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Syrian Jews – Wikipedia

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Jewish ethnic group

Syrian Jews (Hebrew: Yehudey Surya, Arabic: al-Yahd as-Sriyyn, colloquially called SYs in the United States) are Jews who lived in the region of the modern state of Syria, and their descendants born outside Syria. Syrian Jews derive their origin from two groups: from the Jews who inhabited the region of today's Syria from ancient times (known as Musta'arabi Jews, and sometimes classified as Mizrahi Jews, a generic term for the Jews with an extended history in Western Asia or North Africa); and from the Sephardi Jews (referring to Jews with an extended history in the Iberian Peninsula, i.e. Spain and Portugal) who fled to Syria after the Alhambra Decree forced the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492.

There were large communities in Aleppo ("Halabi Jews", Aleppo is Halab in Arabic) and Damascus ("Shami Jews") for centuries, and a smaller community in Qamishli on the Turkish border near Nusaybin. In the first half of the 20th century a large percentage of Syrian Jews immigrated to the U.S., Latin America and Israel. Most of the remaining Jews left in the 28 years following 1973, due in part to the efforts of Judy Feld Carr, who claims to have helped some 3,228 Jews emigrate; emigration was officially allowed in 1992.[3] The largest number of Jews of Syrian descent live in Israel. Outside Israel, the largest Syrian Jewish community is in Brooklyn, New York and is estimated at 75,000 strong.[4] There are smaller communities elsewhere in the United States and in Latin America.

In 2011, there had been about 250 Jews still living within Syria, mostly in Damascus.[5][6] As of December 2014, fewer than 50 Jews remained in the area due to increasing violence and war.[7] In October 2015, with the threat of ISIS nearby, nearly all of the remaining Jews in Aleppo were rescued in a covert operation and moved to Ashkelon, Israel. It was estimated in November 2015 that only 18 Jews remain in Syria.[8] In September 2016, the last Jews of Aleppo were rescued, ending the Jewish presence in Aleppo.[8] In August 2019, BBC Arabic visited some of the last remaining Jews living in Damascus.[9]

There have been Jews in Syria since ancient times: according to the community's tradition, since the time of King David, and certainly since early Roman times. Jews from this ancient community were known as Musta'arabim ("Arabizers") to themselves, or Conversos to the Sephardim.[10]

Many Sephardim arrived following the expulsion from Spain in 1492, and quickly took a leading position in the community. For example, five successive Chief Rabbis of Aleppo were drawn from the Laniado family.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, some Jews from Italy and elsewhere, known as Seores Francos, notable Franco families are the Ancona, Silvera, and Pichotto families they settled in Syria for trading reasons, while retaining their European nationalities.

Kurdish Jews, hailing from the region of Kurdistan, represent another sub-group of Syrian Jews. Their presence in Syria predates the arrival of Sephardic Jews following the reconquista.[11] The ancient communities of Urfa and ermik also formed part of the broader Syrian community and the Aleppo community included some migrants from these cities.

Today, some distinctions between these sub-groups are preserved, in the sense that particular families have traditions about their origins. However, there is considerable intermarriage among the groups and all regard themselves as "Sephardim" in a broader sense. It is said that one can tell Aleppo families of Spanish descent by the fact that they light an extra Hanukkah candle. This custom was apparently established in gratitude for their acceptance by the more native Syrian based community.

In the 19th century, following the completion of the Suez Canal in Egypt in 1869, trade shifted to that route from the overland route through Syria, and the commercial importance of Aleppo and Damascus underwent a marked decline. Many families left Syria for Egypt (and a few for Lebanon) in the following decades, and with increasing frequency until the First World War, many Jews left the Middle East for western countries, mainly Great Britain, the United States, Mexico and Argentina. Further emigration, particularly following the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, followed.

Beginning on the Passover holiday of 1992, the 4,000 remaining members of the Damascus Jewish community (Arabic Yehud ash-Sham), as well as the Aleppo community and the Jews of Qamishli, were permitted under the government of Hafez al-Assad to leave Syria provided they did not immigrate to Israel. Within a few months, thousands of Syrian Jews made their way to Brooklyn, with a few families choosing to go to France and Turkey. The majority settled in Brooklyn with the help of their kin in the Syrian Jewish community.

There has been a Jewish Syrian presence in Jerusalem since before 1850, with many rabbinical families having members both there and in Damascus and Aleppo. These had some contact with their Ashkenazi opposite numbers of the Old Yishuv, leading to a tradition of strict orthodoxy:[12] for example in the 1860s there was a successful campaign to prevent the establishment of a Reform synagogue in Aleppo.[13] Some Syrian traditions, such as the singing of Baqashot, were accepted by the mainstream Jerusalem Sephardi community.[14]

A further group immigrated to Palestine around 1900, and formed the Ades Synagogue in Nachlaot. This still exists, and is the main Aleppo rite synagogue in Israel, though its membership now includes Asiatic Jews of all groups, especially Turkish Jews. There is also a large Syrian community in Holon and Bat Yam.

Many Jews fled from Syria to Palestine during the anti-Jewish riots of 1947.[15] After that, the Syrian government clamped down and allowed no emigration, though some Jews left illicitly. In the last two decades, some emigration has been allowed, mostly to America, though some have since left America for Israel, under the leadership of Rabbi Abraham Hamra.[16][17]

The older generation from prior to the establishment of the Israeli state retains little or no Syrian ethnic identity of its own and is well integrated into mainstream Israeli society. The most recent wave is integrating at different levels, with some concentrating on integration in Israel and others retaining closer ties with their kin in New York and Mexico.[citation needed]

There is a Merkaz 'Olami le-Moreshet Yahadut Aram Tsoba (World Center for the Heritage of Aleppo Jewry) in Tel Aviv, which publishes books of Syrian Jewish interest.[18][19]

The main settlement of Syrian Jews was in Manchester, where they joined the local Spanish and Portuguese synagogues, which had a mixed community that included North African, Turkish, Egyptian and Iraqi as well as Syrian Jews. This community founded two synagogues; one (Shaare Tephillah) in north central Manchester, which has since moved to Salford, and the other (Shaare Hayim) on Queenston Road in West Didsbury, in the southern suburbs. A breakaway synagogue (Shaare Sedek) was later formed on Old Lansdowne Road with more of a Syrian flavor; it and the Queenston Road congregation later merged, while retaining both buildings. They remained known as the "Lansdowne Road synagogue" and the "Queen's Road synagogue", after the names those streets bore in the 1930s. While there are still Sephardim in the Manchester area, a number have left for communities in the Americas. The Sha'are Sedek synagogue has since been sold, and a new synagogue with the same name has been opened in Hale, to be closer to the current centers of the Sephardic and general Jewish populations.

Syrian Jews first immigrated to New York in 1892. The first Syrian Jew to arrive was Jacob Abraham Dwek, along with Ezra Abraham Sitt. They initially lived on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Later settlements were in Bensonhurst, Midwood, Flatbush, and along Ocean Parkway in Gravesend, Brooklyn. These Brooklyn residents spend the summers in Deal, New Jersey. Many of the older residents have a third home in the Aventura, Florida to escape the cold weather. There had been a further wave of immigration from Syria in 1992, when the Syrian government under Hafez al-Assad began allowing emigration of Jews.[20] Jerry Seinfeld, comedian, is of Syrian Jewish descent from his mother's side.[21]

Argentina has the 3rd largest Syrian Jewish community after Israel and United States. The largest Jewish community is in the capital Buenos Aires. The Sephardim, and especially the Syrians, are a sizeable community. Syrian Jews are most visible in the Once district, where there are many community schools and temples. For some decades there has been a good-natured rivalry between the Shami (Damascene) community of "Shaare Tefila (Pasito)" synagogue and the Halebi (Aleppan) community of "Sucath David" across the street. The most influential rabbinic authority was Rabbi Isaac Chehebar from the "Yessod Hadat" congregation on Lavalle street; he was consulted from all across the globe, and had an influential role in the recovery of parts of the Aleppo Codex. There are many kosher butchers and restaurants catering to the community. There were important communities in Villa Crespo and Flores neighborhoods as well. Many Syrian Jews own clothing stores along Avellaneda avenue in Flores, and there is a community school on Felipe Vallese (formerly Canalejas) street. Some important clothing chains such as Chemea and Tawil, with tens of shops each, were started by Syrian Jews. Carolina Duer is an Argentine-Syrian Jewish world champion boxer.

The majority of the Syrian community of Brazil come from Beirut, Lebanon, where most have settled between the late 19th century and the fall of the Ottoman Empire. A lot of the Halabi merchant traders maintained links and resided between Aleppo and Beirut a far back as the 18th century. A later arrival of Syrian Jews to Lebanon took place due to their expulsion from Syria following the creation of the State of Israel in 1948 and the subsequent violent anti-Jewish pogroms perpetrated by their Muslim neighbours. They left Beirut in wake of the first Lebanese Civil War. Most Syrian Jews established themselves in the industrial city of So Paulo, being attracted there by the many commercial opportunities it offered. The community became very prosperous, and several of its members are among the wealthiest and the politically and economically most influential families in So Paulo. The community first attended Egyptian synagogues, but later founded their own synagogues, most notably the Beit Yaakov synagogues in the neighbourhoods of Jardins and Higienopolis. The community has its own school and youth movement, and claims a strong Jewish identity and low assimilation rate. The majority of the community affiliates itself institutionally with Orthodox Judaism, though few could be described as personally fully Orthodox. There are approximately 7,000 Syrian Jews in Brazil.

With its liberal immigration policy, Chile attracted some Syrian Jews, particularly from Damascus, beginning in the late 1800s.[22] Many Syrian Jews also escaped from Syria and Palestine, provinces of the Ottoman Empire during the World War I. At present there are 2,300 Syrian Jews in Chile.

There have been Syrian Jews from Damascus and Aleppo in Mexico City since the early years of the 20th century.[23] Originally they worshipped in a private house transformed into a synagogue Sinagoga Ketana (Bet Haknesset HaKatan) located in Calles de Jess Mara. The first organized Jewish community in Mexico was Alianza Monte Sinai founded on June 14, 1912, mainly by natives of Damascus (together with a few Sephardi Jews) and led by Isaac Capon. They later founded the first synagogue, Monte Sina, on Justo Sierra street in downtown Mexico City, originally led by Rabbi Laniado, which still holds a daily service of mincha (afternoon prayer). The Damascene community also bought the first Jewish burial place in Tacuba street on June 12, 1914, which is in use to this day and has been expanded by the recent purchase of the adjacent land.

The Rodfe Sedek synagogue, for Aleppan Jews, was established in 1931, largely through the efforts of Rabbi Mordejay Attie. This synagogue, known also as Knis de Cordoba, is situated at 238 Cordoba Street in the Colonia Roma quarter of Mexico City. At the time this neighborhood was home to the largest concentration of Jews from Aleppo in Mexico City. The first mikveh (ritual bath) in Mexico was established within the Rodfe Sedek synagogue. In 1982 a funeral house was built in the courtyard of the synagogue.

Also in the 1930s the members of Monte Sina established a large synagogue for Damascene Jews situated at 110 Quertaro Street in the Colonia Roma area. They have welcomed Jews of all backgrounds into their midst, which has allowed tremendous growth over the years. In 1938 Jewish immigrants from Aleppo set up Sociedad de Beneficencia Sedak u Marp, which evolved into a separate Jewish community: since 1984 it has been known as Comunidad Maguen David. Monte Sinai and Maguen David are now the largest Jewish communities in Mexico, having more than 30 synagogues, a community center and a school each, with Maguen David having at least 5 schools and plans for more (Colegio Hebreo Maguen David, Yeshiva Keter Torah, Beit Yaakov, Emek HaTorah, Colegio Atid and Colegio Or HaJaim).

Panama also received a large number of Syrian Jewish immigrants, mostly from Halab (Aleppo), where they constitute the largest group in Panama's 15,000 strong Jewish Sephardic community. The first wave of immigrants arrived in the late 1940s after riots in Aleppo due to the ArabIsraeli conflict. The community consists of many synagogues all united under its flagship, Shevet Ahim Synagogue, where their late Chief Rabbi Zion Levy officiated. The community maintains close contact with their counterparts in North America as well as Israel. In his later years, Rabbi Levy oversaw the construction of new synagogues in Panama City and worked for smooth relations with the country's Arab and Muslim communities. He frequently phoned the country's imam for a talk. By the time of his death, the Shevet Ahim community numbered 10,000 Jews, 6,000 of whom are Torah-observant. The community now includes several synagogues, mikvahs, three Jewish schools, a yeshiva, a kollel, and a girls' seminary, along with several kosher restaurants and supermarkets.

There is a large community of Lebanese Jamaicans, estimated at about 20,000, a number of whom remain practicing Jews to this day. Studies have estimated that there are over 400,000 descendants of Jamaican Jews in Jamaica.

As Syrian Jews migrated to the New World and established themselves, a divide frequently persisted between those with roots in Aleppo (the Halabi Jews, alternately spelled Halebi or Chalabi) and Damascus (the Shami Jews), which had been the two main centers of Jewish life in Syria.[24][25] This split persists to the present day, with each community maintaining some separate cultural institutions and organizations, and to a lesser-extent, a preference for in-group marriage.[24][25]

There exists a fragment of the old Aleppo prayer book for the High Holy Days, published in Venice in 1527, and a second edition, starting with the High Holy Days but covering the whole year, in 1560. This represents the liturgy of the Musta'arabim (native Arabic-speaking Jews) as distinct from that of the Sephardim proper (immigrants from Spain and Portugal): it recognizably belongs to the "Sephardic" family of rites in the widest sense, but is different from any liturgy used today. For more detail, see Old Aleppo ritual.

Following the immigration of Jews from Spain following the expulsion, a compromise liturgy evolved containing elements from the customs of both communities, but with the Sephardic element taking an ever-larger share.[26] In Syria, as in North African countries, there was no attempt to print a Siddur containing the actual usages of the community, as this would not generally be commercially viable. Major publishing centres, principally Livorno, and later Vienna, would produce standard "Sephardic" prayer books suitable for use in all communities, and particular communities such as the Syrians would order these in bulk, preserving any special usages by oral tradition. (For example, acham Abraham amwi of Aleppo commissioned a series of prayer-books from Livorno, which were printed in 1878, but even these were "pan-Sephardic" in character, though they contained some notes about the specific "minhag Aram Tsoba".) As details of the oral tradition faded from memory, the liturgy in use came ever nearer to the "Livorno" standard. In the early years of the 20th century, this "Sephardic" rite was almost universal in Syria. The only exception (in Aleppo) was a "Musta'arabi" minyan at the Central Synagogue of Aleppo, but the liturgy of this group only differed from the "Sephardic" by a few textual variants and the order of some of the hymns.[27]

The liturgy of Damascus differed from that of Aleppo in some details, mostly because of its greater proximity to the Holy Land. Some of the laws specific to Eretz Yisrael are regarded as extending to Damascus,[28] and the city had ties both to the Safed Kabbalists and to the Jerusalem Sephardic community.

The liturgy now used in Syrian communities round the world is textually speaking Oriental-Sephardic. That is to say, it is based on the Spanish rite as varied by the customs of Isaac Luria, and resembles those in use in Greek, Turkish and North African Jewish communities. In earlier decades some communities and individuals used "Edot ha-Mizra" prayer-books which contained a slightly different text, based on the Baghdadi rite, as these were more commonly available, leaving any specifically Syrian usages to be perpetuated by oral tradition. The nearest approach to a current official prayer book is entitled Kol Ya'akob, but many other editions exist and there is still disagreement on some textual variants.

The musical customs of Syrian communities are very distinctive, as many of the prayers are chanted to the melodies of the pizmonim, according to a complicated annual rota designed to ensure that the maqam (musical mode) used suits the mood of the festival or of the Torah reading for the week.[29] See Syrian Cantors and the Weekly Maqam.

Syrian Jews have a large repertoire of hymns, sung on social and ceremonial occasions such as weddings and bar mitzvahs. Pizmonim are also used in the prayers of Shabbat and holidays. Some of these are ancient and others were composed more recently as adaptations of popular Arabic songs; sometimes they are written or commissioned for particular occasions, and contain coded allusions to the name of the person honoured. There is a standard Pizmonim book called "Shir uShbaha Hallel veZimrah", edited by Cantor Gabriel A. Shrem under the supervision of the Sephardic Heritage Foundation, in which the hymns are classified according to the musical mode (maqam) to which the melody belongs. As time passes, more and more pizmonim are getting lost, and therefore efforts are being made by the Sephardic Pizmonim Project, under the leadership of Dr. David M. Betesh, to preserve as many pizmonim as possible. A website to facilitate its preservation was set up at Pizmonim.com.

It was a custom in Syrian Jewish communities (and some others), to sing Baqashot (petitionary hymns), before the morning service on Shabbat. In the winter months, the full corpus of 66 hymns is sung, finishing with Adon Olam and Kaddish. This service generally lasts about four hours, from 3:00am to 7:00am.

This tradition still obtains full force in the Ades Synagogue in Jerusalem. In other communities such as New York, it is less widespread; though the hymns are sung on other occasions.

The Syrian pronunciation of Hebrew is similar to that of other Mizrahi communities and is influenced both by Sephardi Hebrew and by the Syrian dialect of Levantine Arabic. The Syrian pronunciation of Hebrew is less archaic than the Iraqi Hebrew of Iraqi Jews and closer to standard Sephardic Hebrew. That affects especially the interdentals. Nevertheless, Syrian and Iraqi Hebrew are very closely related because of their location and geographic proximity, as is the case with most eastern Jewish communities in the Arabic world other than Yemenite Jews. Particular features are as follows:

The retention of distinct emphatic sounds such as [] and [t] differentiates Syrian pronunciation from many other Sephardic/Mizrahi pronunciations, which have failed to maintain these phonemic or phonological distinctions, such as between [t] and [t].

Vowels are pronounced as in most other Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions. For example, there is little or no distinction between pata and qamats gadol ([a]) or between segol, tsere and vocal sheva ([e]).[40] iriq is sometimes reduced to [] or [] in an unstressed closed syllable or near an emphatic or guttural consonant.[41]

A semivocalic sound is heard before pata ganuv (pata coming between a long vowel and a final guttural): thus rua (spirit) is pronounced [ruwa], and sia (speech) is pronounced [sija].

Jews in Syria had distinctive dialects of Judaeo-Arabic.[43] They are not known to have any current speakers.

Syrian Jews had a distinctive traditional shar (translation of the Bible into Syrian Judaeo-Arabic), which was used in teaching children, though not for any liturgical purpose. One version of this was printed in about 1900: another (from the so-called Avishur Manuscript) was printed by the Merkaz Olami le-Moreshet Yahadut Aram Tsoba in 2006, with pages of translation facing pages from the "Jerusalem Crown". This print contains the Torah only, but volumes for the rest of the Bible are planned.

Many Syrian Jews have the custom of reciting each paragraph of the Passover Haggadah first in Hebrew and then in Judaeo-Arabic.[44]

The Aleppo Codex, now known in Hebrew as Keter Aram Tsoba, is the oldest and most famous manuscript of the Bible. Written in Tiberias in the year 920, and annotated by Aaron ben Asher, it has become the most authoritative Biblical text in Jewish culture. The most famous halachic authority to rely on it was Maimonides, in his exposition of the laws governing the writing of Torah scrolls in his codification of Jewish law (Mishneh Torah). After its completion, the Codex was brought to Jerusalem. Toward the end of the 11th century, it was stolen and taken to Egypt, where it was redeemed by the Jewish community of Cairo. At the end of the 14th century the Codex was taken to Aleppo, Syria (called by the Jews Aram Zobah, the biblical name of part of Syria)this is the origin of the manuscript's modern name.

For the next five centuries, it was kept closely guarded in the basement of the Central Synagogue of Aleppo, and was considered the community's greatest treasure. Scholars from round the world would consult it to check the accuracy of their Torah scrolls. In the modern era the community would occasionally allow academics, such as Umberto Cassuto, access to the Codex, but would not permit it to be reproduced photographically or otherwise.

The Codex remained in the keeping of the Aleppo Jewish community until the anti-Jewish riots of December 1947, during which the ancient synagogue where it was kept was broken into and burned. The Codex itself disappeared. In 1958, the Keter was smuggled into Israel by Murad Faham and wife Sarina, and presented to the President of the State, Yitzhak Ben-Zvi. Following its arrival, it was found that parts of the Codex, including most of the Torah, had been lost. The Codex was entrusted to the keeping of the Ben-Zvi Institute and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, though the Porat Yosef Yeshivah has argued that, as the spiritual heir of the Aleppo community, it was the legitimate guardian. Some time after the arrival of the Codex, Mordechai Breuer began the monumental work of reconstructing the lost sections, on the basis of other well-known ancient manuscripts. Since then a few other leaves have been found.

Modern editions of the Bible, such as the Hebrew University's "Jerusalem Crown" and Bar-Ilan University's "Mikraot Gedolot ha-Keter", have been based on the Codex. The missing sections have been reconstructed on the basis of cross-references in the Masoretic Text of surviving sections, of the notes of scholars who have consulted the Codex and of other manuscripts.

The codex is now kept in the Israel Museum, in the building known as "The Shrine of The Book." It lies there along with the Dead Sea Scrolls and many other ancient Jewish relics.

At the time of the Mahzor Aram Soba of 1527 and 1560, conversions were clearly accepted, as there are blessings in the Mahzor on the rituals of conversions. However, in the early 20th century the Syrian Jewish communities of New York and Buenos Aires adopted rulings designed to discourage intermarriage. The communities would not normally carry out conversions to Judaism, particularly where the conversion is suspected of being for the sake of marriage, or accept such converts from other communities, or the children of mixed marriages or marriages involving such converts.[45]

Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel, then Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel, was asked to rule on the validity of this ban. He acknowledged the right of the community to refuse to carry out conversions and to regard as invalid conversions carried out by other communities in which marriage is a factor. At the same time, he cautioned that persons converted out of genuine conviction and recognized by established rabbinic authorities should not be regarded as non-Jewish, even if they were not allowed to join the Syrian community.

The ban is popularly known within the Syrian community as the "edict" or "proclamation" (in Hebrew, takkanah). Every 20 years or so, the edict is reaffirmed by all leaders and rabbis of the community, often with extra clauses. A full list is as follows:

There has been some argument as to whether the ruling amounts to a blanket ban on all converts or whether sincere converts from other communities, not motivated by marriage, may be accepted. The relevant sentence in the English language summary is "no male or female member of our community has the right to intermarry with non-Jews; this law covers conversions which we consider to be fictitious and valueless". In the 1946 "Clarification" a comma appears after the word "conversions", which makes it appear that all conversions are "fictitious and valueless", though this understanding is contested, and there is no equivalent change in the Hebrew text.

However, there are exceptions to the rule, such as conversions for the sake of adoptions always being permitted. Additionally, communal rabbis (such as the late Chief Rabbi Jacob S. Kassin) have occasionally recognized conversions carried out by certain rabbis, such as members of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel. Nonetheless, these rulings strongly discourage people from converting into the Syrian Jewish community as they require them to show commitment to Judaism above and beyond what is required by the normative rabbinical laws of conversion.

Supporters of the edict argue that it has been demographically successful, in that the rate of intermarriage with non-Jews in the Syrian community is believed to be less than 3%, as opposed to anything up to 50% in the general American Jewish population. Opponents argue that this fact is not a result of the edict, but of widespread attendance at Orthodox day schools, and that a similarly low rate of intermarriage is found among other Orthodox day-schooled Jews despite the absence of any equivalent of the edict.[46]

As in most Arab and Mediterranean countries, Syrian Jewish cuisine is fairly similar to other types of Syrian cuisine (which in turn reflect some Turkish influence), although some dishes have different names among Jewish members. This is partly because of the eastern Mediterranean origins of Judaism as such and partly because the similarity of the Islamic dietary laws to the Kashrut laws. Some dishes of Spanish and Italian origin have become part of the repertoire through the influence of the Sephardi and Franco waves of immigration: a few of these have become part of the wider Syrian cuisine.[47] Syrian (and Egyptian) recipes remain popular in Syrian Jewish communities around the world. There are traditions linking different dishes to the Jewish festivals.

Popular dishes are as follows:

Some reprints of the originals are available today, and many Siddurim today, especially the Magen Abraham series are heavily influenced by the Livorno prayer books.

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Syrian Jews - Wikipedia

Colorado Springs area cooking classes and events starting Oct. 12 – Colorado Springs Gazette

Posted By on October 12, 2022

CLASSES

Classes with author Elayne Prechtel Virtual classes on PPLDTVs YouTube channel; Melissa Mitchell, 719-531-6333 ext. 6082, mmitchell@ppld.org.

Virtual Fruit Cobblers, 1 p.m. Monday.

Cook Street School of Culinary Arts 43 W. Ninth Ave., Denver, $119 unless otherwise noted. Registration: cookstreet.com.

Culinary Date Night: Southwest, 6-9:30 p.m. Thursday.

Sushi II, 6-9:30 p.m. Saturday, $125.

A World of Taste: Caribbean, 6-9:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Pasta 101, 6-9:30 p.m. Oct. 20.

The French Kitchen 4771 N. Academy Blvd., go online for prices. Registration: 719-528-6295, tfkcc.com.

Spanish Tapas, 9 a.m.-noon or 5:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday.

Sauces 2, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Friday.

Crepes, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Friday-Saturday.

Dreaming of Japan, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Saturday.

Italian, 9 a.m.-noon Tuesday or Oct. 19 or 5:30-8:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Pork Expert, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Oct. 19.

Beyond Knife Skills, 9-11:30 a.m., 1-3:30 p.m. or 5:30-8 p.m. Oct. 20.

Gather Food Studio 2011 W. Colorado Ave. Registration: 719-308-2992, gatherfoodstudio.com.

Kouign Amann, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Oct. 22, $85.

The Seasoned Chef 999 Jasmine St., Suite 100, Denver. Registration: 303-377-3222, theseasonedchef.com.

Couples Class: Italian Road Trip My Bologna Has a First Name, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Friday, $195.

Lifestyle Cooking: A Fresh Look at Cardio Health Cuisine, 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Saturday, $89.

Couples Class: Steak and Scotch, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Saturday, $195.

Pearl of India: Classic Indian Cuisine, 2:30-6:30 p.m. Sunday, $89.

Were Bready to Have Bun with You, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Monday-Tuesday, $165.

Rollin Sushi, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesday, $95.

Basic Skills Every Cook Should Know, 6-9:30 p.m. Oct. 19 and 26, $180.

If You Cant Pumpkin, Squash it, 6:30-9:30 p.m. Oct. 20, $89.

Staenberg-Loup Jewish Community Center 350 S. Dahlia St., Denver, $77. Registration: jccdenver.org/communities/adults.

Baba, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Oct. 23 and Nov. 7.

EVENTS

OCT. 20

Paella on the Patio Noon, 2:30 and 5 p.m., TAPAteria, 2607 W. Colorado Ave., $39. Reservations: tapateria.com/events- paella-on-the-patio.

THROUGH OCT. 25

Food Truck Tuesdays 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum, 215 S. Tejon St.; cspm.org.

Email information at least two weeks in advance: listings@gazette.com.

Originally posted here:

Colorado Springs area cooking classes and events starting Oct. 12 - Colorado Springs Gazette

A treasure hunt that turns violent, Stanley Tucci’s foodie memoir and an espionage tale of Jewish refugees in Louth – Independent.ie

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Thriller: The Skeleton Key by Erin Kelly Hodder & Stoughton, 504 pages, hardcover 17.99; e-book 6.99

Nell Churcher is a successful glass sculpture artist who tries to live off the grid on Englands canals in a narrow boat. But now she has reluctantly returned to her childhood home next to Hampstead Heath in London because her celebrated father, Sir Frank Churcher, has planned a special celebration.

Fifty years ago, as a penniless hippy artist, Frank wrote The Golden Bones, a part-picture-book, part-treasure-hunt fairy tale about Elinore, a murdered woman whose bones were scattered all over England. Clues and puzzles throughout the pages of the lavishly illustrated book led readers to seven sites where gold and jewelled parts of a womans skeleton were buried.

One by one, the golden bones had been dug up, until only one, the dead womans pelvis, remained unclaimed. The book had been a sensation and earned Frank and his collaborator a fortune.

A community of treasure hunters called the Bonehunters was formed and over the years they grew more and more frenzied. Some targeted and attacked Nell because they believed she possessed the golden pelvis. Now her father was going to reveal the location of the final piece.

Inspired by the 1979 publishing sensation Masquerade, a richly illustrated fable by artist Kit Williams that sent thousands of treasure hunters digging up swathes of the English countryside, Erin Kellys take on the tale is a delight, particularly the descriptions of Nells eccentric and utterly dysfunctional family.Myles McWeeney

Memoir: Taste by Stanley TucciFig Tree, 320 pages, paperback 11.99; e-book 5.99

He may be best known as one of the finest character actors of his generation, but Stanley Tucci is a bona fide foodie too. He has already brought out a pair of popular cookbooks and now this memoir traces a veritable obsession with food.

There are accounts of his childhood, growing up in a food-obsessed Italian-American family, and anecdotes about the significant part that cuisine has played in his acting career, not least in Julie & Julia, the film he made about the great American cookery writer Julia Child.

An irreverent and witty book, it offers a snapshot of the man himself and he writes so well about food that its best not to read it on an empty stomach.John Meagher

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Thriller: Black Lake Manorby Guy MorpussViper, 400 pages, hardcover 18.75; e-book 5.69

Ella Manning, a marine biologist and part-time police constable, is attending a glitzy product launch at the island home near Vancouver of billionaire tech genius Lincoln Shan, her former fianc.

A violent storm cuts all communications with the mainland, so when Lincoln is found murdered in his locked office, the guests ask her to solve the crime. But when she is sure she has identified the killer, time is unwound and she must start all over again.

Partially set in the early 1800s, but mostly in a high-tech 2045, is this a historical thriller, or science fiction? It doesnt really matter, because at its heart is an intriguing take on a Agatha Christie-type locked-room mystery.Myles McWeeney

Fiction: The Emerald Spy by Nicola CassidyPoolbeg, 450 pages, paperback 15.99; e-book 3.99

During the summer of 1939, just before the outbreak of World War II, a group of Jewish refugees were housed in Termonfeckin, Co Louth. This historical fact intrigued author Nicola Cassidy, and she has spun a slow-burning and intriguing espionage tale around the experiences of classical musician Gisella Mller and tram conductor Hans Schmitt as they try to settle in Newtown House farm near Drogheda, home to generous English-born Laila de Freyne and her dangerously flighty and rebellious 17-year-old daughter Nola.

Both Gisella and Hans struggle to come to terms with the huge upheaval and loss of their loved ones in their new lives, and when an German secret agent lands nearby, the local IRA brigade threatens everybodys safety.Myles McWeeney

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A treasure hunt that turns violent, Stanley Tucci's foodie memoir and an espionage tale of Jewish refugees in Louth - Independent.ie

14 of the best hotels in Krakow – Times Travel – The Times

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Its not surprising that Polands most visited city has a thriving and constantly evolving hotel scene. Nor is it surprising that Krakows old town Stare Miasto throngs with just about every range of hotel. Luxury hotels are often found in beautifully renovated historic settings, including former castles, royal residences and palatial townhouses.

If youre in search of a design hotel, theres a new breed of sleek modern residences that are within walking distance of the major sights of Krakow. As in other European cities, the rise of the boutique hotel is unstoppable, with stylish, intimate places that make a stay in Krakow such a pleasure. The city centre is relatively compact, with many of the sights including Market Square and the Jewish Quarter north of the Vistula River. But Krakows affordable and efficient public transport system of trams and buses makes it easy to get around and explore further.

Main photo: Bachleda Luxury Hotel Krakow, city centre

*This article contains affiliate links.

All products and brands mentioned in this article are selected by our writers and editors based on first-hand experience or customer feedback. We feature properties from a specially selected list of trusted operators who are of a standard that we believe our readers expect. This article contains links which are ads and if you click on a link and buy a product we will earn revenue. These links are signposted with an asterisk. The revenue generated will help us to support the content of this website and to continue to invest in our award-winning journalism.

Best for city-centre luxuryIn a dreamy spot right on Market Square (Rynek Glowny), the five-star Bonerowski Palace has eight sumptuous rooms and eight apartments in a handsome building dating from the 13th century. Interiors evoke the spirit of the 19th century, with glossy parquet floors, silk curtains, floral wallpapers and marble bathrooms. Youll have views of the Renaissance Cloth Hall and St Marys Basilica especially when dining on French and Polish cuisine on the terrace of Amalia Brasserie Steak & Fish right on the square. Head into the hotels vaulted cellars for a drink at the St John Cocktail Club.

Spa YPool NPrice From 175, room only

Best for top-class dining and spaThis Relais & Chteaux member, set in a stately 16th-century building is on Krakows oldest street and is just a few minutes walk from Wawel Castle. Hotel Copernicuss 29 luxurious yet understated rooms are decked out in warm wooden furnishings, with heavy runs covering parquet floors. Some of the suites have frescoes painted in 1500 to go with 14th-century wooden beams. Book ahead for the tasting menu in the Copernicus Restaurant, and take in lovely views of the old town from the rooftop terrace. Save time for the spa and its glittering pool under brick vaulted ceilings.

Spa YPool YPrice From 155, room only

Best for rooftop viewsYoure less than a one-minute walk from Market Square at Hotel Stary, whose origins date from the 14th century and some of whose gothic features have been incorporated into its elegant interiors. Parquet floors are warmed by large rugs and heavy leather furniture. Many of the rooms have balconies with views of the square, which you can easily see from the Sky Bar on the rooftop terrace. Enjoy beautifully crafted dishes at the ground-floor 3 Rybki Restaurant and the Rybki Nove Restaurant in a newer part of the building. The basement spa with its two pools is an atmospheric place to unwind under vaulted brick ceilings.

Spa YPool YPrice From 140, room only

Best for value for moneyThis Polish chain of sleek modern hotels has added a second hotel in Krakow to join its original one near the railway station. Puro in Kazimierz puts you on the doorstep of the districts lively cafs and cultural sights, providing 228 breezy contemporary rooms with a Fifties vibe. Funky design makes its shared open spaces an inviting place to work and meet up with friends. The Halicka Eatery & Bar is also a great place to socialise. Relax in the compact spa after borrowing one of Puros bikes for a tour of the city.

Spa YPool NPrice From 88, room only

Best for familiesRight on the edge of the Jewish district of Kazimierz in a renovated 19th-century townhouse is the stylish Metropolitan Boutique Hotel. Its 51 rooms have a pleasing blend of traditional and contemporary decor, with soothing neutral tones and marble bathrooms. Some have little wrought-iron balconies overlooking the courtyard patio; family suites have interconnecting rooms and plenty of space. The Fab Fusion restaurant, where you can hear live jazz three nights a week, does what its name implies, melding Polish with pan-European dishes.

Spa NPool NPrice From 76, room only

Best for greenery on the doorstepBright, bold design makes Queen Boutique Hotel stand out. This 18th-century townhouse beside Planty Park has attractive, contemporary rooms with soaring ceilings, some with balconies offering city views. The Sky Rooms on the top floor are flooded with light and look out over Wawel Castle. Check out the refined seasonal menus at the hotels Amarylis restaurant after a relaxing session in the Finnish sauna.

Spa YPool NPrice From 57, room only

Best for city-centre convenienceYoull have a grandstand view of Market Square from Hotel Wentzl, a 16th-century townhouse thats right on the square. Its 18 rooms are individually designed but all feature warm traditional furnishings some have four-poster beds and beamed ceilings, and others with balconies overlook the square. Grab an informal bite on the terrace at Slodki Wentzl Caf or have a fine dining experience at Wentzl Restaurant.

Spa NPool NPrice From 82, room only

Best for boutique luxuryHotel Grodek has cosy bolt hole written all over it. In a townhouse dating from the 11th century in a quiet cul-de-sac near Planty Park, its a place to wallow in, with 23 antiques-filled rooms. Theres also a wood-panelled library where you can relax with a drink, as well as a winter garden and a sauna. Try classic Polish dishes at Restaurant Grodek; if youre there in the summer, you can dine in the rooftop restaurant and enjoy sweeping city views.

Spa NPool NPrice From 73, room only

Best for an adults-only breakRight on the edge of Kazimierz near Planty Park is this sophisticated adult-only hotel that comes with a fabulous rooftop hot tub. Its modern rooms have warm, earthy tones and gorgeous soft fabrics and throws, and youll be greeted with a bottle of fizz and a minibar with free non-alcoholic drinks. Downstairs is a sleek pizza restaurant serving proper wood-fired pizzas. Theres also a 24-hour bar.

Spa YPool NPrice From 81, room only

Best for self-catering convenienceHiding within a straightforward-looking 1930s townhouse on a quiet street near Planty Park are Amber Design Residences 34 immensely stylish rooms and apartments. Theyre light and airy, with judicious splashes of colour and a sense of space. In terms of price, theres not much of a leap from rooms to apartments facilities range from rooms with a mini-fridge/cooler to apartments with fully equipped kitchenettes. The sheltered garden is a wonderful place to relax and flop on deck chairs, and the small spa area includes a gym.

Spa YPool NPrice From 44, room only

Best for a romantic breakThe five apartments in Orlowska Townhouse truly are beautiful. Filled with antiques, parquet floors and lovely artwork, the apartments in this listed 17th-century townhouse also come with kitchenettes for a little light self-catering. Three of them make you feel as if youve been invited for a weekend at a Habsburg country retreat, while the 1930s apartment is pure art deco. If you really want to spoil yourself, book the Loft duplex with its fabulous Forties furnishings.

Spa NPool NPrice From 128, room only

Best for shoppingSet on one of Krakows most historic streets, shop-filled Florianska, Hotel Unicus Palace has 60 luxurious bedrooms within a historic townhouse. Its plush rooms combine traditional and modern decor, with soft fabrics adding warmth. Grab a drink in the swish Lobby Bar before dinner in the Unique Taste Restaurant, where Polish and pan-European flavours mingle well. Dont miss the chance to use the spa and wellness centre, with its large pool, sauna, hot tub, gym and salt cave set under brick vaulted ceilings.

Spa YPool YPrice From 107, room only

Best for old-world luxuryTheres a timeless grandeur about the Grand Hotel, a 19th-century former palace just a few minutes walk from Market Square. Its stately rooms are filled with antiques and pleasingly traditional decor, and the Mirror Room banqueting hall is one of the most extraordinary rooms in the city. Theres more splendour in store at the Grand Signature Restaurant and the Viennese-style Grand Caf, where the great and the good have been meeting since 1900.

Spa NPool NPrice From 80, room only

Best for chic eleganceJust outside Stare Miasto near Wawel Castle is the five-star Bachleda Luxury Hotel, whose wonderfully ornate interiors have more than a touch of royalty about them. Its 64 rooms and three suites have enough gilt, velvet and leather furnishings to make you feel positively regal. Try the refined Polish cuisine at Gavi Restaurant after a cocktail in the cocoon-like Opus Lounge Bar. The feeling of utter luxury extends to the art deco spa and indoor pool.

Spa YPool YPrice From 148, room only

Inspired to visit Krakow but yet to book your trip? Here are the best packages from Jet2 Holidays* and BA Holidays*.

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14 of the best hotels in Krakow - Times Travel - The Times

The difference between race and ethnicityand why it matters – Fast Company

Posted By on October 12, 2022

By the year 2045, the majority of the U.S. population will be racially diverse. Already, this reality is impacting our culture, politics, businesses, and national sense of identity.

Companies are particularly eager to get ahead of the change and ensure theyre catering to a rapidly diversifying market and workforce. Gen Z, the most racially diverse generation in American history, will make up roughly 27% of the workforce by 2025. For them, as for many millennials, racial and ethnic diversity are core norms of family, school, and work life.

With more people conscious of racial inequities and mandating official recognition and celebration of diversity, its worth drilling down into what exactly race and ethnicity mean. How are they different, where do they overlap? And how do both impact how we interact with society?

To put the definitions in their simplest terms:

Race refers to categories of human beings that are typically defined by shared biological characteristics. Skin color, hair texture, facial features, and even body shape have historically been used to define race.

Ethnicity, on the other hand, refers to cultural identification and expression. Language, arts, cuisine, customs, holidaysa massive amount of a persons identity is determined by the ethnicity they grow up with and around.

Lets take a deep dive into race first, because its one of the most used words and has a particularly complex history.

Race is primarily an external way of viewing peoples identities. It is based on observed physiological differences associated with regional origins around the world.

In the US, we encounter categories of race all the time on official documentation. But the U.S. Census uses relatively broad definitions, limited to the following categories: White, Black or African-American, Hispanic or Latino, Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian. The Census Bureau has also started tracking Multiracial populations in much greater detail (in the U.S., this population increased 276% in the last 10 years).

Youll notice that the categories above lump people rather surprisingly into categories we might not expect (such as that Middle Eastern people are considered racially White by the Census), or which callously gloss over stark differences in physical traits (Asian simultaneously describes people of Indian, Japanese, or Indonesian origin/descent).

And in fact, theres a very simple explanation for why its so hard to fit people neatly into these vague buckets: Race, from a scientific, genetic, and biological perspective, does not exist.

Genetic differences are not a sufficient explanation for what humans perceive as race. All human beings share over 99% of the same DNA. There are some genetic differences based on geographical origin, but even within the same regionor race, if you likethere can be significant variation (so that people of different races may have amore similar genetic makeup than people of the same race, but from different regions).

If there were a genetic explanation for race, we would expect to see trademark genes that only pop up in certain populations. But of all the genetic markers that account for what we perceive as racial difference (i.e., less than 1% of the human genome), only 7% of them are specific to one geographical region.

This is really important to stress, because historically, studies of racial differences have been presented and construed as scientific projects. The reality, however, is that race is entirely socially constructed by human beings.

That doesnt mean its not important. For hundreds of years now, race has been used to categorize human beings and assess their value and potential. Today, it remains a heavy influence on all peoples unconscious biases, which can sometimes lead to violent or even deadly consequences. Theres no doubt that race remains a powerful determinant of much human behavior.

But this scientific insight does underline the rapidly approaching obsolescence of our current (and historically influenced) ideas about race.

The idea that whiteness or blackness of skin can be used to describe different categories of human beings only appeared several hundred years ago. It did not exist in the ancient world, and it was only with the acceleration of the Atlantic slave trade by Portuguese explorers in the 1400s that Europeans became exposed to racial categories based on skin color.

The Scientific Revolution of the 17th and 18th centuries further developed the concept, especially in order to justify the continued enslavement and unequal treatment of people of color in the New World. As one scholar puts it, this conception of race was based on three fundamentally flawed premises:

One, that biologically distinct races existed in nature; two, that some races were more intelligent than others . . . and three, that these races could be classified and ranked from superior to inferior according to the typical brain, shape, weight or size for each so-called race.

Professor Alice Conklin, Ohio State University

These ideas eventually coalesced into formal scientific disciplines, resulting in the now utterly discredited studies of phrenology (the study of skull shapes and corresponding mental characteristics) and eugenics (the practice of improving a races characteristics by breeding out supposedly undesirable traits). Crucial to the eugenics agenda in the early 20th century was, of course, the concept of racial purity. Taken to one of its most violent extremes, this resulted in the rise of antisemitism all over Europe and, eventually, the Nazis atrocities against that continents Jewish population.

These pseudosciences have been discredited because there is no biological justification for them. Yet, while it has an extremely fraught history full of scientific error and human bias, racial categories are still seen as important markers of identityboth by people and the governments that serve them.

The social construction of race is therefore a double-edged sword. It has led to the denigration and disenfranchisement of specific races based on alleged inequalities in mental, physical, behavioral, and even spiritual ability. (Which has resulted in some very strange arguments, such as the relatively common Abolitionist viewpoint in 19th-century America and England that Black people were intellectually inferior, and therefore required the charity and sympathy of the dominant races, rather than enslavement.)

But it has also led us to an increased awareness of our perceived and actual differences. While race is not a scientifically justifiable distinction, it has played a deeply important role in our nations recent history. In the last century, this led to many economic, legal, and social corrections that sought to create a more equitable playing ground for people of all races and national origins in our society. The visibility of race is partly what makes it such a powerful, immediate marker of identity (even though many of us intuitively believe that it is, in reality, a superficial marker of difference).

Racial identity is therefore an important way for people to define themselves, connect with one another, and organize on behalf of shared interests. For example, data concerning racial demographics helps the government fund and assess new ways of ensuring equitable access to resources. Racial identity can also generate greater solidarity between different ethnic groups, which can help promote the interests of more people rather than less.

At the same time, in a country where multiracial populations are proliferating and growing extremely quickly, we have to ask how useful race will continue to be as a recognizable marker of difference.

My two daughters, Mia and Lila, are both multiracial. Their race according to the U.S. Census would be a combination of Black and White (their mom is Lebanese). But their ethnicity would be considered African-American and Middle Eastern/Lebanese. I cant help but think that as more people begin to look multiracial, race as we know it will become increasingly obsolete as ethnicity continues to influence day-to-day livesas it always has.

Which brings us to the idea of ethnicity. On the surface, this is a much older idea. Ethnicity describes the shared cultural expression and self-identification of a group, typically rooted in historical and geographical origins.

Someone who grew up in Italy but is racially Black might find their own sense of identity is mostly influenced by Italian culture. The fourth-generation descendant of Irish immigrants living in Boston may feel much more affinity to Irish-American culture and identity than to its Old World Irish counterparts.

Ethnicity is therefore both historical and contextually dependent. It is much more present in our lives than race in some ways, because it incorporates ancestry, culture, and the interaction of these things with our daily environment.

The idea of ethnicity, like so many ethnic identities themselves, has also developed over time. In this country, groups of distinct national originsparticularly the Irish and Germansonly began to be seen as separate entities around 50 years after the American Revolution.

Often, the recognition of these groups led to intensified prejudice and agendas that sought to guarantee their exclusion from political life. In the early 20th century, as these ideas progressed, efforts were even launched to help Americanize immigrants (who comprised many different races and ethnic backgrounds) in order to facilitate assimilation.

At the same time, a parallel idea developed in American politics and thought: A multiethnic society has more advantages (and more manpower) than an ethnically homogeneous one. The view that a pluralistic society was more competitive and harmonious than Old World European nations eventually led to the modern commonplace that America is a melting pot. And more to the point, that American identity is flexible enough to accommodate people and identities of non-American origin.

Many of us grew up with this multiculturalist viewpoint in school. But academics have also spent the last century showing how persistent and vital ethnic identities have remained in the so-called melting potnot to mention how easily new hybrids have popped up and established themselves as distinct communities (such as Italian-American, Chicano, Chinese-American, and so on).

Of course, there are limits to the assimilatory spirit of American identity. We all remember how President Obamas race was used to try to exclude him from running for president. That gambit gained ground because many Americans easily believed that a racially Black man might not be ethnically American enough to be presidentdespite Obama having attended our most prestigious schools, already held office, and lived in the U.S. his entire adult life. (In fact, I think its telling that we even believe, somewhat superstitiously, that a president has to be born on American soil to qualify for office. That doesnt exactly mesh with the idea of America, the Great Melting Pot.)

Ethnicity and race therefore exist in parallel to, and sometimes in tension with, one another. Race is a largely external form of identification, which in many ways defies scientific and even social common sense. Ethnicity, on the other hand, is an extremely profound marker of cultural and ancestral identification, but also highly dependent on history and context. It can communicate an enormous amount of information about a person, but it can also change over the course of a single lifetime.

And while race continues to be debunked as a valid form of biological identification or distinction, theres no doubt that its externality will continue to ensure it is used (and potentially abused) to assess the differences between human beings. While on a more personal level, ethnicity will continue to play a deeply vital role in identifying cultural differences in our society (as it always has).

One quote I found really speaks to this tension between race and ethnicity. At a conference about the scientific history of race, a professor who identifies with African, Indigenous, and European origins explained that most Indigenous peoples dont think of themselves as members of an Indigenous or American Indian or Native race:

I can speak for my own people, the Ojibwe . . . we have a long history of viewing our tribal identity, as viewing it in political and kinship frameworks rather than racial or biological constructs.

Professor Deondre Smiles, University of Victoria, Canada

Most of us, consciously or not, would agree with this outlook. We define our ethnicities and our cultural affinities based on where we grow up, where our parents came from, and where weve spent significant portions of our lives up to that point.

Ethnicity, nationality, ancestry, tribe, motherland, my culturethere are so many ways to describe the cultural differences that define our identities and lay the groundwork for human connection through diversity.

As our nation continues to mature in its attitude toward race and ethnicity, we must remember that both are vital to individuals identities. There can be no true authenticity without recognition of the differences between the two and celebration of the role they play in sharing your true self.

This article was adapted and reprinted with permission fromDiversity Explained.

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The difference between race and ethnicityand why it matters - Fast Company

Black people are actually Jew[s]: The historical origins of Kanye Wests inflammatory comments – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on October 12, 2022

(JTA) In 1892, an Oklahoma preacher born into slavery received a series of divine revelations that compelled him to launch a new church and, with it, a new religious movement in the United States: Black Israelism, better known as the Black Hebrew Israelite movement.

More than a century later, the movements central tenet that African Americans are the genealogical descendants of the ancient Israelites has repeatedly found its way into popular culture through the expressions of non-Jewish African-American entertainers and athletes such as Kendrick Lamar, Kodak Black, Nick Cannon and DeSean Jackson. In some cases, these figures have also trafficked in antisemitic tropes about Jewish mendacity and manipulation.

Last week, Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, invoked Hebrew Israelite doctrine when he described a friend as a Jew just like all so called black people in an Instagram post. (The friend, fashion designer Jean Touitou, was born in Tunisia to Jewish parents; he is not Black.) A couple of days later, Instagram locked Yes account after he posted a text exchange with Sean Diddy Combs in which he suggested Combs was controlled by Jews. So Ye, who identifies as a Christian, turned to Twitter to announce to his 31 million followers that he would soon go death con 3 on the Jews, adding, The funny thing is I actually cant be Anti Semitic because black people are actually Jew Twitter removed the tweet for violating its rules.

RELATED:Kanye Wests vow to go death con 3 on Jews and his antisemitism controversy, explained

Much of the outcry over Yes posts centered on his use of the phrase death con 3 and a reference to a shadowy Jewish agenda. But some also flagged his pronouncements about Black people being the real Jews as offensive, especially to actual Black Jews.

On Tuesday, Vice published portions of an interview Ye gave to Tucker Carlson that were edited out of the broadcast. In them, Ye repeats his claim, though in a more convoluted way: When I say Jew, I mean the 12 lost tribes of Judah, the blood of Christ, who the people known as the race Black really are. (The tribe of Judah was one of the 12 tribes of Israel.)

Where did this claim come from, and is it inherently antisemitic? As someone who has reported extensively on the African Hebrew Israelite community in Israel and the context from which it developed, I can offer some essential background.

In the late 19th century, two former slaves turned preachers Bishop William Saunders Crowdy of Oklahoma and Bishop William Christian of Arkansas received the same message from God: the Biblical Israelites were Black and African Americans are the true children of Israel. The message was revolutionary, as it subverted earlier theories about the fate of the lost tribes of Israel. (Anglo-Israelism, for example, posited that British people descended from the Israelites.) This idea also served to counter a prevailing and racist notion that Black people belonged to an inferior race of people.

The idea that African slavery in the Americas was not a mark of shame but instead a mark of distinction as Gods chosen people appealed to some African Americans, who appreciated the way the doctrine gave them pride and dignity in the context of Jim Crow segregation that sought to subordinate and humiliate them at every turn, historian Jacob Dorman writes in Chosen People: The Rise of American Black Israelite Religions.

Crowdy and Christian traveled widely, preaching a form of what scholar James Landing, in his book Black Judaism: Story of an American Movement, called Judaic Christianity. Both prophets were influenced by the Pentecostal Holiness movement and Freemasonry, and they emphasized strict adherence to the Ten Commandments and abstention from alcohol. In an attempt to foster racial harmony, they required white and Black worshippers to ceremonially wash each others feet. Such unorthodox teachings often got Crowdy and Christian into trouble; Crowdy was said to have been jailed 22 times while touring the Southwest.

Owing to their strong identification with the ancient Israelites, Crowdy and his followers adopted many Hebraic practices, including Sabbath observance on Saturday rather than on Sunday, Passover celebration and the use of Hebrew. Due to their limited contact with mainstream Jews, they performed rituals based on their own interpretation of the bible, resulting in distinct ceremonies. On Passover, for example, they smeared blood on their doors as the ancient Israelites did to spare the lives of their first-born sons from the angel of death.

Eventually, in Chicago, Crowdy earned the nickname Black Elijah, and his followers were referred to as Black Jews. Crowdy incorporated the Church of God and Saints of Christ in Kansas in 1896; the church still operates today in the United States and Jamaica.

In the decades following Crowdys 1908 death, a succession of Black spiritual leaders took up his project. Many used the honorific rabbi and introduced their own doctrinal innovations.

Ben Ammi Ben-Israel, the leader of the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem who died Dec. 27, celebrating the festival of Shavuot in 2011. (Uriel Sinai/Getty Images)

Among them were Rabbi Arnold Josiah Ford, a Barbadian musician who founded a synagogue in Harlem before moving to Ethiopia in 1930; Rabbi Wentworth Arthur Matthew, who was ordained by Ford and founded the Commandment Keepers congregation in 1919 (significantly, Matthew saw white Jews as being instrumental in helping Black people return to Judaism); Eber ben Yomin (aka Abba Bivens), who broke from the Commandment Keepers to start his own camp, known as One West, in the 1960s; Ben Ammi Ben Israel, the spiritual leader of the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem, an Israel-based community with roots in Chicago; and Rabbi Capers Funnye, the current chief rabbi of the International Israelite Board of Rabbis who is an integral part of Chicagos broader Jewish community.

While all of these communities fall under the Hebrew Israelite umbrella, their beliefs and attitudes toward Jews and Israel are far from homogenous.

For example, some groups consider Latin Americans and Native Americans to be descendants of the 12 tribes of Israel in addition to Black people, while others do not. Meanwhile, the more radical Hebrew Israelite groups, many of them offshoots of Abba Bivens One West, transformed the notion that Blacks enjoyed special status granted by God into one about Black superiority over other races. Members of such groups, notably the Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ, often preach on street corners using disparaging language about whites, Jews and LGBTQ people.

Perhaps the only shared belief across the communities is the one about Israelite ancestry.

After the 2019 attack on a kosher grocery store in Jersey City by gunmen who attended a One West-offshoot church in Harlem, the term Black Hebrew Israelites seemingly became synonymous with violent Black antisemitism. Indeed, a segment of the movement, primarily connected to Bivens and One West, is considered a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, an anti-hate watchdog. But as a whole, the Hebrew Israelite spiritual movement is peaceful, according to a recent report published by George Washington Universitys Program on Extremism, which notes that the predominant threat today is from individuals loosely affiliated with or inspired by the movement rather than by groups, organizations, or institutions.

There is debate about whether it is antisemitic simply to posit that African Americans represent the true children of Israel, implying as it does that non-Black Jews are lying or unaware of their real identity and history.

Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe they, too, come from Israelite tribes, but they do not regularly face accusations of cultural (or historical) appropriation or antisemitism. Further complicating the matter is the fact that virulently antisemitic figures such as Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan have coopted Hebrew Israelite teachings to denigrate the Jewish people.

Bruce Haynes, author of The Soul of Judaism: Jews of African Descent in America, is among those who find the Hebrew Israelite belief less antisemitic than ahistorical. Im not sure Id call it antisemitism, Haynes told the Associated Press in 2020 after Nick Cannon made inflammatory remarks on a podcast, including that Black people are the true Hebrews and therefore cannot be antisemitic an idea that Ye echoed in his recent tweet.

Its not a good reading of history, but I wouldnt call it antisemitism, Haynes added. On the other hand, some of those groups that call Jews impostors certainly cross the line.

Thus, an idea introduced in the late 19th century by preachers seeking to promote African American uplift and racial justice became, over time, a rhetorical weapon used against Jews by Black people who are distrustful of them. Whether one finds the idea hateful or silly, it certainly rubs many Jews the wrong way. JEWS ARE THE REAL JEWS, tweeted author and educator Ben M. Freeman.

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Black people are actually Jew[s]: The historical origins of Kanye Wests inflammatory comments - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Kanye West links Jews to financial engineering in further antisemitic comments – The Times of Israel

Posted By on October 12, 2022

Hip hop star Kanye West made antisemitic comments in portions of a Fox News interview that were edited out of the program before it was broadcast earlier this week.

The statements espousing antisemitic conspiracy theories and stereotypes came amid an uproar over a series of other anti-Jewish comments from West in recent days.

Fox News broadcast the interview between West and host Tucker Carlson on Thursday and Friday, including controversial comments about Jared Kushner that some deemed antisemitic.

On Tuesday, Motherboard, part of the Vice Media company, released segments of the interview that were edited out of the final broadcast.

Wests digressions in the unreleased segments included muddled conspiracies about Jews as well as his belief that fake children had been planted in his home to manipulate his own children.

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West has discussed his mental health issues in the past, including his bipolar disorder, which he has said makes him hyper paranoid during manic episodes. Some of his comments in the Carlson interview were grammatically confused and unclear.

The hip hop star, who now goes by Ye, linked Jews to financial manipulation in the interview, echoing a longstanding antisemitic trope.

My kids are going to a school that teaches Black kids a complicated Kwanzaa. I prefer my kids knew Hanukkah than Kwanzaa. At least it would come with some financial engineering, he told the far-right cable host.

In another clip released by Motherboard, West said Planned Parenthood had conspired to control Jews with the help of Margaret Sanger.

Sanger was an early birth control advocate whose work led to the formation of Planned Parenthood. She was a racist and eugenicist, views the organization has disavowed, and is the subject of conspiracies about controlling the Black population.

Planned Parenthood was made by Margaret Sanger, a known eugenics, with the KKK to control the Jew population, West said.

He then appeared to claim that all Black people are Jews. The false contention has been used to push antisemitism, including by the Black Hebrew Israelites, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. The Black Hebrew Israelites, who have also made anti-white and anti-LGBTQ claims, have said they are the true Israelites and that so-called Jews have stolen their identity. The group is wholly separate from Jewish people of color.

When I say Jew, I mean the 12 lost tribes of Judah, the blood of Christ who the race, the people known as the race Black really are, is who our people are, the blood of Christ. This as a Christian is my belief, West said. Earlier this week, he said he couldnt be antisemitic because black people are actually Jew.

In another comment, West appeared to compare Black people judging each other to a Jewish person judging another Jewish person on how good they danced.

I mean thats probably like a bad example, people are gonna get mad at that shit but another thing that they do I probably want to edit that out, he said.

West also said he would be the first Latino president, adding, I trust Latinos when I, you know, when I work with them.

I trust them more than Ill be safe, certain other businessmen, you know, he said, without specifying who he was referring to.

The release of the footage added to a turbulent week in which West attacked Jews on several occasions.

In a segment of the interview that was not cut, West said Kushner had brokered the Abraham Accords for financial gain. Kushner is Jewish and served as a White House senior adviser under his father-in-law, former US president Donald Trump. West has previously met with Trump and supported the former president.

You know, he made these peace treaties, he began. I just think it was to make money.

I just think that thats what theyre about is making money. I dont think that they have the ability to make anything on their own. I think theyre born into money, West continued, apparently referencing Kushner and other members of his family whom West had discussed, including Kushners brother Josh. West also said the Kushners had acted like a handler to Trump.

West also wrote on Instagram, F**K JOSH KUSHNER.

Rapper Kanye West shows then US president Donald Trump a photograph of a hydrogen plane during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House October 11, 2018, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

On Friday, West sparked another controversy when he posted on Instagram a series of text messages he said he had exchanged with hip hop star Sean Combs, also known as Puff Daddy or Diddy.

In one of the messages, West said, Ima use you as an example to show the Jewish people that told you to call me that no one can threaten or influence me. West captioned the Instagram post Jesus is Jew.

The argument between the two had erupted after West wore a White Lives Matter shirt at a Paris fashion show and Combs had called him out on it. The controversial slogan has been described by the Anti-Defamation League as a white supremacist phrase.

West was barred from Instagram after the posts. He attacked Mark Zuckberberg, the Jewish owner of Instagrams parent company Meta, formerly known as Facebook.

West then took to Twitter to write, Im a bit sleepy tonight but when I wake up Im going death con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE The funny thing is I actually cant be Anti Semitic because black people are actually Jew also You guys have toyed with me and tried to black ball anyone whoever opposes your agenda, in one of his first tweets in two years.

Death con 3 appears to be a mistaken use of the US military heightened alert status DEFCON 3.

At another point he said, Who you think created cancel culture?

Twitter restricted Wests account and removed the tweet attacking Jews.

West has over 18 million followers on Instagram and 31.4 million on Twitter.

Some Republican personalities have come to Wests defense.

Republican Representative Paul Gosar of Arizona said, Pray for Kanye West. They will throw everything they have at him simply for speaking the truth.

Mark Meuser, a Republican candidate for the US Senate in California, said, Whether or not you agree with Kanye Wests views, isnt it nice to finally see someone who isnt afraid to go against the status quo that everyone else in his industry parrots?

Conservative author and commentator Candace Owens said, If you are an honest person, you did not think this tweet was antisemitic.

Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita said, The constant hypocrisy from the media is at an all-time high. They have now gone after Kanye for his new fashion line, his independent thinking, and for having opposing thoughts from the norm of Hollywood.

Missouri Attorney General and US Senate candidate Eric Schmitt said, America needs a Kanye West Kid Rock tour. Lets go!

Wests comments were condemned by Jewish organizations including the Jewish Democratic Council of America, the American Jewish Committee, the Jewish Federations of North America, the Anti-Defamation League, the Conference of Presidents and the American Jewish Congress.

Power. Disloyalty. Greed. Deicide. Blood. Denial. Anti-Zionism. All of these are antisemitic tropes, the ADL said. Many of these myths have influenced Kanye Wests comments recently, and its dangerous.

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Kanye West links Jews to financial engineering in further antisemitic comments - The Times of Israel

Berlin: Governing Mayor Giffey Signs Declaration Against Jew Hatred – The Berlin Spectator

Posted By on October 12, 2022

At Red City Hall, Berlins Governing Mayor Franziska Giffey signed a declaration entitled Mayors United Against Antisemitism today, in the presence of the American Jewish Committees Remko Leemhuis. The document says that antisemitism is an assault on the core values of democratic societies.

Berlin, October 12th, 2022 (The Berlin Spectator) Early this morning, Remko Leemhuis, the Director of the American Jewish Committee (AJC) Berlin, appeared at Red City Hall. This was where Governing Mayor Franziska Giffey signed the Mayors United Against Antisemitism declaration. It is an initiative the AJC started in the United States of America in 2015.

Principled Response

Back then, mayors all over the U.S. issued a call to action to combat antisemitism in Europe. This was when their colleagues on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean started signing the declaration. Seven years later, today, Berlin became part of it too. We, the undersigned Mayors, express our deep conviction that antisemitism is not only an attack on Jews, but an assault on the core values of any democratic and pluralistic society, the document says.

In a world of global communications, where antisemitic ideas spread rapidly, a concerted and principled response is required to raise awareness, to educate, and to ensure decency prevails, the declaration continues. As Mayors and municipal leaders, we have a unique responsibility to speak out against the growing menace of antisemitism []. The mayors condemn antisemitism in all its forms, including hatred and prejudice directed toward Jews, stereotypes or conspiracy theories about Jews, Holocaust denial or distortion, and denying the Jewish peoples right to self-determination and/or the Jewish states right to exist.

Mutual Understanding

In addition, the signatories support national, state, and local government efforts directed at eradicating antisemitism and preventing extremist indoctrination and recruitment. They reject the notion that opinions about the policies, actions, or existence of the State of Israel can ever justify or excuse antisemitic acts. They also recognize the ever-present need to be vigilant about efforts to prevent and report acts of antisemitism and other hate crimes, and affirm that a climate of mutual understanding and respect among all citizens is the bedrock of pluralistic communities. Respectful coexistence is an important term here.

Supporting this initiative is self-evident to me, Franziska Giffey stated today. We counteract antisemitism, racism, homophobia and xenophobia in this city. This is part of learning the lessons of the past, especially in Berlin. This declaration also is an important signal to a society that vigorously opposes antisemitism.

Seventy-Nine Cities

For the AJC, Remko Leemhuis told The Berlin Spectator, cities were important stakeholders in the fight against antisemitism. The work against antisemitism mainly has to take place in the cities, he stated. In the United States, more than 700 mayors in all 50 states, from Alabama to Wyoming, have signed the declaration. In Germany, 79 mayors are among the signatories so far.

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Berlin: Governing Mayor Giffey Signs Declaration Against Jew Hatred - The Berlin Spectator

We Need to Support Chabad of Cutler Bay – Miami’s Community Newspapers

Posted By on October 10, 2022

Grant Miller

A final vote will come before the Cutler Bay Town Council at the October 19th council meeting regarding an application by Chabad of Cutler Bay to amend the zoning of a parcel of land to Institutional, so the Chabad can at last have a more fitting location.

Chabad of Cutler Bay has been operating out of a small rental space in the town for the past 14 years. The Chabad is the only synagogue in Cutler Bay and there is a need for a permanent, dignified home. Its current subpar rental space is inadequate to serve the community and is not suited for housing sacred texts that are older than 300 years.

Rabbi Yossi Wolf, his wife Mindy and their growing family which includes eight children, have lived in Cutler Bay since 2008. They are not developers. They are not investors or land speculators. They are residents and the Chabads basic mission is to bring heaven down to earth by providing religious services, study of scripture and Hebrew culture. Its purpose is to promote philanthropy, community, and spirituality.

Rabbi Wolff has searched for years to acquire property for a permanent and dignified home for the Chabad and found that there was no available land in Cutler Bay that was already zoned for use as a religious facility. The towns own Growth Management Plan Volume 2 and Zoning Map showed a lack of available land already designated or zoned Institutional in Cutler Bay.

The property at 19650 Old Cutler Road became available and Rabbi Wolffs in-laws purchased the property after meeting with City Staff and being encouraged by their positive response. The current land use designation and zoning would allow up to five two story houses on the property.Cutler Bays professional planning staff and outside planning consultants have recommended approval of Chabads land use, zoning, and modest variance applications.

Chabads proposed plan will be of compatible height, scale, bulk, and design with the existing single family homes in the area. There is currently a dilapidated house built in 1950 on the property.

Other institutional uses nearby include East Ridge at Cutler Bay to the northwest, Jackson Memorial Perdue Medical Center to the north, Dr. Edward Whigham Elementary to the northeast and Cutler Bay Worship Center l/Golden Horizon Academy to the southwest.

The Chabads plan was originally designed by renowned Cutler Bay architect David Feinberg who passed away last February. Well-known Miami architectural firm, R. E. Chisholm Architects Inc., is finalizing the project.

Rabbi Wolff has worked with staff to create lush landscape buffers from neighbors on all sides.

Since most of Chabads congregants walk to services there will be minimal auto traffic impact. Cutler Bays own traffic consultant, Diana White, agrees. Primary ingress/egress will be through Old Cutler Road with only a small service entrance on 197 Street.

Rabbi Wolff has reached out to the neighbors and found a good deal of community support. Chabad is proffering a covenant that will limit the use on the property to religious institution only, so no schools or other institutional uses will be permitted.

I see no reason why this worthwhile project should not be permitted. Let Chabad of Cutler Bay have the home it deserves.

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We Need to Support Chabad of Cutler Bay - Miami's Community Newspapers

Guest Commentary: Of Voting and Atonement – The Philadelphia Citizen

Posted By on October 10, 2022

With the final sounding of the Shofar at the end of Yom Kippur, the holiest season of the Jewish year will end Wednesday night. It began on Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. For this 10-day period, we have been urged by our tradition to search our moral and spiritual ways, change our direction, and determine to be better people in the new year.

As we evaluate our actions, we are taught to view the moral universe as a balance scale. On one side are human actions that incline the world to good; on the other, those that incline to evil. We should imagine this scale as perfectly balanced between good and evil. Our next deed will incline the scale toward one side or the other.

What a responsibility! Each deed takes on cosmic importance. We must be intentional about what we do. And make our choices with care.

In a similar vein, we are often exhorted to vote in every election. Every vote counts. And one vote can mean the difference between one candidate or the other emerging victorious. We should never say My vote doesnt matter. Its just one vote among hundreds, or thousands, or millions. What difference will I make? Recent history has taught us how close elections can be. And the potential consequences that even a few votes one way or the other will make.

In this new year, may we ever be mindful that every one of our actions has consequences. Let us act as if our very next deed has the power to incline the world to good or evil.

As I reflect on the importance of my vote, I am conscious of my personal history, as a Jew in America. What has made America different? What has made it a land where our often reviled, persecuted and expelled people have been able to thrive economically, socially and politically?

I am the child of a Jewish immigrant. My father and his family were born in a small Polish shtetl and emigrated in 1914. One of my most precious possessions is the small leatherette folio containing his naturalization certificate. My mother was born in Rochester, New York, but her mother was born in Lithuania, and her father in Ukraine. All my family immigrated to the United States as part of a wave of migration that began in the 1880s, and was truncated by the draconian immigration laws of the mid-1920s.

America was not always hospitable to its Jewish citizens. Housing laws had restrictive covenants. Universities had Jewish quotas. Friends have told me of going on their honeymoon in the 1950s and encountering a sign at the hotel they had reserved saying, No dogs or Jews allowed.

We have overcome so much prejudice. We have made America better because of the ability to use our talents.

What made this possible? Whatever prejudices individual Americans may hold, the United States is an idea without prejudice. And through our system of elections, the rule of law, and the Constitution, we have been able to access a fair playing field. It did not come easy. And the battle for inclusion and inclusiveness under the law for all minority groups is still being fought. But we have made enormous progress. And until recently it seemed that the ideal of America was even able to change the minds of individual citizens to be more open-hearted, open-minded, and all-embracing.

But as we prepare to vote five weeks from today, we are mindful that this is no ordinary election. It is not just about candidates who differ on the issues. It is about candidates who differ on the nature of America.

In this election, democracy is under attack. The integrity of elections is under attack. The rule of law is under attack. The Constitution itself is under attack.

As Jewish Americans, we need to recognize that we cannot take our position in America for granted. We cannot believe that it doesnt matter who wins or loses in this election. Because it could make all the difference in the world.

Lets be clear. This is not an issue in which both parties are equally culpable. Election deniers, White supremacists and Christian nationalists are found only in the Republican party. It is only in the Republican party that some see the Constitution as a regressive document that will turn back the clock of history on hard-won civil rights for women, racial and ethnic minorities, the LBGTQ community and, yes, Jews.

In this new year, may we ever be mindful that every one of our actions has consequences. Let us act as if our very next deed has the power to incline the world to good or evil.

And on November 8, let us vote as if our very ballot will be the one that preserves the fundamental ideals that have made America such a great home for Jewish Americans. Our ballot might just be the one!

As the Shofar blasts to conclude Yom Kippur, may we, and our nation, be sealed for a year of moral goodness in which the blessings of liberty and justice for all will be secure.

It will all depend on our vote.

Rabbi Seymour Rosenbloom served as rabbi of Congregation Adath Jeshurun in Elkins Park for thirty-six years and now holds the honorific position of Distinguished Service Rabbi.

The Citizen welcomes guest commentary from community members who stipulate to the best of their ability that it is fact-based and non-defamatory.

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Guest Commentary: Of Voting and Atonement - The Philadelphia Citizen


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