As we celebrate Israel’s 73rd Independence Day, we are mindful that the State of Israel in 1948 was a dream fulfilled for Jews all over the world. Some saw it as a religious miracle, as a form of divine intervention in Jewish history. Others saw it as the fulfillment of the national aspirations of the Jewish people in modern times. Still others saw it through mostly idealistic utopian lenses, which were often so dreamy that they were highly detached from the emerging reality on the ground.

A comprehensive new book by Rabbi Marc Rosenstein studies and analyzes this history, with a focus also on the present and the future of Israeli society. Entitled Contested Utopia: Jewish Dreams and Israeli Realities, it provides a fascinating look at the variety of utopian visions that abounded before the creation of the state of Israel. In so doing, the author helps us understand the diverse political, social and religious movements that struggle for the soul of the Jewish state until this day. Not only does Rosenstein present many different utopian understandings of what the state of Israel might have or should have become, but he confronts us with the many questions and dilemmas that arise from an overdose of utopian thinking.

What is meant by utopia or utopian thinking?

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