TY - JOUR
T1 - Israeli prayers of resistance and resilience
T2 - the politics of faith after October 7th
AU - Ben-Lulu, Elazar
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Prayer is a direct channel to the divine, to the unknown, which also reveals cultural and social perceptions both of the individual and their environment. During crises, prayer marks a breaking point, an expression of crisis. Prayer is an action of restoring one's faith. Following the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war on October 7, 2023, Neve Schechter, a center for contemporary Jewish culture and art in Tel Aviv, initiated "Radio Awe"—an online library of prayers spanning various religions, beliefs, cultures, and languages, streaming via internet radio. Through an ethnographic fieldwork that included participating in prayer writing workshops, conducting interviews with the authors, and analyzing the content, I clarify how these prayers express, affirm, and also challenge both the reality of the war and the dominant public responses to it. I argue that this project created a liminal, multidimensional, and heterotopic space; on the one hand, the prayers reflect trends of ethno-national solidarity and unity, speak in an empowering, optimistic tone, and promote a message of security and mental and physical health. On the other hand, some of the prayers also challenge hegemonic national values and liturgy, voicing radical and incisive criticism: against the government, and against the bloodshed of the conflict, and even against the Divine. Thus, I conclude that writing a prayer is revealed not only as a religious-spiritual practice that sheds light on spiritual connections and faith-based motivations that still manage to exist even in times of crisis, but also as a political act of resistance against manifestations of violence, incitement, and a sense of loss of direction and faith.
AB - Prayer is a direct channel to the divine, to the unknown, which also reveals cultural and social perceptions both of the individual and their environment. During crises, prayer marks a breaking point, an expression of crisis. Prayer is an action of restoring one's faith. Following the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war on October 7, 2023, Neve Schechter, a center for contemporary Jewish culture and art in Tel Aviv, initiated "Radio Awe"—an online library of prayers spanning various religions, beliefs, cultures, and languages, streaming via internet radio. Through an ethnographic fieldwork that included participating in prayer writing workshops, conducting interviews with the authors, and analyzing the content, I clarify how these prayers express, affirm, and also challenge both the reality of the war and the dominant public responses to it. I argue that this project created a liminal, multidimensional, and heterotopic space; on the one hand, the prayers reflect trends of ethno-national solidarity and unity, speak in an empowering, optimistic tone, and promote a message of security and mental and physical health. On the other hand, some of the prayers also challenge hegemonic national values and liturgy, voicing radical and incisive criticism: against the government, and against the bloodshed of the conflict, and even against the Divine. Thus, I conclude that writing a prayer is revealed not only as a religious-spiritual practice that sheds light on spiritual connections and faith-based motivations that still manage to exist even in times of crisis, but also as a political act of resistance against manifestations of violence, incitement, and a sense of loss of direction and faith.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012253721
U2 - 10.1080/02732173.2025.2535295
DO - 10.1080/02732173.2025.2535295
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:105012253721
SN - 0273-2173
VL - 45
SP - 358
EP - 374
JO - Sociological Spectrum
JF - Sociological Spectrum
IS - 6
ER -