Los costos de envío se calcularán en base a esta dirección en todo el sitio.
Selecciona tu país
América
Argentina
Brasil
Canadá
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Ecuador
El Salvador
Estados Unidos
México
Perú
República Dominicana
Uruguay
Europa
Alemania
Austria
Bélgica
Croacia
Dinamarca
Eslovaquia
Eslovenia
España
Finlandia
Francia
Grecia
Hungría
Irlanda
Italia
Letonia
Malta
Noruega
Países Bajos
Polonia
Portugal
Reino Unido
República Checa
Serbia
Suecia
Suiza
Resto del mundo


The Wrong Kind of Jew. A Mizrahi Manifesto (en Inglés)
Hen Mazzig (Autor) · Wicked Son · Tapa Blanda
Quedan más de 100 unidades
$ 583.93Part memoir, part manifesto,The Wrong Kind of Jew catalogues the Jewish population of the Middle East and North Africa, their history, and the voices who fail to meet the expectations of both the Jewish and non-Jewish world-yet are better for it.
When people ask what I'm passionate about, Judaism, likely, comes first. If you ask where I'm from, the answer is Israel, so usually a dead giveaway. But if you dive into my ethnicity or race, I will tell you that my family comes from North Africa and the Middle East-Tunisia, and Iraq, to be more specific.
So you're Arab? people often ask. And I respond, no, I'm a Jew.
I'm Mizrahi. The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa are known as Mizrahim. But few people-Jewish and non-Jewish alike-know of us. There are many reasons for that, one of which is that for too many, Mizrahim are "the wrong kind of Jew." We're not only unfamiliar, but our culture shatters stereotypes and unspoken rules. We break the expectations many hold about Jews and race, the Middle East and religion, and even politics and oppression.
Because of my Mizrahi heritage, I don't fit into what many people see as the secular, cultural tenets of Judaism.
I like bagels, but I don't consider them my cuisine. I don't have opinions on Katz Deli or whether or not they are better than Langers. What kind of meat is Pastrami? I'm still not sure. My grandma doesn't make matzo-ball soup when I'm sick or even on the holidays. Instead, she's making a stew that most of my Jewish friends can't pronounce.
Yes, my grandparents were in the Holocaust. Can't get more Jewish than that, right? But their streets were never lined with swastikas or German soldiers. No one scrawled "Jude" on their homes or businesses. They didn't survive Auschwitz or Dachau or Buchenwald. They were due to be sent to Nazi camps with unknown names. Their neighbors were shot and raped in antisemitic riots, which most people, even most synagogues, don't commemorate.
For some, I'm not just the wrong kind of Jew; I'm a bad Jew. I'm bad at meeting expectations of what Jewish looks like, sounds like, thinks like, and means.
But I have the audacity to know that I am a bad Jew and feel good about it.
¿Tienes una pregunta sobre el libro? Inicia sesión para poder agregar tu propia pregunta.
