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Fragile Branches: Travels through the Jewish Diaspora
 
 
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Fragile Branches: Travels through the Jewish Diaspora [Hardcover]

James R. Ross (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 25, 2000
The question of who is a Jew has perplexed, troubled, and angered people around the world for as long as Jews have existed. In some cases, it has been a matter of life and death. Among Jews, it is a source of endless frustration and dispute: The question is one of the central current debates among the Israeli rabbinate, who determine who may marry, divorce, and be buried as a Jew, and who may be granted citizenship and asylum.

And yet, as difficult as it can be to be a Jew in an often hostile world, Jewish communities around the world have endured. From a small outpost in the Amazon to a Ugandan village, these fragile branches of Jewish culture, cut off from mainstream Judaism, exist on every continent and in nearly every country. While such isolated communities are part of the tree of Jewish life, they have retained and reshaped rituals and traditions that have been lost elsewhere.

Through descriptions of his visits to six unusual Jewish communities-in Peru, Brazil, India, the Amazon, Israel, and Uganda-James Ross offers a new perspective on ancient questions, thoughts, and rituals. In Fragile Branches, he challenges us to reexamine our own relationship to tradition and provides us with an inspiring reminder of the diversity and richness of Jewish life.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Fragile Branches: Travels Through the Jewish Diaspora is James R. Ross's account of his journeys among the world's most far-flung Jewish communities in countries including Uganda, India, Peru, and Brazil. Ross's accounts of the ways that each community discovered Judaism, and the ways that geographical isolation allows for both preservation and evolution of Jewish traditions, demonstrate a sophisticated grasp of theology and anthropology. His vivid anecdotal style (which grips the reader from the book's first scene--set "inside the gates of a small Jewish cemetery in Parintins, a dusty island town between the banks of the Amazon River") is that of a skilled literary journalist. Fragile Branches is not merely picturesque, however. Its concise introduction establishes the political and moral stakes of Ross's travelogues. Despite Israel's law of return (which permits immigration of anyone with one Jewish parent or grandparent), Ross notes that "Indians, Peruvians, and black Africans who practice Judaism face bureaucratic barriers and long delays from political and religious officials." Ross believes such harassment is unconscionable, considering that many of the Jews he visited have "sacrificed their jobs, friends, and even their families in their struggle to become Jews." In Fragile Branches Ross forcefully argues for the integrity of his subjects' religious identity, and against parochial notions of Judaism that would exclude them. "These disparate communities are searching for their places in the world. How we ... respond to them is nothing less than a reflection of how we look at ourselves." --Michael Joseph Gross

Review

As Ross acknowledges at the start, such non-normative Jews are immediately suspect to many Israelis, who fear that Judaism is being used by poor foreigners to gain Israeli citizenship under the country's Law of Return, which nationalizes all Jews who choose to move to Israel. "Undoubtedly," Ross writes, "some of them are driven...by economic opportunities that might await them in Israel. Yet I was convinced that nearly everyone I met was sincere in his or her commitment to Judaism." It is clearly one of Ross's goals to support these Jews in their efforts to be recognized as such, and to subtly chastize orthodox rabbis who throw roadblocks in their way.

Ross's writing can grow tiresome; his case studies never spring to life as one would hope. He is relentlessly sympathetic to his subjects, perhaps to a fault. Yet his book fills a void in the literature, and will become a standard work in Judaica. (Beliefnet, Sept. 2000) -- From Beliefnet


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover; 1St Edition edition (September 25, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573221651
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573221658
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #864,896 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unusual and interesting communities, September 7, 2004
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This review is from: Fragile Branches: Travels through the Jewish Diaspora (Hardcover)
This is a well-written, easy-to-read investigation of some unusual Jewish and Jewish wannabe communities in Uganda, Peru, Brazil, India, and even Israel. There are chapters on the ever-increasing discovery of Marranos and their descendents and an interesting one on the Karaite community, who are officially acknowledged as Jews by the rabbinic authorities in Israel though their rabbis are not. Ross focuses on several individuals in each chapter, which brings the research down to a personal and more readable level. He is also careful not to take any one `expert's' advice on the theories of some of the communitites who claim `Lost Tribe' status but brings objective reporting into the argument. Each chapter can be read independent of each other, with an introduction and conclusion linking them. On the whole, interesting and very readable of some unusual communities!
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5.0 out of 5 stars What is a Jew? Can I Be Jewish Too?, October 13, 2011
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What exactly makes someone Jewish? Is being Jewish an ethnic characteristic, is it based on beliefs, or is it cultural? This fascinating book takes a look at scattered communities that self-identify as Jewish, but which are outside the mainstream, often because of isolation. How interesting to find that there are people who, entirely on their own through study of the Bible, decided to be Jewish. In the remote jungles of the Amazon are small communities of people trying to be Jewish. Are the lost tribes of Israel to be found in the New World, in Peru and Brazil? There are people living there who think so. What about the black Jews of Africa? There are several, notably in Ethiopia and South Africa. One community, the Lemba, have been proven by DNA analysis to be ethnically Jewish, even though they appear to be black Africans. Who should enjoy the Right of Return, the right of every Jew to live in Israel?

Other authors have explored Jewish history and found other peoples who were not originally Jewish. Arthur Koestler wrote an account of the Khazars of Eastern Europe, who adopted the Jewish religion in the 7th century and who may be the ancestors of the Ashkenazi Jews, in his book, Thirteenth Tribe. This book was controversial, but it is clear that there have been groups of people who have become Jewish by choice rather than by ancestry.

It is well known that there are people of Jewish ancestry who stopped being Jewish. What about the thousands of Jews who avoided torture during the Spanish Inquisition by converting to Christianity? It appears that, in many cases, those "conversions" did not really take. Some of these closet Jews (known as "Marranos" or "conversos") moved to South America and took up Jewish practices once again, but often with the hostility of existing local Jewish congregations who did not regard them as really Jewish. As Marranos attempted to gain recognition as Jews, disputes arose among rabbis as to whether they needed to be converted or whether no conversion was needed because they were already Jews. The author takes us into the fascinating and largely unknown lives of people facing this dilemma.

I learned in this book that the Catholic Inquisition actually followed these immigrants to Brazil, where many were hunted down and deported to Portugal and some were condemned to death for practicing Judaism. This book really brings home the meaning of the expression "Wandering Jew." It seems whatever it is that makes someone Jewish is a burden to bear in a world that mostly has not welcomed them. It is also a lesson in how this global wandering has created variations in practice that in turn create disputes over what is authentically Jewish. Ironically, this is the same problem the Catholic Church, which so vigorously tortured Jews for their religion, has with its indigenous converts who are prone to incorporating pagan and unorthodox beliefs and practices into their Catholicism. With the decline of the Catholic Church and huge shortage of priests, these mixed practices are likely to accelerate.

I enjoyed this book and found these stories to be inspiring; here are people who made a conscious decision about what they believed and how they wanted to think of themselves, people who declared themselves Jewish. They did not become Jewish through proselytizing or persecution, but through conviction. The rabbis may argue and the state of Israel may decide they are or are not Jewish, but these are people of courage who are living with the faith of their choice. In many, but not all, cases, it is also the faith of their fathers.

We can never know for sure how many of us have Jewishness in our ancestry which has disappeared due to persecution, but how interesting to find that some people who may never have had any Jewishness in their genes at all nevertheless want to be Jews.
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8 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great!, October 24, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Fragile Branches: Travels through the Jewish Diaspora (Hardcover)
Well written. Well researched. Reads like classic novel.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The sun has set behind the vast, rolling foothills of Uganda's Mt. Elgon, and I am enveloped in darkness. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lost Tribes, New York, Hebrew Bible, Moroccan Jews, Nabugoye Hill, United States, Egyptian Karaites, Jerusalem Post, Orthodox Jews, West Bank, B'nai Manasseh, Church of God, Middle East, Rabbanite Jews, Solomon Benchaya, Israel de Dios, New Christians, North Africa, Rabbi Avichail, Rabbi Hamu, B'nai Anusim, Eilon Moreh, Law of Return, Martins Junior Street, New Testament
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