2021
DOI: 10.1177/00377686211046640
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Reforming the Israeli–Arab conflict? Interreligious hospitality in Jaffa and its discontents

Abstract: This ethnography analyzes three Israeli Reform Jewish rituals as manifestations of interreligious hospitality. The Daniel Reform congregation invites Muslim residents of Jaffa to participate in rituals incorporating Arabic and Muslim clergy and prayers. The egalitarian and pluralistic Jewish symbols and narratives promote neighborly relationships. Nevertheless, some participants’ responses reaffirm popular suspicions and prejudices, which the ceremony seeks to overcome. Interreligious hospitality here is not s… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…They comprise 21.1% of the Israeli population; a majority practice Islam (Horenczyk & Ben-Shalom, 2006;Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, 2022). Although there are growing collaborations between the Jewish and Arab communities in Israel (e.g., Ben-Lulu & Feldman, 2022), as a result of the ongoing conflict, including terror attacks, the Arab citizens of Israel are perceived by some members of the majority group as a danger (Litvak-Hirsch, Bar-On, & Chaitin, 2003) and their loyalty is questioned (Hammack, 2010). Through the years of the conflict, there has been a growing distrust between the communities.…”
Section: Motivation To Identify With a National Group Across Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They comprise 21.1% of the Israeli population; a majority practice Islam (Horenczyk & Ben-Shalom, 2006;Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, 2022). Although there are growing collaborations between the Jewish and Arab communities in Israel (e.g., Ben-Lulu & Feldman, 2022), as a result of the ongoing conflict, including terror attacks, the Arab citizens of Israel are perceived by some members of the majority group as a danger (Litvak-Hirsch, Bar-On, & Chaitin, 2003) and their loyalty is questioned (Hammack, 2010). Through the years of the conflict, there has been a growing distrust between the communities.…”
Section: Motivation To Identify With a National Group Across Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is a conflict between the dominant Jewish majority that constitutes about 75% of Israel's population and the Arab minority that constitutes about 21% (Gaya, 2022; Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, 2021; Smooha, 2019). Jewish–Arab relations in Israel are constructed in public and political discourse as an ongoing rivalry; hence, Jews and Arabs have been framed as two opponents that, for decades, cannot manage to find an appropriate solution (Ben‐Lulu & Feldman, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%