Non­fic­tion

A Jew­ish Child­hood in the Mus­lim Mediterranean

December 15, 2022

A Jew­ish Child­hood in the Mus­lim Mediter­ranean brings togeth­er the fas­ci­nat­ing per­son­al sto­ries of Jew­ish writ­ers, schol­ars, and intel­lec­tu­als who came of age in lands where Islam was the dom­i­nant reli­gion and every­day life was infused with the pol­i­tics of the French impe­r­i­al project. Prompt­ed by nov­el­ist Leïla Seb­bar to reflect on their child­hoods, these writ­ers offer lit­er­ary por­traits that ges­ture to a uni­ver­sal con­di­tion while also shed­ding light on the excep­tion­al nature of cer­tain expe­ri­ences. The child­hoods cap­tured here are unde­ni­ably Jew­ish, but they are also Moroc­can, Alger­ian, Tunisian, Egypt­ian, Lebanese, and Turk­ish; each essay thus tes­ti­fies to the mul­ti­cul­tur­al, mul­ti­lin­gual, and mul­ti-faith com­mu­ni­ty into which its author was born. The present trans­la­tion makes this unique col­lec­tion avail­able to an Eng­lish-speak­ing pub­lic for the first time. The orig­i­nal ver­sion, pub­lished in French in 2012, was award­ed the Prix Haïm Zafrani, a prize giv­en by the Elie Wiesel Insti­tute of Jew­ish Stud­ies to a lit­er­ary project that val­orizes Jew­ish civ­i­liza­tion in the Mus­lim world.

Discussion Questions

A Jew­ish Child­hood in the Mus­lim Mediter­ranean is a com­pelling col­lec­tion of thir­ty-four essays and sto­ries that illu­mi­nates the oft-over­looked expe­ri­ences of Jews in Mus­lim-major­i­ty coun­tries. From the streets of Moroc­co to the shores of Turkey, this poignant col­lec­tion offers read­ers a rare — and per­son­al — glimpse into the van­ished world of near­ly one mil­lion Jews, who once found a home in coun­tries where Islam was the dom­i­nant reli­gion. Prompt­ed by French Alger­ian nov­el­ist Leïla Seb­bar to reflect on their child­hoods, each author tack­les ques­tions of belong­ing and mem­o­ry, of child­hoods long gone and worlds most­ly lost. Despite these shared themes, which include the dynam­ics of the Jew­ish expe­ri­ence in Mus­lim-major­i­ty coun­tries under French impe­r­i­al rule, each essay stands as a tes­ta­ment to indi­vid­u­al­i­ty. They cau­tion against col­laps­ing the his­to­ry of Jews from the Arab world into a mono­lith­ic, sim­plis­tic, or moral­is­tic mem­o­ry tale. A Jew­ish Child­hood in the Mus­lim Mediter­ranean is a vital con­tri­bu­tion to our under­stand­ing of mem­o­ry, belong­ing, iden­ti­ty, and the diverse Jew­ish expe­ri­ence in the region. Mir­ror­ing the broad­er his­tor­i­cal real­i­ty of Jew­ish dis­place­ment and exo­dus, and under­scor­ing the urgency of pre­serv­ing these for­got­ten mem­o­ries, only one of the thir­ty-four authors still resides in her coun­try of birth. The orig­i­nal ver­sion of the book, pub­lished in French in 2012, was award­ed the Prix Haïm Zafrani, a prize giv­en by the Elie Wiesel Insti­tute of Jew­ish Stud­ies to a lit­er­ary project that cen­ters Jew­ish civ­i­liza­tion in the Mus­lim world.