
In October Of 2014, 12-year-old Sasha Lutt Read From A Tiny Torah Scroll As A Part Of Her Bat Mitzvah In The Women's Section Of The Plaza At The Western Wall, Judaism's Holiest Prayer Site. Surrounded By Members Of The Multi-denominational Organization, The Women Of The Wall, One Of Whom Had Smuggled The Scroll Into The Plaza, Sasha Became The First Woman To Read From The Torah At The Site. For More Than Twenty Five Years, The Women Of The Wall Have Been Waging A Campaign To Gain The Israeli Government's Permission To Pray At The Western Wall. Despite Widespread Media Coverage, This Is The First Comprehensive Study Of Their Struggle. Yuval Jobani And Nahshon Perez Offer An In-depth Analysis Of The Women Of The Wall's Attempts To Modify Jewish-orthodox Mainstream Religious Practice From Within And Invest It With A New, Egalitarian Content. They Present A Comprehensive Survey Of The Numerous Legal Rulings About The Case And Consider The Broader Political And Social Significance Of The Women Of The Wall's Activism. In This Way, Jobani And Perez Are Able To Address Broader Issues Of Religion-state Relations: How Should Governments Manage Religious Plurality Within Their Borders? How Should Governments Respond To The Requests Of Minorities That Conflict With Ostensibly Mainstream Interpretations Of A Given Tradition? How Should Governments Manage Disputed Sacred Sites And Spaces Located In The Public Sphere? Women Of The Wall: Navigating Religion In Sacred Sites Offers A Critical New Look At Theories Of Religion-state Relations And A Fresh Examination Of Religious Conflicts Over Sacred Sites And Public Spaces.
This book investigates the complex intersection of religious practice, state authority, and gender equality through the lens of the Women of the Wall movement. Authors Yuval Jobani and Nahshon Perez, both scholars in philosophy and political science, utilize legal records, historical accounts, and sociological analysis to examine how this specific activist group challenges Orthodox hegemony at Judaism's most sacred site. They argue that the struggle for egalitarian prayer at the Western Wall serves as a microcosm for broader global debates regarding the management of religious plurality and the governance of contested public spaces.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars in the field of religion and state relations recognize this work as a rigorous, balanced examination of a highly contentious social issue. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a thorough and objective analysis suitable for students and researchers of political science and sociology.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019028045X
ISBN-13:
9780190280451
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