reading room closure
Presented by:
reading room closure
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holiday celebration
Presented by:
holiday celebration
16th street book club
The 16th Street Book Club is a lively group that meets to discuss modern Jewish literature.
Bringing up a child, lying to the boss, placing an order in a fast-food restaurant: in Etgar Keret’s new collection, daily life is complicated, dangerous, and full of yearning. In his most playful and most mature work yet, the living and the dead, silent children and talking animals, dreams and waking life coexist in an uneasy world. Overflowing with absurdity, humor, sadness, and compassion, the tales in Suddenly, a Knock on the Door establish Etgar Keret—declared a “genius” by The New York Times—as one of the most original writers of his generation.
Presented by:
16th street book club
exhibit opening, concert & reception
Presented by:
exhibit opening, concert & reception
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
Presented by:
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
puppet theater
Presented by:
puppet theater
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
exhibit opening and lecture
Presented by:
exhibit opening and lecture
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
lbi memorial lecture
Presented by:
lbi memorial lecture
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
sidney krum young artists concert series
Presented by:
sidney krum young artists concert series
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
Presented by:
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
Presented by:
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
16th street book club
The 16th Street Book Club is a lively group that meets to discuss modern Jewish literature.
A million-dollar Chagall is stolen from a museum during a singles' cocktail hour. The unlikely thief, former child prodigy Benjamin Ziskind, is convinced that the painting once hung in his parents' living room. This work of art opens a door through which we discover his family's startling history—from an orphanage in Soviet Russia where Chagall taught to suburban New Jersey and the jungles of Vietnam.
Presented by:
16th street book club
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
concert
Presented by:
concert
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
theatrical readings
Presented by:
theatrical readings
conference
Presented by:
conference
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
Presented by:
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
film retrospective
Presented by:
film retrospective
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
concert and talk
Presented by:
concert and talk
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
lecture and book signing
Presented by:
lecture and book signing
a concert for daniel pearl
Presented by:
a concert for daniel pearl
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
literary reading
Presented by:
literary reading
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
theater
Presented by:
theater
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
Presented by:
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
talk
Presented by:
talk
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
Presented by:
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
symposium
2pm: Introduction to archival research (Lillian Goldman Reference Services Division, third floor)
Learn about how to do research with primary sources, including navigating a finding aid and proper handling of archival materials.
3pm: How to use original material in family history research (Ackman & Ziff Family Genealogy Institute, third floor)
Learn about the genealogical research process and how to evaluate archival family history documents.
4pm: Show-and-tell (Lillian Goldman Reading Room, third floor)
Discover some of the wonderful material in the collections of the Center’s five Partners.
Presented by:
symposium
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
16th street book club
The 16th Street Book Club is a lively group that meets to discuss modern Jewish literature.
Yael, Avishag, and Lea grow up together in a tiny, dusty Israeli village, attending a high school made up of caravan classrooms, passing notes to each other to alleviate the universal boredom of teenage life. When they are conscripted into the army, their lives change in unpredictable ways, influencing the women they become and the friendship that they struggle to sustain. Yael trains marksmen and flirts with boys. Avishag stands guard, watching refugees throw themselves at barbed-wire fences. Lea, posted at a checkpoint, imagines the stories behind the familiar faces that pass by her day after day. They gossip about boys and whisper of an ever more violent world just beyond view. They drill, constantly, for a moment that may never come. They live inside that single, intense second just before danger erupts.
In a relentlessly energetic and arresting voice marked by humor and fierce intelligence, Shani Boianjiu, winner of the National Book Foundation’s “5 Under 35,” creates an unforgettably intense world, capturing that unique time in a young woman's life when a single moment can change everything.
Presented by:
16th street book club
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
Presented by:
wwi—jewish experiences in the trenches and at the home front film series
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
concert
Phoenix Chamber Ensemble performing Schubert’s Trio in E-flat major, Brahms’ Trio in C major and Zaretsky’s 9/11 – In Memoriam.
Maureen Nelson, violin
Richard Belcher, cello
Karl Kramer, horn
Jonathan Breit, voice
Vassa Shevel, piano
Inessa Zaretsky, piano
Made possible through the generous support of Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Blavatnik.
Presented by:
concert
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
16th street book club
The 16th Street Book Club is a lively group that meets to discuss modern Jewish literature.
Oklahoma is a forgotten territory of "Indians, outlaws, and immigrants" when its first Jewish settler, Boggy Haurowitz, arrives in 1859. Full of expectations, he finds the untamed region a formidable foe, its landscape rugged, its resources strained.
In Stations West, four generations of Haurowitzes, intertwined with a family of Swedish immigrants, struggle against the Territory's "insatiable appetite." The challenges of creating a home amid betrayals, nature's vagaries, and burgeoning statehood prove too great. Each generation in turn succumbs to the overwhelming lure of the transcontinental railroad, and each returns home to find the landscape of their youth, like themselves, changed beyond recognition, their family utterly transformed.
Dramatic and lyrical, Allison Amend's first novel, steeped in the history and lore of the Oklahoma Territory, tells an unforgettable multigenerational — and very American — story of Jewish pioneers, their adopted family, and the challenges they face. Amid the founding of the West, Stations West's generations struggle to forge and maintain their identities as Jews, as immigrants, and as Americans.
Presented by:
16th street book club
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
podbrodz lecture
Presented by:
podbrodz lecture
16th street book club
Presented by:
16th street book club
mordkhe and charne schaechter memorial program
Presented by:
mordkhe and charne schaechter memorial program
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
exhibition opening and benefit reception
Presented by:
exhibition opening and benefit reception
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
book event & dramatic reading
Presented by:
book event & dramatic reading
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
podbrodzer lecture
Presented by:
podbrodzer lecture
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
family history today
Presented by:
family history today
16th street book club
Presented by:
16th street book club
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
early closure
Presented by:
early closure
book talk
Hillel Halkin, Author and Translator; Rebecca Kobrin, Columbia University; Edward Rothstein, New York Times; Abraham Socher, Moderator, Jewish Review of Books
How do we understand Vladimir Jabotinsky’s legacy? Born in Odessa, a celebrated Russian journalist, first-rate novelist, and progenitor of today’s Likud Party, Jabotinsky’s life and work have been rife with contradictions and misunderstandings. In his new, insightful biography, Jabotinsky: A Life (Yale University Press) – the first in English in nearly twenty years – celebrated author Hillel Halkin provides a fresh look at Jabotinsky as a writer, political thinker and leader.
This event features Hillel Halkin in conversation with celebrated New York Times cultural critic, Edward Rothstein, Columbia University historian Rebecca Kobrin, and moderator Abe Socher, editor of The Jewish Review of Books.
Jabotinsky – A Life appears Spring 2014 in the Jewish Lives Series of Yale University Press..
Presented by:
book talk
concert
Presented by:
concert
concert
Presented by:
concert
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
mixed media program
Presented by:
mixed media program
theater
Presented by:
theater
book event
The American Jewish Historical Society, American Sephardi Federation, Leo Baeck Institute and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research will be selling duplicate copies of books from their library collections. Most books are about Jewish topics, including: memoirs, biographies, World War II, the Science of Judaism, collected works, academic studies, literature, art and photography. Books are also in languages ranging from English to Yiddish, German, Hebrew, Russian and Polish.
In addition, the participating organizations will be selling discounted titles from their regular publications.
All proceeds will benefit each organization’s book acquisition fund.
Paperbacks: $1
Hardcover: $3
Music and Movies: $1 to $3
Or priced as marked
Cash Only!
Presented by:
book event
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
book event
The American Jewish Historical Society, American Sephardi Federation, Leo Baeck Institute and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research will be selling duplicate copies of books from their library collections. Most books are about Jewish topics, including: memoirs, biographies, World War II, the Science of Judaism, collected works, academic studies, literature, art and photography. Books are also in languages ranging from English to Yiddish, German, Hebrew, Russian and Polish.
In addition, the participating organizations will be selling discounted titles from their regular publications.
All proceeds will benefit each organization’s book acquisition fund.
Paperbacks: $1
Hardcover: $3
Music and Movies: $1 to $3
Or priced as marked
Cash Only!
Presented by:
book event
gesher galicia meeting
Presented by:
gesher galicia meeting
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
concert
Presented by:
concert
film
Presented by:
film
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
theater
Presented by:
theater
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
meetup
Presented by:
meetup
concert and lecture
Presented by:
concert and lecture
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
tour
Presented by:
tour
tour
Presented by:
tour
16th street book club
Presented by:
16th street book club
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
film screening and lecture
Presented by:
film screening and lecture
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
screening
Presented by:
screening
performance
Presented by:
performance
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
symposium
Presented by:
symposium
screening
Presented by:
screening
concert
Presented by:
concert
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
screening
Presented by:
screening
lecture with musical examples
Presented by:
lecture with musical examples
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
reading
Presented by:
reading
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Film: Would I Lie to You #3 (New York Premiere)
La Verite si Je Mens #3
Director: Thomas Gilou
Would I Lie to You #3 has the buddies in business as garment workers-cum-dealmakers trying to salvage their professional and personal livelihoods amid countless obstacles. ASF honoree, Enrico Macias, has a role in this fun film. Will their escapades tear them apart or will they, once again, triumph with panache!
France, 2012. 115 mins. French, Mandarin, Hebrew, English w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
La Verite si Je Mens #3
Director: Thomas Gilou
Would I Lie to You #3 has the buddies in business as garment workers-cum-dealmakers trying to salvage their professional and personal livelihoods amid countless obstacles. ASF honoree, Enrico Macias, has a role in this fun film. Will their escapades tear them apart or will they, once again, triumph with panache!
France, 2012. 115 mins. French, Mandarin, Hebrew, English w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Documentos robados? Franco y el Holocausto
Director: Yolanda Villaluenga
With the outbreak of WWII, Jews from all over Europe looked to Spain as a possible refuge or as the only possible transit route to safety in the Americas. How did the Franco regime treat Eastern European Jews and the Sephardim trying to escape Europe by crossing the Pyrenees? What was the role of Spanish consuls in Paris, Berlin, or Budapest, as deportations to concentration camps accelerated? Why have thousands of documents having to do with Franco’s policy regarding the Jews during WWII disappeared? Was Franco, the Spanish dictator who admired Hitler and Mussolini, a defender of the Jewish people during the Holocaust or was a myth created with a clear purpose in mind? The film attempts to answer these questions with testimonies of Jewish families, people who helped save them, and historians. Included are fragments of a unique film shot in Sephardic communities of Greece at the beginning of the 20th century.
Spain, 2012. 53 mins. Spanish w/English subtitles.
Post-screening discussion with the filmmaker.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
l’Estigma?
Director: Martí Sans
The Stigma? grew out of its director’s practically expiatory need to take a second look at his own prejudices. Focused on Spain, and more specifically, on Catalonia, the film unravels the history and mutations of Judeophobia, from the Christian accusations of “deicide” to the appearance of the modern State of Israel. It exposes the widespread ignorance that exists in many quarters regarding things Jewish and discusses the anti-Israel slant of a part of the Spanish press.
Spain, 2012. 73 mins. Catalan, Spanish and Hebrew w/English subtitles.
Post-screening discussion with the filmmaker.
A wine reception follows the films!
The presentation of Stolen Documents? and The Stigma? is made possible through the generous support of the Consulate General of Spain in New York, Cultural Consul, Iñigo Ramirez de Haro, Cultural Officer, Águeda Sanfiz and Alba Parejo.
Thanks to the Institut Ramon Llull for its support of the translation of The Stigma?
Sincere appreciation to Daniel Sherr for his work in translating both scripts from Catalan and Spanish into English.
Thanks to Dr. Moisés Cohen and Elvi Wines (www.elviwines.com) for providing the wine for this evening’s reception.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Antoine Casubolo Ferro
A Jewish pied-noir musician and singer, Enrico Macias, is a unique figure in the French musical landscape. Over the past 50 years, the boy from Constantine, Algeria, has become the spokesman for the thousands of North African, and other Middle Eastern Jews, who fled their homelands in the 1950’s and 1960’s. A utopian, singing of love and friendship between nations, he has gradually become not only a messenger for peace, but also one of the most popular singers in France.
France, 2012. 52 mins. French w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Duki Dror
For 2000 years Jews played a major role in Iraqi society and an important role in the making of modern Iraq. Later the would be brutally driven out and virtually annihilated as a community. In this film a young journalist from Baghdad sets out to write about the family of Linda Abdul Aziz, an Iraqi Jew who escaped to Israel in the early 70's. Linda left Iraq, but her father stayed, only to disappear and his fate remain unknown. The film uncovers the tragic end of Linda's father, as well as that of the whole Jewish community, and shows how a generation of young Iraqis are beginning to acknowledge the tragedy inflicted on the Jewish community and the void they left behind.
The presentation of Shadow in Baghdad is made possible through the generous support of Jamil Ezra/Bweta Foundation.
Post-screening discussion with the filmmaker.
Israel, 2013. 65 mins. English and Hebrew w/English subtitles.
preceded by
Director: David Langer
In 2003, thousands of Jewish religious artifacts were saved from the basement of Suddam Hussein’s intelligence headquarters when American troops entered Baghdad. The film chronicles the final journey in New York ten years later (2013) of forty-nine Torah scrolls and religious documents framed in the turbulent history of Babylonian-Iraqi Jewry.
USA, 2014. 6mins
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
opera
Director: Vassilis Loules
The stories of five Greek-Jewish children who were saved by Christian families during the German Occupation. Their personal accounts of survival add an indelible humanity to the history and cover a wide range of issues, from social isolation to survivor guilt. The film also depicts the life of the Greek Jewish communities before the War, with rare images of Occupied Greece from archival material, as well as amateur films by German soldiers and illegal footage shot by Greek patriots.
Greece, 2011. 115 mins. Greek w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
opera
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Writer/Director: Edward Serotta
Renee Saltiel and Solon Molho grew up in one of the greatest Sephardic Jewish communities, Salonika, or Thessaloniki, in today's Greece. 90,000 Jews lived there before WWII and by the time the Germans had rounded up the city's Jews, almost none were left. A few returned. Renee and Solon did manage to survive, thanks to a Spanish diplomat and some very brave Greek families.
Produced by Centropa in cooperation with the Jewish Museum Berlin and the Jewish Museum Thessaloniki.
Vienna, 2013. 25 mins.
followed by
Director: Andrés Enrique-Arias
In the early 20th century 300 Sephardic families from Rhodes emigrated to Los Angeles (USA) and established a Judeo-Spanish (Ladino) language neighborhood in the area around 55th St and Hoover, in South Central Los Angeles. A century later the last survivors of that generation tell the story of the community and reflect upon their vanishing language and culture.
USA and Spain, 2013. 28 mins. English and Judeo-Spanish (Ladino), with English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Ruggero Gabbai
The 2,000 year-old Jewish community of Rhodes was almost destroyed when the majority of its residents were transported to Auschwitz on July 19, 1944. The film weaves together testimonies of three of the few Jews to have survived Auschwitz. They, along with the film crew, returned to Rhodes from their respective lives in New York, Rome and Brussels and recount memories of family and communal life, interactions with the local Greeks, Turks and Italians, cultural traditions, as well as the tragic last days of their community. The film provides a view of Jewish life in Rhodes under Italian dominion before the War. Through the lens of these narrators, their early lives in Rhodes unfold as a sort of ‘paradise lost’.
The presentation of The Longest Journey is made possible through the generous support of Florence Amzallag Tatistcheff.
Post-screening discussion with Stella Levi and Alessandro Cassin, Centro Primo Levi.
Italy, 2012. 50 mins. Italian w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Writer/Director: Yitzhak Halutzi
Dr. Vicki Shiran led a major social struggle for equal rights and for the advancement of Mizrahim in Israel for 30 years until her untimely death in 2004. Shiran’s story is also the story of the rise, and some say the fall, of the social struggle for equality that has characterized Israel in the past 40 years.
Post-screening discussion with the filmmaker and Dr. Shiran’s daughter, Ofrit Peres.
Israel, 2012. 66mins. Hebrew w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Sam Ball
The prolific Joann Sfar has published 150 graphic novels, including the French bestseller, The Rabbi’s Cat. This portrait tracks his odyssey through the Algerian and Eastern European Jewish heritage that serves as the wellspring of his work.
USA, 2012. 56 mins. French w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Directors: Joann Sfar, Antoine Delesvaux
This colorful, highly original and beautifully animated film adaptation of Joann Sfar’s bestselling graphic novel tells the story of a talking cat and his philosophical musings on religion. It also reveals the colorful seaside world of 1920s Algiers, when Jews and Arabs coexisted in relative peace.
France, 2009. 89 mins. French w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Ayal Goldberg
Rita Jahan Farouz immigrated to Israel from Iran with her family when she was eight years old. On the eve of her forty-ninth birthday, with tension between Tehran and Jerusalem looming, she records her first album in Farsi. At the same time we discover an intimate portrait of a family missing their homeland and their extended family, now scattered around the world. A year later, Rita is invited to perform at the United Nations. The warm response she receives proves what is often forgotten: countries are made up of individuals, and there is nothing like music to bring them together.
Israel, 2013. 76mins. Hebrew, Farsi & English w/English subtitles.
preceded by
Director: George Itzhak
Iranian-Jewish identity is expressed through the stories of two women artists and activists, Orly Noy and Josephine Mairzadeh, who are engaged in creative work that attempts to create a bridge between Iran and Israel, and their identities: the Iranian and the Jews.
The presentation of Reading Tehran in Tel-Aviv is made possible through the support of Yeshiva University Museum.
Join filmmaker George Itzhak, singer, composer, scholar Galeet Dardashti and artist Josephine Mairzadeh in conversation and Q&A following the films.
The film complements Yeshiva University Museum's exhibition, Light and Shadows: The Story of Iranian Jews. Guests are invited to visit the exhibition before the films.
USA, 2013. 20mins
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Directors: David Ofek, Neta Shoshani
Ronen and his girlfriend, Orit, have been dating for almost three years and her parents are demanding they either marry or break up. They both come from highly respected Bukharian families. Ronen and his brother, Hay, are the stars of the much loved Handa Handa theatre troupe. Between tradition and modernity, we follow their story as we follow the brothers on the road with their show.
Followed by a discussion and special presentation with Ronen and Hay Davidov!
Israel, 2013. 58 mins. Hebrew, English and Bukhari, Hebrew & English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Phillipe Lellouche
Claude and Isabelle, their sons, Simon (12) and Bibou (8), and his mother-in-law, travel to Brittany. Isabelle has caught Claude cheating on her and has chosen the village of her childhood for their holiday.
Joined by friends, they are all greeted with a particularly chilly attitude at the Café Pondemer. North African Jews, Catholic Bretons, Parisians, provincial types: it's not easy to get along. But, with humor and humility, bonds are formed. For Bibou and Simon, who falls in love for the first time, it’s their best vacation!
France, 2012. 94 mins. French w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Benny Toraty
Twenty years after a car accident, for which he was held responsible, the legendary tar (lute) player Yosef Tawila (Uri Gavriel) is running a bar in northern Israel. The son (Dudu Tassa) of his band mate Avram, who also survived the accident, arrives with news that his father is dying. He brings notations for “The Weeping Springtime Symphony,” a piece Yosef and Avram worked on together but never performed . Yosef decides to reunite the remaining members of the band to grant his dying friend’s final wish—and perhaps to heal his own tortured soul. The film is filled with outstanding music.
Israel, 2012. 105mins. Hebrew w/English subtitles.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Film: Enrico Macias: A Life in Song
Director: Antoine Casubolo Ferro
A Jewish pied-noir musician and singer, Enrico Macias, is a unique figure in the French musical landscape. Over the past 50 years, the boy from Constantine, Algeria, has become the spokesman for the thousands of North African, and other Middle Eastern Jews, who fled their homelands in the 1950’s and 1960’s. A utopian, singing of love and friendship between nations, he has gradually become not only a messenger for peace, but also one of the most popular singers in France.
France, 2012. 52 mins. French w/English subtitles.
followed by
Presentation of the ASF Pomegranate Lifetime Achievement Award to International Singer, Songwriter and Actor Enrico Macias.
Presented by:
17th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
concert
Presented by:
concert
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
purim celebration
Yellow Sneaker Puppets will celebrate Purim in their family show Harry the Hamantaschen Tells the Whole Megillah…and then some! Purim has never been so mysterious, as Harry the Hamantaschen, Private Eye, takes the audience through the Purim story, back in time to the city of Shushan. Kids will cheer (and boo!) as the story unfolds and Esther and Mordechai save the day (with a little help from a hamantaschen in a fedora). Stay after the show to share some hamantaschen with Harry and for a special Purim art project, inspired by the YU Museum exhibition, Light & Shadows: The Story of Iranian Jews."
For families with children of all ages.
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purim celebration
lecture and interactive presentation
Presented by:
lecture and interactive presentation
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
symposium
Presented by:
symposium
max weinreich fellowship lecture
Presented by:
max weinreich fellowship lecture
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
panel discussion
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panel discussion
curator's tour
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curator's tour
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film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
roundtable discussion
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roundtable discussion
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
roundtable discussion
Presented by:
roundtable discussion
panel discussion
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panel discussion
lecture and conversation
Presented by:
lecture and conversation
panel discussion
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panel discussion
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
lecture with musical examples
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lecture with musical examples
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
film roundtable
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film roundtable
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
concert and artist talkback
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concert and artist talkback
archive launch
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archive launch
discussion/performance
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discussion/performance
curator's tour
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curator's tour
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memorial program
Presented by:
memorial program
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures