The Challenges of Sovereignty
Essays on Israel and Zionism
David Ellenson(Author)
Brandeis University Press
Will be published approx. on 3. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
272 pages
978-1-68458-323-2 (ISBN)
Description
Key essays by a notable scholar address some of the most pressing questions facing Israel today.
Over the course of his rich career, David Ellenson-one of the most outstanding Jewish scholars, intellectuals, and thinkers of our time-probed the tension between tradition and modernity, especially as reflected in the ceaseless reinterpretation of liturgical and halakhic texts. Alongside that scholarly interest, largely centered on European Jewry, Ellenson produced an impressive body of work on Zionism and Israel.
This volume follows the arc of this body of work from Ellenson's early articles on the Zionism of American rabbis to his last essay on the struggle between Jewish and democratic impulses in Israeli society. He draws on familiar sources of inquiry-Jewish prayers and legal sources-to chart changes in Israeli religious life and to excavate its theological-political foundation. What emerges is a profound meditation on some of the most important questions that Israel faces today: what does it mean to be Jewish in the state? What role should Halakhah play in a self-defined Jewish state? How should the state treat its non-Jewish minority? How deeply rooted is democracy in the state and its foundational texts? And can the state ever escape seemingly irrepressible internal and external conflict?
Over the course of his rich career, David Ellenson-one of the most outstanding Jewish scholars, intellectuals, and thinkers of our time-probed the tension between tradition and modernity, especially as reflected in the ceaseless reinterpretation of liturgical and halakhic texts. Alongside that scholarly interest, largely centered on European Jewry, Ellenson produced an impressive body of work on Zionism and Israel.
This volume follows the arc of this body of work from Ellenson's early articles on the Zionism of American rabbis to his last essay on the struggle between Jewish and democratic impulses in Israeli society. He draws on familiar sources of inquiry-Jewish prayers and legal sources-to chart changes in Israeli religious life and to excavate its theological-political foundation. What emerges is a profound meditation on some of the most important questions that Israel faces today: what does it mean to be Jewish in the state? What role should Halakhah play in a self-defined Jewish state? How should the state treat its non-Jewish minority? How deeply rooted is democracy in the state and its foundational texts? And can the state ever escape seemingly irrepressible internal and external conflict?
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
399 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-68458-323-2 (9781684583232)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
David Ellenson (1947-2023) was a distinguished scholar of modern Jewish thought and history. Among his many academic roles, he directed the Schusterman Center for Israel Studies and was a visiting professor in the Department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University from 2015-2018. Most recently, he coedited, with Michael Marmur, American Jewish Thought Since 1934: Writings on Identity, Engagement and Belief. David N. Myers is the Sady and Ludwig Kahn Distinguished Professor of Jewish History at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he serves as the director of the UCLA Bedari Kindness Institute. He is the author and editor of many books, including, with Nomi Stolzenberg, American Shtetl: The Making of Kiryas Joel, a Hasidic Village in Upstate New York. Michael Marmur is professor of Jewish theology at the Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem. He is the author of Abraham Joshua Heschel and the Sources of Wonder, and most recently, Living the Letters: An Alphabet of Emerging Jewish Thought.
Content
Preface (Editors) Introduction (David N. Myers) Acknowledgments Part I: Envisaging Zionism 1. Zion in the Mind of the American Rabbinate during the 1940s 2. Rabbi Haim Hirschensohn: An Orthodox Rabbi Responds to the Balfour Declaration 3. The 1946 Exchange between Rav Tzair (Chaim Tchernowitz) and Rav Binyamin (Yehoshua Radler-Feldman) on Bi-Nationalism and the Creation of a Jewish State Part II: Liturgy and Halakhah 4. Masorti and Reform Judaism in an Israeli Legal Cadence: An Analysis and Comparison of Selected Halakhic Writings of Rabbis David Golinkin and Moshe Zemer 5. T'filat HaAdam and the Maturation of Israeli Reform 6. Rabbi Shlomo Goren on the Maimonidean Law of Siege: An Essay on the Ethics of Jewish Warfare 7. Interpretive Fluidity and Psak in a Case of Pidyon Shevuyim: A Modern Israeli Responsum Illuminated by the Thought of David Hartman 8. The Talmudic Principle, "If One Comes Forth to Slay You, Forestall by Slaying Him" in Israeli Public Policy: A Responsum by Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi Part III: Law and Democracy In the State of Israel 9. Jewish Legal Interpretation and Moral Values: Two Responsa by Rabbi Hayyi, David Halevi on the Obligations of the Israeli Government towards its Minority Populations 10. The Supreme Court, Yeshiva Students, and Military Conscription: Judicial Review, the Grunis Dissent, and the Implications for Israeli Democracy and Law 11. Israeli Democracy and its Systems of Checks and Balances: The Testimony Derived from Two Supreme Court Opinions by President Asher Grunis 12. The Ethical Conundrum of a Jewish and Democratic State 13. Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi on the State of Israel and Democracy