Israel’s Post-October 7 Religious Revival

Dec. 13 2024

In his essay for Mosaic last month, Jack Wertheimer found much evidence that there has been a revival of synagogue attendance and interest in religious observance among American Jewry since October 7. The political scientist Asif Efrat believes something similar has been happening in Israel:

Efrat states that the findings clearly indicate an increase in the Israelis’ level of religiosity due to the influence of the war. “The implication of the data is that the war has brought Israelis closer to religion, and this closeness has intensified with the continuation of the conflict,” he says.

Efrat added: “Thirty-seven percent of individuals aged eighteen to thirty-five have reported an increase in their belief in God since the outbreak of the war, compared to only 18 percent among those aged fifty-six and older. Similarly, young adults reported a higher rate of adherence to religious tradition. The trend of Israel becoming more religious has been well-established, long before the war.”

Read more at Israel National News

More about: Gaza War 2023, Israeli society, Judaism in Israel

Yes, the Iranian Regime Hates the U.S. for Its Freedoms

Jan. 14 2025

In a recent episode of 60 Minutes, a former State Department official tells the interviewer that U.S. support for Israel following October 7 has “put a target on America’s back” in the Arab world “and beyond the Arab world.” The complaint is a familiar one: Middle Easterners hate the United States because of its closeness to the Jewish state. But this gets things exactly backward. Just look at the rhetoric of the Islamic Republic of Iran and its various Arab proxies: America is the “Great Satan” and Israel is but the “Little Satan.”

Why, then, does Iran see the U.S. as the world’s primary source of evil? The usual answer invokes the shah’s 1953 ouster of his prime minister, but the truth is that this wasn’t the subversion of democracy it’s usually made out to be, and the CIA’s role has been greatly exaggerated. Moreover, Ladan Boroumand points out,

the 1953 coup was welcomed by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, [the architect of the 1979 Islamic Revolution], and would not have succeeded without the active complicity of proponents of political Islam. And . . . the United States not only refrained from opposing the Islamic Revolution but inadvertently supported its emergence and empowered its agents. How then could . . . Ayatollah Khomeini’s virulent enmity toward the United States be explained or excused?

Khomeini’s animosity toward the shah and the United States traces back to 1963–64, when the shah initiated sweeping social reforms that included granting women the right to vote and to run for office and extending religious minorities’ political rights. These reforms prompted the pro-shah cleric of 1953 to become his vocal critic. It wasn’t the shah’s autocratic rule that incited Khomeini’s opposition, but rather the liberal nature of his autocratically implemented social reforms.

There is no need for particular interpretive skill to comprehend the substance of Khomeini’s message: as Satan, America embodies the temptation that seduces Iranian citizens into sin and falsehood. “Human rights” and “democracy” are America’s tools for luring sinful and deviant citizens into conspiring against the government of God established by the ayatollah.

Or, as George W. Bush put it, jihadists hate America because “they hate our freedoms.”

Read more at Persuasion

More about: George W. Bush, Iran, Iranian Revolution, Radical Islam