Secular Jewish culture

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    one's own culture does not require contempt or disrespect for other cultures.” (Chavez 1) Danny and Reuven came from two differents sects of the same culture, which in their own minds they are completely different people. this essay is going to compare and contrast the Hasidic practices with those of the Modern Orthodox Jew. Danny and Reuven came from different cultural backgrounds, but still become friends. Danny Saunders was raised following a Russian Hasidic sect of judaism. Dannys culture…

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    Since the Jewish population was on the fringe of French society, Voltaire’s negative portrayal of the…

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    Immigrants: An Analysis

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    It seems like the stories of immigrants and their children suggest that at first children reject their parents’ culture and ideas as archaic and non-applicable in the new world, but later in life these children start to see the importance of their past roots and where they came from. They find a way to both assimilate and accomplish American ideals, while still not rejecting their history. In my own life I find this extreme applicable. The three books which I have cited all relate to the many…

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    Mcclymond The Chosen

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    she read The Chosen for the first time as an adolescent. McClymond goes into detail about the biographical information concerning Chaim Potok. She also discusses the details of Potok leaving the very traditional and strict practice of the Hasidic Jewish population. Potok would seek a less religious education as he went to the University of Pennsylvania. Then, McClymond describes the plot of The Chosen. The Chosen describes 2 young boys of Reuven Malter and Danny Saunders. McClymond then goes…

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    The Melting Pot

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    represents a plethora of cultures coming into one, as they all lose a sense of their identity and customs and the dominant culture emerges. Kallen’s essay challenges this American way and refutes…

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    of reciprocal fusion. The phrase entered popular parlance with such élan that its origins still remain unknown and obscure to most people. Although one might safely attribute the wide-spread dissemination of the idea to Israel Zangwill, the Anglo-Jewish Zionist-turned-assimilationist, similar references had already been made by writers like J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Frederick Jackson Turner who used the crucible as a persistent metaphor in the building of…

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    together and kept them from assimilating to the new world. Language is a basis for culture and culture creates connections in societies. Yiddish helped Jews keep their traditional culture by giving them a way to communicate and spread traditions orally without having to be educated. It is not until Jewish citizens have been forced to listen and interact with non-Yiddish speakers do they lose a sense of community and culture. Paralleled in the stories of Sholem Aleichem,…

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    to reflect his actual experiences as they tend to focus on the Jewish and their search for belonging and identity. Potok separates the modernized Jewish culture in America from what he thinks is the true and original Jewish culture. This mirrors his life as an American Jew born and raised in the New York. Potok values the relationship of family in his books, especially between father and son, as the father would pass on their culture down to the son so that it can be passed for many more…

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    Olivia Olson Dr. Alex Hill Bio A 348 9 December 2016 Tay-Sachs: Why so Selective? There are aspects of nature that puzzle the world. Scientists, as curious as they are, try to figure out and solve nature’s great mysteries. One biological phenomenon that appears is Tay-Sachs disease. This is a disorder that tends to appear in only a handful of populations around the world. For quite sometime it was a mystery as to why this deadly disease tended to only show up in certain populations; but thanks…

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    Jews. Its Jewish population exceeded Toronto’s, and the educational and communal structures built by the Jewish community outdid the smaller centers in Canada. Jews in Canada frequently live in cities or suburbs. Although not as residentially segregated as the Vietnamese, often neighborhoods could be considered “Jewish neighborhoods” because of the amount of Jewish synagogues, schools and Jewish population living there. In Louis Wirth’s article The Ghetto he argued that the movement of Jewish…

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