Non­fic­tion

Ene­mies, a Love Sto­ry: Mizrahi-Arab-Ashke­nazi Rela­tions Since the Dawn of Zionism

  • From the Publisher
December 22, 2024

Orig­i­nal­ly pub­lished in Hebrew in 2021, Hil­lel Cohen’s Ene­mies, a Love Sto­ry argues that to under­stand the ongo­ing con­flict in Palestine/​Israel we need to exam­ine the inter­ac­tions among three iden­ti­ty groups: Mizrahim, Ashke­naz­im, and Arabs. Refus­ing to treat Jew­ish soci­ety as a mono­lith, Cohen shows how the eth­nic divide between Ashke­naz­im (Jews of Euro­pean descent) and Mizrahim (Jews of Mid­dle East­ern ori­gin) can inform and com­pli­cate how we view the wider pic­ture of nation­al­ism, reli­gios­i­ty, and oppres­sion in this part of the world.

Cohen con­sid­ers how and why Ashke­nazi-Arab and Mizrahi-Arab rela­tions have meta­mor­phosed over time, from the final decades of the Ottoman Empire into the Man­date peri­od, from the Nak­ba and its after­math to the Six Day War of 1967, and from the polit­i­cal upheaval of the 1970s to the rise of the right-wing Likud par­ty and the assas­si­na­tion of Prime Min­is­ter Yitzhak Rabin in 1995. The author chal­lenges wide­spread beliefs that Mizrahi” is syn­ony­mous with rigid nation­al­ism and Ashke­nazi” with pro­gres­sivism and sup­port for rec­on­cil­i­a­tion, show­ing how reli­gios­i­ty and socioe­co­nom­ic sta­tus have shaped Israeli atti­tudes toward Palestinians.

Read­ers inter­est­ed in Israel, Pales­tine, and the Mid­dle East should find tremen­dous val­ue in this time­ly book on a sen­si­tive issue.

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