In this book, Omer Bartov outlines the transformation of Zionism, a movement that sought to liberate European Jewry from oppression, into a state ideology of ethno-nationalism.
How is it possible, he asks, that a state founded immediately after the Holocaust and which legitimized the idea of a national homeland for the Jews is now accused of committing large-scale war crimes?
How can we reconcile the fact that the destructive war waged by Israel is supported, with varying degrees of denial and indifference, by so many of its Jewish citizens?
Tracing the roots of the violent events unfolding today in Israel and the occupied territories, Bartov examines the origins of Zionism, the connection between Israeli independence and Palestinian displacement, the political use of the Holocaust, the controversies surrounding the term "genocide," and the uncertain future.
A sharp and profound critique that intervenes in contemporary debates about Zionism and the future of Israel.