Protecting the Jewish Identity Through Digital Privacy Within the Context of Created World (ARZ-I MEVUD)

Furkan İlker Akın

Abstract


The State of Israel has been adopted as a form of government that has a population of about six million and remains in an area of about twenty one thousand square kilometers, not included in the nation-state structure. The area where the state is located is where the Kingdom of Yehuda is. Culturally, it has hosted many religions, especially Judaism, Christianity, Druze and Bahaili. There is a long depth of political history and awareness of political culture that makes it behind the establishment of the state.
The identity foundations of Judaism are Jewish society chosen as determined by the Torah. In terms of politics, it is seen that Israeli Political Systematics was created within the framework of Zionism and diversified from different political ideologies formed among Zionist party groups.
The subject of Arz-ı Mevud, the Promised Lands, is an issue that is based on religious foundations and interacts on politics. According to the Judaic belief, it is a region that is shown by Jehovah as an area belonging to the Israelites and is included in a large area between the Euphrates and the Nile. However, its exact boundaries are not clear. When evaluated in the context of Judaism belief, Hz. Mose’s all the lands traveled until he entered the Palestinian territory form the border of the Promised Land region.
The purpose of this study; The aim of this course is to evaluate the sensitivities of transforming the issue of “Arz-ı Mevud” (Promised Land) into a policy tool today. The promised land issue is still an ideologically valid issue. It is possible to say that the Israeli State focuses on this issue, which is based on the ideology of religion, and that it has ideological dreams and sanctions in the region mentioned in the Promised Land. In this context, the Promised Lands issue is important for the State of Israel and it aims to reconstruct its ideological sustainability by reconstructing the state identity in the region with digital diplomacy in the framework of the changing bureaucracy order. In this sense,the existing literature has been examined and the findings have been evaluated and presented as a whole.


Keywords


Israel; Promised land; Digital diplomacy; Foreign policy

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/13182

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