On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948

<p>This dissertation studies Jewish history in the modern Persian Gulf with a transregional look towards Zionism and the British mandate of Palestine. It studies these encounters from the viewpoint of Jewish communities in the Gulf ports, the Zionist leadership in Palestine, and the political...

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Main Author: Kvindesland, E
Other Authors: Rogan, E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
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author Kvindesland, E
author2 Rogan, E
author_facet Rogan, E
Kvindesland, E
author_sort Kvindesland, E
collection OXFORD
description <p>This dissertation studies Jewish history in the modern Persian Gulf with a transregional look towards Zionism and the British mandate of Palestine. It studies these encounters from the viewpoint of Jewish communities in the Gulf ports, the Zionist leadership in Palestine, and the political elites of dominant Gulf states. During the 19th century, Jews from Iran and Iraq settled in the Persian Gulf ports, seeking economic prosperity and British imperial protection. This gave rise to an oceanic network of Gulf Jewish communities, one that reached across the oceans all the way to Jerusalem. An understanding of Zionism developed in the Gulf in the 1920s, one that was deeply shaped by the British imperial world. Gulf Jews viewed Zionism as a continued commitment by the British empire to protect Jews, rather than as a nation-state project, and therefore continued to migrate into British domains in the Gulf.</p> <br> <p>The Zionist movement in Palestine sought political accommodation with Iran and Saudi Arabia, and thought of the oceanic Gulf between them as a transit zone for Jewish migration. Zionist emissaries had a strong presence in the Gulf during the 1940s, encountering Gulf Jews and seeking to convince them of migration to Palestine. However, Jews there developed an indigenous form of Iranian Zionism that professed loyalty to Iran while contesting European Zionism’s fixation on migration and state-building. In the Persian Gulf, the nationalized understanding of Jewishness arrived abruptly when crowds in Bahrain protested the partition of Palestine in 1947. The attack on Bahrain’s Jewish community led to communal disintegration and signaled the end of a Jewish golden age. This transregional study of Jewish communities in the Persian Gulf offers a better understanding of modern empire and religious diversity in that area, while showing the wider Middle Eastern effects of Zionism’s nationalization of Jewish identity.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:f48eadda-97e9-40b0-89d3-93d21130235f2025-02-06T15:03:17ZOn islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:f48eadda-97e9-40b0-89d3-93d21130235fEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Kvindesland, ERogan, EYadgar, Y<p>This dissertation studies Jewish history in the modern Persian Gulf with a transregional look towards Zionism and the British mandate of Palestine. It studies these encounters from the viewpoint of Jewish communities in the Gulf ports, the Zionist leadership in Palestine, and the political elites of dominant Gulf states. During the 19th century, Jews from Iran and Iraq settled in the Persian Gulf ports, seeking economic prosperity and British imperial protection. This gave rise to an oceanic network of Gulf Jewish communities, one that reached across the oceans all the way to Jerusalem. An understanding of Zionism developed in the Gulf in the 1920s, one that was deeply shaped by the British imperial world. Gulf Jews viewed Zionism as a continued commitment by the British empire to protect Jews, rather than as a nation-state project, and therefore continued to migrate into British domains in the Gulf.</p> <br> <p>The Zionist movement in Palestine sought political accommodation with Iran and Saudi Arabia, and thought of the oceanic Gulf between them as a transit zone for Jewish migration. Zionist emissaries had a strong presence in the Gulf during the 1940s, encountering Gulf Jews and seeking to convince them of migration to Palestine. However, Jews there developed an indigenous form of Iranian Zionism that professed loyalty to Iran while contesting European Zionism’s fixation on migration and state-building. In the Persian Gulf, the nationalized understanding of Jewishness arrived abruptly when crowds in Bahrain protested the partition of Palestine in 1947. The attack on Bahrain’s Jewish community led to communal disintegration and signaled the end of a Jewish golden age. This transregional study of Jewish communities in the Persian Gulf offers a better understanding of modern empire and religious diversity in that area, while showing the wider Middle Eastern effects of Zionism’s nationalization of Jewish identity.</p>
spellingShingle Kvindesland, E
On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title_full On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title_fullStr On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title_full_unstemmed On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title_short On islands of oil: Jews and Zionism in the Persian Gulf, 1880-1948
title_sort on islands of oil jews and zionism in the persian gulf 1880 1948
work_keys_str_mv AT kvindeslande onislandsofoiljewsandzionisminthepersiangulf18801948