IIJS@Home: Golden Ages: Chassidic Singers And Cantorial Revival In The Digital Era

On November 10, the Institute welcome Jeremiah Lockwood to give the Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies lecture. Annually, the Institute along with Fordham have worked to find unique and compelling scholarship from those just starting their academic explorations. A cadre of young Chassidic singers who have embraced a style of early 20th century recorded sacred music illustrates the contested nature of prayer practices in the contemporary Jewish American community and pushes at the limits on individual creativity in the Haredi world. Cantorial revivalists are artists who surface sounds of the Jewish sonic past as a means of aesthetic self-cultivation and a utopian effort to revive an approach to prayer characterized by the transportive experience of listening. Beyond a revival of musical style, their work with the archive of early Jewish records attempts to reanimate the role of artists as communal leaders, facilitating an experience of listening as a sacred act while opening up channels for the articulation of creative identities within the context of a conservative social milieu that places limits on expressive behavior.

Jeremiah Lockwood is a scholar and musician, working in the fields of Jewish studies, performance studies and ethnomusicology. His work engages with issues arising from peering into the archive and imagining the power of “lost” forms of expression to articulate keenly felt needs in the present. He is currently a Research Fellow at the UCLA Department of Ethnomusicology Milken Center for Music of the American Jewish Experience, and the Lead Researcher of the Cantorial and Synagogue Music Archive, a new undertaking of the Cantors Assembly Foundation. Jeremiah is the recipient of the 2021 Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies Award and the 2019-20 recipient of the YIVO Kremen Memorial Fellowship in East European Arts, Music and Theater. Jeremiah has played around the world as the leader of The Sway Machinery and guitarist in Balkan Beat Box. He was a recipient of a Six Points Fellowship for Emerging Jewish Artists and a Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra Composer Fellow. Jeremiah successfully defended his dissertation, which focuses on the work of cantors in the Brooklyn Chassidic community, in the Stanford Graduate School of Education in the Fall of 2020.

The Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies lecture is supported by the generosity of the Salo W. and Jeannette M. Baron Foundation.

Presented jointly by Fordham University's Jewish Studies program and Columbia University's Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies.

IIJS@Home: The Genius Of Yosef Yerushalmi

On November 3, the Institute along with The Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center welcomed Sylvie Anne Goldberg, to discuss Transmitting Jewish History, based on conversations with Dr. Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi. In this book, originally published in French, Prof. Yerushalmi discusses his personal and intellectual journey and the mark he’s left on Jewish scholarship and thought.

No people has navigated the tightrope between history and memory with greater doggedness than the Jews. We dig up, investigate and argue about the facts of our past — even as we cling to memories that might not be quite accurate but that serve as our national glue.

That tension was at the heart of the work of Dr. Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi, a towering Jewish scholar, the Salo Wittmayer Baron Professor of Jewish History, Culture and Society at Columbia University.

During his long career, Dr. Yerushalmi plumbed an eclectic assortment of Jewish subjects, from the Spanish expulsion to Freud’s relationship with his religion. But Jewish memory was his signature concern as he wrestled with the question as to whether scholarship alone could nurture a living culture.

Goldberg is associate professor at the Center for Historical Research and head of the Jewish Studies Program at L’École des hautes études en science sociales (The School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences) in Paris. She is the author of three other books on Jewish history.

Sylvie in conversation with Elisheva Carlebach, who helped translate and publish the book, and Alexander Kaye, who wrote the book’s introduction.

Elisheva Carlebach is the Salo Wittmayer Baron Professor of Jewish History, Culture, and Society at Columbia University as well as the current Director of the Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies at Columbia. She is an award-winning author and she has twice held fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She served as Editor of the Association for Jewish Studies Review and chaired the Academic Advisory Council of the Center for Jewish History.

Author Alexander Kaye is the Karl, Harry, and Helen Stoll Assistant Professor of Israel Studies at Brandeis University. His research includes the history of Jewish thought, with a special focus on political thought, the history of law and theories of Jewish modernity. He is also an expert in Israel Studies, and he focuses on the relationship between law, religion, and politics, and in particular the history of religious Zionism.

In partnership with the Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center.

IIJS@Home: Mameloshn! The Story Of Yiddish As Told At POLIN Museum Of The History Of Polish Jews

On Wednesday, October 20, the Institute welcomed Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett to present the the Annual Naomi Prawer Kadar Memorial Lecture. Facing the Monument to the Ghetto Heroes on the site of the Warsaw ghetto and prewar Jewish neighborhood, POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews completes the memorial complex. At the monument, we honor those who died by remembering how they died. At the museum, we honor them – and those who came before and after – by remembering how they lived. This illustrated lecture explores the story of Yiddish – the vernacular of Polish Jews for hundreds of years and the language in which they created a rich modern culture – as presented in POLIN Museum’s multimedia narrative exhibition, a journey of a thousand years. The story of Yiddish at POLIN Museum, the first and only museum to offer a Yiddish audioguide, begins in the Middle Ages and comes forward to the present.

In addition to the video below, we invite you to explore some additional resources related to the POLIN Museum.

Supported by the generosity of the Naomi Foundation.

Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett is University Professor Emerita and Professor Emerita of Performance Studies at New York University. She is currently Ronald S. Lauder Chief Curator of the Core Exhibition at POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, in Warsaw. Her books include Image before My Eyes: A Photographic History of Jewish Life in Poland, 1864–1939 (with Lucjan Dobroszycki); They Called Me Mayer July: Painted and Memories of a Jewish Childhood in Poland Before the Holocaust (with Mayer Kirshenblatt); The Art of Being Jewish in Modern Times (with Jonathan Karp); and Anne Frank Unbound: Media, Imagination, Memory, (with Jeffrey Shandler), among others.

She was honored for lifetime achievement by the Foundation for Jewish Culture, received the Mlotek Prize for Yiddish and Yiddish Culture, honorary doctorates from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, University of Haifa, and Indiana University, the 2015 Marshall Sklare Award for her contribution to the social scientific study of Jewry, and was decorated with the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland for her contribution to POLIN Museum. She was recently elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and awarded the Dan David Prize in Israel. She serves on Advisory Boards for the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Council of American Jewish Museums, Jewish Museum Vienna, Jewish Museum Berlin, and the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow. She also advises on museum and exhibition projects in Lithuania, Belarus, Albania, Israel, New Zealand, and the United States.

The Annual Naomi Prawer Kadar Memorial Lecture provides an opportunity for the public to explore topics of Yiddish language and linguistics, the history of Yiddish, Yiddish children’s literature and education. The lecture is supported by the Naomi Prawer Kadar Foundation, Inc., which is dedicated to reimagining education. The Naomi Foundation champions Yiddish, Naomi’s lifelong passion, as a vibrant, rich, and contemporary language. The Naomi Foundation advances the teaching and learning of Yiddish, particularly in academic and scholarly settings.

IIJS@Home: Places, Spaces And Travel Around The World In The Norman E. Alexander Collections

This year's Norman E. Alexander Celebration of Collections on October 12 focused on researchers studying space and place using resources from the collections. Francesca Bregoli (Queen's College) discussed her research in the archive of a cross-Mediterranean family of hatmakers between Livorno and Tunisia; Maarten Hell (University of Amsterdam) discussed his work on the multi-ethnic Vlooienburg neighborhood of Amsterdam between 1600-1800; and Lea Schäfer (University of Duesseldorf) described her work mapping the variations in the Yiddish language using the Language and Culture Archive of Ashkenazic Jewry.

IIJS@Home: Against My Will: Free Love And Forced Love In Miriam Karpilove's Diary Of A Lonely Girl, Or The Battle Against Free Love

On October 5, we welcomed Jessica Kirzane for a lecture on Yiddish author Miriam Karpilove (1888-1956.). Karpilove was a prolific Yiddish author of short stories and serialized novels. She was known for her sharp-tongued, daring, and unapologetically women-centric attitude. Kirzane will explored Karpilove's pointed criticism of turn-of-the-century Yiddish free love that came at considerable expense to women.

Jessica Kirzane is the assistant instructional professor of Yiddish at the University of Chicago and the editor-in-chief of In geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies. She is the translator of Miriam Karpilove's Diary of a Lonely Girl, or the Battle against Free Love (Syracuse University Press, 2020).

To purchase Diary of a Lonely Girl, or the Battle Against Free Love by Miriam Karpilove (Syracuse UP, 2020), please visit the Syracuse University Press site and save 50% on fiction with discount code 05LEAF21. Offer expires November 1, 2021.

IIJS@Home: Honeymood

On Thursday, September 23, the Institute welcomed Talia Lavie, writer and director of Honeymood. The film tells the story of what happens to a bride and groom after their wedding. Instead of relaxing and enjoying a romantic night together, they get into a fight that soon develops into a dazed, midnight odyssey throughout Jerusalem, confronting them with past loves, repressed doubts, and the lives they have left behind. HONEYMOOD, a romantic comedy hybrid of THE PHILADELPHIA STORY and AFTER HOURS, is the second feature by Talya Lavie, the multi-award-winning writer and director of ZERO MOTIVATION. (90 min)

IIJS@Home: Salo Baron and "the Finest Collection"

On May 25, the Institute hosted a presentation by Michelle Margolis Chesner, Norman E. Alexander Jewish Studies Librarian, titled Salo Baron and “the Finest Collection” as part of Columbia College’s Alumni Week. Professor Salo Wittmayer Baron has been called “the greatest Jewish historian of the 20th century” and was the first chair of Jewish history at Columbia. Participants learned about his legacy and contributions to Jewish studies worldwide.

IIJS@Home: War of Shadows: Codebreakers, Spies, and the Secret Struggle to Drive the Nazis from the Middle East

On May 11, Samuel G. Freedman spoke with Gershom Gorenberg on his latest book, War of Shadows: Codebreakers, Spies, and the Secret Struggle to Drive the Nazis from the Middle East. War of Shadows is a true-life spy thriller: the story of the World War II espionage affair that brought Germany's Erwin Rommel to the very brink of conquering the Middle East -  bringing with him the S.S. officer already responsible for the murder of half a million Jews. Only a last-minute intelligence breakthrough cut off Rommel's secret source and defeated the Nazis.

Years in the making, this book is a feat of historical research and storytelling. Set against intrigues that spanned the Middle East, it presents a new picture of a crucial period in the pre-state history of Israel, and challenges the conventional memory of World War II and and of the Holocaust.

 OrderWar of Shadows here.

Gershom Gorenberg is the Knapp Adjunct Senior Research Scholar and Adjunct Professor of Journalism. An Israeli historian and journalist, Gorenberg has been covering Middle Eastern affairs for three decades. Gorenberg's next book is War of Shadows: Code Breakers, Spies, and the Secret Struggle to Drive the Nazis from the Middle East, forthcoming from Public Affairs. War of Shadows demolishes myths of World War II in the Middle East and solves the mystery of the spy affair that nearly brought Rommel’s army and SS death squads to Cairo and Jerusalem.

Gorenberg's last book was The Unmaking of Israel, on challenges to Israeli democracy and the history behind them. He is also the author of The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements 1967-1977 and The End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount, and coauthor of Shalom Friend, a biography of Yitzhak Rabin that won the National Jewish Book Award

Gorenberg is a columnist for the Washington Post and a senior correspondent for The American Prospect. He has written for The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Review of Books, The New Republic, Foreign Policy and other leading publications in North America, Europe and the Middle East. He holds degrees from the University of California at Santa Cruz and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Samuel G. Freedman is an award-winning author, columnist, and professor. A former columnist for The New York Times and a professor at Columbia University, he is the author of the nine acclaimed books, and is currently at work on his tenth, which will be about Hubert Humphrey, Civil Rights, and the 1948 Democratic convention.

Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Knapp Families.

IIJS@Home: The Electrifiers

On Tuesday, April 20, the Institute was joined by Zvika Nathan (writer/lead actor) and Boaz Armoni (director) for a Q&A for their latest film, The Electrifiers.

The film is about The Electrifiers, a band that won the 1984 Best New Artist Award for a smash hit which no one remembers, and have been stuck in traffic on the fast track to international stardom ever since. Thirty years later, the band members continue to drag themselves between gigs at nursing houses and cheap motels while their lead singer still believes he is a 20-year-old rocker. But just as everyone is about to become completely fed up with him, a surprising opportunity presents itself, which could propel the Electrifiers straight to the top. (90 min)

IIJS@Home: Reporting From The Inside Out: Ultra-Orthodox Journalists In A Time Of Covid

On Monday, April 5, the Institute hosted a panel conversation along with Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.

The pandemic raised tensions between ultra-Orthodox communities and governments in both the United States and Israel. A new breed of ultra-Orthodox journalists has covered the crisis, and faced the challenge of reporting with both independence and attachment to a media-shy society. Their experience has wider implications for minority journalists. Please watch the video below with moderator Jane Eisner and journalists Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt, Tali Farkash, and Jacob Kornbluh.

Jane Eisner is an accomplished journalist, educator, non-profit leader and public speaker who is currently director of academic affairs at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, overseeing the Masters of Arts program. For more than a decade, she was the Forward’s editor-in-chief, the first woman to hold the position at America’s foremost national Jewish news organization. Eisner is a graduate of Wesleyan University and Columbia Journalism School. She was a fellow of the Katharine Houghton Hepburn Center at Bryn Mawr College in its inaugural year and participated in the Sulzberger Executive Leadership Program in 2009. She lives in New York City with her husband, Dr. Mark Berger.

Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt is a writer living in New York City. She was previously the Life editor at the Forward, and a reporter for Haaretz. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Vox, and Salon, among others. She does pastoral work alongside her husband Rabbi Benjamin Goldschmidt in Manhattan's Upper East Side.

Tali Farkash is a haredi journalist writing for the Israeli news site Ynet, a feminist activist, and a doctoral student in gender studies at Bar Ilan University. She was previously a senior writer for the haredi magazine “Bakehila” and a news editor for the “Kol Chay” radio station.

Jacob Kornbluh is the senior political reporter for the Forward. Kornbluh covers politics with a Jewish angle and regularly interviews government officials, political commentators and security experts on issues that matter to the broader Jewish community. He was featured in JTA’s 2018 list of top 50 Jews to follow on Twitter. He previously worked as a national politics reporter for Jewish Insider, City Hall reporter for JP Updates and and covered the 2013 NYC mayoral race for the Yeshiva World News.

Supported by the generosity of the Kaye Family and Knapp Family Foundation.

IIJS@Home: What Is Maintenance, And Why Does It Matter?

On Monday, March 15, the Institute along with Fordham University’s Center for Jewish Studies hosted the third 2020-21 Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies lecture with Pratima Gopalakrishnan.

The concept of “maintenance” — food, clothing, or other in-kind provision to family members labeled dependents — has a long history from antiquity to modernity, in both Jewish and non-Jewish contexts. This talk explores the rich history of this term, as well as its more remote use in classical rabbinic texts. For the rabbis, maintenance was not just a legal obligation, but a malleable concept for defining and thinking through relationships within the household. The talk considers maintenance not only as a legal term but as an entry point into constructions of gender and labor in the ancient Jewish household.
 
Pratima Gopalakrishnan is a scholar of late antique Jewish religion and history, who uses theoretical approaches drawn from feminist and queer theory, and slavery and labor studies. She works primarily with late antique rabbinic Jewish texts, as well as the textual and material artifacts of late antique and early medieval legal cultures and considers how ostensibly economic ancient discussions — of the household, the agricultural field, but also the laboring body itself —were always imbricated with the projects of defining religious, ethnic, and sexual difference.  Pratima received her Ph.D. from the Religious Studies Department at Yale University, where she wrote a dissertation titled “Domestic Labor and Marital Obligations in the Ancient Jewish Household.” She is currently the Perilman Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Duke Center for Jewish Studies.

The Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies lecture is supported by the generosity of the Salo W. and Jeannette M. Baron Foundation.

Presented jointly by Fordham University's Jewish Studies program and Columbia University's Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies.

In the News: Medieval Studies Annual Conference and more

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IIJS@Home: Multiple Identity Politics: The Passing Narratives Of Dahn Ben-Amotz

On Wednesday, February 24, Fordham University’s Center for Jewish Studies hosted Roy Holler in a conversation with Katya Gibel Mevorach. In 1938, Mussia Thilimzogger’s parents put their thirteen-year-old son on a boat from Poland to Palestine. Three years later they perished in the Holocaust. Alone, rejected, and failing to fit in, the young Jewish-Polish immigrant adopted a new biography, changed his birthplace from Rivne to Tel-Aviv, and Hebraicized his foreign sounding name Mussia into Dahn Ben-Amotz (1924-1989). Ben-Amotz was one of many immigrants forced to change their identities and conform to the Zionist vision of the Hebrew: heroic and rough idealist, with a shared hatred of the Jewish diaspora. With his new persona, Ben-Amotz became a cultural icon for generations. But this author who shaped Israeli culture was haunted by little Mussia to his very last day, and the central trauma in his 1968 autobiographical novel, Lizkor veliskoakh (To Remember, to Forget) was not the Holocaust, but his own act of passing.

Focusing on integrationist demands of the Zionist narrative and the transformations of Jewish identities, the talk will introduces the concept of passing to Ben-Amotz's novel. Holler argues that the resettlement of the Jewish diaspora in Palestine did more than move physical bodies in and out of the land: it also called for an erasure and restructuring one’s identity in an effort to create a new Israeli culture and an improved Jewish race. Passing describes the turning away from the Jewish past to claim belongingness to the new Hebrew identity in Israel. Ben-Amotz’s fiction is obsessed with lost identities, showing that when a Jew wished to pass as a Hebrew, all prior ethnicities, memories, languages and cultural heritage had to be erased.

Roy Holler is an assistant professor of Israel Studies in the Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Florida. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University, Bloomington, and his B.A. in English from the City University of New York. His current book project, Passing and the Politics of Identity in Israeli and African American Literatures, explores the phenomenon of passing in a comparative context. A part of a chapter from this project is forthcoming publication in Prooftexts: A Journal of Jewish Literary History.

Katya Gibel Mevorach holds a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from Duke University. She received her B.A. and M.A. in African Studies from Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel. Gibel Mevorach is Professor in Anthropology and American Studies at Grinnell College. She is the author of Black, Jewish and Interracial: It's Not the Color of Your Skin but the Race of Your Kin, and Other Myths of Identity (1997), and articles, review essays and position papers have appeared in journals which include American Anthropologist, American Ethnologist, Biography, Developing World Bioethics, Identities, Cultural Studies, Research in African Literatures, נוגה (Noga: Israeli Feminist Journal), עתון אחר (Iton Aher) and The Jerusalem Post (Israel).

The Salo Baron New Voices in Jewish Studies lecture is supported by the generosity of the Salo W. and Jeannette M. Baron Foundation.

Presented jointly by Fordham University's Jewish Studies program and Columbia University's Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies.

IIJS@Home: Here We Are

On February 17, we were joined by Nir Bergman (director) and Shai Avivi (lead actor) of the wonderful film Here We Are.

Nir Bergman’s warm and moving tale of parental devotion focuses on divorced dad Aharon (Shai Avivi), who has given up his artistic career to look after his autistic son Uri (Noam Imber). They live a quiet life, and as the boy reaches young adulthood, his mother decides that he needs to be placed in a boarding facility more equipped to cater to his needs. Resisting this change, Aharon runs away on a road trip with Uri. With gentle humor, this beautiful film—winner of multiple Ophir Awards, including Best Director—examines the intricacies of love, disability and community, and change. (94 min)

Please enjoy the Q&A below.

IIJS@Home: Israel And The New/Old Middle East

On February 9, over 180 participants joined us for a discussion exploring the changing geopolitical dynamics shaping Israel and the Middle East with Ambassador (Ret.) Daniel Kurtzer. In light of the recent normalization of ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco, Ambassador Kurtzer discussed the history and circumstances that led to such historic regional cooperation, and about the geopolitical possibilities for the region, including in relation to the new Biden administration and its priorities in the international realm.

Daniel C. Kurtzer is the S. Daniel Abraham Professor of Middle East Policy Studies at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. During a 29-year career in the U.S. Foreign Service, Ambassador Kurtzer served as the United States Ambassador to Israel and as the United States Ambassador to Egypt. He was also a speechwriter and member of the Secretary of State George Shultz’s Policy Planning Staff; and served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs and as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and Research.

Kurtzer was a member of the “peace team” for Secretary of State James A. Baker III and Secretary of State Warren Christopher. He played an instrumental role in formulating and executing American policy, in particular helping to bring about the Madrid peace conference. Following that breakthrough, Kurtzer was named as the coordinator of the multilateral peace talks; served as the U.S. representative to the bilateral talks between Israel and the Palestinians and between Israel and Syria; chaired the U.S. delegation to the multilateral refugee negotiations.

Kurtzer is the co-author of Negotiating Arab-Israeli Peace: American Leadership in the Middle East, co-author of The Peace Puzzle: America’s Quest for Arab-Israeli Peace, 1989-2011, and editor of Pathways to Peace: America and the Arab-Israeli Conflict.  After retiring from the State Department, he served as a member of Secretary of State John Kerry’s Foreign Affairs Policy Board, and as an advisor to the bipartisan Iraq Study Group. In 2007, he was named the first Commissioner of the professional Israel Baseball League.

 Ambassador Kurtzer received his Ph.D. in political science from Columbia University.

Supported by the generosity of the Kaye family.