This collection of original essays addresses a new and controversial
avenue for Jewish-Christian dialogue: the project of liberation
theology. While some Jews have welcomed the work of Latin American
liberation theologians, others have been critical--both of Christian
liberation theology, its treatment of Jewish history and scripture, and
of any project of Jewish liberation theology. This dialogue has prompted
Latin American liberation theologians to develop in turn their own
responses to such issues as the state of Israel, the Palestinian
question, the approach to the Hebrew Bible, the meaning of the
Holocaust, the legacy of anti-Semitism, and the problem of empowerment
in both Christian and Jewish history. Contributors: Judd Kruger
Levingston, Marc H. Ellis, Richard L. Rubenstein, Arthur Waskow, Michael
Lerner, Rosemary Radford Ruether, Leonardo Boff, Pablo Richard, Julio de
Santa Ana, Phyllis B. Taylor, Dorothee Solle, and Norman Solomon