Liebelt, “Mama Mary”
Excerpt:Â Each Friday, a loose network of Catholic migrant domestic workers, almost exclusively women from the Philippines, carries a figure of the Virgin Mary through the marginalized neighborhoods of southern Tel Aviv, Israel. As the figure is carried from one participantâs home to another of this so-called block rosary, they believe âsheâ (the Virgin Mary) blesses these homes and the surrounding neighborhood, hears hundreds of the womenâs petitions, creates a community of devotees, and performs miracles. Against the backdrop of the troubled neighborhoodâs Friday night life and the turbulence of the devoteesâ own lives, âMama Mary,â as she is tenderly addressed, has come to stand for compassion, refuge, and protection. This chapter seeks to describe and analyze domestic workersâ Marian devotion in a complex Middle Eastern locale. In doing so, this chapter contributes to the literature on diaspora, gender, and religion and investigates ritual performance and processes of homemaking in the context of female migrantsâ diasporic journeys and a gendered global economy based on the international division and feminization of labor, especially in the field of reproduction and care.