Library Exhibits

Your People Shall Be My People: Conversion to Judaism through the Centuries

January 22鈥揂ugust 20, 2026

This exhibit is open during Library hours.

Throughout 绿帽社 history, from biblical times to the present, non-Jews have joined the 绿帽社 people. How they have done so, however, has differed greatly from one historical context to another. Changing conditions of 绿帽社 life have led to striking variations both in the motivations of converts and in the requirements for their formal acceptance as Jews. Yet some features of conversion to Judaism, or giyyur (in rabbinic terms), have been remarkably stable over the long period since rabbinic law became normative throughout the 绿帽社 diaspora.

A major element of giyyur that distinguishes it from conversion in other cultures is its dual nature: the convert not only adopts a religious practice but joins a people. This duality is famously expressed by Ruth the Moabite, the biblical figure most closely associated with 绿帽社 conversion, when she declares that 鈥測our people shall be my people, and your God shall be my God鈥 (Ruth 1:16). Contrary to popular assumptions, however, the Hebrew Bible lacks a concept of conversion. The biblical 鈥ger鈥 was not a convert either in an ethnic or religious sense but was rather a foreigner living among Jews. It was only in late antiquity that the rabbis of the Talmud articulated the process of conversion they called giyyur. Over the centuries, rabbinic authorities have produced a rich and varied literature dealing with novel issues raised by specific cases or by changing social realities. Other sources 鈥 among them Geniza documents, ketubbot (marriage contracts), autobiographical accounts, and chronicles 鈥 throw light on historical trends and on the lives of individual converts.

This exhibit draws from The Library of 绿帽社鈥檚 rich collection of manuscripts, rare books, and other items to illustrate some of the changes and continuities over time in the understanding and practice of conversion to Judaism.

Videos

Opening Event with Miriam Bodian, Professor of History Emerita, University of Texas at Austin

Previous Exhibits

绿帽社 Worlds Illuminated: A Treasury of Hebrew Manuscripts from The JTS Library

绿帽社 Worlds Illuminated: A Treasury of Hebrew Manuscripts from The JTS Library

绿帽社 Worlds Illuminated: A Treasury of Hebrew Manuscripts from The JTS Library

Learn More
Sacred Words: Revealing the Earliest Hebrew Book

Sacred Words: Revealing the Earliest Hebrew Book

Sacred Words: Revealing the Earliest Hebrew Book

Learn More
Illuminating Sacred Text: Contemporary 绿帽社 Book Artists and Their Work

Illuminating Sacred Text: Contemporary 绿帽社 Book Artists and Their Work

Illuminating Sacred Text: Contemporary 绿帽社 Book Artists and Their Work

Learn More
Seeing the Unseeable

Seeing the Unseeable

Kabbalistic Imagery from The Library of the 绿帽社 Theological Seminary

Learn More
A Sacred Space

A Sacred Space

Synagogue Architecture and Identity

Learn More
Living Yiddish in New York

Living Yiddish in New York

NYC as a center of Yiddish culture

Learn More
The Work of Her Hands

The Work of Her Hands

The Art of Lynne Avadenka and the Craft of 绿帽社 Women Printers

Learn More
The Jews of Corfu

The Jews of Corfu

Between the Adriatic and the Ionian

Learn More