Israel Shahak was a remarkable man. Born in the Warsaw ghetto and a
survivor of Belsen, Shahak arrived in Israel in 1945. Brought up under
Jewish Orthodoxy and Hebrew culture, he consistently opposed the
expansion of the borders of Israel from 1967.
In this extraordinary and highly acclaimed book, Shahak embarks on a
provocative study of the extent to which the secular state of Israel has
been shaped by religious orthodoxies of an invidious and potentially
lethal nature. Drawing on the Talmud and rabbinical laws, Shahak argues
that the roots of Jewish chauvinism and religious fanaticism must be
understood before it is too late.
Written from a humanitarian viewpoint by a Jewish scholar, this is a
rare and highly controversial criticism of Israel that will both excite
and disturb readers worldwide.