Livne Sharon, Bejarano Margalit
The Oral History Division of the Avraham Harman Research Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Contemp Jew. 2021;41(1):185-206. doi: 10.1007/s12397-021-09374-2. Epub 2021 Jun 20.
This article presents research notes on an oral history project on the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on Jews over the age of 65 years. During the first stage of the project, we conducted nearly 80 interviews in eight cities worldwide: Amsterdam, Berlin, London, Milan, New York, Paris, Rio de Janeiro, and St. Petersburg, and in Israel. The interviews were conducted in the spring of 2020 and reflect the atmosphere and perception of interviewees at the end of the first lockdown. Based on an analysis of the interviews, the findings are divided into three spheres: (1) the personal experience during the pandemic, including personal difficulties and the impact of the lockdown on family and social contacts; (2) Jewish communal life, manifested in changed functions and emergence of new needs, as well as religious rituals during the pandemic; and (3) perceived relations between the Jewish community and wider society, including relations with state authorities and civil society, attitudes of and towards official media, and the possible impact of COVID-19 on antisemitism. Together, these spheres shed light on how elderly Jews experience their current situation under COVID-19-as individuals and as part of a community. COVID-19 taught interviewees to reappraise what was important to them. They felt their family relations became stronger under the pandemic, and that their Jewish community was more meaningful than they had thought. They understood that online communication will continue to be present in all three spheres, but concluded that human contact cannot be substituted by technical devices.
本文呈现了一项关于2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)对65岁以上犹太人影响的口述历史项目的研究笔记。在项目的第一阶段,我们在全球八个城市进行了近80次访谈:阿姆斯特丹、柏林、伦敦、米兰、纽约、巴黎、里约热内卢、圣彼得堡以及以色列。访谈于2020年春季进行,反映了首次封锁结束时受访者的氛围和认知。基于对访谈的分析,研究结果分为三个方面:(1)疫情期间的个人经历,包括个人困难以及封锁对家庭和社会交往的影响;(2)犹太社区生活,表现为功能的变化和新需求的出现,以及疫情期间的宗教仪式;(3)犹太社区与更广泛社会之间的感知关系,包括与国家当局和民间社会的关系、对官方媒体的态度以及COVID-19对反犹主义的可能影响。这些方面共同揭示了老年犹太人作为个体和社区一部分在COVID-19下如何体验他们的现状。COVID-19让受访者重新评估对他们来说重要的事物。他们感到在疫情下家庭关系变得更紧密,并且他们的犹太社区比他们想象的更有意义。他们明白在线交流将继续存在于所有三个方面,但得出结论认为人际接触不能被技术设备所取代。