Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland

This article draws on an ongoing research project that seeks to document ethnographically everyday Jewish life in Finland today. Based on the framework of vernacular religion, it approaches religion “as it is lived” (Primiano 1995) and analyses the many expressions and experiences of rules in day-t...

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Main Authors: Ruth Illman, Mercédesz Czimbalmos, Dóra Pataricza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society) 2022-11-01
Series:Suomen Antropologi
Online Access:https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/115509
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author Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
Dóra Pataricza
author_facet Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
Dóra Pataricza
author_sort Ruth Illman
collection DOAJ
description This article draws on an ongoing research project that seeks to document ethnographically everyday Jewish life in Finland today. Based on the framework of vernacular religion, it approaches religion “as it is lived” (Primiano 1995) and analyses the many expressions and experiences of rules in day-to-day Jewish life as part of complex interactions between individuals, institutions, and religious motivations. Historical data, institutional structures and cultural context are put in dialogue with individual narratives and nuances, described as “self-motivated” ways of “doing” religion. In this article, we seek to investigate what a vernacular Jewish approach to making, bending, and breaking rules amounts to in a community where increasing diversity and deep-reaching secularity contest and reshape traditional boundaries of belonging. What rules are accepted, adopted and appropriated as necessary or meaningful for being and doing Jewish? Our analysis traces how static values and conceptions of “Jewishness” give way to more flexible subjective positions as our interviewees struggle to find religiously and culturally significant models from the past that can be subjectively appropriated today. Both everyday quandaries and existential questions influence their ways of crafting vernacular religious positions. Focusing on formal and personal rituals related particularly to family life and foodways, the article shows how rules are revisited and refashioned as the traditional boundaries between sacred and secular, gendered practices and ethnic customs, are transgressed and subjective combinations are developed. Keywords: vernacular Judaism; Jews in Finland; ethnography; religion and rule; kashrut; Jewish family life; Jewish rituals
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spelling doaj.art-51a76b5a00f74f92988e5cef0998087c2023-03-06T09:00:10ZengSuomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)Suomen Antropologi1799-89722022-11-0146310.30676/jfas.115509Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland Ruth Illman0Mercédesz Czimbalmos1Dóra Pataricza2The Donner InstituteFinnish Institute for Health and WelfareÅbo Akademi University This article draws on an ongoing research project that seeks to document ethnographically everyday Jewish life in Finland today. Based on the framework of vernacular religion, it approaches religion “as it is lived” (Primiano 1995) and analyses the many expressions and experiences of rules in day-to-day Jewish life as part of complex interactions between individuals, institutions, and religious motivations. Historical data, institutional structures and cultural context are put in dialogue with individual narratives and nuances, described as “self-motivated” ways of “doing” religion. In this article, we seek to investigate what a vernacular Jewish approach to making, bending, and breaking rules amounts to in a community where increasing diversity and deep-reaching secularity contest and reshape traditional boundaries of belonging. What rules are accepted, adopted and appropriated as necessary or meaningful for being and doing Jewish? Our analysis traces how static values and conceptions of “Jewishness” give way to more flexible subjective positions as our interviewees struggle to find religiously and culturally significant models from the past that can be subjectively appropriated today. Both everyday quandaries and existential questions influence their ways of crafting vernacular religious positions. Focusing on formal and personal rituals related particularly to family life and foodways, the article shows how rules are revisited and refashioned as the traditional boundaries between sacred and secular, gendered practices and ethnic customs, are transgressed and subjective combinations are developed. Keywords: vernacular Judaism; Jews in Finland; ethnography; religion and rule; kashrut; Jewish family life; Jewish rituals https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/115509
spellingShingle Ruth Illman
Mercédesz Czimbalmos
Dóra Pataricza
Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
Suomen Antropologi
title Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
title_full Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
title_fullStr Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
title_full_unstemmed Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
title_short Bending, Breaking and Adhering to Rules of Contemporary Jewish Practice in Finland
title_sort bending breaking and adhering to rules of contemporary jewish practice in finland
url https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/115509
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AT mercedeszczimbalmos bendingbreakingandadheringtorulesofcontemporaryjewishpracticeinfinland
AT dorapataricza bendingbreakingandadheringtorulesofcontemporaryjewishpracticeinfinland