The Jewish Communities of India: Identity in a Colonial Era

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Transaction Publishers - 392 pagini

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.

 

Cuprins

Jews and Society in Premodern India
11
The Emergence of Indian Nationalism
31
A State of Complex Identities
65
Indians Jews or Europeans?
89
Intracommunal Strugglers and Zionism
128
A Heightened Jewish Consciousness
171
Challenges of the War
213
The Postwar Dilemma
238
Conclusion
259
Epilogue to the Transaction Edition
267
Glossary
301
Notes
305
Selective Bibliography
365
Additional Bibliography
375
Index
377
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Pagina 3 - Hindu caste, or tribal or other group, changes its customs, ritual, ideology and ways of life in the direction of a high, and frequently, twice-born/ caste.
Pagina 6 - ... means agricultural income as defined for the purposes of the enactments relating to Indian income-tax; (2) "an Anglo-Indian" means a person whose father or any of whose other male progenitors in the male line is or was of European descent but who is domiciled within the territory of India ard is or was born within such territory of parents habitually resident therein and not established there for temporary purposes only; (3) "article...
Pagina 3 - Terms exist for pollution and purity in every Indian language, and each of these terms has a certain amount of semantic stretch enabling it to move from one meaning to another as the context requires. Thus pollution may refer to uncleanliness, defilement, impurity short of defilement and indirectly even to sinfulness, while purity refers to cleanliness, spiritual merit and indirectly to holiness. The structural distance between various castes is defined in terms of pollution and purity. A higher...

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