At the dawn of Jewish history, the Jewish people were divided into 12 distinct tribes. Personal identity was established not only by one’s loyalty to family and to the entire body politic but also to the intermediate concept of “tribe.”

That which was true at the beginning of the Jewish people is also true of Israeli society now. However, today the tribes of Israel are counted as four: the secular Jews; the National Religious Jews, also known as Religious Zionists; the haredim, or ultra-Orthodox Jews; and the minority sector, sometimes incorrectly identified as “Arabs.” The book Frayed: The Disputes Unraveling Religious Zionists by Yair Ettinger is about one of the four tribes of Israeli society, and in particular about phenomena that are driving apart the two great wings of that tribe.

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