5. The main diversity trends in Judaism

Introduction

Judaism is very diverse, but without the main internal divisions we can find in Christianity or Islam. And this diversity has not always followed the same pattern over time.




Source 1

The Psalm Manuscript

The Dead Sea Scrolls - also called the manuscripts of Qumrān - are a series of 870 manuscripts found on the site of Qumrān between 1947 and 1956. Written between the third century BC and the first century AD, these manuscripts are among the most ancient manuscripts of the text of the Biblical Canon. They also include texts written at the time of the Second Temple that were not incorporated to the Canon, as well as specific texts from the Qumrān community. The presence of the Essenes in the region has led to think that they were the authors of these texts, but this connection has not been formally attested.

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Source 2a

A Jewish couple from Brousse, Turkey, in 1873

Some Sephardic Jews left the Iberian Peninsula for the Ottoman Empire. Most of them settled in the European part of the Empire (Constantinople, Thessaloniki, Sarajevo), but others chose Anatolia, especially the city of Brousse, Bursa.

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Source 2b

Yemenite Jews in Sa’dah, Yemen, in 1986

Among Oriental Jews, the Jews in Yemen (Temanim) have a special place. They were rather isolated from other Jewish communities, so their community developed specific traditions, such as reading the Torah in Hebrew and in its Aramaic translation.

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Source 3

A Jewish school in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, in the early twentieth century

Bukharan Jews, a Jewish community living in Central Asia, had roots that were little known. Some trace their origin to the “lost tribes” deported during the conquest of the Kingdom of Israel, while others trace their origin to the Jews who did not go back to Judea after being deported to Babylon.

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Source 4

Jews from Kaifeng, China, reading the Torah

The existence of a Jewish community around the city of Kaifeng, in the Henan Province, China, was attested since the tenth century. Over the years, this community mingled with the local population so the Jews from Kaifeng had few physical differences with non-Jews.

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(Retrieved 27 February 2015)