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Tishpishti Is Sephardi Honey Cake, But Better | The Nosher

Posted By on September 12, 2023

Honey cake is a hallmark of Rosh Hashanah and the fall Jewish holidays Ashkenazic honey cake, that is. But did you know theres a Sephardic cake traditionally served for Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur break fast and during Sukkot? Like its Eastern European counterpart, tishpishti symbolizes wishes for a sweet new year and the fullness of life. The cake is also popular for Purim and adapted for Passover.

Semolina pastries and puddings have been made for centuries throughout the Mediterranean, North Africa and the Middle East. Tishpishti is traditionally made with fine semolina and soaked in a sweet syrup of sugar, honey or a mixture, but beyond these common elements, there are many variations in both the way tishpishti is made such as nuts or no nuts, eggs or no eggs, flavored with lemon, orange or rose water and even what its called according to different geographic and cultural roots. For example, in Egypt, its basboosah or baboussa, namora or namoura in Syria and shamali in Crete.

Tishpishti is perhaps the name most used and, as we know it today, the cake originated in Turkey. In the Encyclopedia of Jewish Food, Gil Marks explains that in Israel and for Jews from once-Ottoman Turkey, Greece and the Balkans, the name is probably a nonsense name from the Turkish tez (fast/quick) and piti (plane/slope). Put together, it means quickly done. In Ladino it might also be called pispiti, tupishti and revani, which Joyce Goldstein in Sephardic Flavors: Jewish Cooking of the Mediterranean notes is named after a 16th century Turkish poet who wrote about the delights of food.

Many tishpishti recipes use eggs, including ones that instruct you to whip the whites separate from the yolks, a Sephardic contribution to tishpishti. This recipe, however, is based on a very old traditional way of making cakes from a thick dough without eggs. My concession to modernity is adding baking powder and soda, both 19th century products, to lessen the density of the cake. Using ground almonds instead of walnuts will result in a lighter colored cake, which is traditional at Rosh Hashanah to symbolize a bright new year. Tishpishti is delicious on its own or served with a spoonful of yogurt, labneh or whipped cream and a cup of mint tea or strong Turkish coffee.

Notes:

For the syrup:

For the cake:

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Tishpishti Is Sephardi Honey Cake, But Better | The Nosher

Looking into Seattle’s Sephardic Jewish history – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on September 12, 2023

SEATTLE For Raye Behar, 90, the opportunity to act as a guide on a recent sold-out tour of Sephardic landmarks in the Seattle neighborhood where she grew up was invigorating as well as nostalgic.

Riding in the front of a van that carried a diverse group brought together by the Washington State Jewish Historical Society and the Seattle Sephardic Network, Behar told story after story about the Jews from Rhodes and Turkey who found themselves in Seattles Central Area in the early 20th century.

Unlike most cities in America, Seattles Sephardic immigrants made up a third of the Jewish community at the time of the First World War.

They left their close-knit Jewish communities on the shores of Turkeys Sea of Marmara and the island of Rhodes as political instability engulfed the crumbling Ottoman Empire to avoid conscription and to strive for a brighter economic future.

Seattles fishing industry and the Puget Sound reminded the young Jews of the waterfront towns they had left behind, and Jacob Policar and Solomon Calvo had heard about Seattle from a traveler who returned to Marmara. They were the first Sephardic Jews who arrived in Seattle in 1902.

A few years later, Behars father, David Israel, left Rhodes because as a young Jew with no education, he had no way to make a living there, she recounted. As an aside, she added that her father always told his six kids that the family had left Spain before the expulsion in 1492.

As the van wended its way through the narrow streets of the old neighborhood in Seattles Central District, Behars steady voice brought the sights to life with her childhood memories.

Here was the boys-only, Orthodox Talmud Torah school, which nonetheless doubled as a social hub, where non-denominational Jewish youth movement conventions were held. There was the kosher 24th Avenue Market, owned by the Ladino-speaking Maimon brothers, who extended credit to those in need during World War II.

Elsewhere was Condiottys candy shop, where the biggest treat was the candy he made for Pesach [Passover]. You should know that we had nothing kosher for Pesach in those days.

At an elementary school named for the public education advocate and abolitionist Horace Mann, Behar said the student body used to be 50% Jewish. There was no tension at all with our schoolmates, who were Japanese, black, Filipino, or white, she added.

Behar and her group were warmly greeted by several elders of the Tolliver Temple, which today occupies the old Sephardic Bikur Holim (SBH) Congregation building on 19th Ave. and East Fir St. Just last June, the building was recognized by Seattles Landmarks Preservation Board as a protected historical landmark.

Its so small! Behar exclaimed as she walked through the doors of the place that was a cornerstone of her childhood.

The imposing brick building, constructed in 1929, still contains the original synagogues wooden entry doors decorated with Stars of David. The building application for landmark status notes that detailing on stone arches evokes the architecture of Hagia Sophia, the renowned Turkish Byzantine church, which is now a mosque. That flourish in the Seattle building is suggestive of the Turkish heritage of the buildings original congregants, per the application.

Its only a 15-minute drive from that old neighborhood to Seward Park, the pleasant residential area near Lake Washington where two Sephardic synagogues and many in the community moved in the late 1960s.

That move, which was motivated by both racial tensions and upward economic mobility as it was in many US cities at the time marked the end of an idyllic period, according to Behar.

The community was never the same, she told The Jerusalem Post. We lost that feeling of living so close together. It was a wonderful place to grow up, but its in our history to keep moving, she observed.

Behar has stayed put in Seward Park for more than 60 years and although she says she isnt religiously observant and doesnt read Hebrew, she regularly attends Shabbat services at the Congregation Ezra Bessaroth. Many of her relatives, who emigrated from Rhodes, helped found the congregation more than 100 years ago.

I feel sorry for people not committed to community, she said.

Although one of Behars granddaughters joined her on the tour, Behar noted how few millennials who descend from the Sephardic immigrant families took part in the tour.

Miri Tilson, 40, a fourth-generation Seattle native, is the first woman to be president of the SBH congregation.

I want to share the passion and interest in passing on our heritage, she told participants, during a pre-tour breakfast.

Events like this tour aim to bring back the glory days of the congregation, Tilson said. We want to rejuvenate not to change this beautiful congregation.

As participants munched on traditional burekas and bulemas before the tour, longtime Sephardic community activist and SBH member Albert S. Maimon explained the unique Sephardic attitude to Jewish observance.

We have been prisoners of the Ashkenazi definition of Judaism, he noted.

Maimon is the son of Bension Maimon, one of the owners of the kosher 24th Avenue Market in the old neighborhood, and a grandson of Rabbi Abraham Maimon, who served as rabbi of SBH between 1924-1931.

While the Sephardic communal standard follows the norms of Jewish law, individual practice is varied but accepted, he said.

Today, with only one-third of SBH members living within walking distance of the synagogue, people find their own way to be involved, at home or with friends, he said.

Things have changed since Maimons grandfather was rabbi. Then, people would mourn loved ones meldatho, or what Ashkenazi Jews know as yahrzeit in the mourners homes, and everyone would come, Maimon said.

The rabbi would offer words of Torah, there would be refreshments served and the experience was primarily social. Now, most meldathos occur in the synagogue, although some members of Behars extended family still maintain the home meldatho tradition.

Behar still likes to take her grandchildren to the old neighborhood to see the homes and synagogues that defined her childhood, and whose traditions mark a unique community.

I love to linger there, she said.

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Looking into Seattle's Sephardic Jewish history - The Jerusalem Post

Catholic-Jewish research backs reports Catholic convents sheltered 3000-plus Roman Jews during WWII – The Associated Press

Posted By on September 10, 2023

  1. Catholic-Jewish research backs reports Catholic convents sheltered 3000-plus Roman Jews during WWII  The Associated Press
  2. Catholic-Jewish research indicates Catholic convents sheltered Jews during WWII  National Catholic Reporter
  3. Researchers Identify Jews Aided by Catholics in Nazi Era as Pope Was Silent  The New York Times

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Catholic-Jewish research backs reports Catholic convents sheltered 3000-plus Roman Jews during WWII - The Associated Press

Palestinian leader’s comments on Holocaust draw accusations of antisemitism from US and Europe – The Associated Press

Posted By on September 10, 2023

  1. Palestinian leader's comments on Holocaust draw accusations of antisemitism from US and Europe  The Associated Press
  2. Outrage over Abbas's antisemitic speech on Jews and Holocaust  BBC
  3. US antisemitism envoy and EU denounce Mahmoud Abbass speech: Distorts the Holocaust  The Times of Israel

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Palestinian leader's comments on Holocaust draw accusations of antisemitism from US and Europe - The Associated Press

Last living Bielski brother shares Holocaust survival story to combat antisemitism through education – WPEC

Posted By on September 10, 2023

Last living Bielski brother shares Holocaust survival story to combat antisemitism through education  WPEC

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Last living Bielski brother shares Holocaust survival story to combat antisemitism through education - WPEC

Religions – Judaism: The Synagogue – BBC

Posted By on September 7, 2023

Synagogue layout and services Inside the synagogue

The synagogue is the Jewish place of worship, but is also used as a place to study, and often as a community centre as well.

Orthodox Jews often use the Yiddish word shul (pronounced shool) to refer to their synagogue. In the USA, synagogues are often called temples.

In Orthodox synagogues men and women sit separately, and everyone (except young girls) has their head covered. In a Reform synagogue men and women can sit together.

Synagogue services can be led by a rabbi, a cantor or a member of the congregation.

Traditional Jewish worship requires a minyan (a quorum of ten adult males) to take place.

In an Orthodox synagogue the service will be conducted in ancient Hebrew, and the singing will be unaccompanied.

Few British synagogues now have a choir, but they are more common in the USA.

In a progressive (Reform, Liberal) synagogue the service will be at least partly in English, there may a choir and instruments, and men and women can sit together.

Everyone except unmarried women wears a hat in synagogue in order to show reverence to God. (And once unmarried women pass a certain age they usually wear a hat too.)

Jewish men always wear hats when they are saying prayers which mention God's name.

Observant Jewish men wear a hat almost all the time.

The most common hat for men in the synagogue is a small round cap called a yarmulke (Yiddish) or a kippah (Hebrew), but an ordinary homburg or street hat will be accepted.

Hats are always available for visitors, but a hair grip comes in handy to keep a kippah on.

Adult men (i.e. those over the age of 13) often wear a Tallit or prayer shawl for morning prayer. A Tallit has fringes (called tzitzit) on the edges to remind the wearer to observe God's commandments - as commanded by God in the Bible.

Throughout the generations to come you are to make tassels on the corners of your garments, with a blue cord on each tassel.

You will have these tassels to look at and so you will remember all the commands of the LORD, that you may obey them and not prostitute yourselves by going after the lusts of your own hearts and eyes.

Then you will remember to obey all my commands and will be consecrated to your God.

Numbers 15:38-40

There are several times in synagogue services when people kiss these fringes - for example when the tzitzit are mentioned.

Every synagogue contains an Ark, which is a cupboard where the Torah Scrolls, which contain the text of the Hebrew Bible, are kept, and a desk from which to read the Torah.

The Hebrew words of the Ten Commandments are usually written somewhere above the ark.

The Ark is named after the wooden chest which held the stone tablets of the Covenant that God gave to Moses on Mount Sinai.

The search for that original Ark formed the plot of the movie Raiders Of The Lost Ark.

An Eternal Light (called Ner Tamid) hangs above the Ark.

This light is always burning, as a symbol of God's presence.

It also represents the pillar of fire that guided the Jewish people on their early journey.

The platform and the desk for Torah readings are called the Bimah (pronounced beemar), and in an Orthodox synagogue are in the centre of the building. (In a Reform synagogue, the Bimah is usually close to the Ark.)

At the proper moment in the service the Ark is ceremonially opened, and the Torah scroll is carried in procession to the reading desk, unrolled to the reading chosen for the day and laid on the reading desk.

It is normal for everyone to stand whenever the doors of the ark are open.

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Religions - Judaism: The Synagogue - BBC

Schwartzben aims for Green Road Synagogue to be center of community – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on September 7, 2023

Schwartzben aims for Green Road Synagogue to be center of community  Cleveland Jewish News

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Schwartzben aims for Green Road Synagogue to be center of community - Cleveland Jewish News

Catholic-Jewish Research Shows That Catholic Convents Sheltered Thousands of Jews During WWII – Jewish World – Haaretz

Posted By on September 7, 2023

  1. Catholic-Jewish Research Shows That Catholic Convents Sheltered Thousands of Jews During WWII - Jewish World  Haaretz
  2. Researchers Identify Jews Aided by Catholics in Nazi Era as Pope Was Silent  The New York Times
  3. Catholic-Jewish research backs reports Catholic convents sheltered Jews during WWII  The Times of Israel

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Catholic-Jewish Research Shows That Catholic Convents Sheltered Thousands of Jews During WWII - Jewish World - Haaretz

Area Jewish organization reacts to Tipp City school board member making Nazi salute – WHIO

Posted By on September 7, 2023

Area Jewish organization reacts to Tipp City school board member making Nazi salute  WHIO

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Area Jewish organization reacts to Tipp City school board member making Nazi salute - WHIO

The head of the Anti-Defamation League says Elon Musk’s behavior is …

Posted By on September 7, 2023

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The CEO of the Anti-Defamation League called out Elon Musk after the X owner threatened to sue the organization, claiming it had accused him of being antisemitic.

The ADL's chief Jonathon Greenblatt said in a statement that Musk's comments are just the "threat of a frivolous lawsuit."

He remarked that Musk's "behavior is not just alarming nor reckless," but that "it is flat out dangerous and deeply irresponsible."

He added: "We need responsible leaders to lead, to stop inflaming hatred, and to step back from the brink before it's too late."

Musk said in a series of tweets on Monday that X would file a defamation lawsuit against the ADL saying in one tweet that the group "has been trying to kill this platform by falsely accusing it & me of being anti-Semitic."

Musk added that X's US advertising revenue has declined by 60%, saying this was "primarily due to pressure on advertisers by ADL."

The ADL is an organization founded in 1913 with a mission to "to stop the defamation of the Jewish people and to secure justice and fair treatment to all," according to its website. It has recorded increased hate speech on the platform since Musk's $44 billion takeover in October 2022.

Musk's comments came after Greenblatt posted about a meeting with X's CEO Linda Yaccarino in which he said they had a "productive conversation" about the proliferation of hate speech on X.

Shortly afterwards, the hashtag #BanTheADL began trending on the platform with Musk even liking and supporting some of the posts. He responded to a post by YouTube streamer Keith Woods previously accused by ADL of spreading antisemitic content saying "ADL has tried very hard to strangle X/Twitter."

Greenblatt's statement continued: "It is profoundly disturbing that Elon Musk spent the weekend engaging with a highly toxic, antisemitic campaign on his platform a campaign started by an unrepentant bigot that then was heavily promoted by individuals such as white supremacist Nick Fuentes, Christian nationalist Andrew Torba, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and others."

He added: "Finally, we saw the campaign manifest in the real world when masked men marched in Florida on Saturday brazenly waving flags adorned with swastikas and chanting 'Ban the ADL.'"

Twitter and ADL did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment, made outside regular US working hours.

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The head of the Anti-Defamation League says Elon Musk's behavior is ...


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