Buena Esperansa; El Meseret
Jacob, 233–34
Jahiliyya, 279
Janissaries, 20
Jenin, 278–80, 287n45
Jerusalem File, 169
“A Jerusalem Tale,” 281
Jerusalem space, of Yehoshua, 274–76, 283
Jewish Agency of Israel, 8, 171n8, 171n18,
207; headquarters, 168; in Libya, 181,
189; Morocco Jews recruited by, 153–54,
163
Jewish-Arab relations, 300
Jewish Chronicle, 57
Jewish farmers: AIU and, 151–52; alien-
ation, 143–44; under dhimmi, 145, 156;
land ownership, 145–46, 148–51, 156n7;
Morocco, 145–56; Muslim sharecrop-
pers and, 147–49; pride of, 153; skilled
professionals, 143; in U.S., 145; Zionism
and, 144–45, 151
Jewish history: in Egyptian historiogra-
phy, 11–12, 227–50; in Middle Ages,
241–45; modern, 245–48; prior to Islam,
239–41
Jewish messianic pretenders, 133
Jewish nation, 231; aspirations of, 238–39;
end of, 238
Jewish Press Magazine, 206
Jewish state, Al-Qadhafi and, 308–10,
312–16
Jewish suffering theory, 239, 246–47
Jews, 233; Australian National Dialogue
of Christians, Muslims, and Jews, 112;
blood relations, 231–35; central Asia
history and culture, 200–204; Children
of Israel and, 228; Christians persecut-
ing, 6; claim of racial purity, 231–35;
344 · Index
Jews— continued
under colonialism, 3; diaspora, 228,
230, 231, 238, 239; elite, 22; historical
attitude towards, 229–30; historical
continuity, 235–36; Islam identifi-
cation of, 5; Khazars theory, 233;
language, 237; in medicine, 17–18;
Moroccan Nationalist Movement,
160–70; in Nazi camps, 59; Ottoman
Empire migration, 68n1; Palestine
struggle, 4; prayer rituals, 290–91;
professions, 9, 17–18; reform, 238; as
religious enemy, 249; Sephardi, 52, 62;
specific culture, 236–38; tilpak and,
202. See also Ashkenazi Jews; Austra-
lia Jews; Balkan Jews; Bukharan Jews;
German Jews; Libyan Jews; Morocco
Jews; Ottoman Jews; Russian Jews;
Yemeni Jews
Jifkov regime, 67
Jihad, 108; all Arab, 309
Jizya (poll tax), 126, 131, 242
Joint Distribution Committee, 207
Jones, Jeremy, 104
Joselin, Madame, 41
Joseph, 240
Le Journal de Salonique, 31, 35, 45
Journal de Salonique, 30
A Journey to the End of the Millennium
(Yehoshua), 271, 277, 282
Jubrān, Khalīl, 264
Judah, 234
Judaism, 274; conversions to, 233, 234;
among exiles, 236; federalism basis
in, 298–99; historical attitude towards,
229–30; Islam and, 131, 288, 290–91,
300; not a nation, 231; writings about,
227
Judas Iscariot, 58
Judenrein, 61
Judeo-Islamic relations: in Middle East,
306–22; Zionism and, 306–22
Judeo-Muslim connection, 1–2, 5; in
Australia, 7–8; in Germany, 6–7
Jüdische Gemeinde, 75
Jüdischer Kulturverein, 79, 81, 89
Jüdisches Berlin, 81
June 1967 war, 11
Kabir, Nahid, 111
Kach movement, 315
Kamal, Muṣṭafa, 248
Kanazi, George, 256–60, 262, 264
Karadjordie, 55
Karimov, Islam, 207–8, 211–12
Al-Karmil, 260
Karsli, Jamal, 83
Kastel, Zalman, 113
Kelman, Herbert, 295–97
Khaklai, Ze᾿ev, 154–55
Khalifa, Ḥasan, 228, 234–36
Khammas, 147
Khanates, 201–3
Al-Khashab, ῾Abd al-Muḥsin, 227
Al-Khashoggi, ῾Adnan, 313
Khazars theory, 233
Khilafa, 110
Al-Kholti, Muḥammad, 165
Khomlos, 203
Kidnapping, 177, 180
Kilani, Ahmed, 109
Kippa, 87
“The Kiss,” 281
Kittabs, 203
Kittroeff, Alexander, 63
Knake-Werner, Heidi, 82
Knox, Colin, 294
Koestler, Arthur, 233
Koubrat, 65
Kriesberg, Louis, 294
Kristallnacht, 82
Kusa, Musa, 321
Kymlicka, Will, 76
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