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13 March 2020

In Honor of Magda Haroun, President of the Egyptian Jewish Community at Cairo, who made the case for rescuing Egypt’s Jewish institutions at the ASF-Association Mimouna’s Jewish Africa Conference in January 2019 during her historic first speaking engagement in New York. 
 
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!
 
Lost 1,000-year-old Hebrew Bible found on dusty Cairo synagogue shelf” 
By Amanda Borchel-Dan, The Times of Israel
 
The existence of a Zechariah Ben ‘Anan’s handwritten biblical codex in Egypt that dates to 1028 BCE was well-documented at the beginning of the 20th century. Then, it vanished, parallel to the disappearance of the Egyptian Jewish community. In July 2017, the lost codex was found on the shelf of a Karaite synagogue in Cairo by Yoram Meital, an Israeli historian. Meital freely acknowledges the political conditions that made the (re)discovery possible: “‘In Egypt nothing can take place without a very bold green light coming from the top of the pyramid and we highly commend the government support.’”

In 2017, the ASF’s research partner, the Diarna Geo-Museum of North African & Middle Eastern Jewish Life, was given unprecedented access to digitally document Jewish historical sites in Cairo and Alexandria. Click here to tour an online exhibition of select sites.

The 1st Psalm as seen in the Zechariah Ben ‘Anan Codex
(Photo courtesy of Professor Yoram Meital/Times of Israel
Feature: An Ecstatic Performance of a Moroccan Piyyut, in Poland…


Yair Harel and The Piyyut Ensemble, 29th Jewish Culture Festival, Krakow, Poland, 27 June 2019 (Screenshot courtesy of YouTube

 The Piyyut Ensemble of the Ben Tzvi Institute raised the roof at the 29th Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow, Poland, with an ecstatic performance of Aromemcha (“I Will Exalt You”), a piyyut from the Yagel Ya’akov cycle of piyyutim composed by the famed Moroccan-Jewish Abuhatziera family.

Frenkel Pictures Logo
(Photo courtesy of Cassis Films/Tablet Magazine


 
The Jewish Disney Family of Egypt” 
By Raz Greenberg, Tablet Magazine
 
The art of animation in the Arab world was pioneered by three Jewish refugee brothers who settled in Egypt: Herschel, Shlomo, and David Frenkel. Tal Michael’s documentary film, Bukra fil Mish-Mish (“When the Impossible Happens…”), tells the story, “a glorious chapter in animation history and Egyptian film history and also in Jewish history that is waiting to be revealed.”
Sephardi Gifts:
From Generation to Generation: a Legacy of Faith and Tolerance
by David S. Malka

From Generation to Generation: a Legacy of Faith and Tolerance is dedicated to the memory of Rabbi Shlomo Malka. It honors his memory as a Jewish scholar, a spiritual leader, and a great humanitarian.

David S. Malka is publishing this text as his personal contribution to legacy of Malka family, in the hope that this generation will re-discover their patriarch's teaching and advance his message of faith and compassion on to the next generation. 

From Generation to Generation: a Legacy of Faith and Tolerance is a message of love, tolerance, and pride in one's heritage.

 
Our Story: The Jews of Sepharad; Celebrations and Stories
by Lea-Nora Kordova Annette and Eugene Labovitz


Celebrations and Stories, a special publication of the Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education with the American Sephardi Federation, is an essential work that enhances the teaching of Sephardi history, traditions, and cultures. 

The life cycle and calendar sections are designed to horizontally connect to the teaching of customs and ceremonies from the Spanish & Portuguese, Syrian, Judeo-Spanish, and Moroccan traditions. Other sections include translations of classic texts and poetry, tales of our history’s heroes, and classroom activities. 

 
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Upcoming Events or Opportunities:


The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

The Crypto Experience
The Global History of Secret Jews

An online course presented in 10 minute episodes.
Learn at your own pace.


Please sign-up now!
Total cost of the course is $75.00

The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience is proud to present “The Crypto Experience,” an online course on Crypto-Jews. It is part of a series of online courses on a variety of topics that make up the robust Jewish experience.

For hundreds of years there have been descendants of Crpto-Jews, who have covertly kept some of their traditions while maintaining a very different public persona. It is a question of identity, be it Huegenot, Catholic, Sephardi, or Mashadi. Professing one faith on the outside and another on the inside speaks to our quest for defining identity today.

These questions of identity that we think are so new and so relevant are really rather old questions under different circumstances. In this course Dr. Hilda Nissimi (Bar Ilan University) presents an overview of crypto societies historically and in the context of today. She challenges the participants to ask themselves difficult questions like: What defines identity? If I project this outer self, how do I keep my real me? Who is the real me? Am I the me before the expression of an outer facade? Is it a new me?

The course discusses these questions as they pertain to Jews, specifically. What does it mean to be a Jew? What do I have to keep if I want to call myself a Jew? Am I allowed to change? Am I the person to decide? Who will decide? How can anyone decide under such circumstances?

In order to understand this in historic and cultural contexts, world-renowned scholars and experts in the field have joined Dr. Nissimi and will be presenting the challenges facing a range of crypto societies: 

Huegenots – Dr. Hilda Nissimi
Spanish-Portuguese Crypto Society – Dr. Ronnie Perelis (Yeshiva University)
Bildi’in of Morocco – Professor Paul Fenton (Sorbonne Université, Paris) 
Mashhadi Jews of Iran – Dr. Hilda Nissimi
Tracing Jewish Roots – Genie and Michael Milgrom
Growing Up Mashhadi– Reuben Ebrahimoff


For more information and other ASF IJE online course offerings visit: https://courses.instituteofjewishexperience.org/


The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience presents:

The Greek Experience
Explore the world of Greek Jewry from the ancient Romaniote to the Sephardim and others who made it to and through Greece.

An online course presented in 10 minute episodes.
Learn at your own pace.


Please sign-up now!
Total cost of the course is $75.00

Jews have been in Greece since before the Temple was destroyed. They were in Greece upon the founding of the Greek Orthodox Church. Community members, known as Romaniote, made their way through Venice, Byzantium, Spain, across the Ottoman Empire, and beyond.
 
Dr. Yitzchak Kerem provides an overview of the unique languages, liturgical nuances, and communal life of Jews across Greece. Dr Kerem spent significant time living in Greece and researching Greek and Sephardic history. Photographs, maps, and personal accounts provide course participants with a full picture of the unique nature of the Jews of Greece and its surroundings.
 
In the course, participants will look at major influential points in Greek Jewish history. They will explore The Golden Age of Salonika, a time when Greece’s northern city was a hub of Jewish scholarship. Kerem introduces the tension arising in the Greek Jewish community because of Shabtai Tzvi and the Sabbateanism movement that brought with it false messianism and conversion to Islam, at least outwardly.
 
The course looks at when the Alliance Israélite Universelle moved in and the Sephardic culture in Greece developed a rich secular culture with its own novels, theater, and music. 
 
This is part of the greater Jewish heritage and history that is often overlooked. ASF IJE online courses will bring to life all parts of the greater Jewish Experience.

For more information and other ASF IJE online course offerings visithttps://courses.instituteofjewishexperience.org/

 and your generous tax-deductible contribution will empower the ASF to fight for Jewish unity and champion the Sephardi voice in Jewish communal affairs at home and abroad, as well as in our programs, publications, and projects. 

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

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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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