Social Identities
Volume 20, Issue 2-3, 2014, Pages 199-213

Impostors of themselves: performing Jewishness and revitalizing Jewish life among Russian-Jewish immigrants in contemporary Germany (Article)

Roberman S.*
  • a Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

Abstract

In the early 1990s, Germany officially opened its gates to the immigration of Russian Jews as part of the politics of repentance and restitution for the Holocaust. The immigration of Russian Jews seemed to offer an opportunity to strengthen and revitalize Jewish life in the country, even to restore it to its pre-war scale and condition. For the Russian-Jewish immigrants, that task has proven a difficult challenge. Tracking the stumbling blocks and difficulties of the project of revitalization and recreation of Jewish life, this article moves through different arenas of the immigrants' performance of Jewishness – artistic, ritual, and mundane, individual as well as communal. It examines the situation in which role-playing or ‘passing’ as Jews fails to be perceived as credible and is interpreted as ‘imposture.’ © 2014 Taylor & Francis.

Author Keywords

Russian-Jewish immigrants Identity post-World War II Germany revitalization of tradition

Index Keywords

Germany post-war immigrant population identity construction cultural tradition religion immigration cultural identity

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84914688080&doi=10.1080%2f13504630.2014.944144&partnerID=40&md5=855ca0b7a9968cf5de5b5e0eb46ace7a

DOI: 10.1080/13504630.2014.944144
ISSN: 13504630
Cited by: 1
Original Language: English