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- Institut für Jüdische Studien und Religionswissenschaft (64) (remove)
Diese historische Studie erforscht die Entwicklung jüdischer Bildung für Kinder und Jugendliche in Deutschland seit der Schoah mit einem Fokus auf die Institutionen- und Akteursebene und unter Einbindung von Exkursen in Bildungsmedien. In einem chronologischen Dreischritt werden dabei die Bildungsarbeit jüdischer Displaced Persons-Lager der unmittelbaren Nachkriegszeit, der neugegründeten jüdischen Organisationen und Gemeinden in der Bundesrepublik, sowie die jüngeren Entwicklungen seit der deutschen Wiedervereinigung behandelt.
Schlaglichter fallen dabei u. a. auf die Bildungs- und Kulturarbeit jüdischer Hilfsorganisationen in den DP-Lagern, auf Curricula und Schulbücher der DPs, auf die Bedingungen des Wiedereinrichtens jüdischen Religionsunterrichts in den neugegründeten jüdischen Gemeinden, auf die Ferienlager der Zentralwohlfahrtsstelle der Juden (ZWST) oder auf jüdische Kultur- und Schulbuchkommissionen des Zentralrats der Juden im Verbund mit den Rabbinerkonferenzen.
Heimweh
(2021)
The concept of Heimweh conveys a set of emotions and images that have been described in different ways in different languages. This article intends to analyze the Heimweh experienced by Galician intellectual Jewry during the process of linguistic and cultural change that took place from 1867 until the mid.-1880s. This will be discussed while focusing on the urban intelligentsia circles in Lemberg (Lviv), which had a tremendous influence on some Galician Jewish intellectuals during that period. I will analyze the nature of a clash of identities that eventually brought some of the urban intelligentsia in Lemberg to consider themselves as living a "Spiritual" or "linguistic exile"(Sprachexil), regardless of whether they had migrated or not. Longing for the homeland as a nostalgic destination, whether they referred to it as Heimat or Ojczyzna, and whether they called it Lemberg or Lwow, was longing to be part of a group holding a distinct Kultur or Kultura, a set of values, culture and language, which coexisted with their Jewish identity.
Dichterin und Salonière
(2021)
Kommentar zu: Allan Arkush, Mendelssohn's Slippery Efforts to Disentangle Judaism from Theocracy
(2021)
Messianismus ohne Messias
(2021)
Tsimtsum
(2021)
Rabbinische Leitfigur
(2021)
The return of the tribe
(2021)
As a part of “Xenophilia: A Symposium on Xenophobia’s Contrary” in Common Knowledge, this essay examines the interest in, affection for, friendship with, and romanticization of Native Americans by Jews in the United States since the 1960s. The affinity is frequent among Jews with “progressive” or “countercultural” inclinations, especially those with strong environmental concerns and those interested in new forms of community and spirituality. For such Jews, Native Americans serve as mirror, prod, role model, projection, and fictive kin. They are regarded as having a holistic and integrated culture and religiosity, an unbroken connection to premodern attitudes and practices, an intimate relationship with the earth and with nonhuman creatures, along with positive feelings toward their own traditions and a simple, honest, and direct way of living. All of these presumed characteristics offer to progressive Jews parallels and contrasts to contemporary Jewishness and Judaism. For some, Native America has become a path back to a reconstructed Jewishness and Judaism; for others, a path away. Each path is assessed in this article with respect to questions of authenticity, psychobiography, family history, theology, and theopolitics.
Studies in the Jewish reception of Christian theological discussions beyond the proper field of polemics are rare and only in their beginnings. Until now, scholars have often argued that Portuguese Jews discussed Christian concepts of divine foreknowledge and human free will because they were either struggling with their own Christian past or sought to help their 'New Jewish' coreligionists to turn into reliable members of the Amsterdam Sephardic community. This article uses the example of the Catholic Controversia de auxiliis, and the Protestant fight over Predestination before and after the Synod of Dordt (1618-1619) to argue that Portuguese Jews such as Menasseh ben Israel and Daniel Levi de Barrios recognised the cross-confessional dimension of the Christian debates on divine grace; they used their Iberian background and knowledge to order and explain what they observed; and they displayed their position as outsiders to deconstruct religious boundaries, imagine alternative religious landscapes, and finally re-insert themselves into their newly created religious maps and orders. The argument is based on a close reading of one chapter of the last volume of Menasseh ben Israel's Conciliador (1651) as well as Daniel Levi de Barrios's poem Libre Alvedrio y Harmonia del Cuerpo, por disposicion del alma (1680).
Sephardim and Ashkenazim
(2021)