%0 Journal Article %T Dieu reconna tra les siens God Will Recognize His Own. Religious (Dis)orientations of Ethiopians Jews in Israel %A Olivier Tourny %J Transcontinentales : Soci¨¦t¨¦s, Id¨¦ologies, Syst¨¨me Mondial %D 2011 %I Fondation de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme %X L¡¯¨¦migration massive en Isra l ces derni¨¨res d¨¦cennies de la communaut¨¦ juive d¡¯¨¦thiopie se r¨¦alisa au prix d¡¯une condition de taille : l¡¯abandon de sa liturgie, jug¨¦e trop singuli¨¨re, au profit d¡¯un juda sme plus normatif. Des si¨¨cles de rites pratiqu¨¦s sur les hauts plateaux d¡¯Abyssinie ¨¦taient ainsi condamn¨¦s ¨¤ dispara tre. Pass¨¦e la premi¨¨re g¨¦n¨¦ration de migrants, pr¨¦occup¨¦e par son adaptation ¨¤ une nouvelle langue et ¨¤ une nouvelle culture, les personnes n¨¦es sur le sol isra¨¦lien composent ¨¤ pr¨¦sent la majorit¨¦ de cette population. Si la question de l¡¯identit¨¦ juive de cette communaut¨¦ ne se pose plus, celle de son identification ¨¤ un rite sp¨¦cifique, cherchant sa voie entre le monde d¡¯hier et celui d¡¯aujourd¡¯hui, reste d¡¯actualit¨¦. The mass emigration of the Ethiopian Jewish community to Israel in recent decades has been placed under a substantial condition: that it discard its liturgy, deemed too unusual, in favor of a more normative form of Judaism. Centuries of rites practiced on the high Abyssinian plateaux were thus doomed to disappear. After the first generation of migrants, mainly concerned by their adaptation to a new language and culture, those born on Israeli soil now make up the majority of this population. Even if the issue of this community¡¯s Jewish identity is no longer posed, that of its identification with a specific rite remains topical, as it seeks its way between yesteryear and today¡¯s world. %K identity %K emigration %K judaism %K identit¨¦ %K religion %K ¨¦migration %K juda sme %K Isra l %K Ethiopie %U http://transcontinentales.revues.org/354