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The once numerous and vital Jewish communities of Morocco, Algeria
and Tunisia have disappeared, succumbing during the past century to
the assimilating temptations of French culture, or, more recently,
to the pressures of migration. Only the two communities of the
island of Jerba still remain. Only they have succeeded in
maintaining and reproducing their religious and social
institutions, in adjusting to the new realities around them while
preserving intact their cultural, communal identity. This
lavishly-illustrated book, first published in 1984, portrays the
life and history of two Jerban Jewish villages and explores the
paradoxes of their continuity. How and why are they so fully Jewish
while, at the same time, so thoroughly embedded in their Muslim,
North African environment? Although its focus is one small ethnic
group, the implications of this study extend to the broad subject
of relations between Arabs and Jews in modern times.
The once numerous and vital Jewish communities of Morocco, Algeria
and Tunisia have disappeared, succumbing during the past century to
the assimilating temptations of French culture, or, more recently,
to the pressures of migration. Only the two communities of the
island of Jerba still remain. Only they have succeeded in
maintaining and reproducing their religious and social
institutions, in adjusting to the new realities around them while
preserving intact their cultural, communal identity. This
lavishly-illustrated book, first published in 1984, portrays the
life and history of two Jerban Jewish villages and explores the
paradoxes of their continuity. How and why are they so fully Jewish
while, at the same time, so thoroughly embedded in their Muslim,
North African environment? Although its focus is one small ethnic
group, the implications of this study extend to the broad subject
of relations between Arabs and Jews in modern times.
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