Minny Evaline Mock-Degen (1945) grew up in the Netherlands, studied cultural anthropology at the University in Amsterdam, taught at SOSA (Stichting tot Opleiding Sociale Arbeid). In 1985 she emigrated with her family to Israel, where she started volunteering at a hotline for Orthodox woman and participated in a graduate program in clinical sociology at Neve Yerushalayim, under the auspices of the University of Texas. She later joined the research team of a pilot study in Israel which sought to explore how ba’a lot teshuvah and their secular mothers perceived the religious intensification and how it impacted on family relations. This participation led to undertaking research among Dutch returnees and their mothers which resulted in a doctorate thesis (2006) at the Hebrew University. This book is a revised and expanded version of Minny Mock’s doctorate thesis.
Zelden een boek gelezen dat zo openhartig en onbevoor-oordeeld schrijft over de moeite andere ideeën, andere leefwijzen te accepteren. Over de moeite oordeel en vooroordeel te boven te komen. Zelfs al gaat het om eigen kinderen. In eigen huis.
Jan Greven in Trouw

The return to Judaism or the teshuvah experience emerged in the mid 1960s when young American Jews became involved in a spiritual search that eventually led them to discover and embrace