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25 oeuvres 208 utilisateurs 3 critiques

Critiques

The title of this book pretty much sums it up. It's a short introduction to antisemitism, and should be read by anyone interested in understanding what it is and how to identify it. I found it very helpful. The author does a great job of explaining the background of all examples that she gave.
 
Signalé
lemontwist | Apr 2, 2022 |
Published on the occasion of Holy Show, Irish Artist and The Old Testament exhibition at The Chester Beatty Library 16 May - 15 September 2002
 
Signalé
rossah | Jul 14, 2012 |
A study of the moral state of the nation the acid test of this being how we treat the weakest among us. Rabbi Julia Neuberger assesses the situation in the UK from her own unique viewpoint, and draws some challenging and thought-provoking conclusions.

Just as Will Hutton looked at the political landscape at a turning point in Britain, Rabbi Julia takes the moral temperature of the nation by looking at the ways in which we treat the weakest amongst us. The National Health Service, government pensions and asylum seekers all make daily headlines, and here is a writer with the moral authority and mastery of the necessary information to undertake this project. The way we treat the weak and vulnerable members of society has long been an established way to judge how civilised a society is. In this book, Julia looks at the extent to which the elderly are thought a burden, the way we care for the mentally ill, attitudes to asylum seekers, support for ex-offenders as well as the care of children and the future of society in the UK. Her straight-forward approach to what has elsewhere proven highly esoteric, is here written with ease and fluidity and with a style that is highly approachable for those interested in the state of their nation with purely social, rather than academic, motivations.
 
Signalé
antimuzak | Jan 14, 2007 |