Image for Jerusalem Syndrome : The Palestinian-Israeli Battle for the Holy City

Jerusalem Syndrome : The Palestinian-Israeli Battle for the Holy City

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Moshe Amirav, world expert on the conflict in Jerusalem, presents previously unrevealed facts and creative solutions for resolving the conflict.

As a participant in political negotiations and national decision making, his book addresses disturbing questions: "How is it that after 40 years of Israeli efforts to unify Jerusalem it is still one of the most divided cities in the world?"; "Why is it that no country, including the US, has recognised Jerusalem as the capital of Israel?"; "Why has Israel failed in its efforts to curb the rapid growth of Jerusalem's Palestinian population, an increase that will lead to a Palestinian majority in Jerusalem in the next decade?" Israel's policies have failed to 'unite' Jerusalem.

Israeli and Palestinian strategies to gain control over East Jerusalem are analysed, but neither side has proved victorious, and the battle rages on locally and internationally, with serious implications for stability in the Middle East.

Amirav reveals the deep historical divisions within the Arab-Muslim camp over guardianship of Muslim holy places, and provides a gripping account of the Camp David negotiations in 2000 which failed in part due to disagreement about sovereignty over Jerusalem's Holy Places.

When interviewed at the time of the book's publication in Hebrew, Amirav stated: "We have to divide Jerusalem.

We have to get rid of some of our syndromes, some of our dreams".

Newsweek magazine (The Holy City Loses Faith, 4 June 2007).

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Product Details
Liverpool University Press
1845193482 / 9781845193485
Paperback / softback
10/06/2009
United Kingdom
230 pages
229 x 152 mm, 386 grams