Description

Book Synopsis
Jerusalem and Sao Paulo is a pioneering work of over four years of anthropological research on the repentance, or return to Jewish roots phenomenon, in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. The return-to-Jewish-roots phenomenon is identified by its Hebrew name of teshuvah, and the individuals involved are called baalei teshuvah (repentants). Jerusalem and Sao Paulo describes the long process these young people undergo in their choice of Jewish Orthodoxy. Due to the fact that Judaism is an ortho-practical religion, which emphasizes praxis over belief and dogma, the conversion to Orthodoxy is radical, traumatic, and more encompassing than that experienced by other Brazilians who adopt religions such as Neo-Pentacolism, Buddhism, Taoism, and Afro-Brazilian creeds. The book examines the following processes and contexts and their interrelationships: Globalization of religion, the Brazilian market of religious goods, the History of the Jewish community in Sao Paulo, and the teshuvah movement in Israel and the United States.

Trade Review
I recommend the translation and publication of the excellent book by Dr. Topel—Jerusalem and Sao Paulo—into English. The book deals with a most fascinating and enigmatic phenomenon that has not been studied until now: the emergence of a new orthodoxy in the stronghold of secular Jewry in Latin America. This transformation is particularly noticeable in Sao Paulo, where Jews form part of the upper middle class and are well integrated in the Brazilian society. -- Margalit Bejarano, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Department of Contemporary Jewry
Dr. Topel researched during four years the phenomenon of the adoption of orthodoxy by young secular Jewish people. . . . Her volume is undoubtedly an important contribution to the understanding of the world-wide phenomenon of the new-Jewish orthodoxy. For the English reader, who is generally very poorly informed about Jewish life in Brazil, her work will be of particular importance. -- Haim Avni, Professor Emeritus, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Director, Division for Latin America, Spain and Portugal

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Hansen's Law: What a Grandfather wants to forget, His Grandson wants to remember Chapter 3 Chapter 2. The Brazilian Jewish Community's Pikuach Nefesh, or the First Seeds of the Teshuvah Movement in the Tropics Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Teshuvah as a Fundamental Idea within Judaism Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Recruiting New Members Chapter 6 Chapter 5. The Yoke of the Mitzvot: A Long Journey Chapter 7 Chapter 6. On the Baalot Teshuvah and the Many Challenges they face in Becoming Good Jewesses Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Judaism, Religious Identity and Globalization. On the Consolation of the Orthodox Community in Sao Paulo

Jerusalem and Sao Paulo The New Jewish Orthodoxy

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    A Paperback by Marta F. Topel, James A. R. Allen

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      Publisher: University Press of America
      Publication Date: 9/11/2008 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761841555, 978-0761841555
      ISBN10: 0761841555

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Jerusalem and Sao Paulo is a pioneering work of over four years of anthropological research on the repentance, or return to Jewish roots phenomenon, in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. The return-to-Jewish-roots phenomenon is identified by its Hebrew name of teshuvah, and the individuals involved are called baalei teshuvah (repentants). Jerusalem and Sao Paulo describes the long process these young people undergo in their choice of Jewish Orthodoxy. Due to the fact that Judaism is an ortho-practical religion, which emphasizes praxis over belief and dogma, the conversion to Orthodoxy is radical, traumatic, and more encompassing than that experienced by other Brazilians who adopt religions such as Neo-Pentacolism, Buddhism, Taoism, and Afro-Brazilian creeds. The book examines the following processes and contexts and their interrelationships: Globalization of religion, the Brazilian market of religious goods, the History of the Jewish community in Sao Paulo, and the teshuvah movement in Israel and the United States.

      Trade Review
      I recommend the translation and publication of the excellent book by Dr. Topel—Jerusalem and Sao Paulo—into English. The book deals with a most fascinating and enigmatic phenomenon that has not been studied until now: the emergence of a new orthodoxy in the stronghold of secular Jewry in Latin America. This transformation is particularly noticeable in Sao Paulo, where Jews form part of the upper middle class and are well integrated in the Brazilian society. -- Margalit Bejarano, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Department of Contemporary Jewry
      Dr. Topel researched during four years the phenomenon of the adoption of orthodoxy by young secular Jewish people. . . . Her volume is undoubtedly an important contribution to the understanding of the world-wide phenomenon of the new-Jewish orthodoxy. For the English reader, who is generally very poorly informed about Jewish life in Brazil, her work will be of particular importance. -- Haim Avni, Professor Emeritus, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Director, Division for Latin America, Spain and Portugal

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Hansen's Law: What a Grandfather wants to forget, His Grandson wants to remember Chapter 3 Chapter 2. The Brazilian Jewish Community's Pikuach Nefesh, or the First Seeds of the Teshuvah Movement in the Tropics Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Teshuvah as a Fundamental Idea within Judaism Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Recruiting New Members Chapter 6 Chapter 5. The Yoke of the Mitzvot: A Long Journey Chapter 7 Chapter 6. On the Baalot Teshuvah and the Many Challenges they face in Becoming Good Jewesses Chapter 8 Chapter 7. Judaism, Religious Identity and Globalization. On the Consolation of the Orthodox Community in Sao Paulo

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