Jewish life in the United States is
too often told from an East Coast perspective. Lone Stars of David
presents a different panorama, with narratives of Jews who ventured to
Texas before the battle of the Alamo, who fought for the Confederacy,
who herded cattle up the Chisholm Trail, who drilled for oil, and who
forged Jewish communities far from New York’s Lower East Side. These
essays also describe how Texas Jews faced the Ku Klux Klan and how they
respond today to Christian fundamentalism.
This anthology examines the famous, with a close-up
look at Neiman-Marcus, the chain synonymous with remarkable luxuries. It
profiles Zale jewelers, founded by a young immigrant who grew into an
international business icon. Another essay opens a window to the Dell
Computer Corporation, with the story of Michael Dell, the college
dropout whose philanthropy changed the course of the Austin Jewish
community.
Written by historians, journalists,
and rabbis who have experienced Texas firsthand, these essays challenge
stereotypes. One chapter discounts the impact of crypto-Jews who fled
the Spanish Inquisition for the New World. Another defies conventional
wisdom about southern views toward Zionism. El Paso emerges as the
unlikely home of a Holocaust museum. The book’s essay on Jews in Texas
politics analyzes the import of populist candidate Kinky Friedman and
introduces Marjorie Arsht, a grassroots organizer whose living room was
the setting for Republican George H. W. Bush’s first foray into
politics.
The Jewish population of Texas totals 131,000, a mere
0.6 percent of the state’s residents, yet its impact has been
widespread. This anthology explores the resiliency, diversity, and
adaptability of Jews in the Lone Star State, a place with its own
powerful sense of identity.
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