In 1939 there were ten million Jews in Europe. After Hitler there were four million. Today in 1996 there are under two million. On current projections the Jews will become virtually extinct as a significant element in European society over the course of the twenty-first century. Now, in the first comprehensive social and political history of the experience and fate of European Jews during the last fifty years, Bernard Wasserstein sheds light on the reasons for this dire demographic projection. Drawing on a rich variety of sources, many hitherto unpublished, Wasserstein begins with the painful years of liberation after World War II when Jews tried to recover from the destruction of their people and communities, then traces the Jewish experience in Eastern and Western Europe in different national and ideological contexts. His important and original inquiry covers the impact on Jews of postwar reconstruction, Soviet occupation, the Cold War, and the collapse of communism. These, combined with the memory of Nazi genocide, the persistence of antisemitism, the development of Israel, and the Middle East conflicts, shaped the history of European Jewry in the second half of the twentieth century. With exceptional eloquence and conviction, Vanishing Diaspora argues that survival for European Jews ultimately will depend on choices they themselves make to reverse trends. They have an alarmingly imbalanced death-to-birth ratio, and many have jettisoned religious observance in the spirit of a secular Europe, losing their cultural distinctiveness as well as their numbers. This often painful story of destruction, irreparable loss, and the shattering of ties thus serves as a wake-up call and a dramatic warning.
The idea for this book came to Larry Tye as he traveled overseas as a reporter for the Boston Globe.
The compelling story of the great Irish pioneers who left their homeland and in the process profoundly influenced their adoptive countries.
This book is intended to fill in a gap in the study of modern ethno-national diasporas.
In this urgent book, Alan M. Dershowitz shows why American Jews are in danger of disappearing - and what must be done now to create a renewed sense of Jewish identity for the next century.
Assembling an international array of experts on the Soviet and post-Soviet Jewish diaspora, the book makes room for a wide range of scholarly approaches, allowing readers to appreciate the significance of this migration from many different ...
See Museum of Tolerance Biale, David, 16 Birkenau, 63 birthright. See taglit/birthright israel programs Bisexual Jews. See Queer Jews Blaustein, Jacob, 11–12 Blinder, Richard, 146 Bookstores, 46 Borough Park. See Crown Heights/Borough ...
This book examines the dynamic processes by which communities establish distinct notions of 'home' and 'belonging'.
This book explores some of the many different facets of diasporic life and migration across Central and Eastern Europe by specifically employing the concept of cosmopolitanism.
... Disappearance of God ; A Divine Mystery ( Boston : Little , Brown , 1995 ) . 63. Lévinas , Nine Talmudic Readings , 98-103 . 64 ... Vanishing Diaspora , 280-90 . 8 “This Is Not What I Want” Holocaust Testimony, Postmemory, 190 IRWIN WALL.
... Diaspora. They have also been measured relative to the large and vibrant Jewish communities of eastern Europe at the ... vanishing Diaspora.”7 Major researchers of European Jewry echo what has been predicted about American Jews (and vice ...