Like Salt for Bread. The Jews of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Author:   Francine Friedman
Publisher:   Brill
Volume:   13
ISBN:  

9789004471047


Pages:   946
Publication Date:   25 November 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Like Salt for Bread. The Jews of Bosnia and Herzegovina


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Overview

This book is the only comprehensive treatment in any language of a rather “exotic” Balkan Jewish community. It places the Jewish community of Bosnia and Herzegovina into the context of the Jewish world, but also of the world within which it existed for around five hundred years under various empires and regimes. The Bosnian Jews might have remained a mostly unknown community to the rest of the world had it not played a unique role within the Bosnian Wars of the early 1990s, providing humanitarian aid to its neighbor Serbs, Croats, and Muslims. Watch Francine Friedman's presentation on The Jews of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Full Product Details

Author:   Francine Friedman
Publisher:   Brill
Imprint:   Brill
Volume:   13
Weight:   1.902kg
ISBN:  

9789004471047


ISBN 10:   9004471049
Pages:   946
Publication Date:   25 November 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of Figures, Maps and Tables Terms, Definitions, Abbreviations and Acronyms Introduction: Like Salt for Bread  1 Bosnia and Herzegovina  2 Identity, Ethnicity, and Religion in the Lands of the Former Yugoslavia  3 The Jews of Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 The Sephardic Strand  1 Introduction  2 Early Jewish Settlement in Iberia  3 The Jews in Medieval Spain  3.1 The Visigothic Era  3.2 The Moorish Period  3.3 The Reconquista Period  3.3.1 Decline of the Jewish Position in Christian Spain  3.3.2 Conversos, the Crown, and the Inquisition  3.3.2.1 The Conversos  3.3.2.2 The Inquisition  4 Expulsion of the Jews from Iberia and the Journey to the Balkans  5 The Jewish Experience in Iberia 2 The Jews in the Ottoman Empire  1 Introduction  2 Iberian Jews Enter the Ottoman Empire  3 Sephardic Settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina  3.1 Sarajevo  3.1.1 Jewish Settlement Patterns in Sarajevo  3.2 Smaller Bosnian Jewish Communities  3.2.1 Mostar  3.2.2 Banja Luka  3.2.3 Bihać  3.2.4 Travnik  3.2.5 Derventa  3.2.6 Bijeljina  3.2.7 Brčko  3.2.8 Žepče  3.2.9 Zvornik  4 The Ottoman Administration and the Jews  5 The Jews and the Ottoman Communal Organization  5.1 Dhimmıhood  5.2 Taxation of the Dhimmı  6 The Sarajevo Megillah  7 Ottoman Reforms and the Jews  8 The Jews in the Ottoman Economy  9 Bosnian Jewish Marital Customs  10 Bosnian Jewish Communal Organization  10.1 Religious, Social, and Cultural Administration  11 The Effect of Messianism on the Ottoman Jews: Shabtai Zvi  12 The Decline of the Ottoman Empire  12.1 The Effect of the Ottoman Decline on the Bosnian Jews  12.2 The Rise of Nationalism  13 Sephardic Culture in the Ottoman Empire  13.1 Judeo-espanjol  14 Spain and the Sephardim  15 The Jewish Experience in the Ottoman Empire 3 The Ashkenazic Strand  1 Introduction  2 Origins and Development of the Ashkenazim  3 Jewish Relations with Austro-Hungarian Society  4 Jewish Communal Administration  5 Austro-Hungarian Occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina  6 Bosnian Jewish Political Activity  7 Bosnian Jewish Demographic Profile  8 Bosnian Jewish Socioeconomic Life  9 Bosnian Jewish Communal Life  10 Bosnian Jewish Religious Life  11 Bosnian Jewish Cultural Life: Print, Media, the Arts  12 The Bosnian Jews under Austria-Hungary 4 The Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes/the First Yugoslavia  1 Introduction  2 The Balkan Wars  3 South Slavic Jews in World War i  4 The Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes  5 Bosnian Jewish Interwar Demographic Profile  5.1 Bosnian Jews in the Provinces  6 Relations between Bosnian Sephardim and Ashkenazim  7 Yugoslav and Bosnian Jewish Interwar Occupational Profile  8 Economic Situation of the Bosnian Jews  9 Bosnian Jewish Political Activity  10 Bosnian Jewish Communal Organization  10.1 Zionism  10.2 Integrationalism  10.3 Diaspora Nationalism  10.4 The Local Community  10.5 Communal Leadership  10.6 Communal Religious Organizations  10.7 Communal Religious Leadership  10.8 Schools and Language  11 Bosnian Jewish Cultural Activity  11.1 Jewish Newspapers  11.2 Jewish Artists  11.3 Jewish Authors, Essayists, Poets  12 Bosnian Jewish Social and Charitable/Humanitarian Organizations  12.1 La Benevolencija  12.2 Other Bosnian Jewish Communal/Humanitarian Organizations  12.3 Youth and Workers’ Societies  13 Bosnian Jews in the Spanish Civil War  14 Antisemitism in Interwar Yugoslavia  14.1 Bosnian Jewish Response to the Rise of Yugoslav Fascism  15 Bosnian Jews in Interwar Yugoslavia 5 World War ii  1 Introduction: The Collapse of Yugoslavia and the Rise of the Independent State of Croatia  2 Bosnian Jewish Demographic Profile in the Independent State of Croatia  3 “The Hunt for the Jews”  3.1 Bosnian Response to the Establishment of the Independent State of Croatia  3.2 Anti-Jewish Legislation  3.3 Honorary Aryans  4 The Rationale for Impoverishment of the Jewish Population  4.1 Theft of Jewish Personal Property  4.2 Appointment of Povjerenici for the Plunder of Jewish Businesses  4.3 Ustaše Control over Jewish Communal Organizations  4.3.1 Plunder of Bosnian Jewish Communal Property  5 The Sarajevo Haggadah During World War ii  6 Early Violence against the Jews  7 Bosnian Jews in the First Months of Occupation  8 The Catholic Church in the Independent State of Croatia  9 The Islamic Religious Community in the Independent State of Croatia  10 The Shoah in Bosnia and Herzegovina  10.1 Ustaše Establishment of Concentration Camps  10.1.1 Deportations of Bosnian Jews  10.1.2 Bosnian Jews in Concentration Camps  10.1.3 Number of World War ii Bosnian Jewish Victims  11 The Italian Zone  11.1 Jews in Italy’s Zone ii  11.1.1 Rab Concentration Camp  12 Jewish Participation in the Resistance  12.1 Bosnian Jews in the Partisans  12.2 Bosnian Jewish Prisoners of War  12.3 The Četniks and the Jews  13 The Handžar Division  14 Holocaust Survivors  15 Bosnian Righteous among the Nations  16 The Bosnian Jews in World War ii 6 The Communist Era  1 Introduction  2 Popular Identification and Its Impact on Bosnia and Herzegovina  2.1 Narod  2.2 Narodnost  2.3 Etničke Manjine  2.4 Evolution of the Concept of Narod  3 Bosnian Jewish Relations with the Socialist State and Society  3.1 Postwar Reconstruction of the Yugoslav Jewish Community  3.2 Jewish Industrial Property  3.3 Demographic Profile of the Bosnian Jewish Community  3.3.1 The Effect of Aliyah on Bosnian Jewish Demography  3.3.2 Occupational Profile of Yugoslav Jews  4 Post-World War ii Bosnian Jewish Communal Life  4.1 Jewish Communal Organization  4.2 Bosnian Jewish Communal Property under Socialism  4.2.1 Synagogues  4.2.2 Cemeteries  5 Bosnian Jewish Cultural Life  6 Yugoslav-Israeli Relations and Their Effect on Yugoslavia’s Jews  7 Antisemitism in Communist Yugoslavia  8 Visible Shoah Commemorations  9 Yugoslavia’s Interethnic Relations  9.1 The Collapse of “Brotherhood and Unity”  9.2 The Empowerment of Nationalist Leaders  10 The Yugoslav Crisis and Its Effects on Bosnia and Herzegovina  10.1 The Bosnian Leadership Crisis  10.2 Ethnic Politics in Bosnia and Herzegovina  11 The Bosnian Jewish Community at the End of Communist Yugoslavia 7 War in the 1990s  1 Introduction: European Nationalism at the End of the Twentieth Century  2 Ancient Ethnic Hatreds?  3 The Wars of Yugoslav Succession  3.1 Opening Shots of the Bosnian War  3.2 The Bosnian War  3.2.1 Sarajevo Besieged  3.2.2 The International Response to the Bosnian War  4 The Role of the Bosnian Jewish Community in the Bosnian War  4.1 The Rediscovery of Jewish Identity  4.2 The Reestablishment of La Benevolencija  4.3 The Bosnian Jewish Community in the Bosnian War  4.4 The Organization of the Jewish Community in Besieged Sarajevo  4.4.1 The Split Logistical Center  4.4.2 La Benevolencija-sponsored Programs  4.4.2.1 Magacin (Warehouse)  4.4.2.2 Women’s Section: Bohoreta  4.4.2.3 Health Service  4.4.2.4 Pharmacy  4.4.2.5 Clinic  4.4.2.6 House Visit Program  4.4.2.7 People’s Kitchen  4.4.2.8 Radio Station and Postal Service  4.4.2.9 Department for Cultural and Religious Questions  4.4.2.10 Computer Center  4.4.2.11 Evacuations  5 The Sarajevo Haggadah During the Bosnian War  6 Bosnian Jews in the Bosnian War 8 The Postwar Bosnian Jewish Community  1 Introduction  2 The Dayton Peace Accords and Their Implications  3 Characterization of the Bosnian War  4 Bosnia and Herzegovina and the European Union  5 Profile of the Postwar Bosnian Jewish Community  5.1 Synagogues and Cemeteries  5.2 Sociocultural Condition of the Bosnian Jewish Community  6 Bosnian Jewish Involvement in Postwar BiH  7 The Sarajevo Haggadah  8 The Bosnian View of the Shoah  9 Antisemitism in Bosnia and Herzegovina  10 Expropriation, Nationalization, Restitution in Postwar Bosnia and Herzegovina  10.1 Status of Bosnian Jewish Personal and Communal Property  11 The Claims Conference  12 Sejdić-Finci  13 Bosnian Relations with Israel  14 Future Prospects Bibliography Index 872

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Author Information

Francine Friedman, Ph.D. (1977), Claremont Graduate School, is Professor of Political Science at Ball State University. She has published two monographs, The Bosnian Muslims: Denial of a Nation (Westview Press, 1996) and Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Polity on the Brink (Routledge: 2004), and numerous articles and book chapters about ethnic relations in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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