A rather fantastical story, full of grammatical errors and typos, centering around the family of a rural rabbi in N. Israel when it was still the British Mandate of Palestine. Both sons become Christians and Anglican priests for several decades, their motto that they were born Jews and will die Jews, but in the meantime they were Christian. This causes their younger sister to be ostracized, and, fed up with her boring job as a sewing instructor, she moves away to take a job doing floor sales at a large department store. She has a torrid affair with the manager, but he is transferred because that store is shutting down. He reveals he has lied to her and she begins to hate the British and works with the European, now European and Palestinian, Jewish resistance group the Irgun, with whom no one who is decent wants to work if you read other history books.
David - aka Dudi - was always the free spirited one, but he does something terrible to save his family, and that ends up being the crisis that throws him into being Anglican. For Shmuel, the crisis is that his parents are forcing him to stay stuck in yeshiva mode and have arranged his marriage to someone in whom he has no interest, so he feels trapped, and is suddenly liberated when he realizes he can stay in England and convert to Anglicanism, and be far from criticism and the box he has been shoved into at home.
The story twists and turns in fantastical ways, and doesn't seem realistic to me, though in our era anyone can become an Anglican priest and teach against the Bible, this was not the case in that era. Nor was that much promiscuity the case back then. Jewish couples were chaperoned until married, and that is not the case here. At the end of the story, 2 living members of the family are left, neither married.
Try again, author. Mistakes are highlighted in the notes for you.