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Coming up on Connections: Wednesday, October 12, 2022 – WXXI News

Posted By on October 12, 2022

First hour: Marilyn Mayo on the rise and normalization of white supremacy

Second hour: J.R. Harris in his book, "Way Out There"

The Levine Center to End Hate is hosting Brave Spaces: Rochester's 3rd Annual Summit to End Hate. Their keynote speaker is Marilyn Mayo of the Anti-Defamation League. Mayo will discuss the rise and normalization of white supremacy. The event is Friday, October 21st, but first, Mayo joins us on Connections. Our guests:

Then in our second hour, J.R. Harris is a wilderness trekker who has explored some of the most remote parts of the world. The New York City native's first solo adventure was a nearly 5,000-mile drive to the northernmost road in Alaska as a new college graduate in 1966. Since then, he has done more than 40 excursions -- from the Arctic to the Andes, through mountain ranges across the globe, and through the outback of Australia. His book, "Way Out There," details many of them. Harris will be a guest of the Rochester/Genesee Valley chapter of the Adirondack Mountain Club this week, but first, he joins us on Connections to discuss his travels, what he has learned from nature, and what he calls "the art of being afraid." Our guest:

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Coming up on Connections: Wednesday, October 12, 2022 - WXXI News

When will the Diaspora and the Homeland embrace interdependency? – Armenian Weekly

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Graphic by Proper Company, exclusive to the Armenian Weekly

I am not sure about you, but I for one am frustrated with the inability of the diaspora and the homeland to build a strong interdependent relationship. In this time of crisis, it is particularly disappointing. There have been moments where we were on the cusp, only to let short term issues block our vision of a prosperous Armenia. It is a fruitless exercise to assess blame because it has been our collective problem and thus far our collective failure. Of course, there are thousands of success stories, but that should not be the barometer for our nation. The only measurement that counts is the actual performance versus our global potential. We have understated our potential in the last 30 years. My perception is that the negativity has grown in the diaspora over the last several years. There are two major emotions that we see in our communities toward Armenia: disappointment and fear. These are dangerous responses for the diaspora because they can lead to inaction and aloofness. The euphoria of 2018 has settled into disappointment and in some cases cynicism over the internal strife and the disastrous 2020 war. Unfortunately, instead of reaching deep within us to increase our advocacy, many Armenians in the diaspora have taken a step back. The compounded impact of that behavior has been visible. We seem to take the idea of a sovereign nation lightly.

In the first decades of the United States, founded on the principles of equality and democracy, only land-owning white men were allowed to vote in national elections. This was hardly aligned with the stated principles in the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution for that matter. Yet the country continued to improve its identity and over time has built a democracy remarkably close to the founding principles. The point is that nation building is a difficult task and always a work in progress. Why should we judge Armenia so harshly with only a 30-year base? This is particularly important when you consider that the foundation was 70 years of authoritative communism which was preceded by decades of Czarist repression. There has been precious little opportunity for Armenia or any of the former Soviet nations to build a culture of participative inclusion. I realize that we want results, yet the maturation curve is dependent on how we work together to advance society. There has certainly been cause for concern, but our commitment must focus on the vision, not the current state.

The concept of a global nation consisting of an active diaspora with a sovereign homeland is a complex undertaking that requires serious collaborations on a common vision for this nation and the role of members in the diaspora. The diaspora supports the nation emotionally, financially and economically, but may not reside there as citizens. What are boundaries that embrace these global citizens but allow the nation to function as a sovereign state? Who has the responsibility to establish a mechanism that welcomes all to the country, yet differentiates between roles and responsibilities? Certainly Armenia has welcomed those who invest in the country and those who choose to repatriate as citizens. Frankly, those are the least complex options. The more challenging areas are how the relationship between the citizens of the nation and their diaspora brethren function for the betterment of the homeland. We have completed very little of this essential work. For many who were born and raised outside of Armenia, the absence of an independent homeland prior to 1991 was always an awkward moment. Our pride was tempered by the lack of a nation state taking its place on the world stage. I remember engaging in a debate as an eighth grader over the existence of Armenia because it was not included (until 1991) on the list of sovereign nations. I recall the sinking feeling when staring at the global map that did not include the tricolor flag. It is puzzling that our commitment can be so shallow given the life experiences of anyone over 40 with Armenian sovereignty. The gift of a free Armenia is a welcome status from our earlier years. We must never take the independence of Armenia for granted. It may be a right of all peoples, but the reality is that it must be earned and defended.

The other emotion that has engulfed our thinking is the fear of political and military activity that threatens our national security. Fear is also an emotion that can freeze people from taking action when it is most needed. The mantra in the diaspora for decades has been that we must retain our heritage or we will finish ourselves, through assimilation, what the Turks started. With the same danger today from the Azeris and Turks, why are we not all in? Has this challenge become a distraction from our comfortable lives? When I go to Armenia, I am reminded that the only important difference between our brethren in the homeland and those of us in the diaspora is where our ancestors were at the time of the Genocide and how they responded to the catastrophe. Some were able to migrate east toward the Russian border or todays RoA, while many in the western area of the highlands were driven into Syria and eventually western nations. In its simplest form, thats it. Just as it has been their burden to hold the homeland together, it is our burden to use our good fortune of education and wealth for the homeland that our ancestors were forced to abandon.

Certainly, part of the challenge in connecting with the diaspora is the convenience of the term. We refer to it as if it were a homogenous intact grouping. It is quite the opposite as it is geographically and culturally diverse. Armenians in the Middle East have been influenced by their host countries, and the same holds true in western nations. There has been no integrated approach to connecting the diaspora communities with Armenia. Attempts have been made, but it is a daunting task when you consider that our communication mechanisms in the diaspora are usually through organizations, individuals or foundations. It seems that everyone carves out a niche and does their utmost to help. There are many successes and failures with this approach. With the failures also comes withdrawal from the playing field. This must be prevented.

Let us take a closer look at the US community. There have been several proposals over the last several years about creating some form of a representative body of the diaspora to prioritize resources and focus on the needs outlined with the Armenian government. This would reduce the risks of the inefficiencies from a lack of integration and improve the quality of the relationship with Armenia. If we stayed with the organization model that is ingrained deeply in the diaspora culture, we can easily define the major players: AGBU, Prelacy, Diocese, ANCA, Armenian Assembly, Armenian Relief Society and AMAA. If we identify a few major foundations, the majority of Armenians in America would be represented in one form or another. This reasonably-sized group could engage with the RoA to establish a vision, establish priorities and create functioning protocols. Most importantly, it would improve the credibility of sustainable support by limiting the silos. Perhaps what could emerge would be a vision where Armenia truly became the center of the global Armenian nation and where all Armenians can establish an identity. The collective mission would then be to use the combined and integrated resources for a prosperous and sustainable Armenia. Similar models could be used in Europe, Russia and the Middle East. At the end of the day, it requires the diaspora to respect the boundaries of sovereignty and for Armenia to respect the rights of global Armenian identity with the homeland. It can be a very powerful formula.

The sad irony of an understated relationship between the diaspora and the homeland is that each is distinctly dependent on the other. Until 1991, the diaspora operated as an island of sorts without an independent nation state and individual diaspora communities. They were bound together with our common heritage and organizations that operated across geographies. The presence of a sovereign homeland presents the diaspora with a new opportunity of identity. It can be the fulfillment of our dreams and perpetuation of our civilization. We can invest in that future with pride and joy. Our children, who are subject to the impact of assimilation, can find an emotional connection with their heritage in the homeland. Some will move there and others will return with a profound level of sustainable identity. The homeland must find a way to bring the resources of the diaspora for the betterment of the homeland. For a nation of three million citizens with twice that many in the diaspora, it is a necessity. The talent exists in our global nation, and we must find practical ways to release it. That process can accelerate when both parties recognize and embrace their mutual dependency. It could create a natural state of unity as each trusts their reliance on the other. In a democratic society, we should not confuse this with the absence of debate and political conflict. Democracy can be messy, but patriotism should always be our priority. I find that when solving problems, it helps to understand the perspective of the other party. As members of the diaspora, we should consider the concerns of the homeland in building a better relationship. Armenia rightfully does not want their country run by remote control from the diaspora, and they need more practical methods to communicate with this large semi-organized portal called the diaspora. The Armenians in the diaspora want to find their identity between being tourists and organizational investors. If we address these concerns from both perspectives, a brighter future awaits us.

Stepan was raised in the Armenian community of Indian Orchard, MA at the St. Gregory Parish. A former member of the AYF Central Executive and the Eastern Prelacy Executive Council, he also served many years as a delegate to the Eastern Diocesan Assembly. Currently , he serves as a member of the board and executive committee of the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR). He also serves on the board of the Armenian Heritage Foundation. Stepan is a retired executive in the computer storage industry and resides in the Boston area with his wife Susan. He has spent many years as a volunteer teacher of Armenian history and contemporary issues to the young generation and adults at schools, camps and churches. His interests include the Armenian diaspora, Armenia, sports and reading.

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When will the Diaspora and the Homeland embrace interdependency? - Armenian Weekly

6 members of Kerala diaspora to be honored in NY | India Post News Paper – IndiaPost.com

Posted By on October 12, 2022

NEW YORK: Six Indian-American Malayalees will be honored in New York for their outstanding achievements in their field of specialization and for their service to the society by a community organisation, which represents the Kerala diaspora.

The Indian American Kerala Cultural and Civic Center will present its 30th Annual Awards Banquet on October 22 in Elmont, which will be attended by Indias Consul General Randhir Jaiswal and New York Senators Kevin Thomas and Anna Kaplan.

Javad Hassan, Chairman of NeST Group, will be awarded for corporate leadership. He has been striving to bring premier US universities to the Indian shores, so that Indian companies could gain from a global standard of education.

Thomas Joy, Suffolk County police officer will be awarded for Public Service. Joy was honored in 2020 by the India Association of Long Island for his service to the community during Covid-19 pandemic.

In the Performing Arts category, Bindiya Sabarinath, founder of Mayura School of Arts, has been named.

Sabarinath, trained in Bharatnatyam, Mohiniyattam and Kuchipudi, is an alumni of Kalakshetra Chennai, and has been making principal styles of Indian Dance accessible to US residents.

She received a Presidential Award for representing Mohiniyattam from Kerala on Republic Day in 1998, and has dedicated herself to teaching and performing Indian Classical Dance for the past twenty years.

Bindiya established the Mayura school of Arts in 2000 in the US. She has over 1,000 students and many branches in the New York and New Jersey area, according to her website.Silvester Noronha, who will be awarded under the Applied Science category, hails from Kollam district in Kerala. He is currently a visiting faculty of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

He was among a team of scientists from MIT who jointly invented a large high-temperature superconducting electromagnet, a step towards realizing the dream of the much-awaited nuclear power fusion meant for revolutionizing the worlds energy sector.

P.T. Paulose has been recognised for contributions to Pravasi Malayalam Literature, and Jose Kaniyaly, Executive Editor and Partner of Kerala Express weekly newspaper, for his contributions to Malayalam Media and Journalism.

Kerala Center has been honoring outstanding achievers since 1991. Every year we invite nominations and the committee has to make a unanimous choice for a candidate in a category to receive the award and this year is no different from previous years in terms of their achievements, Thomas Abraham, Kerala Centers Trustee Board Chairman and Award Committee Member, said in a press release.

Though the exact number of Keralites in the US is unknown, Thiruvananthapuram-based International Institute of Migration and Development (IIMD) reckons that there are at least 40 lakh Keralites abroad, of which at least 20 per cent or even higher number are now settled in the US, Canada, the UK, Germany, Australia and New Zealand.

Kerala is officially preparing a data bank of Keralites, a move that will help the state find the number of Malayalis working abroad, especially in the US, Canada, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

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6 members of Kerala diaspora to be honored in NY | India Post News Paper - IndiaPost.com

Scottish Connections (diaspora) work: qualitative research – gov.scot – The Scottish Government

Posted By on October 12, 2022

This is a report commissioned by the Scottish Government providing insight into what a successful diaspora policy should consider and include. It is designed to assist in the development of a strategy around the Scottish Connections diaspora activity. There are three aims that underpinned this report; the use of qualitative interviews to support previous desk based research, a strong consideration from within the diaspora itself, and a firm analysis conducted by experts in the area of the Scottish Diaspora. Therefore, the analysis is based around a significant level of input from key diaspora stakeholders, including officials of the Scottish Government, and of comparator governments, diaspora organisations and individuals.

The report provides a synthesis of existing evidence around diasporas in general, and the Scottish diaspora in particular. Existing material thus underpinned the direction and focus of the critical and analytical work undertaken. The themes that emerged informed later engagement with key stakeholders across the globe. Detailed interviews and focus groups provided the evidence herein, and thus gives voice to the groups and individuals that form the Scottish diaspora.

Additionally, the diaspora engagement policies and activities of four comparator states/sub-states were examined in detail, and support by engagement with officials from those cases. This provided a broad informed analyses of good practice and recent activity that can also inform the Scottish Government's approach. Fourteen specific issues were identified from these cases, and this also underpinned further analysis and discussion with the diaspora.

There were six key findings from within the analysis. They begin with a recommendation that the Scottish Diaspora is recognised in its widest possible, and most inclusive, form. The second was that this recognition requires an embracing of all aspects of Scottishness ranging from the historical and ancestral forms of engagement to the contemporary. The third key finding stressed the importance of additional resource allocation to underpin any meaningful diaspora strategy and appreciate that the diaspora needs to know what Scotland seeks from it.

Key finding number four was around issues of coordination with/within the Diaspora and the need for clear ongoing links to the homeland, in which the diaspora and Scotland were partners. This links firmly to the fifth key finding, which is a lack of clarity regarding diaspora responsibilities within the Scottish Government infrastructure. A clear lead and organisation for the diaspora to connect with is strongly recommended. The final recommendation considers the role and engagement of UK officials and state organisations within diaspora policy.

Finally, this report highlights twenty nine specific recommendations, which are grouped together under the headings of Picturing and Understanding the Diaspora, Engaging the Diaspora, Supporting and Recognising the Diaspora and Diaspora Initiatives. These recommendations are also identified as short term, medium term or longer term objectives, with those that require additional resources also recognised. The specific recommendations can be found on pages 51-53.

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Scottish Connections (diaspora) work: qualitative research - gov.scot - The Scottish Government

avuolu Urges His Compatriots In France For "coordinated Actions Against The Armenian Diaspora" – GreekCityTimes.com

Posted By on October 12, 2022

The reaction of French-Armenian organisations against Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlt avuolu turned out to be a rallying cry to his compatriots living in France "to act against the Armenian diaspora in a more coordinated way". avuolu said this during his recent visit to Strasbourg, where he met at the Turkish consulate with representatives of the Turkish community in France.

Franck Papazian, co-chairman of the Coordination Council of Armenian Organisations of France, said that with this report the Turkish minister encourages violence against French-Armenians.

"We feel threatened by the Turkish minister's words. We consider his words to be a call for violence and we expect the French government to take all the necessary protective measures," Papazian said, criticising the French government for "not reacting because it does not want to displease Turkey."

"The history of relations between the French and Turkish governments in recent years shows that Paris never gives appropriate answers to Ankara's insults and threats," Papazian said, calling on the French government to expel the Turkish ambassador, demand a public apology and hold Erdogan responsible in case of attacks by Turks.

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avuolu Urges His Compatriots In France For "coordinated Actions Against The Armenian Diaspora" - GreekCityTimes.com

Yvonne Orji Discusses the Importance of Supporting the Diaspora and Her New Special ‘A Whole Me’ – Ebony – EBONY

Posted By on October 12, 2022

If you haven't noticed, Yvonne Orji is on an ever evolving glow up. A philanthropist, actress and hilarious comedian, she is in power mode and is not letting up. On Nigerian Independence Day, she celebrated the return of her Night of Nigerian Excellence gala and the release of her second HBO special A Whole Me.

Hosted at Beauty & Essex in Los Angeles, Night of Nigerian Excellence honored Nigerian activists, actors, artists, athletes, creatives, executives and musicians to celebrate their culture and excellence. This celebration perfectly complimented Whole New Me which also pays homage to her African heritage.

Below, Orji dished on her new HBO special and the beauty in recognizing your own and celebrating excellence across the African diaspora.

EBONY: With the success of your first HBO special and your second, A Whole Me, having just premiered, what does "a whole me" mean for you regarding you doing your life and your career on your own terms?

Yvonne Orji: A Whole Mereally does mean just thata whole me.It is letting people know that in this current season, in this current moment, this is the best version of Yvonne Orji that I know, that I like, that I love, and that you are going to experience. We are constantly evolving, changing and growing. I am committed to my growth, but in this moment, I have been me. The me that I have been was great. I honor her and I thank her for all she allowed me to do, but now I have more information. Now I am returning to the me I was always supposed to be without some trauma and some characteristics that weren't favorable for becoming and being my best self. I am embracing the journey because, without all those things, I wouldn't be the me I am now. Now things are in the right proportions and the proper perspective, and I am a whole me. I can do deals from this whole version of myself, enter relationships from this whole version of myself and nothing pays better than freedom, baby! Freedom is sexy, so when you have the freedom to be your most authentic, vulnerable and valuable self, everything pops from there.

Congratulations on commemorating the third year of the Night of Nigerian Excellence. How excited were you that it returned for another successful year?

I am so excited about this year's Night of Nigerian Excellence 2022. I feel like this is our best year yet, and it was all kismet. My second HBO special was premiering on October 1st, which happens to be Nigerian Independence Day, and this is our first time doing Night of Nigerian Excellence after the pandemic. Everything just lined up; it was perfect alignment. I am so grateful to everyone that showed up and to HBO for supporting this another year, which speaks to how gracious they are and how willing they are to honor a talent with such specificity in their art.

There is a new space in which Black folks across the diaspora are bridging similarities and differences by celebrating significant historical events like this. What is your hope for what your work, in general, will inspire across our community?

I feel like Black folks across the diaspora are linking together, are finding similarities, even in our differences, because we are more alike than we are different. Even at the event, it wasn't justonlyNigerians; it was friends of the diaspora. There were some Nigerians, some East Africans and some folks from other West African countriesso it was a celebration of us across the diaspora. Even things like being at the event and having authentic Nigerian food in the heart of Hollywoodwhere else can you do that? I think Nollywood has done a great job of showing art and entertainment from the Mother Continent and transferring it to America. And then it's like I have this unique opportunity where I can tell stories with Nigerian themes for first "geners" in America and translate back to Nigerians in Nigeria. My hope is for us to continue doing more dope work and collaborating.

The whole event's purpose is for us to meet each other and know each other so we can be in the room where it all happens; this is how deals get done. Some executives spanned Hulu, Netflix, Universal and Fox in the building, saying, "Hey we are all here, talent is here, strike up a conversation by the bar and let's do the next project and then the next deal." That is my hope for why the event is so important, and it is also my hope for how we can continue to tell stories important to us in the diaspora. What was special for me in doingA Whole Mewas being able to put different talents on. Chigul plays the iconic character "Shady Shola." She is a woman who has been killing it for years in Nigeria, she's hysterical and impressive, and when I met her, I was like, 'You're a star. I promise you that you're bigger than the opportunities you have been given." I kept remembering her year in and year out, and I even had her on my first special when I went to Nigeria. When creating the vignettes for this, I thought there is only one person I want to play, "Shady Shola" and I told her, "Girl, get ready." To see how the American audience has taken a liking to her and see what I saw in her years ago has been beautiful. That's what we have the power to do when we have a platform; you can reach back into the diaspora and bring people along and bring them up. NamoI have known for over a decadeand Nneomawhom I found during the pandemicare people who have been doing comedy on the internet, and I found them. It's like, "Hey, keep doing your thing and dreaming your dream because when one of us pops, we all pop."

Who are some Nigerian icons that inspire you across the entertainment industry?

There are tons of them. Every time I see a new name that I recognize as Ibo or Yoruba, I'm like, "Whoa, whoa, that person is from Nigeria!" That speaks volumes to me because, again, representation matters. When I started trying to branch off into entertainment, it was Chiwetel Ejiofor and David Oyelowo, and then Uzo Aduba came suddenly. Seeing those people, my mom was like, "Okay, maybe you can do this thing; maybe it makes more sense." The more names she saw, the more acceptable it was for me to do this thing. Then you have people like Nkechi Okoro Carroll who are showrunners, and I remember when we were watching TV and her name came on the scream and my mom was like, "That woman is Ibo! That woman is from Nigeria!" And I'm like, "Yeah, I know her." Amazingly, our parents get excited when they see those same names. You have someone like Ayo Edebiri; she's on the new Hulu show,The Bear and Jimmy Akingbolas who's onBel Air. It is so important to see representation across the entertainment industry. And then you have the execs like Pearlena Igbokwe! It goes across. Let's not forget the folks in fashion; Janelle Okwodu, senior fashion and culture editor at Vogue. So seeing Nigerians across multiple platforms, it's all inspirational to me. When I see those names show up either on TV or in the press, it inspires me to keep going, and to say hey, we are all in this together; no one is on an island by themselves. We can all "each one, reach one" and bring one another up.

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Yvonne Orji Discusses the Importance of Supporting the Diaspora and Her New Special 'A Whole Me' - Ebony - EBONY

Taking Nigeria from Third to First World through its diaspora (3), By Sunday Adelaja – Premium Times

Posted By on October 12, 2022

I want to use this opportunity to appeal to President of Nigeria, General Buhari and his Vice, Professor Osinbajo to please heed the call to help our vast number of Nigerians in Diaspora come back to contribute something for the development of their motherland.

I think patriotism is like charity it begins at home. Henry James

7. Biki John is the head of the Marketing Communications department for a Port Harcourt-based, international school called Greenoak International School (GIS). In addition, she also runs an independent consulting company that specialises in crafting communication strategies for companies in the fashion industry.

Her formative years were first spent in Nigeria and then the UK. For university, she continued her studies in the UK and attended Kings College London (KCL), where she studied Law and graduated with a 2:1.

Upon graduating from KCL, she completed her LLM (Master of Laws) at Nottingham University. Biki decided to leave the United Kingdom and come back for greener pastures in Nigeria, where she is not just contributing to developing the economy, but is also making it as a professional. She is also finding fulfillment in impacting the younger generation.

8. After completing his studies at Harvard Business School, Tomiwa Igun and some friends established the organisation Young African MBAs with the aim of closing the gap of management talent in Africa. Now boasting thousands of members, the organisation fosters ties between the continents young talents and also assists its members in career transitioning to Africa. This is a practical way of building a new Africa. These young men are showing us the way. Bravo!

9. Taris primary focus at the moment is baking. She bakes under the Honeys Cupcakes brand, which she founded a few years ago. Besides that, she does some freelance writing, though she writes primarily on africanhadithi.com, an online reader that focuses on issues that matter to Africans, written by Africans based in the diaspora, and on the continent. Her writing focuses on real life experiences mostly hers written and experienced through a gendered lens and finished with a sprinkling of academia.

She went to Cambridge, England for her A-Levels at the Cambridge Centre for Sixth-Form studies (CCSS). After this, she moved to Boston for her undergraduate degree at the University of Massachusetts, Boston graduating with a B.A. in Liberal Arts in 2007.

There is no business that doesnt sell in Africa. Some Israeli expatriates that I meet in Lagos Sheraton hotel, once told me only fools cant make millions in Nigeria. All these young men and women are proving that to be true. Million dollar opportunities abound all over Africa waiting to be tapped by her enlightened citizens. Thereby contributing to making Africa a first world continent.

10. Professor Vincent Chinedum Anigbogu is the director general, Institute for National Transformation, which has centres in Atlanta, Nairobi (Kenya), Kampala (Uganda), and Lagos (Nigeria). He is also the president and CEO of the consulting firm, JC (Jesus Christ) Quality Management Group in US, Nigeria, and Uganda. He speaks to both presidents and leaders of the above mentioned African countries teaching them on National Transformation.

In 2004 Professor Anigbogu moved back from the USA to give back to Nigeria his motherland. He has a Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from the University of Alabama in 1986. He also obtained his M.Sc. in Analytical Chemistry and B.S. in Chemistry from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana, in 1981 and 1978, respectively. He has taught, conducted research, and published in the field of analytical Chemistry for nearly 20 years at several universities including Agnes Scott College, Decatur, GA (1992-95) and Clark Atlanta University, Atlanta, GA (1995-2004).

Professor Anigbogus dream is to see the development of purposeful leaders who will impact their generation and Africa. Anigbogu is a wonderful example of a Nigerian from the diaspora who is taking the continent by storm.

THE WORLD IS WAITING FOR YOUR STORY. PLEASE, DO SOMETHING WORTH WRITING ABOUT!

My dear readers, especially those of you in the Diaspora, as you go through this article, I hope God is starring something in you. It is not by accident that you were born a Nigerian or an African. Please dont leave this earth without contributing your quota. It doesnt matter if you go back home or not, but leave your mark.

Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. John f. Kennedy

I want to use this opportunity to appeal to President of Nigeria, General Buhari and his Vice, Professor Osinbajo to please heed the call to help our vast number of Nigerians in Diaspora come back to contribute something for the development of their motherland.

A mans feet must be planted in his country, but his eyes should survey the world. George Santayana

My dear brothers and sisters, I dont believe anyone of you traveled out of Nigeria to die there.

Instead of your shame you shall have double honor, and instead of confusion they shall rejoice in their portion. Therefore in their land they shall possess double; Everlasting joy shall be theirs. Isa. 61:7

My prayer is, you will fulfill the destiny and purpose for which you left your native land and return with a smile on your face and also put smiles on the faces of those you love.

Sunday Adelaja is a Nigeria born leader, transformation strategist, pastor and innovator. He was based in Kiev, Ukraine.

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Taking Nigeria from Third to First World through its diaspora (3), By Sunday Adelaja - Premium Times

A voice from the Diaspora: A culture of entitlement – Jamaica Observer

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Last week a video emerged on social media of a woman, who appeared to be in Jamaica, berating those of the Diaspora for sending small amounts of money through remittance services.

The woman accused Jamaicans abroad of a lack of sense or conscience for sending US$100 or less because those amounts, in her estimation, were too small and Jamaicans at home were going to start refusing those sums.

Whatever happened to the notion that it is the thought that counts?

Most Jamaicans who live outside the island are very interested in what happens in the land of their birth. We pay close attention to the conventional media platforms and even more so to social media posts, depending on their particular interests.

When we call up ah foreign and tell unu we problem, do not disrespect we like dat. Do not do that, she said, We call unu up deh and tell unu say we rent want pay, we light bill ah go cut off, we nah no food and wee pickney dem nuh want go a school. Who unu think unu is?

The social media post may well have been made in jest but there is nothing funny about it to many Jamaicans who suffer adverse economic, social and political conditions in order to stay afloat in the lands they now live far away from their island home.

Her rant speaks to the undeniable reality that Jamaica has sewn the fruit and replanted the seeds of the culture of entitlement that now plagues us. There are some Jamaicans who are well educated in the profession of mendicancy. For decades we have allowed this cancer to spread among the citizenry without attempting to mitigate the disease and treat it into a state of mildness.

Social programmes are a must in any society which has a conscience and, while life does not include handouts, we must assist those among us who are facing difficulties. However we must adopt measures that reward the virtues of hard work, dedication and ambition.

Many years ago while covering crime for the Jamaica Observer, a hurricane devastated sections of Jamaica. The system destroyed a building that housed dozens of computers set up by a church in the community to act as a homework centre for the schoolchildren in the impoverished community of Arnett Gardens.

Before the water settled and the wind calmed, the centre was broken into and the computers, acquired for the church for the empowerment of the community, were all stolen. Were the thieves aware that while they had taken desktop computers for their own pleasure that they were actually robbing themselves and the children of the community of a chance to grow out of the poverty and despair that befell them?

In the same breath there are some Jamaicans who tell tales of hunger and desperation to their relatives and friends abroad only to use the hard earned funds they gleefully collect to floss at dances and for other purposes than those stated when they were so much in need.

Many Jamaicans who live abroad have improved their lot in life by hard work. Some have paid rent for years and, if not rent, then mortgage. Yet the expectation exists, according to the womans rant, for them to also pay rent for one or more people in Jamaica.

In many cities across the United States, to rent a three bedroom apartment in a middle income community may range between US$2,500 and US$3,500. It sometimes takes the combined efforts of all family members to cover that cost. In Florida, energy rates may cost an average of US$175 monthly and apart from an occasional cookout, free food is not available here.

Food, shelter, clothing and transportation may be easily accessible and less expensive than it is in Jamaica, but it is by no means cheap.

Yet these same Jamaicans are expected to answer every beck and call from everyone in need back at home and, if that call is not answered satisfactorily, then sentiments similar to those expressed in that womans social media post will come flying and unfiltered.

Another video surfaced a few days after featuring a woman boasting a Jamaican accent who claimed to be a nurse who works overseas. The woman told of the harshness she faced during her tenure in the profession and was clearly upset. She described snippets of a nurses perils on the job, describing how they had to clean the fecal matter of some patients, who would sometimes spit at them or attempt to douse them with bodily fluids.

Whether you like it or not you have to take it, the woman, who also advised the complainant to instead earn money from the worlds oldest profession if she was displeased with the amount of money being sent, said.

Many Jamaicans who spent decades toiling in sleet, snow and sun while tightening their belts with the dream of retiring in a nice home back on the island, end up as murder victims, most times at the hands of relatives or close associates who they have worked hard and taken care of for decades.

The stories of Jamaicans in the Diaspora being bamboozled by relatives, friends and perceived lovers abound yet remittances remain in the top three of Jamaicas foreign exchange earners.

This cycle of entitlement and mendicancy must end. It is the reason why some of our brightest minds have resorted to scamming and other illegal activities and refuse to choose the path of hard work. They are used to getting things too easy and have failed to comprehend the value of being rewarded for hard work.

Be careful of those social media posts. Your relatives and friends sometimes fail to tell you everything they endure while living abroad Jamaica.

Karyl Walker is a veteran journalist who served as the Jamaica Observer's Crime/Court and Online News Editor. He now resides in Florida, USA.

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A voice from the Diaspora: A culture of entitlement - Jamaica Observer

Hindu diaspora under attack: The rising trends of global Hinduphobia, attacks by Islamists and propaganda – OpIndia

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Recent instances of targeted hate crimes against the Hindu community and its temples by Khalistani and Islamic radicals in Canada, the USA and the UK point towards the worrying trends of rising Hinduphobia in the West.

The everyday instances of discrimination and violence against Hindus due to Islamic extremism are common in the Indian subcontinent. Hindus have endured this suffering for ages. However, recent attacks on them in so-called liberal democracies have time and again proved that there is no escape from this violent Islamic ideology and so-called liberals and Khalistani are useful idiots in this hateful campaign by Islamists against Hindus.

Network Contagion Research Institute, a US-based scientific research organization in its recent report points out that there has been a 1,000 per cent rise in anti-Hindu hate and attacks on the members of the community across the world, including in the USA. The report reflects the dangerous hybridization of hate against the Hindu diaspora particularly in the West. In the words of Joel Finkelstein co-founder of the Network Contagion Research Institute, Weve seen that theres been a growth of over 1,000 per cent and anti-Hindu slurs are stoking fears of replacement mixing with anti-semitic memes, with other forms of narratives, and hatred shared by white supremacists, by Islamists, and others, and creating a toxic atmosphere of hostility.

This article with the help of independent reports and many recent instances of hate crimes and discrimination against the Hindu diaspora community shows the rising trend of Hindu phobia in countries like the USA, Canada and the UK.

To start with, North America has served as a natural home for Indian talent from various walks of life and Indian Americans particularly Hindus have a huge role in the prosperity of this region. However, in recent times this is increasingly becoming unsafe for American Hindus. Reports of a US-based organisation namely Coalition of Hindus of North America (CoHNA) sheds more light on rising hate crimes against Hindus. This organisation in its statement points out that

Hindus are a vibrant and diverse community that has contributed significantly to American progress, well-being, and democratic values, whether during the COVID-19 pandemic or in the day-to-day things that make the US a great nation. Yet, our community is often the target of bigotry and hate, as witnessed in the recent attack on a local temple in New York and the twice desecration of the Gandhi statue on temple premises.

Similar findings have been pointed out in a historic study done by researchers at Rutgers University on the rise of Hinduphobia and anti-Hindu hatred on social media and other messaging platforms. According to it, there has been a dramatic rise in hate speech and hateful memes directed towards the Hindu community across social media platforms often amplified by Islamists and Khalistani radical elements accusing Hindus of committing genocide of minorities in India. The study finds that Islamists and other extremists are increasingly using genocide memes, tropes and code words to spread Hinduphobia. For example, the term Pajeet has been prominently used to describe Hindus in a derogatory manner. Also, deliberate uses of Hindu religious symbols like the Swastika are done for ulterior motives like violence against Hindus and the defacement of Hindu temples. These findings about rising hate crimes against Indian Americans further gets verified by the 2020 FBI data,according to which hate crimes against Indian Americans are up by 500 per cent. And the irony is that this is despite the fact more than 100 Indian-origin people are occupying prominent positions in the government.

A Delhi-based think tank namely Centre for Democracy, Pluralism and Human Rights (CDPHR) working in the arena of human rights in its recently released report on human rights in the USA has also pointed towards the rampant discrimination and hate crimes against the peaceful Hindu diaspora community. In the words of Dr Prerna Malhotra, head of CDPHR, Freedom of Religion is one area in which the USA makes much noise, but it fails in practice as it has its own preferred religions.Religious minorities, particularly non-Abrahamic religions, like Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains routinely face discrimination. This report also points out that North American Universities have been sponsoring attacks on Hinduism. For example, recently, the University of California at Davis sponsored a Hindu phobic conference which targeted Hinduism and propagated the hateful messages of certain Christian and Islamic fundamentalists. Also, Hindus have been a particular target of the racially entrenched North American political establishment, media and academia.

In North America,Canadais worse as far as hate crimes against Hindus are concerned. Here, with active support from the political establishment to Khalistani radicals, hate crimes against Hindus have seen a rising trend in recent times, particularly during and in the aftermath of farm law protests in India. Hindu temples in particular are targets of these hate crimes. The situation has become so worse that the Indian government is routinely issuing an advisory for Indians living in Canada on many occasions. Chandra Arya, a Canadian lawmaker while speaking in the House of Commons clearly stressed that The increasingly vocal and well-organised anti-India and anti-Hindu groups in Canada has resulted in increasing anti-Hindu sentiments and Hindu-Canadians are legitimately concerned about rising Hinduphobia in Canada. This worrying trend gets reflected in the report of Statistics Canada, an official Canadian government agency which points out that there has been a 72 per cent surge in incidents of hate crime between 2019 and 2021 and Canadian Hindus are major victims of this.

Whether it is the sacrilege of Swaminarayan Mandir in Toronto or defacement of another Hindu temple in New York or the recent violence at Leicester in the UK, the role of Khalistani separatists in fomenting anti-Hindu sentiments is increasingly being noticed. These Khalistani radicals often operating hand in glove with Islamists have become a menace to the peaceful Hindu diaspora in the West. They routinely intimidate Hindus on prominent Hindu festivals or on Indian independence or republic day functions. For example, on the occasion of 15thAugust, A UK-based Khalistani group proudly confessed that they (Sikh radicals) vehemently opposed and pushed Hindus out of Slough city of UK. Similarly, in a disgusting incident at fast-food joint Taco Bell in Californias Fremont, a Sikh radical named Tejinder Singh verbally harassed Krishnan Jayaraman for being a practising Hindu and ridiculed his religious beliefs.

In the Western world,the United Kingdomis another centre of Islamic and Khalistani radicalisation. From being a recruiting ground for ISIS to Jihadi grooming gangs at home, it has become a major hotspot for hate crimes against the successful Hindu community. Its political establishment has allowed this disease of Islamic radicalisation to foster in the name of multiculturalism and in pursuit of appeasement politics. UK Home Office data shows hate crimes against Hindus have gone up from 58 in 2017-18 to 166 in 2020-21, a rise of almost 200 per cent in just four years. These crimes involve racial abuses, violent attacks on Hindus and vandalism of their properties and temples.

A recent incident of a Muslim mob vandalising a temple and several properties belonging to members of the Hindu community in Leicester city of United Kingdom summarises the constant fear under which Hindus are forced to live in the Western cities with significant Muslim and Khalistani demography. These recent targeted attacks against Hindus come after the defeat of Pakistan in the Asia Cup cricket match on August 28 between India and Pakistan. Though for Islamists mere existence of Hindus is a grave provocation but minor instances like loss at a cricket match provide them an opportunity to vent out their hatred against Hindus.

The spate of hate crimes against Hindus has significantly increased during and after the farm laws and CAA agitation in India. The rising trend of Hinduphobia in the UK is also reflected in the recently released report of the Centre for Holistic and Integrated Studies (CHIS) which observes that An incisive study of the cases of Hinduphobia in the UK show that Muslims and other adversaries have attacked Hindus time and again over issues which are central to Hindu culture. For instance, on many occasions, Hindu festivities have been disrupted, their temples vandalised, their deities mocked, and religious symbols destroyed. This reflects the deep-seated hatred and fear that Islamists hold for Hindu civilisation. In the last one-year, religious hate crimes have increased by 9 per cent in the UK. As observed on the ground, Hinduphobia has risen severely.

The above description of a worrying trend of Hinduphobia clearly exposes the inhumane Hinduphobic propensity of Western liberal democracies. However, what is worse is that despite being the victim of these violent attacks, Hindus are painted as aggressors thanks to the total narrative control by Islamists, Khalistani and liberals including brown Hindu sepoys. Western media with support from their Indian counterparts have played the role of whitewashing the crimes of Islamists and Khalistani radicals.

For example, Pratap Bhanu Mehta in his article (Exporting division, IE, September 23) blamed the Modi government being in power as the reason for the recent Leicester riots and called on MEA to issue a statement instructing Hindus in the UK not to chant Jai Shri Ram in so-called Muslim Areas. Today anti-India protests in these countries are synonymous with anti-Hindu sentiments. Hindu diaspora, for most of the time, has shown reluctance to speak against this hatred but they can no longer afford this silence. Despite being at key political, administrative and business positions, being painted as an aggressor shows the narrative slipping out of the hands of successful Hindus and thats why it is necessary for the community to raise their voice on all platforms against the unholy alliance of Islamists-Khalisanis and liberals particular brown sepoys. At the same time, it is the civilizational duty of the Indian government to protect the interests of the Hindu diaspora and mere routine condemnation via MEA will not do much now.

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Hindu diaspora under attack: The rising trends of global Hinduphobia, attacks by Islamists and propaganda - OpIndia

Mountain Jews – Wikipedia

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Jewish community of eastern and northern Caucasia

Cuhuro

Mountain Jews or Caucasus Jews also known as Juhuro, Juvuro, Juhuri, Juwuri, Juhurim, Kavkazi Jews or Gorsky Jews (Hebrew: Yehudey Kavkaz or Yehudey he-Harim; Russian: , romanized:Gorskie Yevrei,[7] Azerbaijani: Da Yhudilri) are Jews of the eastern and northern Caucasus, mainly Azerbaijan, and various republics in the Russian Federation: Chechnya, Ingushetia, Dagestan, Karachay-Cherkessia, and Kabardino-Balkaria. The Mountain Jews are the descendants of Persian Jews from Iran.[8][9] Mountain Jews took shape as a community after Qajar Iran ceded the areas in which they lived to the Russian Empire as part of the Treaty of Gulistan of 1813.[10]

The forerunners of the Mountain Jewish community were in Ancient Persia from the 5th century BCE; their language, called Judeo-Tat, is an ancient Southwest Iranian language which integrates many elements of Ancient Hebrew.[11]

It is believed that they had reached Persia from Israel as early as the 8th century BCE. They continued to migrate east, settling in mountainous areas of the Caucasus. Mountain Jews survived numerous historical vicissitudes by settling in extremely remote and mountainous areas. They were known to be accomplished warriors and horseback riders.[12]

Mountain Jews are distinct from Georgian Jews of the Caucasus Mountains. The two groups are culturally different, speaking different languages and having many differences in customs and culture.[13]

Mountain Jews, or Jews of the Caucasus, have inhabited the Caucasus since the fifth century CE. Being the descendants of the Persian Jews of Iran, their migration from Persia proper to the Caucasus took place in the Sasanian era (224651).[8] It is believed that they had arrived in Persia, from Ancient Israel, as early as the 8th century BCE.[14] Other sources attest that Mountain Jews were present in the region of Azerbaijan at least since 457 BCE.[15][16] However, Mountain Jews only took shape as a community after Qajar Iran ceded the areas in which they lived to the Russian Empire per the Treaty of Gulistan of 1813.[10]

Mountain Jews have an oral tradition, passed down from generation to generation, that they are descended from the Ten Lost Tribes, which were exiled by the king of Assyria (Ashur), who ruled over northern Iraq from Mosul (across the Tigris River from the ancient city of Nineveh). The reference most likely is to Shalmaneser, the King of Assyria who is mentioned in II Kings 18:912.[citation needed] According to local Jewish tradition, some 19,000 Jews departed Jerusalem (used here as a generic term for the Land of Israel) and passed through Syria, Babylonia, and Persia and then, heading north, entered into Media.[citation needed]

Mountain Jews maintained a strong military tradition. For this reason, some historians[17] believe they may be descended from Jewish military colonists, settled by Parthian and Sassanid rulers in the Caucasus as frontier guards against nomadic incursions from the Pontic steppe.

A 2002 study by geneticist Dror Rosengarten found that the paternal haplotypes of Mountain Jews "were shared with other Jewish communities and were consistent with a Mediterranean origin."[17] In addition, Y-DNA testing of Mountain Jews has shown they have Y-DNA haplotypes related to those of other Jewish communities.[17] The Semitic origin of Mountain Jews is also evident in their culture and language.[17]

By the early 17th century, Mountain Jews formed many small settlements throughout mountain valleys of Dagestan.[18] One valley, located 10 km south of Derbent, close to the shore of the Caspian Sea, was predominantly populated by Mountain Jews. Their Muslim neighbors called this area "Jewish Valley." The Jewish Valley grew to be a semi-independent Jewish state, with its spiritual and political center located in its largest settlement of Aba-Sava (1630-1800).[18] The valley prospered until the end of the 18th century, when its settlements were brutally destroyed in the war between Sheikh-Ali-Khan, who swore loyalty to the Russian Empire, and Surkhai-Khan, the ruler of Kumukh.[citation needed] Many Mountain Jews were slaughtered, with survivors escaping to Derbent where they received the protection of Fatali Khan, the ruler of Quba Khanate.[citation needed]

In Chechnya, Mountain Jews partially assimilated into Chechen society by forming a Jewish teip, the Zhugtii.[19] In Chechen society, ethnic minorities residing in areas demographically dominated by Chechens have the option of forming a teip in order to properly participate in the developments of Chechen society such as making alliances and gaining representation in the Mekhk Khell, a supreme ethnonational council that is occasionally compared to a parliament.[20] Teips of minority-origin have also been made by ethnic Poles, Germans, Georgians, Armenians, Kumyks, Russians, Kalmyks, Circassians, Andis, Avars, Dargins, Laks, Persians, Arabs, Ukrainians and Nogais,[19][21] with the German teip having been formed as recently as the 1940s when Germans in Siberian exile living among Chechens assimilated.[20]

Mountain Jews have also settled in the territory of modern Azerbaijan. The main Mountain Jewish settlement in Azerbaijan was and remains Qrmz Qsb, also called Jerusalem of the Caucasus.[22][23] In Russian, Qrmz Qsb was once called (translit. Yevreyskaya Sloboda), "Jewish Village"; but during Soviet times it was renamed (translit. Krasnaya Sloboda), "Red Village."[24]

In the 18th19th centuries, the Jews resettled from the highland to the coastal lowlands but carried the name "Mountain Jews" with them. In the villages (aouls), the Mountain Jews had settled in separate sections. In the lowland towns they also lived in concentrated neighborhoods, but their dwellings did not differ from those of their neighbors. Mountain Jews retained the dress of the highlanders. They have continued to follow Jewish dietary laws and affirm their faith in family life.[citation needed] In 1902, The New York Times reported that clans of Jewish origin, who maintain many of the customs and the principal forms of religious worship of their ancestors, were discovered in the remote regions of Eastern Caucasus.[25]

By 1926, more than 85% of Mountain Jews in Dagestan were already classed as urban. Mountain Jews were mainly concentrated in the cities of Makhachkala, Buynaksk, Derbent, Nalchik and Grozny in North Caucasus; and Quba and Baku in Azerbaijan.[26]

In the Second World War, some Mountain Jews settlements in North Caucasus, including parts of their area in Kabardino-Balkaria were occupied by the German Wehrmacht at the end of 1942. During this period, they killed several hundreds of Mountain Jews until the Germans retreated early 1943. On September 20, 1942, Germans killed 420 Mountain Jews near the village of Bogdanovka. Some 10001500 Mountain Jews were murdered during the Holocaust. Many Mountain Jews survived, however, because German troops did not reach all their areas; in addition, attempts succeeded to convince local German authorities that this group were "religious" but not "racial" Jews.[27][28]

The Soviet Army's advances in the area brought the Nalchik community under its protection.[29] The Mountain Jewish community of Nalchik was the largest Mountain Jewish community occupied by Nazis,[29] and the vast majority of the population has survived. With the help of their Kabardian neighbors, Mountain Jews of Nalchik convinced the local German authorities that they were Tats, the native people similar to other Caucasus Mountain peoples, not related to the ethnic Jews, who merely adopted Judaism.[29] The annihilation of the Mountain Jews was suspended, contingent on racial investigation.[27] Although the Nazis watched the village carefully, Rabbi Nachamil ben Hizkiyahu hid Sefer Torahs by burying them in a fake burial ceremony.[30] The city was liberated a few months later.[citation needed]

In 1944, the NKVD deported the entire Chechen populace that surrounded the Mountain Jews in Chechnya, and moved other ethnic groups into their homes; Mountain Jews mostly refused to take the homes of deported Chechens[31] while there are some reports of deported Chechens entrusting their homes to Jews in order to keep them safe.[32]

Given the marked changes in the 1990s following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and rise of nationalism in the region, many Mountain Jews permanently left their hometowns in the Caucasus and relocated to Moscow or abroad.[33] During the First Chechen War, many Jews left due to the Russian invasion and indiscriminate bombardment of civilian population by the Russian military.[34] Despite historically close relations between Jews and Chechens, many also suffered high rate of kidnappings and violence at the hands of armed ethnic Chechen gangs who ransomed their freedom to "Israel and the international Jewish community".[32] Many Mountain Jews emigrated to Israel or the United States.[35][36] Qrmz Qsb in Azerbaijan remains the biggest settlement of Mountain Jews in the world, with the current population over 3,000.[citation needed]

While elsewhere in the Russian Empire, Jews were prohibited from owning land (excluding the Jews of Siberia and Central Asia), at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, Mountain Jews owned land and were farmers and gardeners, growing mainly grain. Their oldest occupation was rice-growing, but they also raised silkworms and cultivated tobacco and vineyards. Mountain Jews and their Christian Armenian neighbors were the main producers of wine, as Muslims were prohibited by their religion from producing or consuming alcohol. Judaism limited some types of meat consumption. Unlike their neighbors, the Jews raised few domestic animals, although tanning was their third most important economic activity after farming and gardening. At the end of the 19th century, 6% of Jews were engaged in this trade. Handicrafts and commerce were mostly practiced by Jews in towns.

The Soviet authorities bound the Mountain Jews to collective farms, but allowed them to continue their traditional cultivation of grapes, tobacco, and vegetables; and making wine. In practical terms, the Jews are no longer isolated from other ethnic groups.

With increasing urbanization and sovietization in progress, by the 1930s, a layer of intelligentsia began to form. By the late 1960s, academic professionals, such as pharmacists, medical doctors, and engineers, were common in the community. Mountain Jews worked in more professional positions than did Georgian Jews, though less than the Soviet Ashkenazi community, who were based in larger cities of Russia. A sizable number of Mountain Jews worked in the entertainment industry in Dagestan.[37] The republic's dancing ensemble "Lezginka" was led by Tankho Israilov, a Mountain Jew, from 19581979.[38][39]

Mountain Jews are not Sephardim (from the Iberian Peninsula) nor Ashkenazim (from Central Europe) but rather of Persian Jewish origin, and they follow some Mizrachi customs. Mountain Jews tenaciously held to their religion throughout the centuries, developing their own unique traditions and religious practices.[40] Mountain Jewish traditions are infused with teachings of Kabbalah and Jewish mysticism.[41]

Mountain Jews have traditionally maintained a two-tiered rabbinate, distinguishing between a rabbi and a "dayan." A "rabbi" was a title given to religious leaders performing the functions of liturgical preachers (maggids) and cantors (hazzans) in synagogues ("nimaz"), teachers in Jewish schools (cheders), and shochets. A Dayan was a chief rabbi of a town, presiding over beit dins and representing the highest religious authority for the town and nearby smaller settlements.[42] Dayans were elected democratically by community leaders.

The religious survival of the community was not without difficulties. In the prosperous days of the Jewish Valley (roughly 1600-1800), the spiritual center of Mountain Jews centered on the settlement of Aba-Sava.[18] Many works of religious significance were written in Aba-Sava. Here, Elisha ben Schmuel Ha-Katan wrote several of his piyyuts.[18] Theologist Gershon Lala ben Moshke Nakdi, who lived in Aba-Sava in 18th century, wrote a commentary to Mishneh Torah of Maimonides. Rabbi Mattathia ben Shmuel ha-Kohen wrote his kabbalistic essay Kol Hamevaser in Aba-Sava.[18] With the brutal destruction of Aba-Sava (roughly 1800), however, the religious center of Mountain Jews moved to Derbent.

Prominent rabbis of Mountain Jews in the nineteenth century included: Rabbi Gershom son of Rabbi Reuven of Qrmz Qsb Azerbaijan, Shalom ben Melek of Temir-Khan-Shura (modern Buynaksk), Chief Rabbi of Dagestan Jacob ben Isaac, and Rabbi Hizkiyahu ben Avraam of Nalchik, whose son Rabbi Nahamiil ben Hizkiyahu later played a crucial role in saving Nalchik's Jewish community from the Nazis.[23][43][44] In the early decades of the Soviet Union, the government took steps to suppress religion. Thus, in the 1930s, the Soviet Union closed synagogues belonging to Mountain Jews. The same procedures were implemented on other ethnicities and religions. Soviet authorities propagated the myth that Mountain Jews were not part of the world Jewish people at all, but rather members of the Tat community that settled in the region.[41] Soviet anti-Zionism rhetoric was intensified during Khrushchev's rule. Some of the synagogues were later reopened in the 1940s. The closing of the synagogues in the 1930s was part of communist ideology, which resisted religion of any kind.[22]

At the beginning of the 1950s, there were synagogues in all major Mountain Jewish communities. By 1966, reportedly six synagogues remained;[26] some were confiscated by the Soviet authorities.[45] While Mountain Jews observed the rituals of circumcision, marriage and burial, as well as Jewish holidays,[46] other precepts of Jewish faith were observed less carefully.[26] Yet, the community's ethnic identity remained unshaken despite the Soviet efforts.[47] Cases of intermarriage with Muslims in Azerbaijan or Dagestan were rare as both groups practice endogamy.[48][49] After the fall of the Soviet Union, Mountain Jews experienced a significant religious revival, with increasing religious observance by members of the younger generation.[50] Mountain Jews also developed and retained customs different from other Jews, such as govgil, an end-of-Passover picnic celebration involving the whole community.

Mountain Jews speak Judeo-Tat, also called Juhuri, a form of Persian; it belongs to the southwestern group of the Iranian division of the Indo-European languages. Judeo-Tat has Semitic (Hebrew/Aramaic/Arabic) elements on all linguistic levels.[51] Among other Semitic elements, Judeo-Tat has the Hebrew sound "ayin" (), whereas no neighboring languages have it. Until the early Soviet period, the language was written with semi-cursive Hebrew alphabet. Later, Judeo-Tat books, newspapers, textbooks, and other materials were printed with a Latin alphabet and finally in Cyrillic, which is still most common today.[51] The first Judeo-Tat-language newspaper, Zakhmetkesh (Working People), was published in 1928 and operated until the second half of the twentieth century.[52]

Originally, only boys were educated through synagogue schools. Starting from the 1860s, many well-off families switched to home-schooling, hiring private tutors, who taught their sons not only Hebrew, but also Russian and Yiddish.[53] In the early 20th century, with advance of sovietization, Judeo-Tat became the language of instruction at newly founded elementary schools attended by both Mountain Jewish boys and girls. This policy continued until the beginning of World War II, when schools switched to Russian as the central government emphasized acquisition of Russian as the official language of the Soviet Union.

Mountain Jewish community has had notable figures in public health, education, culture, and art.[54]

In the 21st century, the Russian government started encouraging the revival of cultural life of minorities. In Dagestan and Kabardino-Balkaria, Judeo-Tat and Hebrew courses have been introduced in traditionally Mountain Jewish schools. In Dagestan, there is support for the revival of the Judeo-Tat-language theater and the publication of newspapers in that language.[54]

"And we, the TatsWe, Samson warriors,Bar Kochba's heirs...we went into battlesand bitterly, heroicallystruggled for our freedom

-"The Song of the Mountain Jews"[55]

Mountain Jews have a military tradition and have been historically viewed as fierce warriors. Some historians suggest that the group traces its beginnings to Persian-Jewish soldiers who were stationed in the Caucasus by the Sasanian kings in the fifth or sixth century to protect the area from the onslaughts of the Huns and other nomadic invaders from the east.[56] Men were typically heavily armed and some slept without removing their weapons.[43]

Over time the Mountain Jews adopted the dress of their Muslim neighbors. Men typically wore chokhas and covered their head with papakhas, many variations of which could symbolize the men's social status. Wealthier men's dress was adorned with many pieces of jewelry, including silver and gold-decorated weaponry, pins, chains, belts, or kisets (small purse used to hold tobacco or coins).[57] Women's dress was typically of simpler design in dark tones, made from silk, brocade, velvet, satin and later wool. They decorated the fabric with beads, gold pins or buttons, and silver gold-plated belts. Outside the house, both single and married women covered their hair with headscarves.[57]

Mountain Jewish cuisine absorbed typical dishes from various peoples of the Caucasus, Azerbaijani and Persian cuisine, adjusting some recipes to conform to the laws of kashrut, with a great emphasis on using rice (osh) to accompany many of their dishes. Typical Mountain Jewish dishes include:

The music of Mountain Jews is mostly based in the standard liturgy, for prayer and the celebration of holidays. Celebratory music played during weddings and similar events is typically upbeat with various instruments to add layers to the sound.[59]

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Mountain Jews - Wikipedia


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