澳大利亚犹太人的教育

David Mittelberg
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引用次数: 5

摘要

犹太民族是一个多维的复杂结构,不能简单地归结为宗教认同,而是由四个不同的维度组成:集体归属或对犹太人民的认同;犹太文化资本或对文化知识、语言、习俗和仪式的熟悉,使犹太人在犹太世界的任何地方都感到舒适;犹太人对其他犹太人福利的责任或承诺;以及与其他犹太人的人际关系或个人联系。本文通过对澳大利亚Gen08全国调查中18 - 44岁的澳大利亚犹太人群体(N=2330)的多元二次分析,评估了犹太学校教育、非正式犹太教育和以色列访问在澳大利亚犹太人的非宗派传统和世俗流中的独立影响。它认为,无论孩子在什么样的家庭中长大,教育干预都是重要的。采用犹太民族的范式,我们发现,虽然日制学校加强了犹太人的仪式实践和其他认知措施,如学习希伯来语(犹太文化资本),青年运动的参与和访问以色列是犹太社区行动主义(人际依恋)的主要驱动力,因此犹太人的承诺和归属感(犹太人的责任)。年轻的澳大利亚犹太人似乎选择如何重塑不同形式的犹太人归属,因为旧形式的兴衰。他们的多重身份导致了对犹太教堂、社区参与和对以色列的依恋的不同强调,以及对当地社区和公民身份的更多承诺。因此,犹太教育在维持犹太人的集体归属感方面起着重要作用。
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EDUCATION FOR JEWISH PEOPLEHOOD IN AUSTRALIA
Jewish peoplehood is a multi-dimensional complex construct that cannot be reduced to religious identification alone but is comprised of four distinct dimensions: collective belonging or identification with the Jewish people; Jewish cultural capital or familiarity with the cultural knowledge, language, customs, and rituals that makes a Jew feel comfortable anywhere in the Jewish world; Jewish responsibility or commitment to the welfare of other Jews; and interpersonal attachment or personal connection with other Jews. This paper evaluates the independent impact of Jewish schooling, informal Jewish education, and Israel visits within the non-denominational traditional and secular streams of Australian Jewry via a multivariate secondary analysis of the 18–44-year-old group of respondents in the Australian Gen08 national survey of Australian Jewry (N=2330). It argues that educational intervention is significant, irrespective of what kind of home in which the child is raised. Adopting the paradigm of Jewish peoplehood, we find that while day schools enhance Jewish ritual practice and other cognitive measures—such as learning Hebrew (Jewish cultural capital), youth movement participation and visits to Israel are the principal drivers of Jewish community activism (interpersonal attachment) and thus Jewish commitment and belonging (Jewish responsibility). Young Australian Jews appear to choose how they reinvent different forms of Jewish belonging as old forms wax and wane. Their multiple identities lead to variant emphases on the synagogue, community involvement, and attachment to Israel—as well as increased commitment to the local community and citizenship. Jewish education thus plays an important role in sustaining collective belonging to the Jewish people.
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