Sicker provides a synthesis from a wide range of sources that
have not previously been integrated to present an unromanticized
recapitulation of the events and personalities that led to the
troubled birth of modern Israel. Much historical writing on modern
Israel, Sicker asserts, is apologetic and editorially filtered in
conformity with a traditional Zionist historiography that tends to
obscure as much as it reveals. As a result, the emergence of modern
Israel is shrouded in a mythology that has little or no place for
inconvenient facts or dissonant voices. Sicker examines the nature
of the struggles within the Zionist community over the national
idea and its implications, and the evolving interactions of that
community with the external political environment. This leads him
to assign a far more significant role to the so- called right-wing
movements than is usually allotted to them in the traditional
left-oriented historiography and a more critical assessment of the
Zionist leadership.
He shows that virtually every major problem faced by
contemporary Israel, a half-century after it came into existence,
was foreshadowed by the events and circumstances that precipitated
and conditioned its emergence. Sicker examines the seemingly
irreconcilable differences between the left and right extremes of
the political spectrum; between the religious community and the
secular; and between the Zionists and the anti-Zionists. Today, a
half-century later, these same issues are causing an increasing
polarization of Israeli society, with uncertain ramifications for
the future.
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