Spring Sale: On select books, now in the Sales section. Orders placed after Wednesday 18 April, will be processed after Passover. We wish our readers a happy holiday!
Spring Sale
>The Mountain That Was As a Monster
More details
Publisher:
Year:
2009
Catalog number :
45-291030
ISBN:
978-965-493-447-3
Pages:
374
Language:
Weight:
550 gr.
Cover:
Paperback

The Mountain That Was As a Monster

The Golan Between Syria and Israel

Synopsis

The story of the Golan and its position between Israel and Syria is not only a legacy of the past. It has been interwoven in the political experience of the two states up to now.
The story exposes a significant gap between memory and history. This gap is natural, understandable, and characteristic of issues dealing with current history and especially of those whose subjects and the resulting findings touch upon present questions.
Such a gap usually leads to a preliminary reaction of difficulty in accepting research findings. Personal or public memory confronting these findings has already been structured and there is a natural fear of updating it. Additionally, in some cases, research conflicts with existing myths, and myths, which have their own validity, cannot easily be changed.
While the story of history is formulated and updated and is ultimately dependant upon research which has been conducted using methods and accepted rules for historical research, memory is personal and private, choosy, subject to illusion and dependent on its agents. Thus, the gap between the two is personal.
Regarding the Golan, the reader may evaluate its extent.
The gap between memory and history is important as it directly influences the political process in Israel where public opinion sways the decisions of leaders. Therefore to reach a peace agreement, it is a precondition that the Israeli public appreciate this gap. Only in this way will public opinion be able to accompany the process and evaluate it in a serious manner, with careful consideration based on the facts, as detached as possible from the emotions it evokes.