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A soaring, heart-wrenching, and hopeful family memoir of a mostly-forgotten Middle Eastern Jewish community. After dwelling for centuries on the poverty-stricken fringes of Yemeni society, the desert nation's proud Jewish community was forced to emigrate, en masse, to Israel soon after that nation's founding. In this deeply personal and historically rich family memoir, Naomi Kehati Bronner opens a window into the unique world in which her parents grew upa Yemini-Jewish world whose ways remained virtually unchanged since the Middle Ages. Suddenly finding themselves forcibly thrust into the…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
A soaring, heart-wrenching, and hopeful family memoir of a mostly-forgotten Middle Eastern Jewish community. After dwelling for centuries on the poverty-stricken fringes of Yemeni society, the desert nation's proud Jewish community was forced to emigrate, en masse, to Israel soon after that nation's founding. In this deeply personal and historically rich family memoir, Naomi Kehati Bronner opens a window into the unique world in which her parents grew upa Yemini-Jewish world whose ways remained virtually unchanged since the Middle Ages. Suddenly finding themselves forcibly thrust into the modern world, Kehati Bronner's parents and their immigrant community struggle to adjust and assimilate, while still raising their children to remember and honor their ancient traditions. Her own deeply personal story of assimilation, reinvention, and self-discovery not only sheds light on the complexity of modern Israel, but mirrors the immigrant journey of countless people around the worldand in the case of Jews, Israel's powerful role in providing a new sense of peoplehood.

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Autorenporträt
Naomi Kehati Bronner was born while her parents were living in a refugee camp a few years after the State of Israel was created. Her early experiences chronicle what it has meant to be an Arab Jew in Israel. She went to an elite high school and became an officer in the Israeli army. She spent three decades in the United States and has a doctorate from Columbia University. She is a practicing clinical psychologist who has written essays on various topics in Hebrew and English.