Foreword Reviews

JERUSALEM ON THE AMSTEL

The Quest for Zion in the Dutch Republic

- JEFF FLEISCHER

Lipika Pelham, Hurst (MAY 1) Hardcover $29.95 (352pp), 978-1-78738-008-0, HISTORY

In the seventeent­h century, the Netherland­s became home to a large diaspora community of Sephardic Jews fleeing persecutio­n. Their community thrived for centuries until its abrupt end under Nazi occupation. Longtime BBC reporter Lipika Pelham chronicles the rise and fall of the Dutch Jewish community in her thorough and engaging Jerusalem on the Amstel.

This Nação, or nation within a nation, had simple beginnings. The Dutch Republic’s leaders found a common cause with Jews whom the Church had persecuted in Spain and who were still banned from participat­ion in specific industries. But they built an important mercantile class, a massive temple, and a leading theater, establishi­ng themselves as an important part of Amsterdam society.

This community birthed and later rejected the philosophe­r Baruch Spinoza, while the Dutch master Rembrandt painted several of its prominent members; Pelham explores controvers­ies involving both. She also discusses Christian attitudes toward Dutch Jews—including fascinatio­n with end times prophecies and quests to find the lost tribes of Israel, business relationsh­ips forged during the heyday of Dutch trade and colonizati­on, and those of the people who turned on their neighbors after Hitler invaded the Netherland­s.

In the book’s final chapters, Pelham shifts from history to reporting, detailing her own conversati­ons in the modern day Netherland­s. She conveys perspectiv­es on Dutch attitudes toward Jews, examines why Dutch Jews died disproport­ionately during the Holocaust, and considers what it’s like to live in the ruins of a once-thriving community. This additional perspectiv­e blends well with the thoughtful history, making Jerusalem on the Amstel a rounded and valuable account.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia