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Islam has permeated Chinese civilization as a religion and
lifestyle for centuries. This volume offers a summary of key
developments concerning scholarship on Islam in China and presents
a record of research on this topic. The first part of the book is a
narrative introduction to the history of Islam in China, the
coexistence of Chinese and Muslim cultures, and contemporary
issues. The second part of the work is a listing of more than four
hundred sources of information on the topic. Entries are grouped in
ten categories, and each entry includes a descriptive annotation.
An appendix lists journals devoted to research in this field, and
the volume concludes with author, title, and subject indexes.
Years of Upheaval discusses 'Axial periods' in history; years that
witnessed such fundamental reversals in history as to make the
world turn upside down and inaugurate a new era. Raphael Israeli
sees the post-1989 period as such a period in Islam. He explores
events in the Islamic world since the end of the 1980s, and during
the 1990s and their aftermath, particularly following the Iranian
Islamic Revolution, the Rushdie Affair, and the death of Khumeini.
Israeli posits these events signalled a new age of Islamic violence
and fundamentalism. The period has seen the dissipation of state
borders and the rise of transnational and trans-territorial
movements, such as ISIS, that have been extraordinarily attractive
to young people in the Islamic world. The hopeful Arab Spring
(2010-2013) has been replaced by a threatening Islamic winter. A
number of major events shook the Muslim world on both the Asian and
the African continents as well as peripheral Islamic minorities in
Australia, Canada, and Latin America. Among them were the Islamic
Bomb and the rise of radical Islamic movements (notably Hamas and
Hezbollah) and the rift between Sunnites and Shiites. These and
other momentous events in the Islamic world occasioned the 'Arab
Spring' and produced unrest in a wide swath of the Muslim world.
Even more importantly, these were forming trends that are
characterizing the decades thereafter.
Positing that the Palestinians are a unit mainly triangled between
Israel, the Territories, and Jordan, and that the territory in
dispute encompasses the whole of British Mandate Palestine, Raphael
Israeli gives an overview of the roots and historical development
of the problem. He then analyzes and discusses in-depth all the
solutions envisioned so far (status quo, Jordanization of
Palestine, Palestinization of Jordan, annexation, territorial
compromise, autonomy and transfer of population), focusing on the
reasons for their failure and/or unacceptability. Professor Israeli
challenges conventional wisdom and comes up with a workable answer
that could square the triangle. The solution, based on mutual
recognition and respect, is premised on a rigorous and fair
parallelism between the claims and rights of both parties, Israelis
and Palestinians. This means that Jews, as well as Palestinians,
should be recognized as a people (and not only a religion) by their
adversaries--equally entitled to self-determination, to their
national liberation movements (Zionism in the case of the Jews) and
to the territory in dispute (i.e., the whole of Mandate Palestine).
These premises being accepted, the problem, now reduced to a
quantitative and therefore negotiable one, will be to divide the
land at stake into a State of Palestine (east) and Israel (west).
Having thus tried to meet the contradictory needs of both parties,
Israeli comes up with a novel and imaginative solution--embodying a
new concept of sovereignty, that could well serve as a model
elsewhere--to the problem of minorities left in Israel or
Palestine. It rests on the possibility of opting for one of two
statuses in each country: --that of full citizen, with all the
rights and obligations citizenship creates; or --that of resident
alien, with all the rights and protection, as well as inherent
limitations, that this status brings. The adoption of this unique
solution would open up many possibilities for cooperation and peace
in the Middle East.
Throughout Yugoslavia during World War II, anti-Semitism was both
deeply rooted and widespread. Raphael Israeli traces the
circumstances and the historical context in which the pro-Nazi
Ustasha state, encompassing Croatia and Bosnia, erected the Jadovno
and Jasenovac death camps. He distils fact and historical record
from accusation and grievance. Both Serbs and Croats have accused
each other of the wrongdoings that everyone knows occurred. While
the German Nazis, Croat Ustasha, Serbian collaborators, Cetnicks,
and Bosnian Hanjar recruits are often seen as the wrongdoers,
certain individuals helped the Jews, hid them at great risk, and
enabled them to survive. They were the only people who helped the
Jews. This volume is not about judging one side or the other; it is
about acknowledging the evil all sides inflicted upon the Jewish
minority in their midst. Serbs, Muslims, and Croats continue to
dominate the ex-Yugoslavian scene. It has been their arena of
battle for centuries, while the flourishing Jewish minority culture
in that area has all but come to a historical standstill and has
almost completely vanished. Yet the struggle over the historical
record continues.
The recent resurgence of Islam in the Middle East is a far more
complex phenomenon than is often suggested by those analyses which
reduce recent developments in the area to no more than an
intensification of religiosity. Islam and Politics in the Modern
Middle East challenges that perception of the contemporary Middle
East. It explores the nature of the Islamic revival and attempts to
establish the original impulse behind particular instances of
Islamic resurgence. It also examines the degree to which religious
institutions have served as a mechanism for expressing secular
demands and frustrations and investigates to what extent politics
is a functional alternative to religion. First published in 1984.
In The Death Camps of Croatia, Raphael Israeli shows that
throughout Yugoslavia during World War II, anti-semitism was both
deeply rooted and widespread. This book traces the circumstances
and the historical context in which the pro-Nazi Ustasha state,
encompassing Croatia and Bosnia, erected the Jadovno and Jasenovac
death camps. Israeli distills fact and historical record from
accusation and grievance, noting that seventy years later, the gap
in research and the collection of data, memoirs, and oral histories
has become almost irreparable. This volume meets the challenge,
basing its conclusions on evidence from participants from the
period.
The battle between the Serbs and the Croats is not likely to be
settled any time soon. Both sides have accused the other of the
wrongdoings that everyone knows occurred. While the German Nazis,
Croat Ustasha, Serbian collaborators, Cetnicks, and Bosnian Hanjar
recruits are often seen as the wrongdoers, there were individuals
who helped the Jews, hid them at great risk, and enabled them to
survive. These people absorbed the Jews in their own ranks, and
gave them the means to fight; they were the only people who helped
the Jews.
This volume is not about judging one side or the other; it is
about acknowledging the evil all sides inflicted upon the Jewish
minority in their midst. Serbs, Muslims, and Croats continue to
dominate the ex-Yugoslavian scene. It has been their arena of
battle for centuries, while the flourishing Jewish minority culture
in that area has all but come to a historical standstill and has
almost completely vanished. Yet the struggle over the historical
record continues.
'Are they really Muslims?' Islam in China reveals the struggle for
identity of the small yet vital Muslim community of China, a little
studied minority on the fringes of the Islamic world now thrust
into the spotlight by the opening of China to the world and the
rise of independent Muslim republics on China's western borders.
Both timely and important, the multifaceted essays-_ collection of
over twenty years of Raphael Israeli's scholarship on Chinese
Muslims_offer detailed insight into the relationship between
China's non-Muslim majority and an increasingly self-confident
guest culture. The work uncovers a history of uneasy ethnic,
philosophical, and ideological coexistence, the gradual
sinification of the Chinese Muslim creed, and the increasing
accommodation of Islam by a modern, westernizing China. In
addition, it highlights a religious group riddled with
sectarianism; factional rifts that reveal the doctrinal, social,
and political diversity at the core of Chinese Islam.
The fallout from the Iraq War in 2003 has been widespread. The US
finds itself under siege in Iraq; the Iraqi State is ruled by
chaos, corruption and terrorism; and the hunt for weapons of mass
destruction has been relentlessly debated in the media. Through the
prism of the three major conflicts during Saddam's reign: The
Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War (1991) and the climax to Middle East
tensions, the War on Iraq (2003); Raphael Israeli exposes the
tyranny, deception and terror synonymous with the Ba'ath regime.
Focusing on Iraq's demographic populations -- the Shi'ites in the
south, the Kurdish north, and the Sunni ruling minority -- the
author documents the difficulties America faces internally as
rulers of an occupied land, and internationally as a perceived
unilateralist aggressor. The Impact of the Iraq War contains
revealing insights into Saddam's nuclear, chemical and biological
programs, his sponsorship of terrorist groups, and his
collaboration with other countries, including Syria and France.
Testimonies of scientists, along with Israeli's intelligent
analysis, expose the true scale of WMD proliferation in Ba'athist
Iraq. The term Babylonian intrigue' is used to describe the
confusion, chaos and misinterpretation of language that has taken
hold in the aftermath of the war. The author provides a penetrating
analysis of the social, political, economic, and strategic ruptures
the Iraq War has caused in inter-Arab relations and the Islamic
world. The book concludes with an evaluation of who won and who
gained from this war, and what the future holds for Iraqis,
Muslims, and the West.
The fallout from the Iraq War in 2003 has been widespread. The US
finds itself under siege in Iraq; the Iraqi State is ruled by
chaos, corruption and terrorism; and the hunt for weapons of mass
destruction has been relentlessly debated in the media. Through the
prism of the three major conflicts during Saddam's reign: The
Iran-Iraq War, the Gulf War (1991) and the climax to Middle East
tensions, the War on Iraq (2003); Raphael Israeli exposes the
tyranny, deception and terror synonymous with the Ba'ath regime.
Focusing on Iraq's demographic populations -- the Shi'ites in the
south, the Kurdish north, and the Sunni ruling minority -- the
author documents the difficulties America faces internally as
rulers of an occupied land, and internationally as a perceived
unilateralist aggressor. The Impact of the Iraq War contains
revealing insights into Saddam's nuclear, chemical and biological
programs, his sponsorship of terrorist groups, and his
collaboration with other countries, including Syria and France.
Testimonies of scientists, along with Israeli's intelligent
analysis, expose the true scale of WMD proliferation in Ba'athist
Iraq. The term Babylonian intrigue' is used to describe the
confusion, chaos and misinterpretation of language that has taken
hold in the aftermath of the war. The author provides a penetrating
analysis of the social, political, economic, and strategic ruptures
the Iraq War has caused in inter-Arab relations and the Islamic
world. The book concludes with an evaluation of who won and who
gained from this war, and what the future holds for Iraqis,
Muslims, and the West.
Breaking with the tradition that literature about the direction and
coordination of military forces should only deal with technology
and procedures, this work also takes into account the underlying
domestic conditions of a conflict, including cultural, personal and
political relations. The book focuses on two instances, where
fundamental assumptions were at loggerheads and provides a
theoretical "nuts and bolts" approach introduced within the opening
chapters.
Firstly, the book investigates the effect of the several armies
present "in the field" without any central authority during March
1918. It explores how this expensive luxury, as the Germans
threatened to destroy the allied forces, caused internal British
disagreements over strategy which weakened the British
Expeditionary Force.
The second case analyses how Norway tumbled into war in 1940. The
Norwegian government had a tacit, incoherent and ill-coordinated
plan for how they should once again keep Norway out of war. As a
consequence, the de facto decision to resist German aggression was
in fact taken by a rather insignificant colonel. This case
demonstrates how the underlying conditions of command and control
and not the actual directives from the government were the
historical focus which determined Norway's destiny.
"Are they really Muslims?" Islam in China reveals the struggle for
identity of the small yet vital Muslim community of China, a little
studied minority on the fringes of the Islamic world now thrust
into the spotlight by the opening of China to the world and the
rise of independent Muslim republics on China's western borders.
Both timely and important, the multifaceted essays-- collection of
over twenty years of Raphael Israeli's scholarship on Chinese
Muslims-offer detailed insight into the relationship between
China's non-Muslim majority and an increasingly self-confident
guest culture. The work uncovers a history of uneasy ethnic,
philosophical, and ideological coexistence, the gradual
sinification of the Chinese Muslim creed, and the increasing
accommodation of Islam by a modern, westernizing China. In
addition, it highlights a religious group riddled with
sectarianism; factional rifts that reveal the doctrinal, social,
and political diversity at the core of Chinese Islam.
This is the story of the cultural and political struggle between
Christians and Muslims, and of the rapid Islamicization of Nazareth
- the birthplace of Christianity - ironically, under the rule of
the Jewish State of Israel.
This is the story of an amazing manifestation of a modern blood
libel against the Jews and Israel, involving not only Arabs and
Muslims, but also the European media and world organizations. Based
on rich documentation from all angles: Israeli, Palestinian, Arab,
European, American, and International, Raphael Israeli aims to draw
our attention toward another piece in the multi-faceted puzzle of
the Arab-Israeli dispute, and of international antisemitism. By
bringing this Middle Eastern version of the perennial theme of
blood libel before their readers, the author hopes to instruct
people of good will of the dangers inherent in protracted
conflicts, such as the one opposing Israelis and Arabs, which can
provoke war, misery, destruction, and violence, but also
recriminations born out of hallucinations and ill-will. This is a
multi-disciplinary book which should interest not only students of
antisemitism, Judaism, and Israel, but also psychologists,
journalists, political scientists, and scholars of communications,
the Middle East, international relations, and the Israeli-Arab
dispute.
This is the story of an amazing manifestation of a modern blood
libel against the Jews and Israel, involving not only Arabs and
Muslims, but also the European media and world organizations. Based
on rich documentation from all angles: Israeli, Palestinian, Arab,
European, American, and International, Raphael Israeli aims to draw
our attention toward another piece in the multi-faceted puzzle of
the Arab-Israeli dispute, and of international antisemitism. By
bringing this Middle Eastern version of the perennial theme of
blood libel before their readers, the author hopes to instruct
people of good will of the dangers inherent in protracted
conflicts, such as the one opposing Israelis and Arabs, which can
provoke war, misery, destruction, and violence, but also
recriminations born out of hallucinations and ill-will. This is a
multi-disciplinary book which should interest not only students of
antisemitism, Judaism, and Israel, but also psychologists,
journalists, political scientists, and scholars of communications,
the Middle East, international relations, and the Israeli-Arab
dispute.
Traces the background to the history of the Armistice Regime,
established in 1947 to combat the fighting between Jews and Arabs
in Jerusalem. The author details the Armistice Commission, which
governed its application and the many in-built problems that
thwarted their proper functioning.
Modern Arab and Muslim hostility towards Jews and Israel is rooted
not only in the Arab-Israeli conflict and traditional Islamic
teaching but also in Christian anti-Semitic attitudes brought into
the Islamic world by Western colonial powers. In this volume,
Raphael Israeli examines how the worsening situation in the Middle
East together with large waves of Muslim immigration to Europe,
North America, and Australia has brought about a comingling of two
anti-Semitic traditions.As the author explains, the unique
interaction of Muslim immigrants in the West with the host
societies brought them into contact with local, traditional anti-
Semites of the xenophobic fascist and racist Right along with the
avowedly anti-Zionist Left, to build a formidable wall of hatred
against the Jewish state and its people. To complicate this picture
further, the same Muslim immigrants share with them minority status
in a Christian majority society. Often finding themselves at odds
with the majority host society, they find themselves subject to
criticism and censure on all sides. They are engaged simultaneously
in battle with both their host society into which they cannot
integrate, and their Jewish compatriots who are a model of good
integration. Consequently, they feel exposed and lose ground in the
struggle for social acceptance.Israeli lays out the nature and
ideologies of the Muslim immigrant world and shows how in each
European country they create their own ethnic sub-groups and
religious communities, often in competition with each other. This
remarkable and courageous book will be of interest to sociologists,
Middle East specialists, and political scientists.
Political leaders of the 1930s may be accused of blindness to
danger in their failed attempts to appease totalitarian aggression,
but no one doubts they believed they were doing so to preserve
their way of life. In contrast, Raphael Israeli suggests that
twenty-first century appeasement of Islamists, wherever it occurs,
is different. Appeasement in the advanced modern states of this
century--in Europe, Australia, Canada, and even in parts of
Asia--is characterized by what amounts to a self-inflicted
humiliation, in misguided efforts to slow the advance of a rising
Islamist tide. Such appeasement surrenders core aspects of
sovereignty, turning non-Muslim populations into second- and
third-class citizens in their own countries.Disturbing warning
signs first emerged in Europe, but were either not noticed or
denied. They extended to the periphery of the Muslim world, but
their development in Western countries were unnoticed or denied,
until they hit also the peripheral areas of the Muslim world.
Canada and Australia, and to some extent the countries of Asia,
fell into a syndrome of denial, which persisted until they were
forced to listen, often at a price in human lives and carnage. In
Europe, the core of the Muslim presence developed in countries like
Britain, France and Germany, which lacked law-enforcement against
terrorists because the executive and judiciary emphasized human
rights and apparent safety over defensive measures to protect their
citizens and way of life.Both the United States and Great Britain
needed a traumatic jolt before they moved to act. In the United
States, it would be the watershed event of September 11, 2001; in
London, the July 7, 2005 bombings. And there were events in other
countries: in Spain, the March 2004 Madrid train bombings; in
France, the violent riots of 2005; in Amsterdam, the van Gogh
murder; in Asia, the Bali horror; and finally in Scandinavia, the
Cartoon Affair. These jolts shattered the tranquility of
populations who had believed in peaceful coexistence with Muslim
immigrants and in the feasibility of their integration into
national societies. This study fills a large void in the
examination of the consequences of new migrations of Muslim
populations into advanced and modern societies throughout the
world.
In December 1991, a two-volume edition of Dead Sea Scroll
photographs was issued by the Biblical Archaeology Society, an
American group headed by Hershel Shanks. It included an essay
written by Dr. Elisha Qimron, an Israeli scholar noted for his work
in the language of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Publication of this
reconstruction and transcription resulted in a lawsuit in Israel
and the United States between Qimron and Shanks. Piracy in Qumran
analyzes this legal controversy, which rocked the scholarly world
of Biblical and archaeological studies at the time, and which still
resonates today. Qimron's long years of research so as to decipher
one of the scrolls that dated from the years immediately preceding
the Christian Era led him to revolutionary conclusions. He had
controversial ideas about the ancient laws of purity of the
Essenes, the authors of the scrolls, and their problematic
relationships with the two main streams of Judaism. Read or
reconstructed differently, this same text might yield very
different conclusions. The emphasis in Raphael Israeli's volume is
on legal and moral aspects of intellectual property law as it
relates to works of historical reconstruction. There are questions
about whether Qimron's work constitutes something original, the
fruit of his creativity (and thus is copyrightable) versus whether
it is merely a copy of an ancient blurred text, in the public
domain, reconstructed by a modern author. This book does not simply
take a position with respect to the matter of Qimron versus Shanks,
it asks the reader to consider the controversy's implications for
such topics as freedom of press. Although there are other books
available about the Dead Sea Scrolls, no other study examines the
social and cultural implications of this crisis in such detail. The
story itself is intriguing for those who are not specialists in the
subject, but are generally interested in the issues raised by the
controversy. It will be of intense interest to scholars and
students of religion or international law and historians of the
Dead Sea Scrolls.
Since the World Trade Center attacks in New York on September 11,
2001, Europe has been plagued by Islamist attacks that have taken
many lives and disrupted many services. Considerable attention has
been paid to radical Islamist attacks on the United Kingdom,
France, and Germany, but far less focus has been on the Islamist
extremist impact on the rest of Europe. This book warns all
Europeans, but Middle Easterners as well, that they are not immune
to terror. That terror is confined to Jews and Israel is a myth.
Muslim extremist attacks have taken place against other Muslim
nations--as well as European nations in which Jewish influence or
Israeli support is negligible. The waves of Muslim recrimination
against the West have given rise to internal struggles within the
Arab world played out in terrorist acts. Muslim brotherhoods have
defined a global war against other religions, nations, and cultures
that stray from the principles of fundamentalism--a cultural and
military jihad. Just where religious identity supervenes national
identity has become a critical turning point. Israeli's book shows
that the line between moderates and extremists within the Islamic
fold is vague, ambiguous, and in certain situations non-existent.
It draws attention to polls and public sentiments of the Islamic
faithful, and emphasizes the Islamic attack on modernization and
its cultural sources. This timely volume is addressed to those in
the West who are not accustomed to thinking in apocalyptic terms.
Israeli provides painstaking details of European responses to
Islamist challenges, particularly those who prefer pragmatic
compliance rather than response. He demonstrates that Islamic
extremism continues to grow in the heartland of the European world.
This is neither an optimistic nor pessimistic book; its disturbing
message may be a wake-up call to some. It is a necessary read for
those who want to go beyond news, opting for a more intellectual
and comprehensive diet.
The world is watching with uncertainity as the "Arab Spring"
unfolds. Optimistically named by international media sources, the
term "Arab Spring" associates the unrest with ideas of renewal,
revival, and democratic thought and deed. Many hoped the overthrow
of authoritarian leaders signaled a promising new beginning for the
Arab world. Raphael Israeli argues that instead of paving a path
toward liberal democracy, the Arab Spring in fact launched a power
struggle. Judging from the experiences of countries where the dust
is settling including Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and perhaps also Syria
and Libya it appears that Islamic governments will fill the vacuum
in leadership. The hopes that swept the Islamic world with the Arab
Spring have given way to a winter of lost hopes and aspirations, as
it becomes increasingly clear that democratic outcomes are not on
the horizon. What is worse is that the West seems to have abandoned
its hopes for democracy and freedom in the region, instead making
peace with the idea that Islamic governments must be accepted as
the lesser of evil options. Presenting a clear-eyed picture of the
situation, Israeli examines thematic problems that cut across all
the Muslim states experiencing unrest. He groups the countries into
various blocs according to their shared characteristics, then
discusses these groups one by one. For each country, he considers
whether the liberal-democratic option is viable and examines what
kind of regime could be considered legitimate and stable. This
volume offers valuable insights for political scientists, Middle
Eastern specialists, and the general informed public eager to
comprehend the import of these momentous events.
At the doorstep of the twenty-first century, one would expect that
medieval concepts such as blood libel the accusation that Jews kill
children to use their blood in religious ritual would have been
discarded by any civilized human being. Certainly in the Christian
world, where the story originated and endured for centuries, modern
attitudes have nearly erased these barbaric accusations. But in
Arab and Islamic worlds, where enmity towards Israel and Zionism
has conditioned beliefs, attitudes, positions, and fantasies, blood
libel and similar charges are still part of life. Most people are
unaware of the history of blood libel and do not perceive links
between it and many of the false accusations currently hurled
against the state of Israel. Raphael Israeli argues that
individuals and organizations guilty of human rights crimes project
crimes onto Israel to avoid awareness of their own guilt. Certainly
when countries ruled by dictators set the agenda of the UN Council
for human rights, Israel is consistently censured and condemned.
Accusations of "apartheid" and charges of discrimination against
Muslims are frequently made. Israel is accused of plots against
Muslims in order to harm their productive sectors, of using weapons
of mass destruction to commit "genocide" against Arabs, of
injecting poisonous substances into Palestinian children, of
poisoning Arab lands under the guise of "agricultural aid," and of
laying siege to peaceful citizens. All of these charges are
derivatives of blood libel and have been adopted by Middle East
Jihadists in their struggle against Israel. This volume aims to
explain the origins of the charge of blood libel and define the
ways its derivatives have achieved acceptance in certain parts of
the world today.
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