Twelve tribes Promise and peril in the new Israel

Ethan Michaeli

Book - 2021

"A groundbreaking portrait of contemporary Israel by award-winning author Ethan Michaeli, who documents the nation at its most volatile moment by weaving together the personal histories of Holocaust survivors, tech millionaires, Torah scholars, Ethiopian Prisoners of Zion, Russian emigres, West Bank settlers, and Palestinians"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

956.94055/Michaeli
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 956.94055/Michaeli Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Custom House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Ethan Michaeli (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xxi, 440 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062688859
9780062688866
  • Gretti and Shmulik
  • Haifa
  • Order
  • The King of Falafel
  • The Western Wall
  • Rav Nachman's Chair
  • El Marsa
  • The Gnazim
  • Kabbalistic Kugel
  • Psagot
  • Alam
  • Ofer Likes to Cook
  • The Saturday Morning Crew
  • Ma'agan
  • Razallah
  • Tomika
  • The Wolves and the King
  • When the Messiah Dies
  • Gretti and Shmulik
  • Haifa
  • Order 8
  • The King of Falafel
  • The Western Wall
  • Rav Nachman's Chair
  • El Marsa
  • The Gnazim
  • Kabbalistic Kugel
  • Psagot
  • Alam
  • Ofer Likes to Cook
  • The Saturday Morning Crew
  • Ma'agan
  • Razallah
  • Tomika
  • The Wolves and the King
  • When the Messiah Dies.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Michaeli (The Defender) paints an intriguing if underdeveloped portrait of the "often fraught dynamics among the religious factions, ethnic traditions, and political affiliations within Israel today." Drawing on interviews with Palestinian Israelis, ultra-Orthodox Jews, politicians, reporters, and small business owners, among others, Michaeli delves into seldom-discussed topics such as the campaign to ban fraud-prone "binary options" financial trading in Israel, and the "sedentarization" of the once-nomadic Bedouins, many of whom live in illegal villages in the Negev desert. Though Michaeli notes the "fractious relations of Israel's different sectors," he doesn't draw a clear framework for understanding these tensions, and somewhat shortchanges important demographic groups including the poor, Anglo immigrants, the Israeli army, and young Israelis who struggle to afford an apartment and other necessities. Michaeli packs in plenty of revealing anecdotes, but he occasionally lapses into unenlightening shorthand, such as when he refers to the "American superstructure imposed on Israel/Palestine's economy and politics" without fully explaining what he means. Though Michaeli is a skilled interviewer and a vivid scene-setter, this colorful yet meandering tour of modern-day Israel lacks depth. Agent: Rob McQuilkin, Massie & McQuilkin. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An American Jew of Israeli parents returns to Israel to delve into the complicated makeup of that country's society and demographics. In his latest book, Michaeli, a Jewish author and activist who hails from Chicago, returns to the adopted land of his parents, early kibbutzim residents who survived the Holocaust. During several years of visits from 2014 to 2018, the author interviewed Israeli citizens and refugees in order to document their stories of survival and aspiration. Though the narrative initially lacks a concrete theme and meanders, Michaeli eventually hits his stride, offering useful, focused sociological portraits of his many subjects. "My goal was to document Israel at this crucial historical moment," he writes, "and so I kept my literary lens at street level, letting conversations unspool and allowing people to speak for themselves." On his first visit, when bombs were falling between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, he visited his brother, Gabriel, 17 years his senior, who was born on a kibbutz on the Sea of Galilee. Gabi, a lawyer, opened a whole world of contacts for his brother, and the narrative progresses through a wide-ranging variety of on-the-ground reportage, uncovering a teeming world of Israelis and Palestinians working and living in uneasy proximity. Whether visiting the Tel Aviv suburbs, fashionable cafes in Jerusalem, the West Bank, or Ponevezh Yeshiva, "one of the essential institutions of the Haredi world," Michaeli reveals aspects of the country's character that historians and journalists have been unable to capture. "Neither a cautionary tale nor an international role model, Israel is a microcosm, a tiny domain that contains the truth of how the world really works," writes the author. "The state's survival will be determined, then, by the extent to which it is able to accommodate all its tribes, creating a system that respects each tribe's integrity, but ensures that all are able to contribute to the collective." A diligently gathered series of personal stories shows a world defined by difficulty and complexity. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.