Twisted Trajectories and Jewish-Muslim Interfaces: Bukharan Jews of Central Asia in Vienna

Vera Skvirskaja
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Abstract

This article discusses migration of Bukharan Jews – an ethnic-religious minority in (post-)Soviet Central Asia – and the establishment of multi-confessional, multi-ethnic Central Asian diaspora in the city of Vienna, Austria. During the Cold War period, Vienna was transformed from being a major transit hub for Soviet Jews moving from the USSR to Israel, USA and other destinations to a site of the most numerous and prominent Bukharan Jewish diaspora in Europe. Using the concept of ‘migration infrastructure’, the article investigates the ways in which this transformation took place. Furthermore, it focuses on Jewish-Muslim interfaces, both in Soviet Uzbekistan and present-day diaspora, to document the ongoing, albeit changing, coexistence and collaboration across ethnic-religious boundaries that facilitate transnational migration. I argue that the Jewish infrastructure, which emerged in Vienna’s historically Jewish district of Leopoldstadt in the last decades, has also become a migrant infrastructure for the post-Soviet Tadjik-speaking Muslim migrants from Central Asia.
扭曲的轨迹和犹太人与穆斯林的交界面:维也纳的中亚布哈拉犹太人
本文讨论了(后)苏联中亚少数民族--布哈拉犹太人的迁徙,以及在奥地利维也纳市建立的多教派、多种族的中亚侨民。冷战期间,维也纳从苏联犹太人从苏联迁往以色列、美国和其他目的地的主要中转枢纽,转变为欧洲数量最多、最突出的布哈拉犹太人散居地。文章使用 "移民基础设施 "的概念,研究了发生这种转变的方式。此外,文章还重点探讨了犹太人与穆斯林在前苏联乌兹别克斯坦和当今散居地之间的互动关系,以记录促进跨国移民的跨越种族-宗教界限的持续共存与合作,尽管这种共存与合作是不断变化的。我认为,过去几十年在维也纳历史上的犹太区利奥波德施塔特(Leopoldstadt)出现的犹太基础设施,也已成为后苏联时期中亚塔吉克语穆斯林移民的移民基础设施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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