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  1. Three main trends in Israeli Judaism have been characterized as fundamentalist: militant religious Zionism, the ultra-Orthodoxy of the Ashkenazim (Jews of eastern European origin), and the ultra-Orthodoxy of the Sephardim (Jews of Middle Eastern origin) as represented by the Shas political party.

  2. Mar 21, 2005 · Home. Articles. Jews and Fundamentalism. Jewish Political Studies Review 17:1-2 (Spring 2005) The differences between active and quiescent fundamentalism, two stages of the phenomenon, help explain developments among contemporary Orthodox Jewry, which is also divided along these lines.

  3. Fundamentalism - Haredim, Orthodoxy, Judaism: The ultra-Orthodox are often referred to in Hebrew as Haredim, or “those who tremble” in the presence of God (because they are God-fearing). Unlike the Orthodox, the ultra-Orthodox continue to reject Zionism—at least in principle—as blasphemous.

  4. The study's main finding is that, opposite to a commonly accepted assumption that fundamentalists’ integration into secular politics causes them to moderate, the more political power that fundamentalists accrue the stronger is their tendency to promote their religious agenda.

  5. Jun 24, 2022 · The real threat the progressive Jewish movements pose to the Jewish fundamentalists is not that other Israelis will adopt their definition of Judaism. There’s little chance of that ever happening. The threat to them is that Israelis will begin to think that there can indeed be any Judaism other than the fundamentalist one.

  6. Clearly, this is a notion which is completely alien to Judaism, which has always emphasized the Oral Law as the interpreter of the Written Law. A more popular notion of fundamentalism is that of the American Heritage Dictionary , namely, "A movement or point of view characterized by rigid adherence to fundamental or basic principles." The ...

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