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The Crypto-Jewish Mashhadis - The Shaping of Religious and Communal Identity in their Journey from Iran to New York (Paperback)
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The Crypto-Jewish Mashhadis - The Shaping of Religious and Communal Identity in their Journey from Iran to New York (Paperback)
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This book tells the little-known story of a fascinating
crypto-Jewish community through two centuries and three continents.
Beginning as a precarious settlement of a few families in
mid-eighteenth-century Mashhad, an Islamic holy city in northern
Iran, the community grew into a closely-knit group in response to
their forced conversion to Islam in 1839. Muslim hostility and a
culture of memory sustained by intra-communal marriages reinforced
their separate religious identity, vesting it in strong family and
communal loyalty. Mashhadi women became the main agents of the
cultural transmission of communal identity and achieved social
roles and high status uncharacteristic for contemporary Jewish and
Muslim communities. The Mashhadis maintained a double identity
upholding Islam in public while tenaciously holding onto their
Jewish identity in secret. The exodus from Mashhad after 1946
relocated the communal centre to Tehran, and later to Israel and
after the Khomeini revolution to New York. The relationship between
the formation and retention of communal identity and memory
practices with interconnected issues of religion and gender draws
upon existing research on other crypto-faith communities, such as
the Judeoconversos, the Moriscos, and the French Protestants, who
through the special blend of memory-faith and ethnicity emerged
strengthened from their underground period. For the immigration
period, the author challenges the old paradigm that modernity and
religion are mutually exclusive. The book also explores the
sometimes uncomfortable yet intimate relationships that exist
between seemingly incompatible ways of seeing the past, both
secular and religious.
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