From Jadaliyya
Lior B. Sternfeld, Between Iran and Zion: Jewish Histories of Twentieth-Century Iran (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2018), 208 pp.
Jadaliyya (J): What made you write this book?
Lior B. Sternfeld (LS): As a historian of Iran, it has bothered me greatly that historiography of this country makes no effort to reflect the complex social composition of Iranian society. Diversity has shaped Iranian society for centuries, and understanding it is crucial to the understanding of this society today. Iran is a country of minorities. There are almost thirty minorities (religious, ethnic, lingual) and only about half of the population is Persian Shi’i. If you read any of the “big histories” of Iran, you do not get this sense. This historiographical mold can be attributed in part to the nation-building projects of the twentieth century, and also to the dominant trends of Iranian nationalism, to which many of the minorities responded and wanted to interact with.
The case of the Jewish minority presents multiple historiographical and methodological challenges. Historiography of Iranian Jews has been heavily influenced by Iranian national historiography, on the one hand, and very secluded views and methodologies of Jewish studies and Zionism, on the other. The result of this has been a very shallow understanding of the Jewish experience in Iran in the twentieth century. Daniel Tsadik’s book on the nineteenth century had recently come out, revising the entire way scholars should look at the Jewish communities. I read this book in a very transformative period of graduate school and decided to write a paper, a paper which became my first article of this project on Jewish participation in the 1979 revolution.
I found out that the Jews were involved in the revolution in several ways. The Jewish hospital played a key role, and there were other fascinating aspects that, until that stage, remained very silent. The response to my article convinced me that I should write the histories of Iranian Jews in the twentieth century, in all their plurality. I wanted to try and analyze the profound social, political, and cultural transformation of these communities in a very turbulent century.
Lior Sternfeld is a historian of modern Iran and the modern Middle East.
More content from this blog
- Who digs the mines?, by Andrew Liu – 21 July 2022
- Kamala Harris, Usha Vance, and the Twice-Born Thrice-Selected Indian American Elite, by Shruti Rajagopalan – 25 July 2024
- Will Sectarian Massacres Derail Syria’s Transition? Interview with Aron Lund and Sam Heller – 11 March 2025
- Racial Capitalism and the Campaign Against “Islamo-Gauchisme” in France, by Muriam Haleh Davis – 14 August 2018
- The Countercultural Figures who Helped Give Birth to the Neo-Nazi Terrorist Networks of Today, by Spencer Sunshine – 15 May 2025