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1 November 2019

Mazal Tov/Mabrouk to The ASF Young Leader’s President Lauren Gibli, Chasseda Shmella’s Founder and Leader Bizu Riki Mullu, and Ethioian-Israeli actress Revital Iyov ahead of tonight’s sold out Shabbat Dinner, part of SIGD weekend!
 

Click here to dedicate a future issue in honor or memory of a loved one. 
The Sephardi World Weekly is made possible by generous readers like you. Now there is a new way to show your support. Become a Patron of the Sephardi World Weekly via Patreon and your name will appear in each edition along with timely, thought-provoking articles on Greater Sephardi history, the arts, and current affairs. Thanking you in advance! And thank you to Sephardi World Weekly Patrons Maria Gabriela Borrego Medina and Gwen Zuares!
The Special Journey of Bene Israel’s Shalom Torah” 
By Nissim Moses, The Jerusalem Post
 
How was a Torah scroll from the Magen Shalom Bene Israel Synagogue in Karachi, Pakistan, salvaged and transported to Milan, and then brought to a synagogue in Israel? After the 1948 partition between India and Pakistan, the Bene Israel community fled in various directions. Then, in 1988, just before their deserted Pakistani synagogue was, “razed to the ground… to make way for a mall,” the scroll was spirited out to a synagogue in Milan. However, sustained neglect had rendered the scroll defective, and it was stored away until a member of the Bene Israel community happened to see it, “He convinced the management of the synagogue in Milan to have it returned to a Bene Israel synagogue in Israel.” The Torah scroll was refurbished and then, in 2003, “donated to the Shaar E Shalom Synagogue in Lod at a special dedication ceremony.”
 
Magain Shalome Synagogue (known as the Yahudi Masjid or Jewish Mosque), Karachi, Pakistan
(Photo by Chaim Teitler, "Jews in Distant Lands: India & Pakistan”), 1959
Special Feature: Ayelet Chen (“Graceful Gazelle”): Shalom Shabazi’s Classic Piyyut in a Mizrahi Mode

 

Album Cover
(Photo courtesy of Youtube)  

Tzlilei HaOud (“The Sounds of the Oud”) was one of the pioneering Mizrahi bands in Israel during the 1970’s and 80’s. Listen and enjoy as they perform Rabbi Shalom Shabazi’s (1619-1720) classic Yemenite piyyut, Ayelet Hen (“Graceful Gazzelle”).

(Left to right:) Rabbi Yaakov Ades, Rabbi Ovadia Hedaya, and Rabbi Betzalel Zolty, Israel Rabbinate High Court of Appeals, Jerusalem, Israel, 7 March 1959
(Photo courtesy of the State of Israel’s National Photo Collection)
The Crucial Role of Rav Ovadia Hedaya in Sephardic Life” 
By Rabbi Haim Jachter, Jewish Link of New Jersey
 
Most Sephardim have never heard of Hakham Rabbi Ovadia Hedaya (1890-1969), the Syrian-born Torah giant who moved to Israel at age fifteen and went on to serve on the Supreme Court of the Israeli Rabbinate. But he’s an important figure in 20th century Sephardi history. Consider: at a time when the Sephardic Torah community, “was miniscule and in grave danger of being extinguished,” Hakham Hedaya preserved and extended the Sephardi tradition, inspiring a generation of scholars that included Hakham R’Ovadia Yosef. What’s more, after the fall of Jerusalem’s Old City in 1948, he rebuilt and led Yeshivat Bet El LeMekubalim in the Israeli section of the city: “The Sephardic community owes a great debt to Rav Hedaya... The time has come for the name and teachings of Rav Hedaya to be restored to its rightful place in the Sephardic and broader Jewish community.”
Sephardi Gifts:
Ascending the Palm Tree: An Anthology of the Yemenite Jewish Heritage 
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 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.
On Being a Jew: What does it Mean to be a Jew
A Conversation about Judaism and its Practice in Today's World

by James Kugel

Composed as a meandering dialogue between a wily Syrian-Jewish banker and an American graduate student of literature, this engaging book explains all the basic beliefs and practices of Judaism, including Jewish teachings on intermarriage and conversion, keeping the Sabbath, prayer and Torah, midrash and mitzvot, and God's presence in the world.

Although the book has plenty of the “how to” of religious practice, On Being a Jew is in the end an eloquent reflection on Judaism's deepest theme: living life as a way of serving God.

*Exclusively available at the ASF's Sephardi Shop 
“Like” ASF on Facebook to keep up-to-date on our projects, programs, and publications, as well as to share your thoughts
Upcoming Events or Opportunities:


The American Sephardi Federation and Chassida Shmella Ethiopian Israeli-Jewish Community present:

The 10th Annual Sigd Celebration*
Join us for the Authentic Ethiopian Jewish Weekend!  

Friday, 1 November at 7:00PM
SOLD OUT!
Traditional Kosher Ethiopian Shabbat Dinner with ASF Young Leaders
Professor Ephraim Isaac and special guests from Israel: Kes Eli Vanda Menntessnout and Revital Iyov (who recently appeared in Netflix’s Red Sea Diving Resort)
All age groups are welcome to join the celebration!


Saturday, 2 November at 7:30PM
Congregation Beit Simchat Torah
130 W 30th Street
New York City

Screening followed by a Q&A with Professor Ephraim Isaac and special guests from Israel.
Light refreshments will be served


Sunday, 3 November at 5:00PM
Special guest:

Gili Yalo & his band!
Kessouch reading in Ge'ez ምህልላ, Ethiopian Music and Shoulder
Dancing, Ethiopian Coffee Ceremony, traditional Kosher food and entertainment


Please register here

~Contact Yves Seban to learn more about sponsorship opportunities~

Center for Jewish History
15 W 16th Street
New York City


Chassida Shmella Ethiopian Israeli-Jewish Community hosts an annual SIGD Celebration, marking this celebratory Ethiopian Jewish community event.
For the past eighth years, Chassida Shmella, the Ethiopian Jewish community of North America, has taken on the challenge and exciting experience, of bringing the SIGD ceremony to New York!

The overarching idea is to bring diverse people together to experience the beauty of this festival. Ethiopian Jews, Ashkenazi Jews, Sephardi Jews attend and even others in the community who just want to experience- this amazing celebration.

This day commemorates both the giving of the Torah and the communal gatherings held in Jerusalem in the days of the prophets Ezra and Nehemiah.
Thousands of Jews traveled on foot every year in Ethiopia from Gondar Province to the village of Ambober where the joyous celebration included prayer and fasting.
In modern times, the celebration commemorates the return of Ethiopian Jewry to Israel, our ancient homeland.

The day is a national holiday in Israel!

In New York, SIGD occurs approximately a week following the festival in Israel when a weekend is set aside for a SIGD in the Diaspora.

The festival is a full weekend event and includes celebratory meals, traditional Ethiopian music, dancing, and crafts. Here in NYC, the event comes alive through music, dancing, traditional food, dress and chanting, and through photos. Ethiopian Jewish Qesim (priests) and rabbis who live in Israel join us for the SIGD so the spirit of this festival can be authentic. Historical photos bring the viewer to experience the event as if they are there in time and place - in Ethiopia in times past, and in Israel in recent years.


Centro Primo Levi and the Rhodes Jewish Historical Foundation in partnership with Kehila Kedosha Janina and the American Sephardi Federation present:

Los Corassones Avlan*
The Hearts Speak
*from a Sephardi saying

Conversations on Jewish Life on the Island of Rhodes
A multimedia pop-up installation


On view 29 October through 24 November, 2019

Opening hours: 
Sunday through Thursday: 1:00PM to 9:00PM
Friday: 1:00PM to 4:00PM
Saturday: 5:00PM to 10:30PM 

Bourekas, sweets, coffee and tea will be served during opening hours

West Village
148 West 4th Street
New York City


Los Corassones Avlan is dedicated to centuries of Jewish life in Rhodes. It expands the ideas of the Rome Lab, a 2017 installation created by Centro Primo Levi and the Jewish Museum of Rome, which challenged traditional museum narratives by playing on the tension between personal memory, official history and ongoing research debates.

Conceived as an old funhouse, made up of objects, projection and rotating soundscapes, the new installation will juxtapose ambiguities, uncertainties and discontinuities onto linear representations of the past. It will invite the public to imagine a world that was profoundly different from ours and to question stereotypes and prepackaged depictions of other cultures that increasingly restrict the way in which we experience the present.

The project will be installed in a 19th century carriage house on West 4th street that shares the courtyard with the historic night bar named after Antoine Saint-Exupéry’s novel Vol de Nuit. The bar was once a popular eatery and cabaret called The Samovar, which the photographer Jessie Tarbox Beals seized in one of her legendary images of lower Manhattan and where Al Jolson is believed to have performed in his early career.

During the month of November, the carriage house, which is usually closed, will become home to the exhibition and to roundtables, readings, talks, film and music presentations, where the public will experience the little-known story and traditions of the “Rodeslis,” the Jewish community living on the island of Rhodes for an unknown number of centuries until its destruction in 1944.

*Centro Primo Levi’s public program is made possible in part through the generous support of the Viterbi family. The Rhodes installation was made possible through the generous support of Peter and Mary Kalikow and Bruce Slovin.


ASF Institute of Jewish Experience and מרכז דהאן - Dahan Center present:

The End of Jewish Communal Life in the Arab Lands
International Conference

Monday, 2 December at 9:30AM-5:00PM

Please register here
Conference Timeline

Center for Jewish History
15 W 16th Street
New York City


For thousands of years Jews have lived across North Africa and the Middle East. Despite the long history, 1948-1967 marked the end of these Jewish communities across most of the region. The Dahan Center, together with the American Sephardi Federation and Yeshiva University, seeks to explore this history through research and personal anecdotes.

Join us as we host international scholars, as well as local students, to share stories of the rich life that once was and the events across the region that caused the majority of Jews to leave.

Among our distinguished speakers will be Rabbi Elie Abadie, Dr. Samuel Torjman Thomas, and multidisciplinary artist Ms. Dana Avrish!

The conference is organized in collaboration with Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ministry for Social Equality.

The American Sephardi Federation Presents:

The New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival’s (NYSJFF)
23rd Anniversary Edition


SAVE THE DATE
18-27 February 2020!
Please click here to reserve your Festival Passes now!


The American Sephardi Federation/ASF Young Leaders are partnering with Germany Close Up for the first-ever trip for Sephardi young professionals to Germany!

Dates:  4-12 May, 2020
Total cost: $900
(includes airfare, hotels, sightseeing, and meals)


Please here to apply
Applications Close on 25 November!


Travel to Germany with the American Sephardi Federation - ASF Young Leaders and Germany Close Up this spring! This will be Germany Close Up’s first-ever partnership with a Sephardic group – join us and make history! This trip has been tailor-made just for us to connect with our past.  We’ll interface with what remains of the Portuguese Jewish community in Hamburg, dive into artifacts of the Turkish Jewish community in Berlin, and explore other Sephardic histories on our journey.  We will find out how Germany is relevant to a more diverse Jewish story – including Sephardic Jews!

About Germany Close Up:
Founded in 2007, Germany Close Up introduces young Jewish professionals to modern Germany.  The Germany Close Up experience is administered by the Action Reconciliation Service for Peace, the New Synagogue Berlin Centrum Judaicum Foundation, and the German government’s Transatlantic Plan.



The American Sephardi Federation is proud to partner with Combat Anti-Semitism on its Venture Creative Contest - Round 1. The Contest’s Art Award is named in honor of Emma Lazarus, the Sephardi American patriot, poet, playwright, critic, journalist, campaigner against anti-Semitism, and champion of Zion.

Venture Creative Contest – Round 1

Anti-Semitism is once again on the rise, just 75 years after the Holocaust. This irrational hatred of Jews and the world’s only Jewish State harms both innocent victims and perpetrators infected by bigotry. The resurgence of anti-Semitism poses a challenge to all people of conscience:
How can we work together to stop anti-Semitism?

This contest is crowd-sourcing new solutions to help end “the world’s oldest hatred.” The contest is sponsored by the CombatAntiSemitism.org Coalition.

People of all ages, backgrounds, and nationalities are encouraged to participate by creatively addressing one of the categories. 


Round 1 Deadline: 1 December 2019
Future Rounds Coming Soon

Please click here to submit your contest entry 

Contest Rules – Contest Judges – FAQ – Contact

Specific contest awards co-sponsored by Coalition Members, including:

American Sephardi Association logo
Israel on Campus Coalition logoGaliaArtists


The Philos Project and the American Sephardi Federation present:

Nosotros 3.0: Strengthening Bonds Between Jewish and Latino Communities

On view until May 2020

Center for Jewish History
15 W 16th Street
New York City


The Philos Project and the American Sephardi Federation cordially invite you to the third edition of our Latin American classic art exhibit: Nosotros 2019. 

This years exhibit explores the Judtice of Zionism through the lens of Jewish and Latino national liberation struggles for independence from European colonialism. A new collection of art pieces will be revealed, including pieces from master artists Norma Lithgow and Deyvi Pérez. It will be a night of celebration of the shared history and culture of the Jewish and Latin communities.

 and your tax-deductible contribution will help ASF preserve and promote the Greater Sephardi history, traditions, and culture as an integral part of the Jewish experience! 

Contact us by email to learn about giving opportunities in honor or memory of loved ones

Copyright © 2019 American Sephardi Federation, All rights reserved.

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The American Sephardi Federation is located at the Center for Jewish History (15 West 16th Street, New York, New York, 10011).

www.AmericanSephardi.org | info@AmericanSephardi.org | (212) 294-8350

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