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Jewish Identities in Iran
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Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Messianism and Assimilation: The Jewish Presence in Iran during the Pre-Islamic and Medieval Periods 2. Forced and Voluntary Conversion of Jews in the Safavid and Early Qajar Periods 3. Historical Background to Jewish Baha'i Conversions 4. Group Conversions to Christianity and the Baha'i Faith 5. A Pedlar Living through Critical Times: Reflections in Converts' Memoirs Epilogue Notes Bibliography

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For minority faith groups living in nineteenth-century Iran, religious conversion to Islam - both voluntary and forced - was the primary means of social integration and assimilation. This work explores the conversion experiences of Jewish families during this time, and examines the fluid, multiple religious identities that many converts adopted.

About the Author

Mehrdad Amanat is an independent scholar with a PhD in History from UCLA. He is a regular contributor to the 'Encyclopaedia Iranica'.

Reviews

'Mehrdad Amanat's highly original and deeply researched book provides the first convincing and well-documented history of the interactions of the Jewish, Baha'i and Shi'i communities in modern Iran. It demonstrates the changing nature throughout history of all Iran's major religions, and should be read by all interested in modern Iranian history, and also those concerned with the histories of Judaism, Baha'ism and Islam.' - Nikki Keddie, Professor of History, UCLA; 'A fascinating story of Jewish life in nineteenth-century Iran and how some Jews traded one minority status for another by converting to Bahai'ism.' - Janet Afary, Professor of Religious Studies and Feminist Studies and the Mellichamp Chair in Global Religion and Modernity, University of California Santa Barbara; 'Mehrdad Amanat's sleuthing in rare manuscript sources has shed illumination on the otherwise obscure history of Iranian Jews and Baha'is, and has thereby added rich texture to the social and cultural history of modern Iran.' - Juan Cole, Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History, University of Michigan

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