Thanks to both of you!
I mentioned earlier in the thread that one effect of a parallel Haskalah happening in the Galilee and Acre is that Jews can explore modernity in a way that doesn't dilute Judaism. The modernity of the Yishuv is more conservative and preserves many more traditions, but...
To start, you'd need a lot more Americo-Liberians. They were never more than 5 percent of the Liberian population, so if they began intermarrying with the indigenous Liberians (which is what would have to happen for an assimilation process to get started), the tendency would be for the...
Jews in the Pale did farm in the sense of having kitchen gardens and a few chickens and cows, but the shtetl economy was based mainly on villages of tradesmen serving the nearby peasants. Similar arrangements existed in some other parts of the world, for instance Morocco and Yemen. The common...
Thanks! Any more thoughts on the latest story?
The next one will feature the Maid of Ludomir (thanks to @jacob ningen for putting that notion in my head) and take place somewhere in the Russian Empire, but details are still TBD. After that, I think, three more, and then a final one set in 1841...
Notes to The Student:
1. Due to the events of the Napoleonic Sanhedrin and the post-Napoleonic reaction in Germany, the Netherlands have taken a more leading role in the early Reform movement (or as it is called here, “Modern”) than OTL. Several things have contributed to this: the prominence...
THE STUDENT
JUNE 1840
Gideon Chelemer had grown up on stories of his great-grandfather’s arrival at Acre, nearly penniless after having been robbed in Beirut and lost in an unfamiliar city. Gideon himself was returning to Acre in far more fortunate circumstances; the view as he stood on the...
Thanks! I'm also going to take up a suggestion of yours - I've decided that I'll do another arc after 1840, and that it will consist of four or five stories of Ulysses and Julia Grant's 1878 visit to Egypt, the Holy Land and Syria. They'll stay a few months longer and go more places than OTL...
This was true to some extent IOTL - obviously there was no historical exodus to Astrakhan, but many Central Asian Jews welcomed the Russian conquest because they would now be equal to the Muslims. It helped that the worst abuses of Nicholas I had ended by that time, and the weird Tsarist...
The Nakshbandi sheikhs were (and are) well known throughout Central Asia. It wouldn't be unusual for a rabbi in a crossroads like Astrakhan (or at least one with Melek's curiosity) to know of them.
The last of whom, IOTL, moved to Jerusalem about this time, didn't she? Maybe she will bring...
Notes to The Wise Man of Astrakhan:
1. Astrakhan was part of the initial Pale of Settlement in 1791, which, as has been mentioned before, allowed Jews to live in certain parts of the Russian Empire where they hadn’t lived before but where the empire wanted non-Muslim colonists. IOTL, Nicholas I...
Threadmarks: THE WISE MAN OF ASTRAKHAN APRIL-MAY 1840
THE WISE MAN OF ASTRAKHAN
APRIL-MAY 1840
Nahum Groysman, as fitting for a man with that name, was big. In fact he was almost a caricature of his name: six foot five, tipping the scales at a seventh of a ton, heavily-built and muscular like the carter’s son he was. His beard and sidelocks were...
It's not so much that the Sanhedrin would want to change them - as mentioned in the story, the rabbis told them there was nothing to forbid - as that, as a small and mostly illiterate minority among the Jews of the Yishuv, they wouldn't be able to avoid assimilating. If they don't stay...
They'll also remember the first years of the revival (1538-41) when their ascetic/flagellant tendencies started riots and almost brought them down before they'd got fairly started, and they'll know the history of the infighting during the Hasmonean period. There's a lot of institutional history...