Indigenous Judaism in Colonial Algeria

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19th century colonial history
A01=Vered Sakal
Abraham Ankawa's Kerem Hemer
Algerian rabbis
Author_Vered Sakal
Category=NHH
Category=NHTQ
colonialism
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French Jews
French laws
French legislation
French liberal colonial politics
Halacha
Halachic writing
jews in Algeria
Muslim-Ottoman Empire
north Africa
post-colonial discourse
Rabbi David Mu'ati
rabbinical stagnation
rabis
revolutions
self-governance
synagogues
The Altaras-Cohen Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350534223
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 162 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Did Jewish scholars develop new strategies of applicability and governance to adapt to and survive in French-colonial Algeria? How did indigenous rabbis respond to changes in their socio-political environment? Did it affect the way in which they understood and addressed their juridical roles and, if so, to what extent?

This study explores these questions and furthers the growing discourse about indigenous Jews in colonial Algeria. Vered Sakal adopts a Halachic perspective to examine the transition from Muslim-Ottoman to French-liberal-colonial politics.

Sakal considers how 19th century Algeria was an environment in which Jews are both colonizers and colonized, and in which colonial officials actively intervene with the communal and private lives of indigenous Jews, and the way they practice their Jewishness – at the home, the school, and the synagogue.

Through the analysis of several historical sources, such as French legislation and scholarship from the colonial era, a survey written by two French Jews about the Jews of Algeria, and the Halachic writings of indigenous Algerian rabbis, the varied genres covered in this book come together to portray a unique religio-political environment.

Vered Sakal is the Bertram and Gladys Aaron Professor of Jewish Studies at Christopher Newport University, USA. Her fields of research are religious studies, modern Jewish thought, liberal theory and subaltern studies.

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