Home Lands: Portraits of the New Jewish Diaspora

by Larry Tye

Hardcover, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

903.4 TYE

Collection

Description

The idea for this book came to Larry Tye as he traveled overseas as a reporter for the Boston Globe. In each city he visited he was intrigued by a reawakening of practice and spirit of the long repressed Jewish community. And the more communities he saw close-up, the clearer it became to him that the Jewish world was being reshaped and revitalized in ways that were not reflected in what he was reading about the disappearing diaspora and the vanishing Jews of America.The result is Home Lands, an narrative that tells the story of the new Jewish diaspora. Tye picked seven Jewish communities from Boston to Buenos Aires and Dusseldorf to Dnepropetrovsk deep in the Ukraine, and in each he zeroes in on a single family or congregation whose tale reflects the wider community's history and current situation. He met each community's leaders, talked with their scores of young people and old, and went with them to High Holiday services and Sabbath celebrations.The first impression that emerges from his travels is each city's uniqueness. Far more striking than the differences, however, is the unity. Jews all over the world still have enough customs and rituals in common for outsiders to see them as part of the same people, and for them to define themselves that way. It is that new comfort level, that sense of finally feel comfortable in the lands where they are living, that is at the heart of this engrossing book. Readers' eyes will be opened to how Germany, just a generation after the genocide, has the world's fastest-growing Jewish population; how the Jews of Buenos Aires have carved a place for themselves in a land that also gave refuge to Nazi henchmen like Adolph Eichman, and how Ireland is home to a tight-knit Jewish community that, remarkably, has produced Jewish Lord Mayors in Belfast, Cork and, twice from the same family, in Dublin. In Boston, Tye tells the story of his own family, whose roots run deep in the city's Jewish community.Home Lands is a book that is deeply personal even as it sheds light on the larger Jewish experience.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member simchaboston
There are people who believe the only place for Jews is Israel. They are wrong, and this book proves it. Tye investigates seven Jewish communities in the diaspora where Judaism is surviving -- and in most of these places, thriving. Each chapter provides historical context and clearly discusses the
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issues each community faces (like a good reporter, he is careful to show both sides of any controversies). But what I like most are when Tye lets people speak for themselves, whether it's about overcoming fears of anti-Semitism while living in Dusseldorf, or the excitement of inventing new ways for Jews in Boston to connect and engage with each other. Some years ago, a now ex-member of my synagogue gave a Shabbat morning talk that basically yelled at people for living here instead of in Israel. I didn't have an rebuttal for her then, but "Home Lands" would be my answer now.
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