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Title: What Shall I Do with This People?: Jews and the Fractious Politics of Judaism by Milton Viorst ISBN: 0-684-86289-1 Publisher: Free Press Pub. Date: 08 October, 2002 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $25.00 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.33 (6 reviews)
Rating: 1
Summary: Dissent is nothing compared to Christianity...
Comment: Next I would like the author to write a similar history of dissent amongst the Christian religious groups in the world today from Roman Catholicism to born-again christians to Lutherans, to the Church of England.
I see nothing different about people.
Whether they are Jews or Christians, Muslims or Hindus, Buddhists or Sufi, people will always disagree, they will always see things from their perspective, and there will always be dissent even amongst members of the same church or same parish.
The challenge that the author fails to address is how any religion can avoid fractious politics. If in fact it can; if humanity can.
Rating: 4
Summary: fascinating, interesting, disturbing
Comment: I bought this book based on comments here, and a recommendation under a review of ONE PEOPLE, TWO WORLDS. But I have reason to question Viorst's accuracy, knowledge, and statements because of the following:
P. 79 (Re: Yochanan ben Zakkai and his yeshiva at Yavneh) "His yeshiva ... also contributed to compiling and editing the books of the Bible, and presided over the Greek translation of what has since become the Old Testament." I assume he is referring to Aquila's translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek, but "the Greek translation of ... the Old Testament" began a few hundred years earlier, and many NT quotations of the OT were from this earlier Greek translation (or others). Whatever Viorst means to say, he doesn't say it clearly.
P. 87: "The word 'Torah,' which means 'guidance,' is absent from the Bible, and appeared only in Talmudic times." Huh???? The word "Torah" appears 220x in the Hebrew Bible, beginning with Genesis 26:5. How can Viorst mean what he writes here?
Thus, while I find the book an interesting history of the way rabbinic Judaism came to be, statements like the above make me wonder if what I'm reading is accurate.
The "Advance Praise" on the back of the dustjacket from Letty Cottin Pogrebin ("exhaustively researched") and Balfour Brickner ("a rich knowledge of Jewish history to produce a brilliant, accurate ... analysis") supports Viorst's veracity -- but the above two quotes undermine it, and there may be others that I won't recognize, due to being ignorant of these other matters.
Having written the above, however, this book is eye-opening and fascinating reading for those like myself who have never read about this dark side of Jewish history. And it is dark.
If the author is basically accurate (his endnotes and bibliography support him being accurate), then this is a troubling book that merits reading.
Rating: 4
Summary: Enlightening, annoying, scary.
Comment: Viorst is deeply troubled by two segments of the Jewish population which have little use for the goals and thinking of the Western enlightenment: the religious - expansionist Zionists, and the ultra-orthodox Haredim. He tries to put these movements into a historical and Biblical context as well as describing them in some detail. It is a stretch to relate the Biblical Jewish tendency to revert to idolatry to the themes of this book, but the historical context is enlightening. Unfortunately, I don't quite trust Viorst's scholarship when it comes to ancient history, which is treated in a rather cursory way even given the objectives of the book. When it comes to modern Israel, Virost's writing is enriched by the many interviews he has conducted, often with people he totally disagrees with and even abhors, and he makes a definite effort to provide a fair account of their views and characters. Not withstanding this objectivity, Viorst seems unable to truly credit genuine piety and faith, or the marvelous aspects of the Talmudic way. Certainly, not all the traditional orthodox rabbi's were acting out of pride and self-interest. I found this annoying, even though I totally agree with Viorst's basic points. This is an enlightening and scary book.
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Title: In the Shadow of the Prophet: The Struggle for the Soul of Islam by Milton Viorst ISBN: 0813339022 Publisher: Westview Press Pub. Date: 15 November, 2001 List Price(USD): $17.50 |
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Title: The Case for Israel by Alan Dershowitz ISBN: 047146502X Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Pub. Date: 01 August, 2003 List Price(USD): $22.95 |
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Title: Plan of Attack by Bob Woodward ISBN: 074325547X Publisher: Simon & Schuster Pub. Date: 19 April, 2004 List Price(USD): $28.00 |
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