Abstract
AbstractThe article takes note of the recent re‐establishment of relations between the World Council of Churches and the International Jewish Committee on Interreligious Consultations, the organized Jewish community’s official representative for international interreligious dialogue. It examines the asymmetries between the two bodies and explores the significant features that will pose challenges to that relationship, such as the different natures of the Jewish and Christian communities and the impact of the constituencies of the two organizations on their respective positions on the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
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