
From India to Israel
Identity, Immigration, and the Struggle for Religious Equality
by Joseph Hodes
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Pub Date May 06 2014 | Archive Date Jun 09 2014
McGill-Queens University Press | McGill-Queen's University Press
Description
Between May 1948 and December 1951, Israel received approximately
684,000 immigrants from across the globe. The arrival of so many ethnic,
linguistic, and cultural groups to such a small place in such a short
time was unprecedented and the new country was ill-prepared to absorb
its new citizens. The first years of the state were marked by war,
agricultural failure, a housing crisis, health epidemics, a terrible
culture clash, and a struggle between the religious authorities and the
secular government over who was going to control the state.
In
From India to Israel, Joseph Hodes examines Israel's first decades
through the perspective of an Indian Jewish community, the Bene Israel,
who would go on to play an important role in the creation of the state.
He describes how a community of relatively high status and free from
persecution under the British Raj left the recently independent India
for fear of losing status, only to encounter bias and prejudice in their
new country. In 1960, a decision made by the religious authorities to
ban the Bene Israel from marrying other Jews on the grounds that they
were not "pure Jews" set in motion a civil rights struggle between the
Indian community and the religious authority with far-reaching
implications. After a drawn-out struggle, and under pressure from both
the government and the people, the Bene Israel were declared acceptable
for marriage.
A detailed look at how one immigrant community
fought to maintain their place within a religion and a society, From
India to Israel raises important questions about the state of Israel and
its earliest struggles to absorb the diversity in its midst.
Advance Praise
“Joseph Hodes has made excellent use of the Zionist archives in Israel and he has integrated the interviews into his overall project very well. There have been too few studies of the absorption/ acculturation of Indian migrants to Israel -From India to Israel makes a vital contribution.” Nathan Katz, Distinguished Professor in the School of International and Public Affairs, director of Jewish Studies, and Bhagwan Mahavir Professor of Jain Studies at Florida International University
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9780773543409 |
PRICE | $24.95 (USD) |