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11 - Chaos and Community: 1492 and the Formation of the Sephardic Diaspora

from Part III - Methods of Coping

Jonathan Ray
Affiliation:
University in Washington, DC, USA
Timothy G. Fehler
Affiliation:
Furman University
Greta Grace Kroeker
Affiliation:
University of Waterloo
Charles H. Parker
Affiliation:
Saint Louis University
Jonathan Ray
Affiliation:
Georgetown University
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Summary

The themes of exile and migration have always been central to the history of the Jews. Indeed, it is the Jewish experience of dislocation, and the social and intellectual systems that they established in response to it, that stand as the model for the current field of diaspora studies. Paradoxically, however, the ubiquity of exile and migration in the broad sweep of Jewish history threatens to obscure the details surrounding the process of expulsion and resettlement of particular Jewish communities. The following study offers an examination of one such moment – the formation of the Hispano-Jewish (or Sephardic) Diaspora following the Expulsion of 1492 – and highlights some of the particular ways in which the processes of migration and resettlement came to shape the contours of their society. The various mechanisms employed by Sephardic refugees in order to cope with the obstacles of exile included the increased importance of sub-communal fellowships, the adoption of new ethnic identities, and a general dependence on social and political ties with Christians, Muslims and other Jews. The various ways that the Sephardim responded to the challenges of exile and migration throw into sharp relief the different goals and strategies of average Jews and those of their communal leaders. These differences, and the distinct and often competing communal structures that they produced, caution against the portrayal of early modern Jews as a monolithic entity.

Type
Chapter
Information
Religious Diaspora in Early Modern Europe
Strategies of Exile
, pp. 153 - 166
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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