
Courtesy of www.thecaseforisrael.com
A follow up from his 2004 book The Case For Israel, Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz is back, this time with a film of the same name, which defens Israel as a democratic state coping with threats in a hostile environment.
Unafraid of confronting the most contentious of issues, Dershowitz probes beneath what little coverage there is on the news, inviting us to see for ourselves why Israel does what it does. Though he raises the question of checkpoints in the West Bank and the rejected Camp David offer, the mood is very much a positive one, focussing upon reaching a two-state solution.
The documentary also addresses Israel’s status as the only democracy in the Middle East. However, it is more often than not the case that it is condemned as a country which frequently violates human rights. What Dershowitz suggests is that Israel is unfairly singled out, meanwhile countries which consistently violate human rights (notably denouncing gay rights, feminism and democracy), such as Saudi Arabia, are given a free ride.
Whatever your beliefs – political or religious, a peaceful reconciliation is surely the only durable solution. Given the recent conflict in Gaza, and the fact that today is Yom Ha’atzmaut, marking Israel’s 61st birthday, what better time to put the peace talks back on track?
Click here to find out more Dershowitz’s documentary.







