Ari Shavit
Autore di My Promised Land: The Triumph and Tragedy of Israel
Sull'Autore
Ari Shavit is a journalist in Israel. He is a columnist for Haaretz and a commentator on Israeli public television. (Bowker Author Biography)
Opere di Ari Shavit
By Ari Shavit - My Promised Land 1 copia
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome legale
- Ari Shavit
- Data di nascita
- 1957-11-16
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- Israël
- Luogo di nascita
- Rehovor
- Luogo di residenza
- Kfar Shmaryahu, Israel
- Attività lavorative
- Journalist
Utenti
Recensioni
Liste
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Statistiche
- Opere
- 4
- Utenti
- 827
- Popolarità
- #30,854
- Voto
- 4.2
- Recensioni
- 55
- ISBN
- 25
- Lingue
- 8
As for the past and present of Israel, this book is remarkable. It showed me how different Israel is today from the one I visited -- and worked on a kibbutz -- about 40 years ago. This much and more has happened:
"In less than 30 years, Israel has experienced seven different internal revolts: the settlers' revolt, the peace revolt, the liberal-judicial revolt, the oriental revolt, the ultra-Orthox revolt, the hedonist-individualist revolt, and the Palestinian Israeli's revolt."
So if the displaced Palestinians got the impression that they were the only ones displeased with Israeli intransigence, they shouldn't feel alone: it seems most Israelis are pretty annoyed, too.
This in addition to threats from neighbouring Arab regimes, worldwide Islam, and extremist Islamist groups.
But how much of this is unique to Israel and how much the nature of our times?
Let's compare Israel polity to my own Canadian:
We occupy a land that was forcibly taken from indigenous people. Check.
We marginalize minority groups based on ethnicity and possibly religious affiliation. Check.
Our leadership appears feckless and rudderless. Our democracy is immobilised by regional grievances and short-term thinking. Check.
The resource curse lures us to balance our budget with oil revenues instead of banking them and focussing on sustainable changes to the economy. Well, this is something Israel is about to find our about with newly discovered off-shore gas reserves.
Shavit interviews a great many people linked to the themes of dispossession and security. Odd how Shavit ignores interviewing anybody remotely concerned with environmental degredation. Yes, Israeli's made the desert bloom. What about salinization of the soil, or the impact of so much more garbage on the landscape. Well, at least they aren't overflowing in pig ordure like the American midwest.
This story also underlines another reason Israeli GDP is growing faster than the European economies, or Japan for that matter: sustained immigration over a long period of time, something Canada and the US excel at over their Western competitors.
Israel grew so fast -- and continues to grow -- that social planners are helplessly left in the dust.… (altro)