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JEWISH AMERICANS: QUEST TO MAINTAIN IDENTITY. CHAPTER 14. Jewish Americans. US has the largest Jewish population in the world America’s 6 million Jews account for 46% of world’s population Play a prominent role in worldwide Jewish community
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JEWISH AMERICANS: QUEST TO MAINTAIN IDENTITY CHAPTER 14
Jewish Americans • US has the largest Jewish population in the world • America’s 6 million Jews account for 46% of world’s population • Play a prominent role in worldwide Jewish community • 2nd largest Jewish population in Israel and only nation in which Jews are majority
American Jews superficially resemble Asian Americans in that both are largely free from poverty • Anti-Semitism • Anti-Jewish prejudice and discrimination • Anti-Semitism is as old as relations between Jews and Gentiles (non-Jews) • Concentrated in Urban areas • Especially New York City, Los Angeles, and Miami
Jewish People: Race, Religion or Ethnic Group? • Jews are a subordinate group • Experience unequal treatment • Share a cultural history that distinguishes them from the dominant group • Ascribed status or involuntary status • Group solidarity • In-group marriage • Jewish identity among Jews is based on a shared culture - thus Jews are best classified as an ethnic minority
The trend in the United States among Jews • Judaization • Lessening of the significance of religion and an increase in culture as the bond among Jews • Issue of what makes a Jew figures in policy matters • The Israel Law of Return • Defines who is a Jew and extends Israeli citizenship to all Jews • Jewish identity is ethnic • Share cultural traits not physical features or uniform religious beliefs
Immigration of Jews to the United States • First Jewish migration occurred around 1654 from Spain and Portugal (Refugees) • Largest Jewish migration occurred around the turn of nineteenth century • Immigration Act of 1920 reduced Jewish immigration • Immigrant Jews in 1930’s were refugees from Nazi Germany • Recent immigration has been from Israel, Soviet Union, and Iran
Anti-Semitism Past and Present • History of Jews is history of struggle to overcome centuries of hatred • Religious observances commemorate past sacrifices or conflicts • Passover, Hanukkah, and Purim • Origins of anti-Semitism • Blamed for the crucifixion of Jesus Christ • Formation of negative stereotypes over the years
Stereotype of Jews obsession with money is false • Fringe-of-Values Theory • Social Psychologist Gordon Allport (1979) • To gentile, business practices by the Jews constituted behavior on the fringes of proper conduct • In-Group Virtues becoming Out-Group Vices • Sociologist Robert Merton (1968) • Being critical of others for traits for which you praise members of your own group • Discrimination as a source of anti-Semitism
The Holocaust • Holocaust • State-sponsored systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators • German policy and the restriction of the rights of Jews • Between 1933 - 1945 two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population were killed
Holocaust Revisionists • Small but vocal proportion of the world community who claim that the holocaust did not happen • Also blame Jews for 9/11 • Anti-Semitism not just historical social phenomenon in Europe • Jewish worshippers attacked with rocks and insults • Growing Arab and Muslim population in Europe offer an audience for Christian-generated anti-Semitism
United States Anti-Semitism: Past • US cannot be described as a nation with a history of anti-Semitism • Colonial America and anti-Semitism • Peter Stuyvesant’s attempt to expel Jews from what is New York city today • The 1920’s and 1930’s periods of most virulent and overt anti- Semitism • Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion • Absurd definition of communism attributed to the Jews
Henry Ford responsible for publication of the Protocols • Faced with millions in civil suits, posted halfhearted apology in 1927 • Charles Lindbergh, Klu Klux Clan, and German American Bund supported anti-Semitism and Hitler • Many changed their attitudes when Nazi atrocities were exposed • Protocols sold by Wal-Mart until 2004 • 2006, Spanish version sold in Mexico City
Differences Between Anti-Semitism in the United States and Europe • First - United States government never promoted anti-Semitic policies • US never embarked on program of expulsion or extermination • Second - anti-Semitism was not institutionalized in the United States • Jews did not develop a defensive ideology in order to survive • Jewish American can make personal decision on assimilation or secularization
Contemporary Anti-Semitism • Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith (1913) • Monitors anti-Semitic incidents • Rise in numbers in 1990’s and 2001 • Carried out by neo-Nazis or skinheads • Groups of young people who champion racist and anti-Semitic ideologies • Internet growing as a vehicle for anti-Semitism
American Jews and Israel • Many Jews concerned that Jews in US, who were more free, would ignore struggle of other Jews • Israel’s status proven to strong source of identity for Jewish Americans • Wars of 1967, 1973, and 1991 reminded world of Israel’s vulnerability • Not all American Jews agree with Israel’s actions • Express support for struggles by contributing money and trying to influence American opinion and policy
Zionism • Initially referred to the old Jewish religious yearning to return to the biblical homeland, now expressed in 20th century as a movement to create a Jewish state in Palestine • UN (1974) passed resolution declaring “Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination.” • Diaspora • Exile of Jews from Palestine several centuries before Christianity • Many Jews have seen the destiny of their people only as the establishment of a Jewish state in the Holy Land • Zionism resolution repealed by the UN (1991)
American Jews and African Americans • Anti-Semitism of African Americans is of special concern to Jewish Americans given Black history of oppression • Jewish Americans active in civil rights causes and contributed generously to legal defense funds • Jewish neighborhoods and employers quicker than Gentiles to accept African Americans • Causes of Black-Jewish contention • 1960’s activists and Black Panther party supported Arabs • 1984 – Jesse Jackson and Louis Farrakhan publicly broadcast anti-Semitic remarks
African American sentiment rarely anti-Jewish as such but rather opposed to White institutions • James Baldwin (1967) • Blacks “are anti-Semitic because they’re anti-White.” • Deep racial prejudice in the US demonstrated by two groups suffering discrimination that should unite in opposition to the dominant society, fight each other instead
Position of Jewish Americans • Employment and Income • Declining discrimination in the business world • Jewish MBAs and job opportunities • Rising rapidly up the corporate hierarchy • Higher salaries • Declining poverty and the invisible poor • Anne Wolf (1972) “The Invisible Poor” • Jewish poor remain invisible to rest of society • Similar to Chinese Americans and not well served by the Economic Opportunity Act and other federal programs of the 1960’s
Education • Judaic religion and the emphasis on formal schooling • Emphasis on education • Higher educational attainment • 1947, Jews founded graduate schools of medicine, education, social work, and mathematics • Brandeis University • Jewish sponsored contribution to higher education • Nonsectarian (admission is not limited to Jews
Organizational Activity • Groups serve many purposes • Religious, charitable, political, or educational • United Jewish Appeal (UJA) (1939) • Fund raising organization for humanitarian causes • American Jewish Community (1906) and Congress (1918) • Improve Jewish-Gentile relations • B’nai B’rith (Sons of the Covenant) (1843) • Promotes cultural and social change (Anti-Defamation League) • Many community groups founded because existing groups barred Jews from membership
Political Activity • Prominent role as voters and elected officials • Not typical as more likely than general population to label themselves as liberal • Senator Joseph Lieberman (CT) • First Orthodox Jew elected to Senate • VP candidate of Al Gore • Some Jews backed the extreme responses to Arab-Israeli conflict • Few settled in Israel and were vocal backers of resistance to any accommodation to Arab nations or Palestinian Authority
Religious Life • Jewish identity and participation in Jewish religion are not the same • Many Americans consider themselves Jewish and are considered Jewish by others though never participated in religious life • Levels of affiliation • Orthodox: 19% • Conservative: 32% • Reconstructionist: 2% • Reform: 29% • Just Jewish: 26% • Not sure: 1%
The Orthodox Tradition • Three sects beginning in mid-19th century • Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judaism • Based on varying acceptance of traditional rituals • Reasons for development of differences • Some Jews wanted to be less distinguishable from other Americans • The absence of a religious elite and bureaucratic hierarchy, which facilitated breakdown in traditional practices • Orthodox life is demanding • Ultra-Orthodox are Hasidic • Life conducted according to traditions and rituals • Strict adherence to the Torah
The Reform Tradition • Deeply committed to faith but altered many of the rituals • Changed traditions to reflect social changes • Conservative Judaism – in between Orthodox and Reform • Reform are least likely to participate in predominantly Jewish organizations • Effort to observe religious occasions such as Rosh Hashanah in Reform temples • Like Protestants, Jewish denominations associated with class, nationality, and other social differences
Jewish Identity • Improvement of Jewish-Gentile relations creates new problem for Jewish identity • It has become possible for Jews to shed their “Jewishness” or Yiddishkait • Jews cannot totally lose identity • Denied total assimilation in the US • Social clubs may still refuse membership • Non-Jewish in-laws interfere with marriage plans
World events reminder of heritage • Nazi Germany • Founding of Israel (1948) • 1967 Six-day War • Soviet interference • 1972 Munich Olympics • Yom Kippur War (1973) • 1973 Oil Embargo, • UN’s 1974 anti-Zionism vote • Scud missile attacks during 1991 Gulf War • Changes in Halakha • Jewish law covering obligations and duties – regarding women
Role of the Family • Shadchan • Marriage broker or matchmaker • Fulfilled important function in Jewish community by ensuring marriage of all eligible people • Less acceptable to young Jews because of romantic love • Traditionally remained in extended families • Observers argue that Jewish family no longer maintains role in identity transmission due to assimilation
American Jewish Committee • 10 problems endangering Jewish family • 1. More Jews marry later than other groups • 2. Most organizations of single Jews no longer operate solely for matching – now support single lifestyle • 3. Divorce rate is rising • 4. Birthrate is falling, childlessness socially acceptable • 5. Financial success more important than child raising • 6. Intensity of family interaction decreased • 7. Less socializing across generation lines • 8. Sense of responsibility of family members to each other has declined • 9. Role of Jewishness no longer central in Jews lives • 10. Intermarriage has lessened involvement of Jewish partner in Jewish life and aspects of family life
Role of Religion • Devotion is way to preserve ethnic identity • Question not so much ideology as of observing commandments of traditional Jewish law • Marginality • The status of living in two distinct cultures simultaneously • Jews who give some credence to secular Christmas
Role of Cultural Heritage • Religious observance small aspect of Jewishness • Identity expressed in many ways including: • Political, cultural, and social activities • Gentiles mistakenly believe Yiddish is a measure of Jewishness • Jews have spoken many languages throughout their long history, Yiddish is just one • Peoplehood • A group with a shared feeling • For Jews originates from past and present, within and without
Why are the Jewish people most accurately characterized as an ethnic group?
How have the patterns of anti-Semitism changed or remained the same?
Why do African American-Jewish American relationships receive special scrutiny?
Which sociological perspective, symbolic interaction, functionalism, or conflict theory, best describes and explains the relationship between African Americans and Jewish Americans?
Why is maintaining Jewish identity so difficult in the United States?
Why does the family play such a critical role in Jewish identity?
Using the Jewish experience as a basis for comparison, how has fusion functioned or not functioned for any other subordinate group when compared with Jews in the United States?