Immigrants to Freedom

Jews as Yankee Farmers! (1880's to 1960's)

by Joseph Brandes Ph.D.


Formats

Softcover
$31.95
Hardcover
$47.95
E-Book
$14.95
Softcover
$31.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 1/12/2009

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 399
ISBN : 9781441505972
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 399
ISBN : 9781441505989
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 399
ISBN : 9781462843039

About the Book

“Immigrants to Freedom is not a volume of past circumstances; it details the continuing quest of the Jewish people to find a more perfect union with lands and peoples of expanding freedom.”

from the Preface by Moshe Davis

An almost unknown chapter in the story of U.S. immigration and social history opened in 1882 with the creation Southern New Jersey of Alliance, the first rural Jewish settlement in the New World. Escaping from the pogroms of Eastern Europe, disillusioned with the poverty-ridden slums of the big cities, and inspired by popular leaders such as Michael Bakal and Moshe Herder who taught the dignity of manual labor, four hundred Jews chose to become American farmers. Thousands more followed, to settle within the triangular district bounded by Vineland, Millville, and Bridgeton, all searching for individual transformation as well as group transplantation, all seeking to disprove the stereotype of the Jew as small trader and middleman. Their successes, failures, conflicts with the urban Jews of nearby New York and Philadelphia – these are the fascinating subjects of this intimately written history.

These organized agricultural communities were not primarily Zionist, unlike the pioneering settlements of the same period in Eretz Yisrael. Originally conceived as privately subsidized social experiments, free of socialist or nationalist ringes, these groups sought to overcome anti-Semitism while striving for a more creative life – and almost at once, true to their basic Jewish sense of family and self-help, the experiments in farming became programs for saving lives, first from the sanctioned savagery of Alexander III, later from the holocaust of Nazi Germany.

These colonizing experiments, says Dr. Brandes, were “both a kaleidoscope and a mirror of the major forces in modern Jewish life. Agrarianism, Americanism, Zionism, a testing traditional values – all were to be found here in microcosm. [They are]…a significant chapter in the history of a people straining from oppression to freedom.”


About the Author

Joseph Brandes, Emeritus Professor of History at Paterson State College and Research Associate at the American Jewish History Center, is the author of Herbert Hoover and Economic Diplomacy (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1962), which was named one of the ten outstanding books from university presses by The American Scholar, 1962-1963. Dr. Brandes is also listed in Contemporary Authors and American Men of Science.