Between Two Homelands

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A01=Adrian Krupnik
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Alabama
aliyah
American south
antisemitism
Argentina
Argentine crisis
Argentine dictatorship
ashkenazic
Ashkenazim
Author_Adrian Krupnik
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJK
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Category=JBFH
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Chasid
chasidim
civil rights
civil war
colonialism
confederacy
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diaspora
dixie
Dixieland
eastern Europe
economic migrants
emancipation
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Ethnic migration
heart of dixie
Hebrew
holocaust
Israel
Israeli
Israeli identity
Jew
Jewish Agency
Jewish history
Jewish identity
jewry
judaism
Language_English
Latin American Jews
magen David
migrants' absorption
Migration
north America
old southwest
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Palestine
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Return migration
secession
Sephardic
Sephardim
slavery
softlaunch
south america
southeastern united states
Southern history
the South
torah
war between the states
white settlers
yerida
Yiddish
Zionism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817361037
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Examines the experiences of thousands of Jewish Argentines who built their life trajectories through migrations to and from Israel

Emigration from Israel to other parts of the world has not yet received significant scholarly attention, as the subject is a sensitive one in Israeli society. Zionist ideology has long compelled Israelis to approach emigration from Israel through a very biased lens. The Hebrew words aliyah and yerida, which mean, respectively, “ascent” and “descent,” are often used to refer to immigration and emigration. These ideological terms, which are charged with religious meaning, are heavily loaded with praise for immigrants and scorn for emigrants. Yet, thousands of Jews from all over the world have lived between two homelands, as the Israeli-Argentine case demonstrates. This study challenges the formerly dominant Zionist narrative that presents immigration to Israel as unique and emigration as a disgrace, shedding light on issues of immigrant identities, belonging, and expectations.

Based on archival documents in English, Spanish, and Hebrew, as well as on interviews, AdriÁn Krupnik’s study gives voice to Argentine migrants to and from Israel. The pursuit of two often irreconcilable ways of living—peace and economic prosperity—repeatedly vexed migrants moving in either direction. Many Jewish-Argentine migrants between 1980 and 2006 lost everything and became the “new poor” in both countries. Protracted recessions and incessant political crises in Argentina continued to drive migrants in one direction, only to arrive in an Israel submerged in the violence of multiple intifadas.

In our own era, one that will see unprecedented global migration patterns based on similar economic and political—and environmental—upheavals, Between Two Homelands serves as an important and informative cautionary tale of the personal, social, and economic stakes at play in an utterly unsettled globalized landscape.

AdriÁn Krupnik is a Minerva Stiftung postdoctoral researcher at the Lateinamerika-Institut der Freie UniversitÄt. He has served as a research fellow at the Selma Stern Zentrum fÜr JÜdische Studien in Berlin-Brandenburg and the University of Potsdam Institut fÜr JÜdische Studien und Religionswissenschaft. He is a fellow of the Schusterman Center for Israel Studies at Brandeis University.

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