Beyond the Rivers of Ethiopia: Writings on the Beta Israel (Falasha)

Q3 Arts and Humanities
R. Ridinger
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The global communities of Judaism have each generated distinctive bodies of writings, both for internal use (such as the works of individual religious leaders and unique liturgies for their formal worship) and as the subject of research in the social sciences and humanities. One of the most ancient such communities existed for centuries in a region not usually associated with Judaism, but with significant ties to ancient Israel in historical and religious tradition, the land of Ethiopia. In existence by the third century C.E., the people who referred to themselves as the Beta Israel (House of Israel) maintained distinct political and economic identities while continuing to practice a pre-Rabbinic form of Judaism up to the twentieth century within a society structured by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. This article will explore the diverse literature on the Beta Israel created before and since the foundation of the State of Israel in 1948 covering the issue of the recognition of their identity as Jews, the efforts made by the world Jewish community to rescue them from war and violence, and the cultural and religious problems generated by their arrival in Israel.
越过埃塞俄比亚的河流:关于贝塔以色列的著作(法拉沙)
摘要犹太教的全球社区都产生了独特的著作,既可供内部使用(如个别宗教领袖的作品和他们正式礼拜的独特礼拜仪式),也可作为社会科学和人文学科的研究主题。最古老的此类社区之一存在了几个世纪,该地区通常与犹太教无关,但在历史和宗教传统上与古以色列埃塞俄比亚有着重要联系。到公元前三世纪,自称贝塔以色列(以色列之家)的人保持着独特的政治和经济身份,同时在埃塞俄比亚东正教会构建的社会中继续信奉拉比时代之前的犹太教,直到二十世纪。本文将探讨1948年以色列国成立前后创作的关于贝塔以色列的各种文献,包括承认他们的犹太人身份问题,世界犹太社区为将他们从战争和暴力中拯救出来所做的努力,以及他们抵达以色列所产生的文化和宗教问题。
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来源期刊
Journal of Religious and Theological Information
Journal of Religious and Theological Information Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: The Journal of Religious & Theological Information is an essential resource for bibliographers, librarians, and scholars interested in the literature of religion and theology. Both international and pluralistic in scope, this peer-reviewed journal encourages the publication of research and scholarship in the field of library and information studies as it relates to religious studies and related fields, including philosophy, ethnic studies, anthropology, sociology, and historical approaches to religion. By "information" we refer to both print and electronic, and both published and unpublished information.
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