
This is the first comprehensive account of Shas, which is the most significant religious and cultural movement to have emerged in Israel since the rise of Likud in 1977. Shas represents an explosive mixture of the religious and ethnic tensions that continue to simmer beneath the surface of Israeli Jewish society and politics. This Sephardi religious revival movement is also giving birth to the first truly Israeli form of Orthodox Judaism, distinct from the still-dominant Ashkenazi Yiddish-speaking version. Shas appeals especially to underprivileged Israelis, among whom a significant minority adopts ultra-orthodox Judaism. As a social phenomenon, Lehman and Siebzehner argue, Shas exemplifies how a fundamentalist movement invents and reinvents ethnic and quasi-ethnic frontiers, even to the point of acquiring the markers of those it denounces, and how it draws on popular religion and culture. This groundbreaking book will be the primary source of information on this fascinating, important, and troubling movement, as well as representing a rare example of the application to the study of Judaism of the same perspective that has been used to study fundamentalist and charismatic movements in other religious traditions.
This book investigates the emergence and socio-political impact of the Shas movement as a transformative force within Israeli religious and cultural life. Authors Batia Siebzehner and David Lehmann utilize a sociological framework to analyze how Shas navigates the intersection of Sephardi ethnic identity and ultra-orthodox religious practice. By examining the movement's growth since 1977, the authors argue that Shas functions as a unique fundamentalist entity that actively reshapes the boundaries of Israeli Jewish society. The text provides a systematic analysis of how the movement synthesizes popular culture with religious doctrine to mobilize underprivileged populations.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this work as a foundational text for understanding the complexities of contemporary Israeli religious politics. Scholars frequently note the academic rigor and the comparative approach the authors employ to contextualize Shas within global fundamentalist trends.
Page Count:
295
Publication Date:
2006-07-06
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195306937
ISBN-13:
9780195306934
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