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University of California Press

About the Book

A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.

The Scourge of Jewish Nationalism is the first book-length study of the theopolitical writings of Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar (1887–1979). A towering figure in twentieth-century Judaism, Teitelbaum was the founder and spiritual leader of the ultra-Orthodox Satmar Hasidic sect, today the largest Hasidic sect in the world. He emerged in the post-Holocaust years as one of the most provocative thinkers in traditional Judaism. The book situates Teitelbaum’s dense rabbinic writing in the larger context of contemporary political thought and theology on questions of nationalism, messianism, and Jewish covenantal theology. Introducing readers to Teitelbaum’s anti-Zionist writings, Shaul Magid argues that Teitelbaum’s anti-Zionist ideas were among the most significant Jewish theological interventions of the twentieth century. Putting his work into dialogue with important philosophers, theologians, and theorists inside and outside of Judaism, The Scourge of Jewish Nationalism closely examines Teitelbaum’s work as an illustration of how the Jewish tradition challenges, and is challenged by, the modern nationalist project and its Jewish articulation in Zionism.

 

About the Author

Shaul Magid is Professor of Modern Judaism in Residence at Harvard Divinity School.

Table of Contents

Contents


Acknowledgments


Introduction
1. Heresiology and Zionist Anti-Messianism: On “Essay on the Three Oaths”
2. Between Residence and Commandment: On “Essay on Dwelling in the Land of Israel”
3. Modern Hebrew and Its Discontents: On “Essay on the Holy Language”
4. Zionism and the Demonic: On ‘Al Ha-Geulah ve ‘al Ha-Temurah
Conclusion


Notes
Bibliography
Index