Avi Picard

Soft Religiosity: The Identity of North African Youths
in Israel in the 1950's
Abstract
The discussion about the ethnic gap between Ashkenazy and Mizrahi Jews in Israel is usually detached from the discussion about the tension between religious and secular Jews. However, these two internal Israeli conflicts are closely related. Religious identity in Israel divided its society and was one of the forces that shaped Israel's political arena. The question of religious identity among European Jews was clear – a dichotomy between observance and non-observance defined which camp each individual belongs to. The process of secularization among Mizrahi Jews was different, without clear distinction between the religious and the non-religious.
The large immigration of Jews from Muslim countries challenged the Israeli system, particularly the education system. The habits and way of life of Mizrahi youth fit well with neither the religious nor the secular schools. The problem was especially difficult in Youth Aliyah institutions, where teens who immigrated without their parents were educated. The article elaborates on the difficulties that those young immigrants faced in the existing religious and secular institutions. It also focuses on the development of a third stream - the traditional stream - which offered a solution to the religious identity of North African Youth.
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