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What Israel Means to Me: By 80 Prominent Writers, Performers, Scholars, Politicians, and Journalists
 
 
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What Israel Means to Me: By 80 Prominent Writers, Performers, Scholars, Politicians, and Journalists [Paperback]

Alan Dershowitz (Author)
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Book Description

August 17, 2007 0470169141 978-0470169148 1
Personal and Passionate Reflections on the Land and Its People

"The Mediterranean landscape, the exuberance of the Israelis, the way politics is a matter of life and death there-all these things beguiled me."
-Erica Jong, author

"What does Israel mean to me? Courage. The Israelis have more courage in their pinky finger than I have in my whole life."
-Tovah Feldshuh, actress

"It is an unparalleled story of tenacity and determination, of courage and renewal. And it is ultimately a metaphor for the triumph and enduring hope over the temptation of despair."
-David Harris, Executive Director of the American Jewish Committee

"I have no desire to be like everyone else. Something in me wants the entry of the Jewish people into world politics to be judged by the highest conceivable measure. Indeed, that may be what is both so inspiring and confounding about the existence of Israel."
-Rabbi Lawrence Kushner?

"Israel isn't a symbol. Israel is the practical manifestation of hope, freedom, and self-determination."
-Larry King, television host

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Harvard law professor Dershowitz is out to defend Israel again"this time, with a little help from his friends. In this volume, some 80 writers, scholars and journalists, many of them prominent figures, most of them Jewish, contribute short pieces about the meaning of Israel in their lives. The breadth of authors is impressive, from Sen. Norm Coleman of Minnesota and the Rev. Pat Robertson to the actresses Natalie Portman (Jewish, born in Israel) and Christina Applegate (not Jewish, visited Israel). As might be expected, many of the pieces emphasize the writer's emotional connection to the Jewish state. Some are prone to hyperbole (former Cabinet member William Bennett counts himself "among the millions of Americans who see America's fate and Israel's fate as one"), while others are overly sentimental. But to Dershowitz's credit, the collection includes selections from more nuanced and critical thinkers. Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts points out the importance of Israel as a haven for Palestinian gays and lesbians, while noting that Israel has a way to go in ridding itself of homophobia. Some authors oppose Israel's existence or, like Israeli politician Shulamit Aloni and American Jewish activist Michael Lerner, are critical of Israeli policy in the West Bank, in essays that may expand the readership for this collection beyond the usual pro-Israel suspects. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

Harvard law professor Dershowitz is out to defend Israel again—this time, with a little help from his friends. In this volume, some 80 writers, scholars and journalists, many of them prominent figures, most of them Jewish, contribute short pieces about the meaning of Israel in their lives. The breadth of authors is impressive, from Sen. Norm Coleman of Minnesota and the Rev. Pat Robertson to the actresses Natalie Portman (Jewish, born in Israel) and Christina Applegate (not Jewish, visited Israel). As might be expected, many of the pieces emphasize the writer's emotional connection to the Jewish state. Some are prone to hyperbole (former Cabinet member William Bennett counts himself "among the millions of Americans who see America's fate and Israel's fate as one"), while others are overly sentimental. But to Dershowitz's credit, the collection includes selections from more nuanced and critical thinkers. Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts points out the importance of Israel as a haven for Palestinian gays and lesbians, while noting that Israel has a way to go in ridding itself of homophobia. Some authors oppose Israel's existence or, like Israeli politician Shulamit Aloni and American Jewish activist Michael Lerner, are critical of Israeli policy in the West Bank, in essays that may expand the readership for this collection beyond the usual pro-Israel suspects. (July) (Publishers Weekly, May 8, 2006) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (August 17, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470169141
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470169148
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,065,952 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ is a Brooklyn native who has been called 'the nation's most peripatetic civil liberties lawyer' and one of its 'most distinguished defenders of individual rights,' 'the best-known criminal lawyer in the world,' 'the top lawyer of last resort,' and 'America's most public Jewish defender.' He is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. Dershowitz, a graduate of Brooklyn College and Yale Law School, joined the Harvard Law School faculty at age 25 after clerking for Judge David Bazelon and Justice Arthur Goldberg. While he is known for defending clients such as Anatoly Sharansky, Claus von B'low, O.J. Simpson, Michael Milken and Mike Tyson, he continues to represent numerous indigent defendants and takes half of his cases pro bono. Dershowitz is the author of 20 works of fiction and non-fiction, including 6 bestsellers. His writing has been praised by Truman Capote, Saul Bellow, David Mamet, William Styron, Aharon Appelfeld, A.B. Yehoshua and Elie Wiesel. More than a million of his books have been sold worldwide, in numerous languages, and more than a million people have heard him lecture around the world. His most recent nonfiction titles are The Case For Peace: How the Arab-Israeli Conflict Can be Resolved (August 2005, Wiley); Rights From Wrongs: A Secular Theory of the Origins of Rights (November 2004, Basic Books), The Case for Israel (September 2003, Wiley), America Declares Independence, Why Terrorism Works, Shouting Fire, Letters to a Young Lawyer, Supreme Injustice, and The Genesis of Justice. His novels include The Advocate's Devil and Just Revenge. Dershowitz is also the author of The Vanishing American Jew, The Abuse Excuse, Reasonable Doubts, Chutzpah (a #1 bestseller), Reversal of Fortune (which was made into an Academy Award-winning film), Sexual McCarthyism and The Best Defense.

 

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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Israel has become a symbol of the world's wilingness to let the Jewish people live", November 13, 2007
By 
This review is from: What Israel Means to Me: By 80 Prominent Writers, Performers, Scholars, Politicians, and Journalists (Paperback)
What does Israel mean to me?

Israel is a tiny country, numbering six million souls, and only a tiny fraction of the Middle East.

It attracts more attention than any other country in the world, with the possible exception of the USA.

Many of us love Israel for the justice and truth it represents, for the land and heritage, and for the strength and vibrancy of it's people.

Others hate it with a venom and passion unequalled, since Hitler's hatred of Israel's Jewish forebears.

For me the essence of the conflict around Israel is a very simple one.

Most of the Arabs and Moslems (with the backing of the international left and some of the world's far right) want to drive the Jews of Israel into the sea. The Jews of Israel are determined not to be driven into the sea.

Hence an irreconcilable conflict.

For me Israel is the phoenix that rose out of the ashes of the Holocaust, and the continuation of the Jewish life and civilization that was so brutally destroyed in Europe by the Nazis and by the Arabs when the Jews of the Middle East and North Africa were savagely expelled from these lands and fled to Israel with nothing other than the clothes on their backs.

For me Israel is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people, and a symbol of righteousness, I believe that those who hate and mean harm to Israel are evil at heart, and hate Israel because Israel represents good and decency.

For me Israel is represented by it's beautiful, vibrant and inquisitive children, who represent the future. Looking at them I am reminded that children just like these were murdered in Europe in their millions sixty years ago, and a large portion of the world would like to see them murdered again.

It is up to all decent people around the world to fight against this ghastly spectre, and ensure that Israel survives safe, strong and free.

This book is edited by Alan Dershowitz, author of several previous volumes putting Israel's case to the world, and puts the perspectives together of 80 figures, writers, politicians, educationalists, performers and spiritual leaders.

Most of the pieces left me inspired, while a few like those of Richard Ben Cramer and Paul Buhle , are a reiteration of leftwing prejudices among certain sections of diaspora Jewry, against Israel.

I could not begin to summarize all of the points made by the contributors to this amazing volume.

But a few of the thoughts and observations that struck me include the observations by Professor Dershowitz in his introduction about the low level of academic discourse on most university campuses today, on the topic of the Middle East, reflecting a kneejerk hatred and prejudice against Israel and it's people, and an uncritical support for her most implacable and ruthless enemies.

This is echoed by Avner Even-Zohar's summary of the hatred directed at Israel and Jews at San Fransisco State University.

Magazine editor Yosef I Abramowitz refers to the world's hypocrisy against Israel, the "Jew in the thorn of the side of civilization", as an uncomfortable mirror for the world's hypocrisy.

Award winning children's author David Adler is struck by the humanity of Israel's people, a theme we return to again and again in the book by almost all who have been to Israel.

Actress Christina Applegate contributes a beautiful poem about Israel written by her mother, Nancy Priddy.

Others, like David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee note how the Holocaust may not have happened had Israel been around before World War II, or at least how millions of Jews would have been saved.

National president of the Zionist Organization of America, Morton Klein, notes that "Israel is the answer to Auschwitz. Jewish statehood is the answer to Jewish powerlesness".

Chaiman of the United States Memorial Museum Fred S Zeidman reminds us that "The Holocaust represent all that was brutally taken from us. The rebirth of Jewish life that followed, especially with Israel's creation represents the humanity and faith survivors miraculously reclaimed from it's ashes".

Rabbi Harold Kushner, author of '"When Bad Things Happen to Good People".

reminds us that "...in the wake of the Holocaust, Israel has become a symbol of the world's wilingness to let the Jewish people live, not just as individuals but as a recognized legitimate corporate entity. It is unfair and outrageous that we have to justify our right to exist, but alas, that is the case."

Author Anne Roiphe reminds us that "in Israel people are beset by the same doubts, drugs, insomia, biterness, lovelesness, joblesness and fear of death that exist everywhere and will continue to do so until the end of time".

Beautiful Israeli born actress, Natalie Portman, describes how Israel describes that Israel is where she was born, ate her first popsicle, and used a proper toilet for the first time.

She describes Israel as "Where I was born;Where my insides refuse to abandon".

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach notes how no other country, has ever behaved as ethically towards the civillian population of an enemy nation, in wartime as Israel has.

Israel, in a fight for her survival against a ruthless enemy that targets her women and children, and aims at the destuction of every Jew in Israel, always does all in it's power to avoid harming Arab civillians.

Compare this to the Allied bombing of Dresden during World War II, or the horrific atomic destruction by the USA of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

And worldwide bestselling mystery writer Jonathan Kellerman exposes the lie that tries to delink Zionism from Judaism and anti-Zionism from Jew hatred reminding us that "any attempt to split Israel from Judaism is either deliberate racist mischief or the product of sheer ignorance" and concludes by declaring to the world that "I am A Jew. Israel is a a part of me, and I am a part of Israel".

While Evanglelical Christian leader Pat Robertson exhorts Israel to be strong and resists world pressure for her dismantlement.

Many of the essays in this volume resonated with me, and helped me to further define my love for Israel and my determination to stand by her against her countless and malicious enemies.
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21 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I would give this book five stars simply on the basis of its main idea, July 21, 2006
Alan Dershowitz gathers the evidence of eighty distinguished witnesses who tell what Israel means to them. These are all basically pro- Israel voices though there are some sharp critics of Israeli policies among them. Among those whose testimony is included are: William Bennett, Hillary Clinton, Barbra Streisand, Al Gore, Henry Kissinger, Elie Wiesel, Saul Bellow, Arnold Schwartzenegger, Jerry Seinfeld, Sir Martin Gilbert, Harvey Weinstein, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Ron Silver, Barney Frank, Larry King, Natalie Portman.

This work is another admirable effort by Alan Dershowitz to defend and strengthen Israel. And this is done at a time when the hate propaganda emanating from extreme Right and extreme Left is very great indeed.

Israel is not only the only real democracy in the Middle East, and the one wholly loyal friend of the United States in the area. It is much much else. It is the realization of a two- thousand year old Divine Promise and dream of return. It is the one Jewish state in the world. And it is , after the Holocaust the promise to many Jews that when attacked they will be defended. Israel is a growing vibrant society , one which makes considerable contributions to many different areas of life , from agriculture to music , from computer technology to medical research.

It is also the home of over five million Jews and another million citizens all of whom have cradle- to- grave medical care, and true educational opportunity.

Israel is a country with many cultural divides and problems, but it is too a country of many outstandingly talented and dedicated individuals.

Unfortunately Israel is also the only country in the world whose neighbors near and far threaten and will its destruction. It is a country which has had to fight for its life from the very beginning. And it is still fighting now.

It is also a quite beautiful country, small but with tremendous diversity.

It is also as I have said the home of many families , individuals who just long to live in peace.

I pray to G-d that it will know peace and well- being in the years ahead and that its people will be a blessing not only to themselves but to all of humanity.

I hope the reader will excuse me for making my own personal statement of what Israel means to me. This book contains the statements of eighty people and each is in its own way interesting.
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14 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Litmus Test, July 1, 2006
By 
Jill Malter (jillmalter@aol.com) - See all my reviews
What does Israel mean to me?

In this book, we get answers to that question from eighty very different people. Well, what is my answer?

I thought about that for a while. I knew I could say that it is a country I know quite a bit about, even though I only visited it twice, for a few weeks total. And I could explain that I am not monolingual, and that I have had conversations with Israelis in multiple languages.

Or I could tell about my feelings when I visited Tel Aviv, and why I see Israel as a small and innocent but enchanting nation, with balmy weather. I could explain that Tel Aviv is like an American college town, and that the people there appear to party all night because, well, they're going to stay up all night anyway, so why not party?

Or I could start by saying that Israel is the Land of Jezebel. Given that I am a Pagan who considers Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as forms of atheism, I think you can understand why.

But here's what I decided to say instead: Israel is my litmus test.

You see, I love the academic world. And I don't panic at every challenge to scholarship and the Enlightenment I see, but I do react to systematic attacks on academic standards. And in the Western world today, by far the most serious threat to those standards is in the field of Middle East Studies, where I see wholesale replacement of scholarly work by crude and taunting political untruths. If I were a few decades younger, I would seriously consider doing a Ph. D. thesis on the etiology, nature, and significance of anti-Zionist lies.

That is what makes Israel my litmus test. Anyone who seriously values truth has to be able to figure out for themselves that it isn't worth perverting academic standards when it comes to the topic of Israel, in the misguided hope of hurting a few Jews. Those who do commit such transgressions have flunked my litmus test. They are participating in the most serious attack on scholarship we now see. And by doing so, I think they are doing their part to put human civilization at greater risk, which could result in making billions of humans miserable, rather than prosperous and happy.

Now, what about the book itself? It's excellent! There are plenty of captivating stories. And we're reminded of Israel's history and significance. We learn that "Never Again" does not mean something like "Never Again, unless some folks don't like us!" It means trying to defend one's people if necessary, rather than enabling one's killers by dying quietly.

Still, there is one more impression I would like to counter. I feel that both those who like Israel and those who dislike it usually make Israel appear far more important than it really is. Israel is in fact a rather normal, albeit land-poor, country of about six million people. It simply isn't that important, just as a canary in a coal mine is rather small and unimportant. However, that in no way means that we ought to disregard threats to it: such threats are dangerous to everyone.

I highly recommend this book.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
light unto the nations
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Middle East, New York, Tel Aviv, West Bank, American Jewish, American Jews, World War, San Francisco, Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli Jews, Six-Day War, Soviet Union, Golda Meir, Israel Defense Forces, King David, Dead Sea, Hebrew University, United Nations, Yassir Arafat, Ariel Sharon, Camp David, Orthodox Jews, Saudi Arabia, Western Wall
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