As we start another year of studies, I invite my students and their families to check out this wonderful database of Jewish music from around the world for Selichot, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur.
JNUL - Jewish National & University Library
Showing posts with label mizrahim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mizrahim. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
High Holy Day Music from throughout the Jewish World JNUL - Jewish National & University Library
Labels:
ashkenazim,
Beta Israel,
customs,
Ethiopia,
God,
High Holy Days,
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ladino,
mizrahim,
music,
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sephardim,
seventh grade,
teshuvah,
yemen,
yemenite
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Hanukkah celebrations and stories from around the world
Be'chol Lashon/In Every Tongue is an organization offering educational resources and programs highlighting the diversity of Jewish customs and practices around the world. They offer here eight bits about Hanukkah as it is practiced by diverse Jewish communities: Chanukah around the World: 8 Ways to Celebrate.
Another custom is practiced in Italy and Yemen--reading a book called Megillat Antiochus.
For more resources on Hanukkah around the world:
Be'chol Lashon: Educational Resources: Holidays: Chanukah
Another custom is practiced in Italy and Yemen--reading a book called Megillat Antiochus.
For more resources on Hanukkah around the world:
Be'chol Lashon: Educational Resources: Holidays: Chanukah
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Actual color photo of Bukharan Jews from a Century Ago
A hundred years ago, a color photo was almost always one that had been hand-tinted (painted). I said "almost always" for a reason. In August, the Boston Globe published an amazing series of actual color photos taken between 1909 and 1912, surveying the Russian Empire. They are truly amazing. Image 16 of the ones published by the Globe shows a rabbi and students in Samarkand, the heart of the Bukharan Jewish community.
To see the rest of the photos, click here:
Russia in color, a century ago - The Big Picture - Boston.com
To learn more about the Uzbek, or Bukharan Jews, see: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/Bukharan_Jews.html.
Thanks to Jodi Paley for bringing these amazing photos to my attention!
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| A group of Jewish children with a teacher in Samarkand, (in modern Uzbekistan), ca. 1910. Google Map, (Prokudin-Gorskii Collection/LOC) # |
To see the rest of the photos, click here:
Russia in color, a century ago - The Big Picture - Boston.com
To learn more about the Uzbek, or Bukharan Jews, see: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/Bukharan_Jews.html.
Thanks to Jodi Paley for bringing these amazing photos to my attention!
Sunday, September 12, 2010
The Jewish Traveler: Rome - Hadassah Magazine | HadassahMagazine.org
Hadassah Magazine is consistently one of the best Jewish periodicals around. My favorite ongoing feature is The Jewish Traveler. Every month, Hadassah profiles the Jewish community of a city in North America or an international destination. Not only does it inspire dreams of travel, but it also describes the history and culture of the Jews in that area. The Jewish Traveler: Rome - Hadassah Magazine | HadassahMagazine.org
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Jews around the world
Jews around the world
This website has links that describe briefly the history of Jews from countries all over the world.
This website has links that describe briefly the history of Jews from countries all over the world.
Labels:
ashkenazim,
mizrahim,
sephardim,
seventh grade
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
The Jews of Yemen--Weddings
When studying Jewish ethnic groups, it's often interesting to compare the customs of a place with both the local non-Jews and with Jews from other places. In the following links, you can find information about Jewish weddings in Yemen and their celebration with a henna ceremony, non-Jewish weddings in Yemen, and a slideshow of Yemenite henna designs.
http://www.ujc.org/page.html?ArticleID=40490
http://www.yementimes.com/article.shtml?i=733&p=culture&a=1
http://www.aisledash.com/photos/bridal-henna/504625/
http://www.ujc.org/page.html?ArticleID=40490
http://www.yementimes.com/article.shtml?i=733&p=culture&a=1
http://www.aisledash.com/photos/bridal-henna/504625/
Labels:
mizrahim,
seventh grade,
weddings,
yemen,
yemenite
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