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E-raamat: Jews from Elsewhere: Forgotten Diasporas and Singular Jewish Identities

Volume editor (Associate Researcher, French National Center for Scientific Research; UNISA-University of South Africa; and SOAS University of London)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197750933
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197750933

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Most people, when thinking about Jews, consider only two categories: the Ashkenazim of European origin, and the Sephardim (often being lumped together with a vaguely-defined group of Middle Eastern "Mizrahi" Jews). Noticeably few of us are even aware of the history of the geographically-dispersed Jewish diaspora, including communities in India, China, and Africa, which reveal a fascinating diversity of Jewish people. This comes as no surprise - there are not many reference works to consider, and consequently not much education for the general public about Jews outside these two main groups. Jews from Elsewhere aims to begin to fill that information void.

Most people, when thinking about Jews, consider only two categories: the Ashkenazim of European origin, and the Sephardim (often being lumped together with a vaguely-defined group of Middle Eastern "Mizrahi" Jews). Noticeably few of us are even aware of the history of the geographically-dispersed Jewish diaspora, including communities in India, China, and Africa, which reveal a fascinating diversity of Jewish people. This comes as no surprise - there are not many reference works to consider, and consequently not much education for the general public about Jews outside these two main groups. Jews from Elsewhere aims to begin to fill that information void.

Edith Bruder has gathered scholars from around the world and a variety of disciplines to sort out the dynamics of those lesser-known, often slumbering worlds. Thirty-four contributors bring to light the cultural universes of these diverse communities, and open up to general readership a millennia-long, interconnected, global history. In this monumental work of scholarship, communities such as the non-Rabbinical Jews of Ethiopia, those scattered around the Amazon rainforest, and the "new Jews" of Asia and Africa (who may or may not claim to belong to the famed Lost Tribes of Israel) are shown to rebuke the common understanding that all Jews share a single common genealogical, cultural, or religious denominator.

Available for the first time in English, this collection is essential reading for anyone interested in the history and development of the Jewish diaspora.
Part I. Introduction: From <"Diaspora> " to the Diasporas, from Exile to
Multiculturalism 1: Elsewhere . . . Differently 2: Julien Darmon: Exile
According to the Bible and Rabbinical Literature 3: Edith Bruder: The Lost
Tribes of Israel: A Modern and Postmodern Myth 4: Edith Bruder: The Diaspora
as a Multicultural Paradigm Part II. The Islamic Near East 5: From Babylon
to Iraq 6: Yaron Harel: Syria, Between the Land of Israel and Diaspora 7:
Bat-Zion Eraqi Klorman: In the Kingdom of Sheba: The Yemeni Jews 8: Ester
Muchawsky-Schnapper: The Ethnography of the Yemenite Jews 9: Miriam Nissimov:
From Cyrus to Khomeini: The Jews of Iran 10: Süheyla Yildiz: Being Jewish in
Turkey: A Three-Pronged Identity Strategy 11: Dilek Akyalç)in Kaya: Jews,
Muslims, Both, or Neither? The Salonican Dönme Part III. The Muslim Caucasus
and Central Asia 12: At the Heart of the Caucasus: The Mountain Jews 13:
Chen Bram: The Jews of Azerbaijan: Between <"Soviet Cosmopolitanism> " and
(Bi)Nationalism 14: Irena Vladimirsky: Along the Silk Road: Tashkent and
Bukhara 15: Irena Vladimirsky: The Jews of Afghanistan 16: Carol Mann: The
Ancient Hebrew Origins of the Pashtuns of Afghanistan Part IV. The Russian
Orient 17: The Cantonists> ' Descendants: Ashkenazi Jewish Communities of
Central Asia 18: Emanuela Trevisan Semi: The Karaites in Crimea 19: Irena
Vladimirsky: Between Christianity and Judaism: The Subbotniks 20: Irena
Vladimirsky: The Birobidjan Project: A History of Jewish Autonomy in the
Russian Far East 21: Mikhail Kizilov: The Thirteenth Tribe: The Imaginary
Legacy of the Khazars Part V. Latin America and the Caribbean 22: The Jews
of Latin America and the Caribbean 23: Aviva Ben-Ur: The Jews of Suriname and
Brazil 24: Paul B. Miller: The Jews of the Caribbean 25: Gina Malagold: The
Jews of Mexico 26: Raanan Rein: Argentina: The Other Promised Land 27: Romina
Yalonetzky: Jewish Life on the Pacific: The Jews of Peru 28: Aviva Ben-Ur:
The Legacy of Marranism Part VI. India 29: The Jews of India 30: Shalva
Weil: The Bene Israel 31: Navras J. Aafreedi: The Departure of the Jews of
Cochin to Israel: How They Remember versus How They Are Remembered 32: Nathan
Katz: The <"Baghdadi> " Jews of India, Burma, and Malaya 33: Yulia Egorova:
The Bene Menashe 34: Yulia Egorova: The Bene Ephraim Part VII. Sub-Saharan
Africa 35: Jewish Communities in Africa in the Twentieth Century 36: Lisa
Anteby-Yemini: Ethiopian Jews: From Beta Israel to Ethiopian Israelis 37:
Edith Bruder: The Abayudaya of Uganda 38: Magdel Le Roux: The Lemba of
Southern Africa 39: Edith Bruder: The Igbo of Nigeria 40: Edith Bruder: The
House of Israel in Ghana 41: Alma Gottlieb: The Jews of Cape Verde 42:
William F. S. Miles: The Jews of Madagascar 43: Edith Bruder: <"New Jews> "
in Cameroon and Kenya Part VIII. China 44: The Jews of China 45: Noam
Urbach: The Sino-Judaism of Kaifeng 46: Remi Huppert: The Jewish Communities
of Harbin and Tianjin 47: Noam Urbach: Jews in Shanghai 48: Alina Patru:
Jewish Life in Hong Kong Part IX. Moving Identities 49: Jews on the Move:
Images of Cosmopolitan Jews versus Jewish Nomads 50: Yaakov Ariel:
Philo-Semitism from Christian Millenarianism to Contemporary Judaizing
Movements 51: Sergio DellaPergola: Paradigms of <"Sephardic and Oriental> "
Jews: Migration, Social Change, and Identification 52: Yulia Egorova:
Genetics, Community, and Identity 53: Len Lyons: Jewishness as an Evolving
Paradigm: The Case of the Bene Menashe
Edith Bruder is a Research Associate at the French National Center for Scientific Research; UNISA-University of South Africa; and SOAS University of London. A leading scholar of the Jewish diaspora, she is the author of The Black Jews of Africa (2008), the co-editor of African Zion (2012) and Africana Jewish Journeys (2018) and the editor of Juifs d'ailleurs (2020).