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Originally published: London: Simon & Schuster, 2012.
When experiencing a crisis, you will find yourself inundated with a flood of intense emotions, negative thoughts, and physical reactions. If you don't understand what's happening, the stress of the situation will be compounded by helplessness, fear, guilt, confusion, and the feeling of being completely out of control. If you understand what's causing the intense emotions, you will be better equipped to make it through the crisis experience in a healthy and even victorious manner. Everyone faces a crisis at some point. Whether it is in the form of the loss of a loved one, an unwanted divorce, a disabling accident, a frightening medical diagnosis, a natural disaster, or some other unexpected life-altering event, crisis comes to us all. In this inspiration guide, Chris McQuay ivites readers along on an allegorical journey with a young girl named Gabriella. With only the lessons that she's gleaned from her papa and the help of the Guidebook that he's given her, she sets out across the Mountains of Crisis in order find her High Calling. As readers follow this expedition, Chris explains how the lessons that Gabriella learns can benefit us all. With the wisdom that comes from life experience, Chris shows readers what crisis can look like, how it can effect us, and how we can overcome through faith and perseverance. The path to your high calling may lead through crisis, but you too can journey From Pain to Purpose.
Does America's “pro-Israel lobby,” including the legendary American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), have as much power as is commonly believed? Does it have an unbreakable stranglehold on America's Middle East policies? The answer is no, according to Dan Fleshler, an American Jewish activist who has worked within his community to try to counteract AIPAC and its allies. Written from the singular perch of a liberal American Jew who wants to create an alternative lobby in order to encourage more evenhanded U.S. policies in the Middle East, Fleshler's new book, Transforming America's Israel Lobby, sheds new light on how Israel's American supporters exert their influence in Washington. With original research, it skewers myths propounded by the defenders of America's mainstream, pro-Israel community as well as its detractors, notably John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt. It demonstrates that much of AIPAC's power is based on smoke and mirrors, on its ability to manage the perceptions of the political elite and promote exaggerated notions of its resources and clout. Having put AIPAC and its allies in proper perspective, the book provides the first detailed examination of the opportunities for—and obstacles to—creating a domestic political bloc that is pro-American, pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian. It offers concrete, provocative suggestions to Americans—Jews and non-Jews alike—who want to embolden the U.S. government to disagree with Israel when necessary, and to press both Israelis and Palestinians to make the compromises required for peace. Why have American Jews, one of the most liberal communities in the United States, allowed hawks and neoconservatives to speak for them in Washington on matters related to Israel? Where have all the Jewish doves been hiding all of these years? Why didn't more of them speak out against America's invasion of Iraq? What can be done to mobilize Americans who believe that stopping both Israeli settlement expansion and Palestinian terrorism are vital American interests, and who want to give U.S. officials more political leeway to lean on both sides of the conflict, rather than just one side? Dan Fleshler, who has spent a quarter century as a consultant, board member and volunteer for a wide range of Jewish organizations, is in a unique position to answer these questions. He does so based on his own extensive experience in the American Jewish community, as well as interviews with Washington insiders, American Jewish leaders, Arab American and Christian church activists who focus on the Middle East, Israeli diplomats and politicians, and other experts. This book is a clarion call to “passionate moderates” who want to see an end to the Israeli occupation and who envision a viable Palestinian state; both goals can be achieved, according to Fleshler, via a robust American diplomacy that does not sell out the interests of either Israelis or Palestinians.
Through a qualitative analysis and broad historical contextualization of personal interviews, The New Zionists shows how American Jewish “Millennials” who are not religiously orthodox approach Israel and Zionism as galvanizing solutions to the thinning of American Jewish identity, and (re)root themselves through “Israeliness”—an unselfconscious and largely secular expression of national kinship and solidarity, as well as of personal and communal purpose, that American Judaism scarcely provides.
DIVDeception, Preparation, Rapture. Get ready, so you will not be deceived./div
Justin White's memoir takes us on a journey from the Virginia suburbs to the cloistered precincts of Israel's Sephardic ultra-orthodox. Along the way, he experiences a cross-section of Israeli life, working in Israel's high-tech sector and attending some of the country's most prestigious universities as well as learning and living in the ghetto-like neighborhoods of the extremely religious. Many of the characters he meets, religious or secular, Sephardic or Ashkenazi, immigrant or native-born, have, in common with the State of Israel itself, the quality of being "neither here nor there," caught between different worlds, living in that liminal space "between the suns" where, according to mystical lore, nothing is quite real and anything is possible. And so this record of one man's time in Israel provides us with a glimpse into the conflicts-between religious and secular, high-tech and Torah, European and Arab-that roil Israeli society and whose resolution will determine the fate of the Land and its people.
Song of Spies is a documentary novel. Using main characters based on real people, it is on one level a fascinating story of Israel's foreign intelligence service, the Mossad. The story tracks the breakdown of the Oslo peace process, the rise of the Al Aqsa intifada, and the fight against Islamist terror. On a deeper level, it is also a story of the pivotal events that have shaped Israel's leaders for the 21st century. The story has two protagonists. One is the man called out of semi-retirement to become the Mossad's director. He is also the nephew of one of the last century's most famous philosophers and intellectuals. He is the Shamash. Avi is a former elite commando, now married with a young child. He becomes the Shamash's protege. As the peace process collapses and the new intifada erupts, the Shamash gives Avi a vital new assignment. Ultimately, the assignment and events force Avi to come to terms with his past and recognize what may be his destiny. In the tradition of classic spy novelists, Katz has created a story that takes the reader beyond the headlines, to reveal the soul of an intelligence agency and the people that serve it.