Holocaust Miseducation, Celebrating Judeo-Spanish, & Revisiting the Bitton Report

Hazaq u’Barukh to Isaac de Castro—Editor of Jewcy, Co-Founder of Jewish on Campus and the New Zionist Congress, and an ASF Broome & Allen Scholar—for being chosen for the Anti-Defamation League’s inaugural Collaborative for Change Fellowship! Together with the ASF Institute of Jewish Experience, Isaac will be interviewing Jewish refugees and immigrants from Latin America! Please contact us if you or someone you know would like to be involved


The Sephardi World Weekly is made possible by Professor Rifka CookMaria Gabriela Borrego MedinaRachel AmarDeborah Arellano, and Distinguished ASF Vice President Gwen Zuares!


 Click here to dedicate a future issue in honor or memory of a loved one

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✡️️Majority of Israelis learned very little on Mizrahi Jewish culture – poll

By The Jerusalem Post


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Iraqi Jews playing tennis at the AIU Laura Kadoorie School for Girls, Baghdad, Iraq, 1924

(Photo Courtesy of the Diarna Geo-Museum of Middle East & North African Jewish Life)


A new poll commissioned by Iraqi-British Jewish entrepreneur and philanthropist David A. Dangoor of Dangoor Education, revealed the extent to which the history, heritage, and culture of the Jews from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are absent from Israel’s educational system. Years after the landmark Bitton Report was hailed and then failed to be implemented, the poll found that “[w]hile 74% of all respondents claimed that the history, heritage, and culture of Ashkenazi Jewry is taught in the educational system to a large or somewhat large extent, only 14% could say the same about Mizrahi Jewry.” Dangoor sees both the problem and a silver lining: “‘The results are both disappointing and heartening… Disappointing that so little has been done to educate about the history, culture, and heritage of MENA Jews in Israeli schools, but heartening that so many from different backgrounds seek to change that.’”



Feature: Salud i Vida: Celebrating Ladino on Radio Sefarad 🎙️📻

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International Ladino Day programs have been organized around the world beginning in 2013, and in 2018 Ladino Day migrated to New York. January 30th marks New York’s 5th Annual Ladino Day, organized by the American Sephardi Federation with the support of the Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America, the Sephardic Foundation on Aging, and the Shearith Israel League Foundation. In this week’s audio feature on Radio Sefarad, the the broadcast of La Federación de Comunidades Judías de España (FCJE), Linda Jiménez interviews ASF Executive Director, Jason Guberman about the history of Ladino Day, the resurgence of interest in Ladino, especially among young people, Ladino lovers in New York and Seattle, the ASF’s National Sephardic Library & Archives and YIVO-ASF Ladino Digitization project, as well as the upcoming event, with its focus on Ladino-speaking patriarchs and matriarchs, superb musical performances, and an original play.


Sign-up now for Ladino Day tomorrow (Sunday), 30 Jan at 2:00PM EST.

Co-Curated by Drs. Jane Mushabac and Bryan Kirschen, the program will feature scholar Eliezer Papo, Sephardic Nonagenarians, Estreyikas d’Estambol Children’s Choir “Kantiga,” and a Ladino Short Story. Trio Sefardi: the Musical Finale!


📚 “Thoughts on Holocaust Education, Anti-Semitism, and Overcoming Bigotry” 

By Rabbi Marc B. Angel, The Institute for Jewish Ideas and Ideals


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Rabbi Dr. Marc Angel speaks with Jewish Journal, 30 March 2018

(Screenshot courtesy of The Jewish Journal/Youtube


International Holocaust Remembrance Day was observed this past Thursday (27 January) and coincided with renewed calls to counter antisemitism with more Holocaust education. Swimming against the current, the Seattle-born Sephardic sage and Rabbi Emeritus of Shearith Israel Dr. Marc Angel warns: “Holocaust education—unless handled very well—can have negative consequences for Jewish students.” While learning about the Holocaust can create awareness regarding “the dangers of hatred” and “the value of tolerance,” it can also link Jewishness with victimization and suffering: Jewish students “will see no particular virtue in being part of a hated minority, victimized so cruelly by the Nazis…and still subjected to anti-Jewish hatred today.”  


[RAngels perspective should also be considered in the context of the continued controversy over California’s Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum


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The American Sephardi Federation invites all individuals, communities, and organizations who share our vision & principles to join us in signing the American Sephardi Leadership Statement!


Please also support the ASF with a generous, tax-deductible contribution so we can continue to cultivate and advocate, preserve and promote, as well as educate and empower!


Donate Now!


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Sephardi: Cooking the History. Recipes of the Jews of Spain and the Diaspora, from the 13th Century to Today


By Dr. Hélène Jawhara Piñer, a 2018 ASF Broome & Allen Fellow


In this extraordinary cookbook, chef and scholar Hélène Jawhara-Piñer combines rich culinary history and Jewish heritage to serve up over fifty culturally significant recipes. Steeped in the history of the Sephardic Jews (Jews of Spain) and their diaspora, these recipes are expertly collected from such diverse sources as medieval cookbooks, Inquisition trials, medical treatises, poems, and literature. Original sources ranging from the thirteenth century onwards and written in Arabic, Spanish, Portuguese, Occitan, Italian, and Hebrew, are here presented in English translation, bearing witness to the culinary diversity of the Sephardim, who brought their cuisine with them and kept it alive wherever they went. Jawhara-Piñer provides enlightening commentary for each recipe, revealing underlying societal issues from anti-Semitism to social order. In addition, the author provides several of her own recipes inspired by her research and academic studies.


Each creation and bite of the dishes herein are guaranteed to transport the reader to the most deeply moving and intriguing aspects of Jewish history. Jawhara-Piñer reminds us that eating is a way to commemorate the past.



Buy Now



Ascending The Palm Tree

Edited by Dr. Rachel Yedid and Dr. Danny Bar-Maoz


Until about one hundred and thirty years ago, the Jewish community in Yemen was largely unknown. Despite the irregular connections that this ancient Diaspora held with the various centers of the world's Jewry, knowledge about the community remained somewhat vague.


E’ele Betamar, the ASF’s partner in presenting The Yemenite Conference: Shared Jewish Cultural Values of Jews & Muslims in Yemen, has embarked on this great research project, which aims to document, preserve, research, and distribute Yemenite Jewry’s heritage by publishing books that treat on Yemenite Jewish research in it's various branches.


Ascending the Palm Tree: An Anthology of the Yemenite Jewish Heritage includes several new studies that have been written specially for this book. Thus twenty-two articles have been collected, along with dozens of photographs, which gives the readers a glimpse into the special world of Yemenite Jews in the following areas: their history and their manner of life in their country of exile; the miraculous manner in which they immigrated to Eretz Israel; their costumes; the eye-catching, ornate decoration and architecture of their homes; the Jewish daughter's way of life in Yemen; and the expression of all these in song, in storytelling, and in dance.


Buy Now


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Upcoming Events or Opportunities

The American Sephardi Federation, the Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America, the Sephardic Foundation on Aging, and the Shearith Israel League Foundation proudly present:


Salud i Vida: The 5th Annual New York Ladino Day!

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Featuring scholar Eliezer Papo

Sephardic Nonagenarians: A Panel by Bryan Kirschen

Estreyikas d’Estambol Children’s Choir “Kantiga,” a Ladino Short Story by Jane Mushabac

Trio Sefardi: the Musical Finale!


Sunday, 30 January at 2:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

Ladino is a bridge to many cultures. It is a variety of Spanish that has absorbed words from Hebrew, Turkish, Arabic, French, Greek, and Portuguese. The mother tongue of Jews in the Ottoman Empire for 500 years, Ladino became the home language of Sephardim worldwide. While the number of Ladino speakers has sharply declined, distinguished Ladino Day programs like ours celebrate and preserve a vibrant language and heritage. These programs are, as Aviya Kushner wrote in the Forward, “Why Ladino Will Rise Again.”


Since 2013, International Ladino Day programs have been held around the world to honor the Ladino language, also known as Judeo-Spanish. January 30th marks New York’s 5th Annual Ladino Day curated by Drs. Jane Mushabac and Bryan Kirschen for the American Sephardi Federation.


Print © loannia, mid-19th c. Sephardi & Romaniot Jewish Costumes in Greece & Turkey. 16 watercolours by Nicholas Stavroulakis, published by the Association of the Friends of the Jewish Museum of Greece, Athens, 1986. (Scan courtesy of the Jewish Museum of Greece)


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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HUC-JIR Jewish Language Project, Iranian American Jewish Federation, Nessah Synagoque, and USC Caden Institute present:


Languages of the Jews of Iran: A series of online conversations and performances

On Sundays at 1:00PM EST 

(10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 6pm UK / 8pm Israel / 9:30pm Iran)

(Complimentary RSVP)


30 January

Judeo-Hamadani, Judeo-Isfahani, Judeo-Yazdi, and other Median languages

How do the Iranian languages/dialects of various cities and towns differ? What work is currently being done to record them and share them with the public? Why is this work so important? Dr. Saba Soomekh moderates a conversation between Haideh Herbert and Haideh Sahim, who have been interviewing native speakers. Finally, attendees will be treated to a Judeo-Hamadani song by Farhad Heravi.

Sign-up Now!


20 February

Lishán Didán and Hulaulá: Jewish Neo-Aramaic in the Kurdish region of Iran

In each town of the Kurdish region, Jews and Christians spoke different dialects of Jewish Neo-Aramaic. Dr. Geoffrey Khan gives a historical and linguistic overview and showcases an interactive map with recordings based on his decades of research. Shahnaz Yousefnejadian shares her long-term dictionary project of the Hulaulá dialect of Sanandaj. Alan Niku gives the perspective of a heritage learner/speaker. And musicians Alon Azizi and Adi Kadussi explain why it’s important to record songs in these languages. The event ends with the world premiere of two new songs by Azizi and Kadussi

Sign-up Now!


13 March

(10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 5pm UK / 7pm Israel / 8:30pm Iran - note time - US Daylight Savings)

Judeo-Persian in the 20th century: New research

Dr. Habib Borjian and Ibrāhīm Šafiʿī present personal documents written in Persian in Hebrew letters, and Alan Niku discusses the distinctive Tehran Jewish dialect of Persian based on recordings and fieldwork. Then, Cantor Jacqueline Rafii presents Passover psalms translated into Judeo-Persian and recorded by her grandfather in Tehran in 1971.

Sign-up Now!


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Jews in Iran historically spoke many languages - from Semitic, Median, and Persian language families. The languages/dialects of Jews in different cities and towns were so different that their speakers often could not understand each other. Now these longstanding Jewish languages are endangered, as most Jews shifted to standard Persian in Iran or to Modern Hebrew, English, and other languages after emigrating.

The HUC-JIR Jewish Language Project presents a series of conversations and performances highlighting this rich linguistic heritage. By attending these events, you will learn how Jewish languages compare to each other and to local Muslim, Zoroastrian, and Christian languages. You will be inspired by the elderly speakers and young activists who are working hard to preserve them for future generations. And you will be entertained by new songs in Judeo-Isfahani, Judeo-Hamadani, and Jewish Neo-Aramaic.


These events will last for 75 minutes. Please register for each event separately. While the Jewish Language Project usually posts recordings of events the following day, these events will only be accessible at the times they are presented (due to security concerns and preferences of some of the presenters). These events will also be screened in person at Nessah Synagogue in Beverly Hills, California. Learn more and RSVP for the in-person screenings here


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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

Museum Mondays:

The Museum for Islamic Art, Jerusalem

Tour the Museums from the comfort of your own home with Nachliel Selavan, the Museum Guy.


Monday, 31 January at 12PM EST

Tour the Babylonian Jewry Heritage Center in Or Yehuda 

Sign-up Now!

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About Your Tour Guide:

Nachliel Selavan created and delivered an integrated learning and museum tour program for both school and adult educational settings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and has hosted similar pilot visits to a dozen museums in North America, and a few museums in Europe and in Jerusalem. He also teaches and engages audiences through virtual tours and social media. He has recently completed a year long Tanach Study podcast called Parasha Study Plus, delivering a weekly episode of Archaeology on the Parasha, and is now on his second podcast and a new video series reviewing every book in Tanach, called Archaeology Snapshot.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

The Jews of Italy and the African Empire

This project examines the causes, nature, and consequences of Italian Jews’ support for imperialism. I argue that between the 1890s and 1930s, Italian Jews took an active part in racializing and controlling indigenous Libyan and Ethiopian Jews. Moreover, by promoting the empire and upholding a racial hierarchy between Europeans and Africans, Italian Jews unwittingly contributed to their own downfall, since Italy’s antisemitic campaign (1938-1945) borrowed heavily from earlier anti-black legislation and propaganda. 


This book breaks new ground; using non-traditional sources, it is the first study to inquire what ordinary European Jewish women and men thought about empire and how they engaged with it in their daily life. The Italian case is uniquely fertile for examining the relationship between Jews and race; Italy’s forays into Eritrea, Somalia, and Ethiopia, home to the Beta Israel, triggered the earliest significant encounter between white Jews and sub-Saharan black Jews. As such, Jews and Race also speaks to emerging interest in the history of Jews of color and broadens the study of intra-Jewish racism.


Tuesday, 1 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

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About the Speaker:

Dr. Shira Klein is Associate Professor of History at Chapman University. She has won awards from the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, the Yad Hanadiv/Beracha Foundation, and the USC Shoah Foundation.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

New Works Wednesday with Dina Danon

Join us for a New Works Wednesday with Dr. Dina Danon who will be discussing her book The Jews of Ottoman Izmir: A Modern History (Stanford University Press, 2020), a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award in Sephardic Culture.


Wednesday, 2 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

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About the book:

This lecture will tell the story of a long-overlooked Ottoman Jewish community in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing extensively on a rich body of previously untapped Ladino archival material, the lecture will also offer a new read on Jewish modernity. Across Europe, Jews were often confronted with the notion that their religious and cultural distinctiveness was somehow incompatible with the modern age. Yet the view from Ottoman Izmir invites a different approach: what happens when Jewish difference is totally unremarkable? What happens when there is no “Jewish Question?” Through the voices of beggars on the street and mercantile elites, shoe-shiners and newspaper editors, rabbis and housewives, this lecture will underscore how it was new attitudes to poverty and social class, not Judaism, that most significantly framed this Sephardi communitys encounter with the modern age.


About the author:

Dina Danon is Associate Professor of Judaic Studies at Binghamton University. She holds a doctorate in History from Stanford University. She is the author of She was recently a fellow at the Katz Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, where she began work on a new project on the marketplace of matchmaking, marriage, and divorce in the eastern Sephardi diaspora. She is currently at work, with Nancy Berg, on a co-edited volume entitled Longing and Belonging: Jews and Muslims in the Modern Age.


For here more about the book.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

The Jew who Ruled Persia: The Story of Sa’ad ad-Dawla

Sa’ad ad-Dawla was a Persian Jew from the city of Abhar. Being a master in recovering delayed taxes, he was able to rise in the ranks of the Mongol Ilkhanate that ruled all of Persia and Iraq. He had personal interactions with Ilkhan Arğun, where he demonstrated a strong compunction against corruption, a facility with languages, knowledge about minute matters throughout the lands, and the ability to cure the Ilkhan of disease. The led to Arğun appointing him as the Grand Vizier of the Ilkhanate in 1289, the most powerful position in the country below the Ilkhan himself. Despite the offense that many Muslims took to having a Jew in such a position of power, the Buddhist Arğun defended him and gave him a long leash to improve the Ilkhanate.


Sunday, 6 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

Complimentary RSVP

(Please consider a suggested donation of $10: https://tinyurl.com/DonateASFIJE)


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About the Speaker:

Richard Sassoon is an Iraqi-American of Jewish heritage who graduated from Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service and Fordham University Law School with a J.D. and with an LL.M. in European Business Law from Madrid’s Universidad Pontificia Comillas. He currently works at UnitedLex as a Contract Manager, but has previously held roles at Samsung Engineering, J.P. Morgan, and several law firms. Richard sits on the ASF Young Leaders Board and is a recipient of the ASF Broome & Allen Fellowship. Richard has a long-standing interest in diverse cultures and regions, having visited over fifty different countries, meeting various high-level diplomats with Jewish organizations, working on three continents, and handling legal documents in five languages.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:


Kavkazi, Georgian, and Bukharian Jews: At the Crossroads of Sephardic, Mizrahi, and Russian-Speaking Worlds

(3 Part Learning Series)

The histories and cultures of Bukharian, Kavkazi (Mountain), and Georgian Jews are situated at the unique intersection of Sephardic, Mizrahi, and Russian-Speaking Jewish (RSJ) identities. Through this 3-part learning series, we will explore the multilayered and rich stories of these millennia-old communities in Central Asia and the Caucasus—discovering the ways in which they have developed their mosaic cultures through dynamic interactions with the dominant and changing societies surrounding them. Our discussion will also shed light on how their experiences fit into the broader historical saga of the Jewish people.


On Tuesdays at 12:00PM EST


8 February

(Part 1)

Sign-up Now!

22 February

(Part 2)

Sign-up Now!

22 March

(Part 3)

Sign-up Now!

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About the Speaker:

Ruben Shimonov is an educator, community builder, and social entrepreneur with a passion for Jewish diversity. He previously served as Director of Community Engagement and Education at Queens College Hillel. Currently, Ruben is the American Sephardi Federation’s National Director of Sephardi House and Young Leadership. He is also the Founding Executive Director of the Sephardic Mizrahi Q Network and Director of Educational Experiences & Programming for the Muslim-Jewish Solidarity Committee. He is an alumnus of the COJECO Blueprint, Nahum Goldmann and ASF Broome & Allen Fellowships for his work in Jewish social innovation and Sephardic scholarship. He has been listed among The Jewish Week's "36 Under 36" Jewish community leaders and changemakers. Currently, he is a Jewish Pedagogies Research Fellow at M² | The Institute of Experiential Jewish Education. Ruben has lectured extensively on the histories and cultures of various Sephardic and Mizrahi communities. He is also a visual artist specializing in multilingual calligraphy that interweaves Arabic, Hebrew, and Persian.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The Department of Anthropology & Archeology at the University of Calgary, Schusterman Center for Israel Studies, Brandeis University and Belzberg Program in Israel Studies, University of Calgary, & the American Sephardi Federation present:


Sephardi Thought and Modernity 2022 Webinar Series

Continuity and Rupture in Sephardi Modernities

(Second Edition)

On Wednesdays at 1:00PM EST 

(10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 6pm UK / 8pm Israel / 9:30pm Iran)

(Complimentary RSVP)



9 February

Lital Levy (Princeton University) Esther Moyal, Emile Zola, and Alfred Dreyfus: An Arab-Jewish Feminist on the Affair that Rocked the World

Sign-up Now!


9 March

Deborah Starr (Cornell University) and Eyal Sagui Bizawe (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Nostalgia as Critique: The Case of Jews in Egyptian Cinema

Sign-up Now!


13 April

(10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 5pm UK / 7pm Israel / 8:30pm Iran - note time - US Daylight Savings)

Julia Philips Cohen (Vanderbilt University) and Devi Mays (University of Michigan) Middle Eastern and North African Jews in Paris: A Forgotten Chapter

Sign-up Now!


11 May

(10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 5pm UK / 7pm Israel / 8:30pm Iran - note time - US Daylight Savings)

Vanessa Paloma Elbaz (University of Cambridge) Rhizomic networks of unruptured continuity from 16th c. Italy to 21st c. Casablanca: Music, Power, Mysticism and Neo-Platonism

Sign-up Now!


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In this second edition of the Sephardi Thought and Modernity Series we will focus on the question of continuity and rupture as a way to deepen our dialogue about the different forms that modernity has adopted throughout Sephardi history. We will discuss questions such as the meaning of the concept of “modernity” in non-European contexts such as the Levant and/or the Arab world. We will explore how non-European Jewish societies developed ways of life and practices that synthesized tradition, change and cultural diversity throughout time. We will delve into Sephardi intellectual life, cosmopolitanism, cultural belongings, language, translation and mobility.


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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

Protest, Philanthropy, and the Struggle for ‘Aliyah in 1940s ‘Aden

After the 1947 “pogrom” in ‘Aden, Selim Banin and a handful of other traumatized ‘Adeni Jewish notables were left to pick up the pieces of a shattered community. They founded the “Jewish Emergency Committee,” which took charge of representing ‘Adeni Jewry in negotiations and confrontations with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the British colonial regime ruling ‘Aden, and the Zionist organizations. Theirs is a story of solidarity and culture-clash in a philanthropic network that spanned New York, London, Tel Aviv, South Africa, Asmara, and ‘Aden. In time, through a combination of petitions, closed-door negotiations, and popular demonstrations, they would play a key role in making possible the evacuation of most Yemeni and ‘Adeni Jews to Israel


Sunday, 13 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

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About the Speaker:

Benjamin Berman-Gladstone, an ASF Broome & Allen Fellow, is a doctoral student at the Skirball Department for Hebrew and Judaic Studies and the Department of History at New York University. He graduated magna cum laude from Brown University in 2018 with a Bachelor of Arts in Middle East Studies and Judaic Studies and received honors for his thesis on the idea of an “Ingathering of Exiles” in relations between the American, Israeli, and Yemeni Jewish communities during Operation On Eagles’ Wings. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 2018 and spent the 2018-2019 year in Jerusalem on a Fulbright research scholarship. His writing about issues related to Israel, American Jewry, and Southwest Asian affairs has been published in the New York Times, Haaretz, Tablet Magazine, the Jewish Daily Forward, Tower Magazine, the Times of Israel, the Jewish Advocate, the Hill, the Brown Daily Herald, and the Brown Political Review.


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:


New Works Wednesday with Yehuda Azoulay

Join us for New Works Wednesday with Yehuda Azoulay of Sephardic Legacy Series as he discusses his new book “A Legend of Humility and Leadership: Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu”!


Wednesday, 16 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

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About the Speaker:

Noted scholar, educator, author, activist, and entrepreneur. He is the Vice President & Head of Investor Relations for Concrete Mortgage Capital Inc. Currently he holds a Rabbinical Degree, a Bachelors of Talmudic Law, a Bachelors Degree in Liberal Arts, from Excelsior College and a Masters of Science degree from Yeshiva University’s Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration. He is presently pursuing his Doctorate from Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning, from the Northwestern University and receiving his Doctor of Science in Jewish Studies. Yehuda was the Vice-Principal of Torah High/NCSY in Toronto for the past four years, and later moved in to the field of finance and is Vice President & Head of Investor Relations for Concrete Mortgage Capital Inc. Furthermore, Yehuda is the founder of “Sephardic Legacy Series – Institute for Preserving Sephardic Heritage.” To date he has authored five books and published over thirty articles on Sephardic historical topics.


For more about the book: https://sephardiclegacy.com/index.php/publications/


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:


Jewish Languages Today: Endangered, Surviving, and Thriving

Throughout history Jews have spoken many languages, such as Ladino, Judeo-Arabic, Jewish Neo-Aramaic (Iraq-Iran), and Judeo-Malayalam (Southern India). Over the past two centuries, migrations and other historical events have led to many of these languages becoming endangered. At the same time, Jews are now engaging with these languages in postvernacular ways, such as through song and food, and new Jewish language varieties are developing, including Jewish English, Jewish Latin American Spanish, and Jewish French. This talk explains these developments and makes the case for the urgent need for documentation and reclamation.


Wednesday, 28 February at 12:00PM EST

Sign-up Now!

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About the Speaker:

Dr. Sarah Benor is Professor of Contemporary Jewish Studies at Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion (Los Angeles campus) and Adjunct Professor (by courtesy) in the University of Southern California Linguistics Department. She received her Ph.D. from Stanford University in Linguistics in 2004. She has published and lectured widely about Jewish languages, linguistics, Yiddish, American Jews, and Orthodox Jews. Her books include Becoming Frum: How Newcomers Learn the Language and Culture of Orthodox Judaism (Rutgers, 2012) and Hebrew Infusion: Language and Community at American Jewish Summer Camps (Rutgers, 2020). Dr. Benor is founding co-editor of the Journal of Jewish Languages (Brill) and co-editor of Languages in Jewish Communities, Past and Present (De Gruyter Mouton, 2018).


Sponsorship opportunities available:

info@americansephardi.org

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