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Journey To The Vanished City

Journey To The Vanished City

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Top Notch Travel Adventure
Review: I am a great fan of travel adventure stories and rate this book as one of my favorites. Tudor Parfitt seems to be an unusual combination of intellectual and adventurer. Journey....is well written, entertaining and informative. I envy his students back in England as his classes must be the highlight of their college education. How exciting it must have been to be able to prove that the Lemba Tribe's oral tradition was correct. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in Africa, travel, cultural anthropology or Jewish studies.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mesmerising
Review: In 1967 while still a high school student my Sunday School class was shown a documentary about the Falashas of Ethiopia. While I can barely remember details of documentaries that I saw last week, I still vividly recall details from that documentary I saw in 1967. When I saw this book, saw that Parfitt had also written about the Falashas, and this was yet another group of people who believed they held onto an ancient Jewish tradition.

To my surprise this book was even better than I expected; I couldn't put it down. Parfitt weaves the oral tradition of the Lemba people, historical scholarship parsed mostly from travel diaries, anthropological observation together into a travel monologue that both reveals a great deal about modern Africa while also tracing the Journey of the Lemba people. Eventually the journey he takes to find out about the Lemba becomes more interesting the the answers he may have found.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Mesmerising
Review: In 1967 while still a high school student my Sunday School class was shown a documentary about the Falashas of Ethiopia. While I can barely remember details of documentaries that I saw last week, I still vividly recall details from that documentary I saw in 1967. When I saw this book, saw that Parfitt had also written about the Falashas, and this was yet another group of people who believed they held onto an ancient Jewish tradition.

To my surprise this book was even better than I expected; I couldn't put it down. Parfitt weaves the oral tradition of the Lemba people, historical scholarship parsed mostly from travel diaries, anthropological observation together into a travel monologue that both reveals a great deal about modern Africa while also tracing the Journey of the Lemba people. Eventually the journey he takes to find out about the Lemba becomes more interesting the the answers he may have found.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FASCINATING
Review: Mr. Parfitt's tale of travel and revelation is brilliant. As an avid reader of religion and ancient history...this beautiful book made the journey to knowlede that much more pleasurable! A MUST READ!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: FASCINATING
Review: Mr. Parfitt's tale of travel and revelation is brilliant. As an avid reader of religion and ancient history...this beautiful book made the journey to knowlede that much more pleasurable! A MUST READ!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Journey to Vanishing Memories
Review: Parfitt starts with a simple question: why do the Lemba tribe of southern Africa believe they are Jews? His research reveals the limits on the transmission of self-knowledge through oral history. He also shows how diverse African culture really is. These are indispensible to understanding civilizations.

Westerners tend to assume that our received wisdom scripture is infallible. But its written form must preserve the final state of an early oral tradition. By following the oral memory of the Lemba backwards in time and geography, Parfitt vivdly shows how their tribal memories merge and diverge under the influence of nearby cultures and events. All Lemba regard themselves as Jewish, and say the Hebrew "amen" at the conclusion of prayers, but many of them also recite Moslem formulas in Arabic. So, were they originally Islamic, with Jewish ideas introduced under the recent influence of Christian missionaries? Or the reverse? What do their memories have to tell us about our own traditions?

Along the way, he meets chieftans, beaurocrats, and ordinary Africans, all of whom he reveals as distinct personalities. He patiently tracks down clues found in every version of the Lemba histories. As his collection of evidence grows, the mystery enlarges. This is detective anthropology, written stylishly, and with urgency. The Lemba are forgetting their myths and the traditions are vanishing.

I highly recommend this book for revealing nuances of African culture and history in a matrix of travel, character, and discovery.


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