The Beta Israel, the Ethiopian Jews, have suffered from a negative or complete misrepresentation in the written and oral sources of pre-modern Ethiopia. The term “Jew” was deliberately chosen to stigmatize heretic groups, or any other group deviating from the normative church doctrine. Often no difference was made between Jewish groups or heretic Christians; they were marginalized and persecuted in the harshest way. The article illustrates how Jews are featured in the Ethiopian sources, the apparent patterns in this usage, and the polemic language chosen to describe these people
The Israeli Ethiopian Jews want full admission into mainstream Israeli society. The purpose of this ...
There are several communities at the intersection of both the African and Jewish Diasporas, but the ...
This paper explores the phenomenon of marginal identities in Israel, focusing on the Ethiopian Jewis...
The Beta Israel, the Ethiopian Jews, have suffered from a negative or complete misrepresentation in ...
Between Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages, many times Jews are equated with heretics in Patristic...
The purpose of the article is to point out that the structure of anti-Jewish stereotypes concerning ...
Even after more than two decades, over 70 000 Ethiopian Jews - the Beta Israel - have still not been...
Ethiopian Christianity has often been regarded by European travelers and missionaries as impure, bec...
The Jews (Falasha) of northwestern Ethiopia are a unique example of a Jewish group living within an ...
The article shows that it is anachronistic to speak of either 'Christians' or 'Jews' in the biblical...
Much ink has been spilled over the term “antisemitism,” yet it still remains rather ambiguous. What ...
A Jewish community of people who lived in Northwestern Ethiopia and shared a common language, cultur...
Affinity with the Holy Land, and especially with Jerusalem, is a common theme in the sacred geograph...
The persecutions of Jesus and the members of the ancient Church are well attested by Christian (New ...
The manuscript tradition of the Betä Ǝsraʾel, the Jews of Ethiopia, has not been studied before. Thi...
The Israeli Ethiopian Jews want full admission into mainstream Israeli society. The purpose of this ...
There are several communities at the intersection of both the African and Jewish Diasporas, but the ...
This paper explores the phenomenon of marginal identities in Israel, focusing on the Ethiopian Jewis...
The Beta Israel, the Ethiopian Jews, have suffered from a negative or complete misrepresentation in ...
Between Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages, many times Jews are equated with heretics in Patristic...
The purpose of the article is to point out that the structure of anti-Jewish stereotypes concerning ...
Even after more than two decades, over 70 000 Ethiopian Jews - the Beta Israel - have still not been...
Ethiopian Christianity has often been regarded by European travelers and missionaries as impure, bec...
The Jews (Falasha) of northwestern Ethiopia are a unique example of a Jewish group living within an ...
The article shows that it is anachronistic to speak of either 'Christians' or 'Jews' in the biblical...
Much ink has been spilled over the term “antisemitism,” yet it still remains rather ambiguous. What ...
A Jewish community of people who lived in Northwestern Ethiopia and shared a common language, cultur...
Affinity with the Holy Land, and especially with Jerusalem, is a common theme in the sacred geograph...
The persecutions of Jesus and the members of the ancient Church are well attested by Christian (New ...
The manuscript tradition of the Betä Ǝsraʾel, the Jews of Ethiopia, has not been studied before. Thi...
The Israeli Ethiopian Jews want full admission into mainstream Israeli society. The purpose of this ...
There are several communities at the intersection of both the African and Jewish Diasporas, but the ...
This paper explores the phenomenon of marginal identities in Israel, focusing on the Ethiopian Jewis...