lecture
Presented by:
lecture
4th annual adrienne cooper memorial concert
36 Battery Place, NYC
Celebrate the life and work of Adrienne Cooper, Yiddish singer, scholar, and former Assistant Director at YIVO. Stars of the klezmer and Yiddish world, including Frank London, Sarah Gordon, Michael Winograd, and Joshua Dolgin present an evening of music dedicated to her legacy.
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4th annual adrienne cooper memorial concert
holidays and closures
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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
family history today 2015 lecture
Presented by:
family history today 2015 lecture
celebration
Presented by:
celebration
annual hanukkah concert
Presented by:
annual hanukkah concert
sidney krum young artists concert series
Presented by:
sidney krum young artists concert series
film
Presented by:
film
exhibit opening & hanukkah celebration
Presented by:
exhibit opening & hanukkah celebration
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
Presented by:
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
artist's workshop
Presented by:
artist's workshop
lecture and theatrical reading
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lecture and theatrical reading
concert
Presented by:
concert
podbrodz memorial lecture
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podbrodz memorial lecture
concert
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concert
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
concert
Presented by:
concert
family history today 2015 lecture
Presented by:
family history today 2015 lecture
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
exhibition opening
With his fake beard, putty nose, and thick Yiddish accent, the “stage Jew” was once a common character in vaudeville, part of a genre that mocked immigrants and minorities. Essentially a variant of blackface minstrelsy, the music that accompanied these “Jewface” performances was not only performed on stage, but also published as colorfully illustrated sheet music so fans could play them at home. Outrageous and offensive by today’s standards, these “Yiddish” dialect songs exploited a variety of unpleasant stereotypes about Jews.
Based in part on the sheet music collection of The New York Times’ Sunday Magazine Critic-at-large Jody Rosen, YIVO presents its exhibition, Jewface: “Yiddish” Dialect Songs of Tin Pan Alley. Eddy Portnoy (Academic Advisor & Research Associate, YIVO), the curator of Jewface, and Jody Rosen lead a discussion with Tablet Magazine editor-in-chief Alana Newhouse about this form of early 20th-century entertainment, how it mocked Jews, engaged Jews, and developed Yiddish-accented English for comic effect.
Presented by:
exhibition opening
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
Presented by:
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
panel discussion
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panel discussion
edit-a-thon
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edit-a-thon
concert and lecture
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concert and lecture
naomi prawer kadar memorial lecture
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naomi prawer kadar memorial lecture
presentation
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presentation
panel discussion
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panel discussion
celebration
Presented by:
celebration
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
Presented by:
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
family history today 2015 lecture
Presented by:
family history today 2015 lecture
memorial program
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memorial program
performance
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performance
book talk
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book talk
family history today 2015 lecture
Presented by:
family history today 2015 lecture
max weinreich fellowship lecture in baltic jewish studies
Presented by:
max weinreich fellowship lecture in baltic jewish studies
panel discussion
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panel discussion
exhibition opening
Please join us for a program and reception to celebrate the opening of a new exhibit in the David Berg Rare Book Room.
The far-reaching impact of World War II resulted in massive destruction, decimation, deprivation, and the unparalleled displacement of people across and far beyond the European continent. In commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the end of the war, After the War uses photographs, artifacts, and archival material to document and provide insights into the end of the war and post-war disorder and revitalization in Europe and the United States. Selected photographs from the Roman Vishniac Archive at the International Center of Photography in New York are brought together with materials from American Jewish Historical Society and Leo Baeck Institute, whose collections reside at the Center for Jewish History.
After the War: Recovery, Relief, and Return, 1945-1949 has been supported by a generous grant from The David Berg Foundation.
Presented by:
exhibition opening
lecture
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lecture
film and exhibition opening
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film and exhibition opening
discussion
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discussion
120th anniversary of peretz markish's birth symposium
Presented by:
120th anniversary of peretz markish's birth symposium
panel discussion
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panel discussion
family history today 2015 lecture
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family history today 2015 lecture
model-maker's tour
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model-maker's tour
book talk
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book talk
lecture
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lecture
symposium
Interior of the Anhalter Bahnhof railway terminus near Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, 1929–early 1930s. © Mara Vishniac Kohn, courtesy International Center of Photography
The recent discovery of an enormous body of previously unknown work, including more than 10,000 negatives, by renowned photographer Roman Vishniac, has revealed a far more versatile, innovative and accomplished artist than previously thought. The New Yorker called the images “a revelation.” A day-long symposium with a wide range of scholars, photography curators and cultural critics reappraise Vishniac’s radically diverse body of work that spans the 1920s through the 1970s.
This symposium is organized in conjunction with the publication of Roman Vishniac Rediscovered by Maya Benton (co-published by the International Center of Photography and DelMonico Books•Prestel. 384 pages, $75). The book spans six decades of the photographer’s work and includes 475 images and essays by 23 world-renowned scholars, curators and cultural critics.
“Roman Vishniac Rediscovered” was been supported by generous grants from The David Berg Foundation, The Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, Joyce B. Linker and the Andrew and Marina Lewin Family Foundation.
For more information, please visit: www.cjh.org/Vishniac.
Presented by:
symposium
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
Presented by:
ruth gay seminar in jewish studies
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
Presented by:
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
lecture
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lecture
exhibition opening
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exhibition opening
lecture
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lecture
book talk
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book talk
concert
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concert
film and discussion
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film and discussion
panel discussion
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panel discussion
book talk
In his new book The House of Twenty Thousand Books, journalist and writer Sasha Abramsky weaves together a moving family story of radical politics, passionate book collecting, and the eclectic mind of a Jewish intellectual. Join us for a lively discussion with Abramsky about the ways books have shaped Jewish lives and culture in the modern world.
Review from The Wall Street Journal:
by Jeremy Dauber (09/25/2015)
Intellectualism - the practice of being and living in the world as an intellectual, rather than simply using one’s intellect—poses a set of diametrically opposed challenges. On the one hand, there’s the magpie-like drive of intellectual curiosity, the desire to winkle out everything one can about an endlessly complex world. On the other, there’s the rigorously analytical drive of systematization, of trying to fit all that everything into clearly explicable channels.
Any public intellectual’s posterity depends in no small part on how well they navigate the tensions between the two. A chronicle of intellectual life like “The House of Twenty Thousand Books,” Sasha Abramsky’s tale of his brilliant grandfather, must measure its success in how well it lives up to the challenges of addressing those disparities.
Before you ask: The house in question is the externally unprepossessing 5 Hillway, Highgate, London. Though there’s no list or catalog, Mr. Abramsky’s depiction of the treasures stacked, heaped and hoarded inside its walls renders the number 20,000 utterly persuasive. But Mr. Abramsky’s book ultimately revolves around not the house, nor the books, but their reader; structured like an architectural floor plan, the book presents each room’s holdings (like a library, except they’re all reading rooms) as a jumping-off point to discuss the different interests, drives, intellectual obsessions, and emotional and psychological pulls of their occupant.
Mr. Abramsky’s grandfather Chimen Abramsky was by all accounts a remarkable man of prodigious intellect and enormous energy. (He died at age 93 in 2010.) Chimen himself was the heir to a familial tradition of intellectual achievement: His father, Yehezkel Abramsky, was considered one of the great intellects of the 20th-century rabbinate and arguably the most important Orthodox rabbi in Britain during his lifetime, having immigrated after spending time in Stalin’s Siberia for refusing to lie about the maltreatment of religious Jewry there. Chimen’s photographic recall and his voracious love of reading and scholarship could easily, had he followed in that path, suggested a similar destiny.
But the transformations of modernity had their effect on Chimen, as they did on numberless Jewish men and women born in Europe in the early part of the 20th century. By his teenage years, Chimen switched his allegiances from the Talmud to Marx, and, as the decades went on, became one of the truly great collectors of books, letters and other archival documents related to the history of socialism in Europe, earning much of his living cataloging and evaluating similar materials for auction houses.
Presented by:
book talk
panel discussion & auction
Presented by:
panel discussion & auction
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
concert
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concert
book talk
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book talk
conversation
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conversation
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
Presented by:
first response: postwar cinema and the holocaust
annual nusakh vilne memorial program
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annual nusakh vilne memorial program
book event and film screening
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book event and film screening
book talk
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book talk
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
panel discussion
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panel discussion
book talk
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book talk
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
reading room closure
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reading room closure
reading room closure
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reading room closure
reading room closure
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reading room closure
reading room closure
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reading room closure
reading room closure
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reading room closure
reading room closure
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reading room closure
memorial program
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memorial program
film screening and discussion
Chava Rosenfarb, noted Yiddish writer and major Holocaust literary figure, discusses her life in Lodz before the Holocaust, her years in the Lodz Ghetto, in Auschwitz, in Bergen-Belsen, and her career as a Yiddish writer in Montreal, in an unscripted interview with Yiddish teacher and activist Anna Fishman Gonshor. This is the third in the series Worlds within a World: Conversations with Yiddish Writers produced by the League for Yiddish and directed by noted filmmaker Josh Waletzky.
Yiddish with English subtitles. Followed by a panel discussion.
Presented by:
film screening and discussion
memorial program
This program will be in Yiddish.
Former students, colleagues, family, and friends of the celebrated Yiddish language teacher, linguist and scholar gather in his honor for this annual commemoration. Guest speaker Kenneth (Binyomen) Moss will deliver a talk, "Nationalism, the State and the New Antisemitism in Zionist, Diasporist and Territorialist Thought, 1929-1939,” followed by a musical program by Zhenya Lopatnik.
Presented by:
memorial program
exhibit opening & film premiere
Special guests, including civil rights activist Julian Bond, historian Hasia Diner, author Eli Evans and filmmaker Aviva Kempner discuss the remarkable story of a Jewish partnership with African American communities in the struggle for civil rights. This panel discussion followed a screening of the film, Rosenwald.
Presented by:
exhibit opening & film premiere
book talk and signing
"Sharply observed, beautifully rendered stories about gender, sexuality, and nationality by a fresh and original literary voice.”
Join us as we welcome Shelly Oria, a brilliant New York based Israeli author, to read from her best-selling debut New York 1, Tel Aviv 0, and talk to us about writing between the here and there of spaces and languages, about the amalgamating Israeli and American literary influences on her work, and more.
Enter the world of New York 1, Tel Aviv 0, where the characters are as intelligent and charming as they are lonely. A couple discovers the ability to stop time together; another couple lives with a constant, loud beeping in their apartment, though only one of them can hear it. A father leaves his daughter in Israel to pursue a painting career in New York; a sex worker falls in love with the Israeli photographer who studies her.
Presented by:
book talk and signing
discussion and reading
Novelist Julia Kissina will present an excerpt from her work-in-progress “The Shtetl of Eden”—an imaginative fictional treatment of a little-known episode in modern Jewish history.
As waves of pogroms decimated Russia’s Jewish communities in the wake of the failed Revolution of 1905, London-based author Israel Zangwill and his Zionist Territorialist Movement raced against time to send teams on exploratory missions to exotic locales around the globe, hoping to establish a refuge and possible autonomous state for the besieged Jews of Russia.
At the narrative’s core is the town of Chernobyl, a center of Hasidism, where Jewish residents were caught between crushing poverty and the antisemitic nationalists of the Black Hundreds. In this context they tried to imagine life the jungles of Angola and the deserts of Africa—braving perilous circumstances and acting on wild hopes for safety and freedom.
“The Shtel of Eden” was inspired by research conducted in the partner collections housed at the Center for Jewish History. It inventively recreates the astonishing experiences of Jews imagining their own versions of paradise and redemption, and the harsh realities that they encountered.
Julia Kissina, a 2015 Prins Foundation Artist-in-Residence at the Center for Jewish History, was born in the former Soviet Union and was a member of the Russian underground Samizdat movement during the 1980s and 1990s. She now lives in Berlin, where she is active as a leading novelist and visual artist. Her books include Springtime on the Moon, Goodbye Tarantino and the forthcoming Elephantina’s Moscow Years.
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discussion and reading
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
play with music
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play with music
book celebration and talk
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book celebration and talk
book talk
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book talk
play with music
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play with music
exhibition opening
Join us on June 21 for the opening reception of Shtetl: Graphic Works and Sketches Of Solomon Yudovin (1920-1940).
Presented in collaboration with the Russian American Foundation and the Russian Museum of Ethnography, this exhibit features works of the renowned Russian-Jewish artist, ethnographer and scholar of Jewish traditional art, Solomon Yudovin. From the collections of the Russian Museum of Ethnography, St. Petersburg, and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, NY.
Presented by:
exhibition opening
concert and cd release party
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concert and cd release party
lecture
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lecture
curator's tour
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curator's tour
concert
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concert
puppet theater
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puppet theater
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
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jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
play with music
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play with music
play with music
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play with music
nyc film premiere and discussion
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nyc film premiere and discussion
conversation
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conversation
film
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film
nyc film premiere and discussion
Feature documentary Return to a Burning House portrays the life of heroine Haviva Reick (1914-1944), an activist during the Slovak National Uprising, a member of British Intelligence and the Palmach, and a passionate Zionist leader. Haviva left her beloved native Slovakia to found a Hashomer Hatzair kibbutz in British Mandate pre-Israel Palestine. After joining the Palmach strike force of pre-Israel's army, she was recruited by the British military in 1944 and sent back to Slovakia to rescue Allied airmen and help the remnant of the Jewish community. Using interviews with people in Slovakia, Israel, and Great Britain, some of whom knew Haviva, as well as archival material, the film tells the story of a compelling and inspiring woman. More info at www.haviva.sk.
After the film, join Mirka Molnar Lachka, producer of the film, Thomas Ort, Assistant Professor, Department of History, Queens College, and Rochelle Saidel, Director of Remember the Women Institute, for a discussion and Q & A.
A reception will follow.
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nyc film premiere and discussion
book launch
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book launch
concert
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concert
exhibit opening and discussion
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exhibit opening and discussion
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
book talk
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book talk
concert and discussion
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concert 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
film and panel discussion
Presented by:
film and panel discussion
book event
Sunday May 17 11:00am - 4:30pm
Monday May 18 11:00am - 4:30pm
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!
During the book sale on Sunday May 17, the Jewish Genealogical Society will have their monthly May meeting at the Center for Jewish History. The JGS event will include the Gesher Galicia regional meeting at 11am and a lecture titled “Holly Golightly Was a Nice Jewish Girl: Our Ancestors Reinvented” by speaker Pamela Weisberger at 2pm. Earlier, at 11:00am Gesher Galicia will hold its regional meeting with Andrew Zalewski discussing "Galician Portraits: In Search of Jewish Roots" and Valerie Schatzker on "Jewish Oil Magnates of Galicia." All are welcome to attend; the lecture costs $5 for non JGS members.
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book event
genealogy talk
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genealogy talk
jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
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jewish genealogical society programs at cjh
max weinreich fellowship lecture
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max weinreich fellowship lecture
concert
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concert
book talk
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book talk
lecture
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lecture
book talk
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book talk
book talk
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book talk
sidney krum young artists concert series
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sidney krum young artists concert series
book talk
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book talk
discussion
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discussion
celebration
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celebration
concert
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concert
book talk
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book talk
book talk
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book talk
concert
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concert
conversation
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conversation
curator's tour
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curator's tour
16th street book club
The 16th Street book club is a reading group that meets to discuss contemporary literature. All book club sessions are free and open to the public.
In celebration of National Poetry Month
All book club sessions are free and open to the public. Please try to bring your books or e-readers with you.
Our April selection is Yeshiva Boys by David Lehman (poetry collection, 2009, 112 pages).
David Lehman, a poet of wit, ingenuity, and formidable skill, draws upon his heritage as a grandson of Holocaust victims and offers a stirring autobiographical collection of poems that is his most ambitious work to date. It covers an expansive range of subjects — from love, sex, and romance to repentance, humility, the meaning of democracy, Existentialism, modern European history, military intelligence, and the rituals associated with faith and prayer. The title poem, "Yeshiva Boys," is a work in twelve parts that blends the elements of espionage fiction, memory, history, and moral philosophy. It reflects David's experience as a student in an orthodox Yeshiva, and it, along with many other poems in the book, explores what it means to be a Jew in America, what is gained and lost in assimilating to secular culture, how to understand the peculiar destiny of the Jewish people, and how to reconcile the existence of God with the knowledge of evil. Beautiful, provocative, and accessible, this is David Lehman's most inspired collection.
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16th street book club
book talk
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book talk
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
book talk
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book talk
yom hashoah program
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yom hashoah program
max weinreich center fellowship lecture
Presented by:
max weinreich center fellowship lecture
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
theatrical excerpts, launch of educational unit & panel discussion
Presented by:
theatrical excerpts, launch of educational unit & panel discussion
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
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holidays and closures
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
lecture
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lecture
book talk
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book talk
holiday celebration
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holiday celebration
concert
Presented by:
concert
max weinreich fellowship lecture
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max weinreich fellowship lecture
discussion
Presented by:
discussion
16th street book club
The 16th Street book club is a reading group that meets to discuss contemporary literature. All book club sessions are free and open to the public.
“Images of home in its many guises permeate Israeli novelist Shalev's latest work to be translated into English, following Blue Mountain, The Loves of Judith, and Esau. With the land of Israel in the background and frequently the foreground, the intertwined stories introduce two teenage handlers of messenger homing pigeons whose love blooms in the 1940s through the War of Independence and the battle for Jerusalem, as well as narrator Yair Mendelson, his unusual conception, his unhappy marriage, and his longing for a home of his own. Yair achieves his wish: he builds his new home with the help of his female contractor, with whom he falls in love. All the characters and their families are linked, homing pigeons make their nests, and the characters whose lives come together all have ‘homing’ stories as well. Magical realism works beautifully in this powerfully suffused novel of love, loss, and the need for home. Highly recommended.”
—Molly Abramowitz in Library Journal
“Shalev has deftly layered Yair's story in such a manner that a refreshingly nuanced picture of Israel emerges.”
—The Miami Herald
“Vivid characters and sharp dialogue... By working stories in the past and present against each other, Shalev brings into questions the validity, and the reliability, of memory.”
—The New York Times Book Review
Presented by:
16th street book club
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Ron Arons, author of "Jews of Sing Sing" and of "Mind Maps for Genealogy," will introduce basic concepts of "family systems theory."
For more than 40 years, people in the mental health and social services have used “family systems theory” to analyze family dynamics through multiple generations. Unfortunately, most genealogists don’t know much about family therapy. Conversely, those in the mental health and social services fields know very little about genealogical research. Yet genealogy and family therapy go hand in hand. In this talk, Ron will introduce basic concepts of family systems theory. He will also show how families can be represented a different way, using ‘genograms’ (social workers, family therapists, and psychologists use these ‘family diagrams’ every day to understand family dynamics in the family).
Ron Arons is a nationally recognized writer and lecturer, best known for his research on New York’s Jewish criminals and for his book, The Jews of Sing Sing. In the process of researching his own criminal ancestor’s past, Ron traced his roots to England, Poland, Romania, Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania. He appeared on the PBS television series, “The Jewish Americans” as the acknowledged expert on Jewish criminals in New York’s Lower East Side.
Before turning his attention full-time to genealogy, Ron was employed for many years as a marketer for high-tech companies. He received a B.S. degree in Engineering from Princeton University, and an MBA from the University of Chicago.
The Ackman & Ziff Family Genealogy Institute at CJH will be open before the meeting at 11:00 a.m. for access to research materials and computers and networking with other researchers.
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Directed by Younis Laghari
Morocco, 60 min
In French, Arabic, & English with English subtitles
U.S. Premiere
Once upon a time, there were over 250,000 Jews in Morocco. Why they left has rarely been of interest, until now. A probing and comprehensive exploration of the many reasons the Jews of Morocco left their homeland, leaving behind a rich and vibrant history.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Directors: Directed by Hanna Azoulay Hafsari
Israel, 90 min
In Hebrew with English subtitles
This vibrant and sensual story of three generations of Moroccan women living in Israel playfully examines the universal struggle between following past traditions and the desire to break free and be independent.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Director: Alexandre Arcady
France, 108 min
In French with English subtitles
New York Premiere
This award-winning thriller tells the true story of the kidnapping and murder of Ilan Halimi. Targeted by the self-described “Gang of the Barbarians,” Halimi was kidnapped and taken to an apartment in the Bagneux neighborhood of Paris. There he was held captive and tortured for three weeks before being dumped in the woods by his captors.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Directors: Lewis Cohen
France, 90 min
In French & English with English subtitles
In 2006, Ilan Halimi had been seized for ransom, allegedly because, as a Jew, he would have easy access to money. Using the trial of Ilan Halimi’s murderers as the base, this film delves into the centuries old stereotype that Jews often have easy and deceitful access to money.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Before the Revolution
Directors: Dan Shadur
Israel, 60 min
In Farsi & Hebrew with English subtitles
Drawing on rare archival footage, personal histories, and interviews, this is the untold story of the Israeli Paradise in Iran: During the 60’s and 70’s, thousands of Israelis lived in Tehran, enjoying special status under the Shah’s dictatorial rule. Protected by large arms deals and complex financial ties, this community relished in luxury, until the Revolution turned their lives, and the country, upside down.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
The Iranian Americans, 9pm
Directors: Andrew Goldberg
USA, 60 min
In Farsi & English with English subtitles
Short synopsis: With Iran in the news virtually every day, most Americans have little knowledge of the story of the hundreds of thousands of Iranians who live in the U.S. including a huge sub-community of Iranian Jews. This PBS documentary chronicles the underreported history of a group of emigrants finding refuge, overcoming adversity, and ultimately creating new Persian-American lives.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Many roads have led to Israel, and the vast number of stories are thought-provoking and powerful. Tonight’s films feature the stories of Jews from Rhodes, Ethiopia, and Iraq. Divided into two programs, the second half of the evening will be accompanied by Iraqi hors d’oeuvres.
It Never Rained on Rhodes, 6pm
Director: Barry Saltzman
USA, Canada, Belgium, Greece, South Africa,
30 min, In English
A short experimental film about the universality of loss. Avoiding specific geographic, demographic and historic references, the director attempts to transform the story of one small community into a vehicle that emotionally engages the audience in personal notions of loss and history.
The Dove Flyer, 8pm
Director: Nissim Dayan
Israel, 88 min
In Arabic with English subtitles
Sixteen year old Kabi is typical teenager in Iraq in the 1950’s – surrounded by activists, he tries to decipher the difference between the various Jewish underground movements until a single act brings them together. Based on the award- winning novel by Eli Amir, this is the modern exodus story of one of the world’s most ancient Jewish communities.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
With something for all ages, the day begins with a free program for children to learn about upcoming Jewish and Persian holidays. For older children and people of all ages, the afternoon program features films about Bukharian veterans of World War II, a celebration of the Judeo-Moroccan musical tradition, and the magic of matchmaking.
Babak & Friends: A First Norooz, 33 min
Norooz, the Persian New Year, is a holiday for Persians of all persuasions, including Jews and Muslims. In this short film, Babak, a little boy, travels to the ancient capital of the Persian Empire, Persepolis, to learn about the traditions of Norooz and rejoice in the rich culture of Iran.
Be Happy, it’s Purim, 30min
Everyone’s dressing-up for Purim, so get out your costumes and join the fun! Presented by Shalom Sesame, Israel’s Sesame Street, this short film explores the story of Esther, the Persian Jewish Queen, who saved her community from the evil Hamman.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Aron Aronof & the Bukharian Museum, 6 min
On the top floor of a yeshiva in Queens, Aron Aronov has gathered unique items to memorialize the history and culture of Bukharian Jews, a Sephardi minority group from Central Asia. But maintaining a museum single-handedly has its challenges.
Bakhsh in Rego Park, 5min
A Bukharian Jew living in Rego Park, Queens, takes us throughthe process of making Bakhsh, a traditional meal that her family has been preparing for generations.
Bukharian Lens: The Untold Story of Bukharian Jews, 18min
Denied for decades by the Soviet regime’s anti-Jewish propagandists, learn the untold story of bravery and sacrifice by Bukharian Jewish veterans of World War II who fought the Nazis. This unique, inter-generational film project features interviews with veterans, many of whom have since passed.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Directors: Dan Wasserman & Barak Heymann
Israel, 50 min
In Hebrew with English subtitles
Get ready to meet the most unexpected and charming matchmaker in Israel: Tova. Apart from being hugely successful, she’s also paralyzed from the neck down. This award-winning festival-favorite is a heart- warming documentary that is sure to woo even the hardest of hearts.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
In January 2015, an unsolved terrorist act from 1994 was recently thrust back into the spotlight with news of the death of the prosecutor in charge of resolving the crime. God’s Slave reimagines the preparation and execution of the heinous crime and its aftermath.
God's Slave
Director: Joel Novoa
Venezuela & Argentina, 90 min
In Spanish with English subtitles
Based on the true story of the bombing of the AMIA Community Center in Buenos Aires in 1994, this heart-pounding and nuanced political thriller closely follows the game of cat and mouse between an Islamist terrorist and a Mossad operative as they each follow their convictions.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
Enrico Macias, the Algerian-born international recording superstar, presents El Gusto! The much-loved 2014 Pomegranate Award Recipient for Sephardi Excellence in the Arts will be on hand to present this year’s award, and for a performance. This Opening Night reception will include authentic Sephardi hors d’oeuvres and desserts
El Gusto!
Director: Safinez Bousbia
Ireland, UAE, Algeria, 88 min
In French & Arabic with English subtitles
The remarkable story of Jewish and Muslim musicians from the Casbah separated by political conflicts for over 50 years and reunited to celebrate their common passion: Chaabi music, a.k.a the people’s music of Algeria.
Presented by:
18th annual ny sephardic jewish film festival
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
concert
Presented by:
concert
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
film and discussion
Presented by:
film and discussion
concert
Presented by:
concert
concert
Presented by:
concert
lecture
Presented by:
lecture
film & lecture
Presented by:
film & lecture
book talk & music
Presented by:
book talk & music
symposium
Presented by:
symposium
panel discussion
Presented by:
panel discussion
book talk
Presented by:
book talk
max weinreich center fellowship lecture
Presented by:
max weinreich center fellowship lecture
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
concert
Presented by:
concert
staged reading
Presented by:
staged reading
lecture and panel discussion
Presented by:
lecture and panel discussion
holidays and closures
Presented by:
holidays and closures
screening
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screening
legacy council event
Presented by:
legacy council event
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
lecture with film & song
Presented by:
lecture with film & song
archival leaders advocate: annual seminar at the center
http://archivalleaders.cjh.org/
Presented by:
archival leaders advocate: annual seminar at the center
http://archivalleaders.cjh.org/
book talk
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book talk
film screening and discussion
6 pm: Echoes of the Borscht Belt: Contemporary Photographs by Marisa Scheinfeld: Open gallery with the photographer
7 pm: Film screening & discussion
Presented by:
film screening and discussion
16th street book club
The 16th Street Book Club is a lively group that meets to discuss modern Jewish literature.
Hope: A Tragedy is a hilarious and haunting examination of the burdens and abuse of history, propelled with unstoppable rhythm and filled with existential musings and mordant wit. It is a comic and compelling story of the hopeless longing to be free of those pasts that haunt our every present.
The rural town of Stockton, New York, is famous for nothing: no one was born there, no one died there, nothing of any historical import at all has ever happened there, which is why Solomon Kugel, like other urbanites fleeing their pasts and histories, decided to move his wife and young son there. To begin again. To start anew. But it isn’t quite working out that way for Kugel...
His ailing mother stubbornly holds on to life, and won’t stop reminiscing about the Nazi concentration camps she never actually suffered through. To complicate matters further, some lunatic is burning down farmhouses just like the one Kugel bought, and when, one night, he discovers history—a living, breathing, thought-to-be-dead specimen of history—hiding upstairs in his attic, bad quickly becomes worse.
Reviews:
“A virtuoso humorist, and a brave one: beware Shalom Auslander; he will make you laugh until your heart breaks.” – New York Times Book Review
“A caustic comic tour de force.” – NPR
Presented by:
16th street book club
curator's tour
Presented by:
curator's tour
cd release concert
Celebrate the release of Toyznt tamen: A Thousand Flavors, a new recording by Yiddish singer and songwriter Miryem-Khaye Seigel, featuring her original Yiddish songs and other adapted repertoire, including dynamic theatre gems and subversive folk songs. With musicians Patrick Farrell, Alicia Svigals, Michael Winograd and Rémy Yulzari.
Location: Museum at Eldridge Street
Presented by:
cd release concert
screening
Presented by:
screening
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
Presented by:
jewish genealogical society monthly meeting
film
Presented by:
film
panel discussion
Five historians dig up film footage, Yiddish newspapers, autobiographies, and landsmannschaften records from the YIVO archives, and present a rare portrait of NY Jewish life between the wars. With Rebecca Kobrin (Columbia), Eddy Portnoy (YIVO; Rutgers), Roberta Newman (YIVO), Daniel Soyer (Fordham), and Annie Polland, moderator (Tenement Museum).
Location: Museum of the City of New York (MCNY)
Presented by:
panel discussion
artist's tour
Presented by:
artist's tour
concert
Grammy-winning band The Klezmatics perform from the original score they composed for the exhibition Letters to Afar in the MCNY gallery. Much like old-style klezmer street bands, in this concert, the band will play while moving through the exhibit space.
Location: Museum of the City of New York (MCNY)
Presented by:
concert
memorial event
This event marks the 5th anniversary of Mina Bern's passing at the age of 99, the last great star of the interwar European Yiddish stage who was still active. Bern’s absence is felt among the Yiddish and theater communities, who wish to honor her memory and remind the world of her contribution. A wonderful actress and entertainer in her own right, Bern was also mentor to many of those who keep the field of Yiddish theater vibrant. She was also one of the most colorful personalities in a milieu not short on colorful personalities.
The program will feature material associated with Mina Bern, including sketches from the Broadway shows Those Were the Days and Let’s Sing Yiddish; songs that she put her mark on; documentary footage of Bern talking about her life and performing; and of course reminiscences by those who worked with and were influenced by her.
Most importantly, Mina Bern mentored artists of all ages who sought to keep the flame of Yiddish language and theater alive. Among those who worked with and learned from her are the event organizers, Tony-nominated director and actress Eleanor Reissa, Congress director Shane Baker, and photographer Joan Roth; as well as event participants including founding Klezmatics member and world-renowned trumpet star Frank London; Broadway actresses Lori Wilner and Joanne Borts, and Broadway actors Allen Lewis Rickman and Bob Abelson; actresses Yelena Shmulenson and Rachel Botchan; Rabbi Avram Mlotek; Chazzan Shira Flam; actors Sandy Leavitt and Hy Wolfe; pianist and actor Steve Sterner; and stage manager David Rosenberg.
Kosher refreshments will be served.
Presented by:
memorial event