The Settlers
WARNING
You are viewing an older version of the Yalebooks website. Please visit out new website with more updated information and a better user experience: https://www.yalebooks.com
And the Struggle over the Meaning of Zionism
Gadi Taub
Out of Print
The controversy over settlements in the occupied territories is a far more intractable problem for Israel than is widely perceived, Gadi Taub observes in this illuminating book. The clash over settlement is no mere policy disagreement, he maintains, but rather a struggle over the very meaning of Zionism. The book presents an absorbing study of religious settlers’ ideology and how it has evolved in response to Israel’s history of wars, peace efforts, assassination, the pull-out from Gaza, and other tumultuous events.
Taub tracks the efforts of religious settlers to reconcile with mainstream Zionism but concludes that the project cannot succeed. A new Zionist consensus recognizes that Israel must pull out of the occupied territories or face an unacceptable alternative: the dissolution of Israel into a binational state with a Jewish minority.
“Anyone who has been concerned or angered by the debate over the future of liberal Zionism . . . should hurry to read The Settlers.”—Adam Kirsch, Tablet Magazine
“An excellent account of how a small messianic group with its fervent belief in redemption and the end of days became an important political factor. It is a history with possibly disastrous consequences, and this book could not be more timely.”—Walter Laqueur
“Anyone who has been concerned or angered by the debate over the future of liberal Zionism … should hurry to read The Settlers.”—Adam Kirsch, The Tablet
“Gadi Taub's The Settlers: And the Struggle Over the Meaning of Zionism offers a profound and fascinating account of the practical and ideological challenges posed by the settler movement.”—Foreign Affairs
Publication Date: August 31, 2010