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NATHAN KATZ is Professor of Religious Studies at Florida International University in Miami. Arguably the world's authority on Indian Jewish communities, he is co-founder and co-editor of the Journal of Indo-Judaic Studies. His book, Who Are the Jews of India?, was a Finalist for the 2000 National Jewish Book Award in Sephardic Studies, and won the 2004 Vak Saraswati Devi Saman Award. |
ELLEN S. GOLDBERG is a program coordinator with the Greater Miami Jewish Federation. In that capacity, she coordinates outreach and educational efforts to strengthen Jewish identity and also directs an initiative to get young people to Israel on long- and short-term programs. A journalist and photographer with extensive experience in both fields, she has widely published articles and exhibited her photographs in the USA and in Israel. |
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KASHRUT, CASTE AND KABBALAH is a study of the religious life of the ancient Jewish community at Cochin, in South India. The authors argue that the Cochin Jews acculturated into a hospitable Indian society by adapting Hindu motifs, symbols and practices into their religious life. At the same time, by remaining knowledgeable about and faithful to Jewish law, they avoided assimilation, or the loss of a distinct identity. It was the tolerant nature of Hindu culture that lay behind their acculturation, and the hierarchical structure of Hindu society that made assimilation impossible. Therefore, Jews found an ideal home in traditional India, one that afforded them status for maintaining their distinct religious and cultural identity.
This research is located at the intersection of Jewish Studies and South Asian Studies, and explores theoretical issues from the fields of religious studies, cultural anthropology, history, literature, and psychology. The authors use their data as a basis for advancing understanding of the dynamics of identity generation, and presents a fresh approach to the study of majority-minority group relations in India.
This book is based on a year of participant-observation field work in Cochin, as well as detailed studies of relevant historical materials and primary documents, and extensive interviews with members of the community.
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Indo-Judaic Studies in the Twenty-First Century, Nathan Katz, editor.
This book is an analysis of the affinities and interactions between Indic and Judaic civilizations from ancient through contemporary times. The contributors to this volume come together to propose new and global understanding of patterns of commerce and culture, to reconfigure how we understand the way great cultures interact, and to present a new constellation of diplomacy, literature, and geopolitics.
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University Press of Kansas, 2003
About the Editors:
James C. Cato is Professor, Food and Resource Economics, Director, Florida Sea Grant College Program, University of Florida, Gainesville.
Christopher L. Brown is Director, Marine Biology Program and Fellow, Honors College, Florida International University, North Miami.
Publication Date: 2003
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing
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