This book about Indian Jewish identity is an attempt at 'self definition'. It raises basic questions like who the Jews of India are, are they Jewish or Indian? It then proceeds to answer them by delving deep into cultural mechanisms by which India's Jews came to define themselves and how they were defined by others. In doing this it explores the conditions by which a group's identity is established and maintained, how it responds to changing conditions and how it anticipates and structures a future.
This book, therefore, is about at least two subjects. First, it is descriptive and ethnographic. It describes the beliefs and attitudes, the rituals and histories, which conditioned the identities of three distinct communities of Indian Jews. Second, it is analytical and therefore reflexive; it adheres to the standard of scholarship which insists that in studying the 'other' we learn about ourselves.
The seven essays in the book analyze Indian Jewish identity as a complex product of four interrelated phenomena. First, there is the historical trajectory, the construction of a suitable narrative. Second, there are social trajectories of the present, the patterns underlying social interactions with Gentile neighbors, which also defined the group. Third, there are the trajectories of the future, which is to say how modernization, Zionism and Indian nationalism came to reconstellate Jewish identity by directing toward new sometimes competing, goals. Finally, there is the role of religion, not merely as a template of ethnic identity but as a system of rituals and norms which defined and celebrated the very identities of India's Jews.
• Introduction by Nathan Katz
• Part I: The Cochin Jews
• 1. The Ritual Enactments of Indian-Jewish Identity of the Cochin Jews, by Nathan Katz and Ellen S. Goldberg 15
• 2. ""For Any Good Occasion We Call Them"": Community Parties and Cultural Continuity among the Cochin Paradesi Jews of Israel, by Barbara C. Johnson 53
• Part II: The Bene Israel
• 3. The Bene Israel Villagers of Kolaba District: Generations, Culture Change, Changing Identities, by Shirley Berry Isenberg 85
• 4. Indian-Jewish Identity of the Bene Israel During the British Raj, by Joan G. Roland 117
• Part III: The ""Baghdadi"" Jews
• 5. Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Jews, by Thomas A. Timberg 135 6. Promised Lands and Domestic Arguments: The Conditions of Jewish Identity in Burma, by Ruth Fredman Cernea 153
• Part IV: Indian Jewry Since Independence
• 7. Marginality and Disintegration of Community Identity among the Jews of India, by Margaret Abraham 175
• Notes on Contributors 201