day in 2006, Brickman and his
wife attended an exhibit on the history of Jewish life at Emory
University and were astonished to come face-to-face with documents
that strongly suggested that Brickman and many others had been
failed out of Emory's dental school because they were Jewish. They
decided to embark on an uncharted path to uncover the truth. With
no initial allies and plenty of resistance, Brickman awoke each
morning determined to continue extracting evidence hidden in deep
and previously unmined archives. While the overt discrimination was
displayed in charts and graphs, the names of the victims were
scrupulously withheld. The ability of the perpetrators to silence
all opposition and the willingness of the Jewish community to
submit to the establishment were deeply troubling as Brickman
continued to dig deeper into the issue. Extracted brings to light
the human element of the rampant antisemitism that affected the
dental profession in twentieth-century America-the personal
tragedies, the faces, and the individual stories of shame and
humiliation. After five years of identifying, interviewing, and
recording the victims, Brickman was finally permitted to present
his documentary to Emory officials and ask for redemption for the
stain she had made.
Deadly Clerics explains why some Muslim clerics adopt the ideology
of militant jihadism while most do not. The book explores multiple
pathways of cleric radicalization and shows that the interplay of
academic, religious, and political institutions has influenced the
rise of modern jihadism through a mechanism of blocked ambition. As
long as clerics' academic ambitions remain attainable, they are
unlikely to espouse violent jihad. Clerics who are forced out of
academia are more likely to turn to jihad for two reasons: jihadist
ideas are attractive to those who see the system as turning against
them, and preaching a jihad ideology can help these outsider
clerics attract supporters and funds. The book draws on evidence
from various sources, including large-scale statistical analysis of
texts and network data obtained from the Internet, case studies of
clerics' lives, and ethnographic participant observations at sites
in Cairo, Egypt.
This book offers a study of the Jewish community in Kielce and its
environs during World War II and the Holocaust: it is the first of
its kind in providing a comprehensive account of Kielce's Jews and
their history as victims under the German occupation. The book
focuses in particular on Jewish-Polish relations in the Kielce
region; the deportation of the Jews of Kielce and its surrounding
areas to the Treblinka death camp; the difficulties faced by those
attempting to help and save them; and daily life in the Small
Ghetto from September 1942 until late May 1943.
A New York Times Notable Book A New York Times Book Review Editors'
Choice Named a Book of the Year by the Telegraph, the Spectator,
the Observer, and BBC History Magazine In Harran, the locals
refused to convert. They were dismembered, their limbs hung along
the town's main street. In Alexandria, zealots pulled the elderly
philosopher-mathematician Hypatia from her chariot and flayed her
to death with shards of broken pottery. Not long before, their
fellow Christians had invaded the city's greatest temple, smashing
its world-famous statues and destroying all that was left of
Alexandria's Great Library. Today we refer to Christianity's
conquest of the West as a "triumph." But this victory entailed an
orgy of destruction in which Jesus's followers attacked and
suppressed classical culture, helping to pitch Western civilization
into a thousand-year-long decline. In The Darkening Age, Catherine
Nixey brilliantly resurrects this lost history, offering a
wrenching account of the rise of Christianity and its terrible
cost. "A feast of tales of murder, vandalism [and] willful
destruction . . . Nixey has a great story to tell, and she tells it
exceptionally well." -- Guardian "[A] bold, dazzling and
provocative book." -- Peter Frankopan, best-selling author of The
Silk Roads
We may think we know what defines religious fanaticism: violent
action undertaken with dogmatic certainty. But the term fanatic,
from the European Reformation to today, has never been a stable
one. Then and now it has been reductively defined to justify state
violence and to delegitimize alternative sources of authority.
Unknowing Fanaticism rejects the simplified binary of fanatical
religion and rational politics, turning to Renaissance literature
to demonstrate that fanaticism was integral to how both modern
politics and poetics developed, from the German Peasants' Revolt to
the English Civil War. The book traces two entangled approaches to
fanaticism in this long Reformation moment: the targeting of it as
an extreme political threat and the engagement with it as a deep
epistemological and poetic problem. In the first, thinkers of
modernity from Martin Luther to Thomas Hobbes and John Locke
positioned themselves against fanaticism to pathologize rebellion
and abet theological and political control. In the second, which
arose alongside and often in response to the first, the poets of
fanaticism investigated the link between fanatical
self-annihilation-the process by which one could become a vessel
for divine violence-and the practices of writing poetry. Edmund
Spenser, John Donne, and John Milton recognized in the fanatic's
claim to be a passive instrument of God their own incapacity to
know and depict the origins of fanaticism. Yet this crisis of
unknowing was a productive one. It led these writers to experiment
with poetic techniques that would allow them to address
fanaticism's tendency to unsettle the boundaries between human and
divine agency and between individual and collective bodies. These
poets demand a new critical method, which this book attempts to
model: a historically-minded and politicized formalism that can
attend to the complexity of the poetic encounter with fanaticism.
It is a little known fact that as early as the thirteenth century,
Europe's political and religious powers tried to physically mark
and distinguish the Jews from the rest of society. During the
Renaissance, Italian Jews first had to wear a yellow round badge on
their chest, and then later, a yellow beret. The discriminatory
marks were a widespread phenomenon with serious consequences for
Jewish communities and their relations with Christians. Beginning
with a sartorial study - how the Jews were marked on their clothing
and what these marks meant - the book offers an in-depth analysis
of anti-Jewish discrimination across three Italian city-states:
Milan, Genoa, and Piedmont. Moving beyond Italy, it also examines
the place of Jews and Jewry law in the increasingly interconnected
world of Early Modern European politics.
There is currently much discussion regarding the causes of
terrorist acts, as well as the connection between terrorism and
religion. Terrorism is attributed either to religious 'fanaticism'
or, alternately, to political and economic factors, with religion
more or less dismissed as a secondary factor. The Cambridge
Companion to Religion and Terrorism examines this complex
relationship between religion and terrorism phenomenon through a
collection of essays freshly written for this volume. Bringing
varying approaches to the topic, from the theoretical to the
empirical, the Companion includes an array of subjects, such as
radicalization, suicide bombing, and rational choice, as well as
specific case studies. The result is a richly textured collection
that prompts readers to critically consider the cluster of
phenomena that we have come to refer to as 'terrorism,' and
terrorism's relationship with the similarly problematic set of
phenomena that we call 'religion.'
The Conflict over the Conflict chronicles one of the most divisive
and toxic issues on today's college and university campuses:
Israel/Palestine. Some pro-Palestinian students call supporters of
Israel's right to exist racist, and disrupt their events. Some
pro-Israel students label pro-Palestinian students terrorists, and
the Jews among them traitors. Lawsuits are filed. Legislation is
proposed. Faculty members are blacklisted and receive death
threats. Academic freedom is compromised and the entire academic
enterprise is threatened. How did we get here and what can be done?
In this passionate book, Kenneth S. Stern examines attempts from
each side to censor the other at a time when some say students,
rather than being challenged to wrestle with difficult issues and
ideas, are being quarantined from them. He uniquely frames the
examination: our ability to think rationally is inhibited when our
identity is fiercely connected to an issue of perceived social
justice or injustice, and our proclivity to see in-groups and
out-groups - us versus them - is obvious. According to Stern, the
campus is the best place to mine this conflict and our intense
views about it to help future generations do what they are supposed
to do: think. The Conflict over the Conflict shows how this is
possible.
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