Monday Jan 07, 2008

Tracing the Tribe: Texas: Sephardic scholar in residence

Posted by Schelly Talalay Dardashti
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Sephardic history is part of my personal research, and Tracing the Tribe's readers note my affinity for all matters Sephardic, as I present interesting programs, books, author appearances, concerts and more with those who share these interests on a personal or cultural level.

Those in Houston, Texas, are in for a treat as this year's scholar-in-residence for the Horvitz program (in its 20th year) is Dr. Renée Levine Melammed; the theme is "Insights into Jewish History: Studying Women, Sephar­dim and Oriental Jewry."

A Jewish history professor who heads the Women's Gender Studies MA program at Jerusalem's Schechter Institute, Dr. Melammed has authored numerous articles dealing with women in Jewish history, Conversos of Spain and the Inquisition, and edits the gender and women’s studies journal, Nashim

Among her books: "Heretics and Daughters of Israel: The Crypto-Jewish Women of Castile" (Oxford University Press, 1999), received two National Jewish Book Awards; and "A Question of Identity: Iberian Conversos in Historical Perspective" (Oxford University Press, 2004).

Melammed's first program (7.30pm, Sunday, January 27) will be "The Spanish Inquisition: Fact or Fiction," focusing on historical accuracy.

For three weeks, she will offer programs on Ladino poetry, Crypto-Jewry, Jewish women's history and Converso Jews. Sessions will be at 11am Sunday mornings and at 8pm Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. The final lecture is at 8pm February 13. All programs are free to the public.

A concert is also scheduled by singer/songwriter Consuelo Luz, a descendant of Crypto-Jews, who will explore her Sephardic roots in adapting ancient Jewish prayers and ballads from Spain, the Mediterranean and the Middle East.

Click http://www.jcchouston.org

For all postings, including events, visit Tracing the Tribe - The Jewish Genealogy Blog at http://tracingthetribe.blogspot.com. Send questions for Schelly to tribeblog@jta.org.

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Tracing the Tribe Jewish genealogy blog by Schelly Talalay Dardashti provides the tools and resources to peer into your family tree.

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Recent Comments

Celia Male - London: Please note - the Sephardic LEVI may have Germanised their names to LEWY after settling in Vienna. I have studied the obituary notices and many Sephardic families intermarried in Vienna with the dominant Ashkenazi community but were buried in the Sephardic section of the cemetery. Other pre- 1848 settlers in Vienna were deemed to be Turkische Grosshandler and belonged to the Sephardic Community - this allowed them to live there although they were very likely Ashkenazi! Compare Egypt; many who considered themselves to be Sephardim had Ashkenazi names because of intermarriage.
Marvin T. Cox, Sweetwater, Texas, USA: If DNA tests can determine Jewish ancestry does it identify whether you are of Judah, Levi, or Benjamin? Is there an individual gene identifying each tribe, or a common gene linking all three tribes together as being part of Israel and therefore termed as being Jewish? If so, then could that same concept be used to locate and identify members of the lost ten tribes? Is there a gene which identifies each tribe, or a gene common to all twelve? Should this possibility be researched and explored. Are the ten tribes right under our noses, but we simply do not recognize them?
Marvin T. Cox, Sweetwater, Texas, USA: This is wonderful and exciting news. But, might an ignorant man ask a question: when did Israel become composed solely of one tribe--the Jewish People? Was not, and is not, Israel comprised of twelve tribes of people who, as the Jewish people, were scattered over the face of the earth, and, as the Jewish people, were prophesied in scripture to be returned to the land one day? I say look for your Jewish brethren, bravo, I support your efforts, but do not forget those brethren who are your brethren though they departed from Torah and may not be keeping Torah to this day, but brethren still.