Although the Bene Israel community of western India, the Baghdadi Jews of Bombay and Calcutta, and the Cochin Jews of the Malabar Coast form a tiny segment of the Indian population, their long-term residence within a vastly different culture has always made them the subject of much curiosity. India is perhaps the one country in the world where Jews have never been exposed to anti-Semitism, but in the last century they have had to struggle to maintain their identity as they encountered two competing nationalisms: Indian nationalism and Zionism. Focusing primarily on the Bene Israel and Baghdadis in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Joan Roland describes how identities begun under the Indian caste system changed with British colonial rule, and then how the struggle for Indian independence and the establishment of a Jewish homeland raised even further questions. She also discuses the experiences of European Jewish refugees who arrived in India after 1933 and remained there until after World War II. To describe what it meant to be a Jew in India, Roland draws on a wealth of materials such as Indian Jewish periodicals, official and private archives, and extensive interviews. Historians, Judaic studies specialist, India area scholars, postcolonialist, and sociologists will all find this book to be an engaging study. A new final chapter discusses the position of the remaining Jews in India as well as the status of Indian Jews in Israel at the end of the twentieth century.
“Ysrael Rhammana: Kinship and Community among Jews of Iraqi Origin in Sidney, Australia,” in Menorah 2 (1): 7–19 Samra, Myer. “Naming Patterns among Jews of Iraqi Origin in Sidney,” in The Jewish Journal of Sociology 31 (1) (1989): ...
Numbering about 5,000 at the population's peak, Baghdadi Jews were largely assimilated into British colonial society, did not develop a distinct material culture in India, and so are a relatively minor presence in this book.
Exploring the image of Jews in India in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this book looks at both the Indian attitudes towards the Jewish communities of the subcontinent and at the way Jews and Judaism in general have been represented ...
Who Are the Jews of India? is the first integrated, comprehensive work available on all three of India's Jewish communities.
- A comprehensive historical account of the primary Jewish communities of India, their synagogues, and unique Indian Jewish custom - The essays and over 150 images in the book explore how Indian Jews retained their unique characteristics, ...
The Jewish community in India comprises a tiny but important part of the population. There are around five thousand Jews and five Jewish communities in India, but they are fast...
Chief Pol apparently presented a totem pole to Ginsburg and a blanket to his wife off the back of the Indian leader's wife. Ginsburg apparently asked the Nootka to “inform him by smoke signals, telegraph, or other methods of the next ...
The Seven Contributions In This Volume Analyse The Historical, Social And Religious Identity In Three Distinct Communities Of Indian Jews: The Cochin Jews, The Bene Israel And The Baghdadi Jews.
This book, for the first time, presents a deeply researched analysis of all three Jewish communities from India, studying them holistically as `Indian-Israelis` with shared histories of migration, acculturation and identity in the Jewish ...
A riveting family portrait of four generations of Jewish women from Calcutta.