Laura Yares, "Jewish Sunday Schools: Teaching Religion in Nineteenth-Century America "
English | ISBN: 1479822272 | 2023 | 264 pages | PDF | 18 MB
English | ISBN: 1479822272 | 2023 | 264 pages | PDF | 18 MB
Charts how changes to Jewish education in the nineteenth century served as a site for the wholescale reimagining of Judaism itself
The earliest Jewish Sunday schools were female-led, growing from one school in Philadelphia established by Rebecca Gratz in 1838 to an entire system that educated vast numbers of Jewish youth across the country. These schools were modeled on Christian approaches to religious education and aimed to protect Jewish children from Protestant missionaries. But debates soon swirled around the so-called sorry state of “feminized” American Jewish supplemental learning, and the schools were taken over by men within one generation of their creation. It is commonly assumed that the critiques were accurate and that the early Jewish Sunday school was too feminized, saccharine, and dependent on Christian paradigms. Tracing the development of these schools from their inception through the first decade of the twentieth century, this book shows this was not the reality.
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