The 1996 Split of the Islamic Movement in Israel: Between the Holy Text and Israeli-Palestinian Context |
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Authors: | Issam Aburaiya |
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Affiliation: | (1) Harry S. Truman Institute for the Advancement of Peace, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel |
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Abstract: | This article aims to explain the causes and meaning of the formal split of the Islamic Movement in Israel into two factions—following the decision to participate in the elections to the fourteenth Knesset (Israeli parliament) on May 29, 1996—while locating these in a larger theoretical framework. This split resulted from a delicate combination of doctrinal-ideological controversies relating to secular electoral competition and historical-political-tactical controversies that are rooted in the Israeli-Palestinian context. Specifically, the split of the Islamic Movement in Israel derived from two interpretations of the Islamic belief: a more literal or concrete interpretation and a more abstract one. |
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Keywords: | Political Islam religiosity Israel Palestinians electoral politics |
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