Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry

This article highlights the outcome of a long-term field research into the transnational identity of the post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry. It analyzes biographical interviews taken between 2015 and 2018 in St. Petersburg and Minsk to define the religious identity and day-to-day practices of post-Soviet Or...

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Main Author: Elena A. Ostrovskaya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ural Federal University 2021-07-01
Series:Changing Societies & Personalities
Online Access:https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/245
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spelling doaj-870875a7363e4d14aafabeadbda71b742021-07-19T16:24:53ZengUral Federal UniversityChanging Societies & Personalities2587-61042587-89642021-07-015220121910.15826/csp.2021.5.2.129245Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox JewryElena A. Ostrovskaya0Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, RussiaThis article highlights the outcome of a long-term field research into the transnational identity of the post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry. It analyzes biographical interviews taken between 2015 and 2018 in St. Petersburg and Minsk to define the religious identity and day-to-day practices of post-Soviet Orthodox Jews. In this article, I argue that the modern post-Soviet Jewry is a new socio-cultural phenomenon with no historical prototypes. As to the research methodology, it was a combination of the transnational approach, random choice case-study targeting post-Soviet Orthodox communities of Orthodox Jewry in large cities, and the biographical method. The backbone of the post-Soviet Orthodox communities of different strains of Judaism was formed in 1990–2008. It is made up of three generations of men and women born in the late 1940s–1960s, mid-1960s–early 1970s, and the 1980s. Each of these generations is characterized by its own unique pattern of observance, the formation of which is directly conditioned by the circumstances of involvement in religious Jewry. The transnational pattern of observance of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jews involves the model they confronted at the very beginning of their journey, the model they learned in overseas educational institutions or through incoming envoys and rabbis in the country of residence, and the model of balance between the required and possible in the modern post-Christian and post-atheist environment.https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/245
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elena A. Ostrovskaya
spellingShingle Elena A. Ostrovskaya
Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
Changing Societies & Personalities
author_facet Elena A. Ostrovskaya
author_sort Elena A. Ostrovskaya
title Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
title_short Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
title_full Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
title_fullStr Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
title_full_unstemmed Tradition as a Homeland to Return to: Transnational Religious Identity of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry
title_sort tradition as a homeland to return to: transnational religious identity of the post-soviet orthodox jewry
publisher Ural Federal University
series Changing Societies & Personalities
issn 2587-6104
2587-8964
publishDate 2021-07-01
description This article highlights the outcome of a long-term field research into the transnational identity of the post-Soviet Orthodox Jewry. It analyzes biographical interviews taken between 2015 and 2018 in St. Petersburg and Minsk to define the religious identity and day-to-day practices of post-Soviet Orthodox Jews. In this article, I argue that the modern post-Soviet Jewry is a new socio-cultural phenomenon with no historical prototypes. As to the research methodology, it was a combination of the transnational approach, random choice case-study targeting post-Soviet Orthodox communities of Orthodox Jewry in large cities, and the biographical method. The backbone of the post-Soviet Orthodox communities of different strains of Judaism was formed in 1990–2008. It is made up of three generations of men and women born in the late 1940s–1960s, mid-1960s–early 1970s, and the 1980s. Each of these generations is characterized by its own unique pattern of observance, the formation of which is directly conditioned by the circumstances of involvement in religious Jewry. The transnational pattern of observance of the Post-Soviet Orthodox Jews involves the model they confronted at the very beginning of their journey, the model they learned in overseas educational institutions or through incoming envoys and rabbis in the country of residence, and the model of balance between the required and possible in the modern post-Christian and post-atheist environment.
url https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/245
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