Bread to Eat and Clothes to Wear: Letters from Jewish Migrants in the Early Twentieth Century

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Product Details
Price
$39.59
Publisher
Wayne State University Press
Publish Date
Pages
240
Dimensions
6.1 X 0.6 X 8.9 inches | 0.85 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780814335192
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About the Author
Gur Alroey is professor of Jewish history in modern times at the University of Haifa. He is also author of The Immigrants: The Jewish Immigration to Palestine in the Early Twentieth Century, The Quiet Revolution: The Jewish Emigration from the Russian Empire in the Early Twentieth Century, and "Homeland Seekers" The Jewish Territorialism Organization (JTO) and the Zionist movement, 1905-1925.
Reviews
Gur Alroey's Bread to Eat and Clothes to Wear dramatically expands our understanding of the Eastern European Jewish immigrant experience by providing the reader with a firsthand glimpse of the trials and tribulations facing migrating Jews from Tsarist Russia. Through an evocative and never-before-published collection of letters penned in Yiddish and Hebrew by Jewish migrants, Alroey enables the reader to see the political, emotional, financial, and psychological dilemmas faced by Jews as they ventured overseas to start their lives anew. Moreover, these astonishing primary documents also offer up an intimate view of gender relations in marriage as husbands went ahead of their wives and children to secure a better future; and at times, as many wives feared, to break free from the shackles of family life.--Rebecca Kobrin "Knapp Assistant Professor of American Jewish History at Columbia University "
At the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, millions of Eastern European Jews found migration the antidote of choice to poverty and persecution. Those intending to depart wanted questions answered and anxieties calmed. Their welfare and that of their families was at stake. They wrote letters to immigration bureaus established by Jewish philanthropic organizations. Gur Alroey's translation of sixty-six of these letters opens a fresh window for scholars and students on this modern day exodus. His volume will find a special place on the book shelves of all those engaged with the Jewish migration experience.--Alan Kraut
Alroey unpacks the great Eastern European Jewish migration to America (and lesser in number, to Palestine) through what scholars are always complaining is missing: the voices of the 'ordinary' women and men who went through the process."--Hasia R. Diner "Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History and professor of Hebrew and Judaic studies at NYU "
Students of history and the social sciences, as well as amateur genealogists, will appreciate the one-act dramas contained in the letters Alroey has rescued from obscurity. These letters ground historical events in a concrete reality, give faceless statistics individuality and suggest stories behind names on ships' manifests."--Adam Rovner "Forward "
Will benefit both scholars of Jewish history and the general reader.--Sonja Mekel "H-Net Reviews "
Thanks to the author's thoroughness and willingness to examine not merely conditions in the Old Country and in the New, but also the interstitial, sometimes intangible moment in between, the insights that can be gained from this captivating and informative book will benefit both scholars of Jewish history and the general reader.--Sonja Mekel