Many Yemenite Jews made their way to Israel in the first half of
the century. Later, following the foundation of the state of Israel
in 1948, the rest of the community was flown in from the Yemen--an
airlift of 50,000 people code-named Magic Carpet. These two groups,
the early and late immigrants, afford a rare opportunity to
describe the changes in health patterns during development toward a
modern society. Using the fascinating but scanty information
available from all manner of sources and comparing it with
contemporary accounts of life in the Yemen today, Michael
Weingarten relates the changes in the physical and psychological
health of the Yemenite Jews to the various components of their new
environment.
There was no modern medicine available in the Yemen, and most of
the older generation of patients described in this study continue
to believe in a threefold etiology of disease--magic, fate, and
environment. Weingarten describes how traditional healers coexist
with modern doctors and how, even when modern medicine is used,
magical cures are expected. Although there are several sections
dealing with largely medical data which will interest physicians
and geneticists, most of the book is readable by anyone taking an
interest in health and culture, including ethnologists,
anthropologists, sociologists, health workers and planners,
students of medical history, as well as all those interested in the
study of Yemen, Judaic history, or Israeli culture.
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