Unsettled: The Problem of Loving Israel | 
| Author: Marc Aronson Publisher: Ginee Seo Books Category: Book
List Price: $18.99 Buy New: $3.99 You Save: $15.00 (79%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 272683
Media: Hardcover Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 192 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 1416912614 Dewey Decimal Number: 956.94 EAN: 9781416912613 ASIN: 1416912614
Publication Date: October 21, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description PIsrael.PThe word itself can mean "arguing with God," and talking about Israel can start endless arguments about politics, history, morality, and prejudice. Unsettled, Marc Aronson's most deeply personal book to date, explores the history of Israel, from the beginning of the Zionist movement to the birth of Israel as a state in 1948 to the intense confa??licts over Israel, the Palestinians, and the Jewish settlements of today. Along the way Aronson intersperses stories from his own family's long experiences in Israel while asking and answering such questions as: Can a religious state also be a democratic one? Is Israel the victim or the aggressor? Do modern states have moral obligations? And perhaps the most troubling question of all: What kind of Israel should exist? Once again, Aronson has created history for young adults that is exciting, probing, clear, and most of all, fearless.
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| Customer Reviews:
The hows and whys of the state of Israel's creation, and much more December 16, 2008 So, you want to catch up on current events? Except, to do that, you have to know the history behind every single current event. It's no easy task to be current. Israel is one of those "issues" that seems to be impossible to understand. Just who hates whom? And why?br /br /Enter this book. In simple terms, Marc Aronson explains the history behind the state of Israel, and the hows and whys it was created. Not only that, but he gives the background to Palestine and offers an objective explanation as to why there is so much tension in the area. Neither Israel nor Palestine gets off scot-free in his discussion of the wars, diplomatic measures, or attacks in the Jewish state's history. Each side has contributed to the bloodshed.br /br /Aronson also sheds light on other groups of people living in Israel, reminding readers that Jews are not its only citizens. The United States has a clear "separation of church and state" clause. Israel, on the other hand, was created as a Jewish state; however, as it has only just passed its 60th birthday, there were other groups of people already residing in the area when it was formed, adding to the unique composition of the nation.br /br /What makes UNSETTLED so interesting is Aronson's unique perspective. He is Jewish, has been to Israel, and has studied the issue. But he writes about how not all Jews have the same opinion on Israel or the way the tensions with Palestine are handled.br /br /Aronson's descriptions of Israel are so well written, you'll feel as if you're on a tour bus checking out the country for yourself. Learn what a kibbutz is and what Israel's political leaders have done, and see the significant religious landmarks. To understand Israel, you have to know something about Judaism, and Aronson describes that when necessary. He also makes issues easy to comprehend by relating them to historical events you've likely studied in a U.S. History class.br /br /UNSETTLED never becomes a textbook, though. Because Aronson has such a personal connection to Israel, he includes anecdotes about his family, his friends and his experiences visiting there. He describes why groups of immigrants have chosen to settle there over the years, from Zionists to Holocaust refugees.br /br /This is an excellent book for anyone to read, especially if you enjoy history or are just looking for a clear way to understand (or at least begin to understand) the delicate nature of the state of Israel.br /br /--- Reviewed by Sarah Hannah Gomez (hannahgomez@gmail.com)br /
Wonderful explanation of a complex issue November 13, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Aronson is writting for high school students, but his clear explanations of this complex issue should also be read by adults frustrated by long, boring rants on the Middle East. This is not a scholarly expose, but a quick introduction to the issue. Aronson makes sure you know his perspective is from a liberal American Jew. He admits that is what colors his views. His analogies are clever (and adults with any sense of humor should even laugh at some of them). This is a GREAT non-fiction book to get young adults and adults started on exploring the issue of the Middle East. It's a quick read and should spark great discussions.
Terribly one-sided October 22, 2008 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
Marc Aronson has written a book to unburden himself of his hostile feelings toward Israel. His book reveals prejudice (he informs that he can barely stand being among devout Israeli Jews) and misinformation about Israel and about Zionism--the movement that created an independent Jewish state. I'll mention just two examples:br / He perpetuates the false propaganda charges that Jews carried out atrocities in 1948 at an Arab village called Deir Yassin, and that Ariel Sharon "oversaw" a massacre of Palestinians in Lebanon in 1982. Aronson should know that Lebanese Arab militiamen perpetrated the killings of 1982, and that a U.S. Federal Court found Time magazine's story accusing Sharon of complicity in the massacre to be both defamatory and false. As for Deir Yassin, it was the site of a battle during Israel's War of Independence, and residents fabricated atrocity stories for their own purposes. One prominent Palestinian Arab, Hazem Nusseibeh, told the BBC that fabricating the atrocity stories was a big mistake, because it led to so many Arabs fleeing the country.br / The Arabs who stayed became full citizens of Israel--sadly, this is more than they are offered by the Arab countries. But Aronson's book is more than sad; it perpetuates vile falsehoods and reveals a tragic self-hatred, a kind of Stockholm Syndrome where, to win acceptance, a person identifies with those who threaten him, and believes the lies they tell about him.br / Aronson uses for sources writers who feel as he does, but even these are beginning to have epiphanies. In the Jerusalem Post (April 10, 2008), we learn that one such revisionist historian, Benny Morris, now realizes that from the start, Israelis "failed...to appreciate the depth of [Arab] abhorrence anchored in centuries of Islamic Judeophobia, " and that Arab rejection of "infidel" Israel was always a jihad, a religious war. Morris writes that neither Israelis nor their leaders have understood this. Nor, he could add, have Americans like Marc Aronson.
Unloved October 22, 2008 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
Despite beginning his book with the statement "I love Israel," the author's rambling first person account actually describes all the reasons why he doesn't love it. No one is obligated to love Israel but the reasons Aronson gives are so specious and uninformed that one wonders if he ever actually listened to the legions of relatives he seems to have living there or ever studied any of the issues that he cites to find fault. Another flaw of the book is its self-absorbed and overly personal tone. Why should anyone care about these superficial opinions from an assimilated American Jew who is obviously alienated from the sources of his ancestral religion and unconfortable with his Jewish identity? While Aronson wrestles with his Israeli-demons in print, readers are misled.
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