Religious Absolutism: Isaac and Ishmael

<p>Measuring its ultimate influence is difficult, for the dispute is largely secular, and is seen that way by most Israelis and Palestinians, polls show. In theory, the two sides&rsquo; overlapping territorial claims, driven by the clash of two nationalisms, could be resolved by drawing reasonable borders between Israel and a Palestinian state. West Bank Jewish settlements could be dismantled and consolidated. Security concerns could be addressed by humane, mutual protections. Jerusalem could be shared. Palestinians could bargain away their &ldquo;right of return&rdquo; to former villages inside Israel. The dueling historical narratives of grievance, so central to the conflict&rsquo;s psychology, might gradually fade as uneasy neighbors learn to coexist.</p> <p>That is all eventually possible, but less likely when each of the issues is salted with the absolutism of divine mission, as certain Israeli and Palestinian leaders are doing. They merge the sacred and the temporal, combine faith with tribal identity, and infuse piety into their peoples&rsquo; past grievances and present longings.</p> <p><a href="https://dkshipler.medium.com/religious-absolutism-isaac-and-ishmael-dd56753f75fa"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>