The Origins and Religious Practices and Identities of the Honen Dalim Jewish Community in Mozambique |
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Authors: | Marina Pignatelli |
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Affiliation: | Rua Almerindo Lessa–Pólo Universitário do Alto da Ajuda, Lisbon University, Lisboa 1300–663, Portugal |
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Abstract: | All world religions are trans-local and transcultural and have been long before or after the thalassocracy of colonial empires took shape and moulded ethnic-religious affiliations, and Judaism is no exception. This paper is focused on the religious identities and practices of the Jews in Maputo, their perceptions of belonging and constraints of integration. It relies on an inter-subjective multi-situated ethnography and tries to reason on the ways Judaism, with its unique message, meant to be spread to all peoples and claiming its own truth and forms of allegiance and identification, assumes a new significance in complex contexts like Mozambique demanding negotiations between differently empowered agents in the present in order to achieve a constructive harmonization between the global and the local forms of Judaism. |
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