14/Sep/2025
Months after finishing this book, I’m more convinced than ever that Israel’s slow collapse from within is imminent, if not already happening. Please do yourself a favor and read it. My rating isn’t meant to discourage you. On the contrary, I think this book is worth your time.
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Can a Future Be Rebuilt on the Ruins of the Present?
So Israel on the Brink is a confrontation of our current situation. The historian Ilan Pappé is well known for challenging the foundational myths of Zionism and in this book, he offers one of his most urgent and direct arguments yet - the Zionist project, and subsequently the Israeli state built on it, is fracturing from within. What follows this fracture is not only determined by political changes, but by the fundamental cultural and moral issues that have stubbornly lingered in the background for far too long.
A Nation Split From Within
Pappé begins with an internal analysis - one often overlooked in broader conversations about Israel. He focuses on two dominant identities inside Israel today: the secular Israelis who uphold a nationalist, modern, often liberal Zionist identity - and the religious “Judea” Israelis, often settlers and ideologues, who see the state as divine territory and refuse compromise, even with their own people.
It’s this internal contradiction, Pappé argues, that has placed Israel in existential crisis. These two factions - once loosely aligned - are now clashing openly, politically, and culturally. Their competing visions for what Israel is (a democratic state vs. a biblically promised land) are tearing at the seams of the state itself. These cracks, he argues, are not temporary - they are signs of… collapse.
The Eight Mini-Revolutions - The Future??
From there, the book shifts toward building. A vision, let’s say? Pappé outlines eight “mini-revolutions” that must take place to move toward a just and peaceful future in historic Palestine. And it is clear that the author argues that these are not cosmetic fixes, but rather are paradigm shifts (mainly focused on coexistence between Palestinians and Jews.):
- A central commitment to the Right of Return - not as a side note, but as non-negotiable.
- An honest reckoning with the future of settlements in the West Bank.
- A truly representative Palestinian liberation movement that includes all Palestinians - uin exile, in ‘48, in the West Bank and Gaza.
- Reconnection between Jews and the Arab world, particularly the Eastern Mediterranean roots many Israelis share.
Why I Disagree, and Why I STILL Listen
There’s a point where Pappé says something like,
”The future depends on whether Palestinians move in the right direction.”
And I’ll be honest…that sat heavy with me. It’s difficult to read a line like that when Palestinians are still under occupation, still in exile, still grieving, still being displaced. The future isn’t just ours to shape - not when the systems of control still operate so violently. And no, I’m not only talking about Israel here.
And to get this off my chest: after years of observing what’s happening - after years of living amidst the politics of our cause - I fear I hold strongly to this opinion, I find it difficult to fully accept the idea that Palestinians are expected to shoulder the majority of the responsibility for shaping what comes next. Yes, Jewish involvement will undoubtedly be significant, especially considering the historical and structural power imbalances. But to believe that this will all somehow conclude on peaceful or even mutually acceptable terms feels overly… idealistic????? The reality, I suspect, will be far more complicated, messy, drawn-out, and full of painful reckonings. It won’t be the beautiful or clean resolution some people imagine.
And, well, even if I don’t agree with the framing, I respect the intent behind it?
On Palestinian “Division” and the Truth Beneath It
One theme Pappé revisits is the so-called “division” (eye-roll here, yep) among Palestinians - particularly the tired, overused narrative of Fatah vs. Hamas. It’s become the default excuse, especially for Arab Zionists, who constantly invoke it as a reason to deny Palestinians their basic right to resist. It’s as if any sign of political disagreement somehow invalidates an entire people’s struggle for freedom. But that’s a gross oversimplification. No liberation movement in history has ever been perfectly unified, and expecting Palestinians to meet that impossible standard is both unfair and dehumanizing. We are not robots… we are people navigating impossible conditions, and of course, we disagree. But those disagreements are deliberately inflated, exploited, and weaponized to discredit us.
And when we speak about Fatah - or more specifically, the PA - we’re not just talking about a political faction. We’re talking about a leadership that has, in many ways, actively betrayed its own people. The PA has functioned less like a representative body and more like a subcontractor for the occupation, enforcing policies that harm the very people it’s supposed to protect. Their coordination with Israeli security forces, their silence in moments of crisis, and their suppression of resistance within the West Bank - it all adds up (google what happened in the past couple of months in Jenin Camp, you’ll thank me later), It’s not a neutral division, it’s a CRISIS of legitimacy.
So when people point to ‘Palestinian division’ as if it’s some inherent flaw in the people themselves, what they’re really doing is ignoring the deliberate external pressures and internal failures that fuel it. They’re erasing the decades of imposed fragmentation, manipulation, and betrayal that have made this struggle even harder. But none of it negates the justice of the Palestinian cause, or even our right to fight for it.
Final Note
Do I think this is a necessary read? Absolutely.
It’s not an easy read - but it’s an essential one. And I’m grateful I had the opportunity to engage with it this early, with all the emotions and thoughts it stirred up.
As this was an early review copy, I want to extend my deep thanks to Edelweiss and Beacon Press for granting me access to this eARC.