The Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Studies
University of Maryland
presents
Can Jews Become Farmers? Rurality, Peasantry and Cultural Identity in the World of the Nineteenth Century Lithuanian Rural Jew
Professor Mordechai Zalkin
Ben-Gurion University
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
12:30 – 2:00 PM
0142 Holzapfel Hall (JWST Seminar Room)
Based on conventional wisdom, supported also in no
small measure by stereotypes, agriculture as a vocation was not
considered as part of the occupational profile of Jewish society in
Eastern Europe until World War II. However, various studies
show that in different places in this region, primarily Lithuania,
White Russia and Bessarabia, tens of thousands of Jews, living in small
villages and farms, made a living from direct engagement in various
branches of agriculture, including field crops, orchards,
lake fishing, etc. Following the first part of my talk in which I will
present some figures of this phenomenon, I will examine the possible
influence of the agricultural occupation on the shaping of a unique
peasant cultural identity among these rural Jews
and the ways they coped with the accompanying religious, social and
cultural implications.
Mordechai Zalkin is an associate professor of
modern Jewish history in the Jewish History department at Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev. His special fields of interest are the history
of Lithuanian Jewry as well as the cultural, educational
and social transformation east European Jewry underwent during the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
For more information, please visit:
www.jewishstudies.umd.edu
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