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In Jewish-Muslim Relations and Migration from Yemen to Palestine in the Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Ari Ariel analyzes the impact of local, regional and international events on ethnic and religious relations in Yemen and Yemeni Jewish migration patterns. Previous research has dealt with single episodes of Yemenite migration during limited spans of time. Ariel, instead, provides a broad sweep of the migratory flows over the 70 year time span during which most of Yemen’s Jews moved to Palestine and then Israel. He successfully avoids the polemic nature of much of the literature on Middle Eastern Jewry by focusing on the social, economic and political transformations that provoked and then sustained this migration.
Ari Ariel, Ph.D. (2009), Columbia University, has taught at Fordham University and New York University and is currently a Lecturer in Middle Eastern history at Bryn Mawr College. He is the author of numerous scholarly articles.
IntroductionChapter One: Theoretical Considerations and Historical ContextChapter Two: Jewish Migration from Yemen to the Ottoman Sanjak of Jerusalem, Palestine, and IsraelChapter Three: The Alliance Israélite Universelle and the Zionist Movement in Yemen: The Missions of Yom Tov Semah and Shmuel YavnieliChapter Four: The Forced Conversion of Jewish Orphans in Yemen under Imam YahyaChapter Five: Regime Change, Anti-Jeiwsh Violence, and Emigration in Libya and YemenConclusionBibliography