Raymond Cohen is Chaim Weizmann Professor of International Relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. A graduate of Oxford University, he has been a visiting professor at Georgetown University, and a research fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Watson Institute at Brown University.
"Raymond Cohen's book traces in meticulously annotated detail the
bumpy road traveled by the Christian denominations with claims to
space inside the church whose foundations go back to the fourth
century, to assert those claims. Chronicling complexities that make
a Gordian knot look like a slip tie, Cohen, a professor of
international relations at the Hebrew University, traces a process
that began with insistence on preeminence and reached a point of
making do
with negotiated condominium, to reconstruct the crumbling complex,
culminating in the dedication in 1997 of the new dome over the
tomb." --Haaretz
"...meticulous, evenhanded account Cohen's chronological approach
and strong writing maintain suspense in spite of the outcome
promised in the book's title. His tale offers hope that ancient
sites can be preserved in spite of seemingly impossible odds."
--Publisher's Weekly
"A terrific story, told very well." --Rodney Stark, author of
Victories of Reason: How Christianity, Freedom, and Capitalism Led
to Western Success
"Saving the Holy Sepulchre tells a story of intrigue and tangled
diplomacy that no novelist would invent. The book tells us a great
deal about interfaith relations, about the preservation of
antiquity, and about the Middle East - but the best reason to read
it is that it offers a fascinating story, eloquently told."
--Philip Jenkins, author of God's Continent: Christianity, Islam,
and Europe's Religious Crisis
"A dramatic account told with zest and backed by careful research."
--First Things
"Cohen not only has done the sort of properly conducted historical
research that is rarely done on institutions with such huge
religious stakes, but also...manages to make the detailed story of
bickering and nastiness so riveting." --Church History
"Cohen's work of tracing this complex and unseemly history is a
marvel of scholarship." --ooks and Culture
"Saving the Holy Sepulchre is a complete and very useful accounting
of the modern history of the church. It is more than just a story
about fixing a building; it is one that reflects the contentious
nature of centuries-old claims of religious dominance in Jerusalem
and international claims on holy places." --Middle East
Quarterly
"Cohen writes in a particularly readable and witty style--a
literary achievement that should not be taken for granted. He
presents all the 'dramatis personae,' bringing them to life and
placing them within the cultural and political settings in which
they labored. Likewise, he is to be commended for his mastery of
the topography, archaeology, and architecture of the site, as well
as for his coherent analysis of architectural plans and debates,
which he presents
(for what is a presumably a nonspecialist audience) in a very clear
manner."--The Protestant-Jewish Conundrum
"...well-written, well-researched, and well-documented history of
the church in the twentieth century...."Heleen Murre-Van Den Berg,
Leiden University
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