Wild tribes and ancient Semites: Israelite-Indian identification and the American West |
| |
Authors: | Sarah Imhoff |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Religious Studies, Indiana University, 1033 E Third St, Bloomington, IL 47405, USAseimhoff@indiana.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Rabbi Henry Cohen of Galveston, Texas, carefully preserved a 1916 pamphlet that claimed a common history for ‘Wild Tribes’ of Indians and Jews of antiquity. Why would a Jewish author tie the customs of ‘uncivilised’ tribes to his own religion, and why might it capture Cohen's attention? This article suggests that the ‘Indian-Israelite’ identification appealed to acculturated Jews like Cohen as part of a wider embrace of a vision of manhood that at once held ties to Jewishness and American identity. That is, identification with the American West and frontier emphasised the harmony between Jewishness, a particular type of enlightened Judaism, and Americanisation. A brief survey of three movements – the relatively small-scale Galveston Movement, Jewish agricultural communities and the larger, more diverse Zionist movement – then demonstrates how the gendered and nationalist ideologies of Henry Cohen and other acculturated Jews like him aligned with their imagined constructions of Indians. |
| |
Keywords: | Judaism masculinity religion American West Native Americans |
|
|