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Beyond Oscars’ glare, a glimpse of women on the rise – CSMonitor … – Christian Science Monitor

Posted By on February 27, 2017

February 26, 2017 Sujata Days Hollywood career was transformed by a tweet.

It was 2011 Twitters early years and she had spotted a call online for auditions for a new web series. Ms. Day, frustrated after four years of commercials and bit parts that often caricatured her Indian American heritage, jumped at the chance.

Within a week, Day had nabbed the role of CeCe, best friend and sidekick of the lead character in The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, a YouTube comedy short. A month later, she was on set with Issa Rae, who starred in, wrote, produced, and directed the show. By 2012, the series had won a Shorty Award and drawn support from players like star singer Pharrell Williams.

What a web series can do in terms of visibility, especially for women of color its really amazing, Day says. It changed my life.

Days experience demonstrates how indispensable the Internet has become for diversity in Hollywood.

The Academy Awards Sunday night will again drive a discourse about the value of diversity both on- and off-screen as well as in society. And while the Oscars made conspicuous headway this year in addressing the ethnic and racial homogeneity of their nominees, less clear has been the progress made in promoting women at all levels of cinema and television.

Data show that opportunities remain largely limited and stereotyped across the board. But online platforms, industry experts say, are providing female and minority actors and filmmakers a means to break out of those boxes.

Social media helps budding filmmakers and actors build networks. Sites like YouTube and Vimeo serve as repositories where employers can quickly access an actor or directors previous work. Theyre also avenues for sharing original content that might otherwise never see the light of day.

The new platforms, experts say, have upped the demand for material, opening doors throughout the industry.

What were seeing is a lot more of a lot more, says Jocelyn Diaz, executive vice president of programming for EPIX, a premium cable service. There are more opportunities out there, and more opportunities for women.

When she first arrived in Los Angeles three years ago, Marie Jamora would have disagreed.

She had come to the United States to be with her now-fianc, leaving behind a 15-year career directing, producing, and writing in the Philippines. Despite her background in the business, Ms. Jamora says, being a female minority added to the already considerable challenges facing anyone overseas career or not who wants to break into Hollywood.

You get the best of the best in this town, she says. And there are not as many work opportunities for female directors.

Of the top 200 highest-grossing movies released in 2015, women directed 7.7 percent, according to the most recent Hollywood Diversity Report, released this month by the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.

In 2016, women comprised 17 percent of executive producers, 13 percent of writers, 5 percent of cinematographers, and 3 percent of composers, the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University found.

This month, the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) reported that their 16-month investigation of hiring practices in Hollywood found that major studios consistently discriminated against female directors. The commission is now in talks to resolve the issue. If the settlement negotiations fail, it may resort to legal action, Deadline reports.

Such findings show how deeply ingrained gender norms remain in Hollywood, says Sarah Kozloff, a professor of film at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

There seem to be certain occupations that are just gendered male and female in the cultural mindset, she says. You'll have famous women editors like Dede Allen, but very few women [directors of photography]. You'll have women in hair and makeup, but sound design seems to have just been colonized by men.

And this has been true essentially since the silent era, she says.

The Internet has started to change that. In the past five years, the ubiquity of YouTube, combined with the growing dominance of video-on-demand (VOD) sites like Netflix and Hulu have provided a pipeline for faces and voices once shut out of or sidelined in film and television.

Ilana Glazers and Abbi Jacobsons Broad City, about two Jewish American women in their 20s navigating life in New York City, began as a web series that the pair had independently produced and starred in from 2009 to 2011. In 2014, Comedy Central picked up the show, which has since been nominated for more than a half dozen awards.

Transparent, the Jill Soloway-helmed web television series about a family who discovers their father has always identified as a woman, premiered on Amazon Video in 2014. In 2015 it became the first show produced by a VOD service to receive a Golden Globe for best series.

And Ms. Rae, who had created and starred in Awkward Black Girls, has partially adapted the series into HBOs Insecure. The show has earned her a Golden Globe nod for best actress, among other accolades.

The trick, industry insiders say, is to have an enterprising attitude.

I see an entrepreneurial economy emerging, says Amy Baer, a 25-year industry veteran who is now president and chief executive of Gidden Media, a development and production company in Los Angeles. Writers, directors are not at a disadvantage anymore [just] because they are not represented by an agency.

You dont have to wait for someone to greenlight your idea. You can release it on the Internet, Jamora adds. You can make sure you have current work and youre not just sitting around waiting for a break.

Day, the actress, has a recurring role on Insecure. But she now also writes, produces, and stars in her own material. She has in motion five different film and television projects. All give voice to the female and minority experience.

A lot of the roles I was auditioning for four, five years ago were like, medical assistant No. 2, Day says. When you can be busy with your own work and your own writing and creations, you dont have to rely on other people to get you the job.

In recent years, advocates have used the attention around the Academy Awards to urge studios and executives to recognize the value of diversity in the industry.

Despite the data and EEOC findings, observers say, Hollywood has begun to respond.

This years Oscars boasts a diverse catalog of nominees, including Ava DuVernay for best documentary (feature) for 13th and Allison Schroeder for best adapted screenplay for Hidden Figures.

Stars like Reese Witherspoon have also taken initiative to produce more stories for and about women. Her production company, Pacific Standard, is behind the HBO miniseries, Big Little Lies, which premiered Sunday and stars Ms. Witherspoon alongside Nicole Kidman and Shailene Woodley.

Just last week, the Sundance Institute and Women in Film announced ReFrame, a collaboration with 50 Hollywood leaders to advance gender equality.

I am starting to see an industry that is awakening to making a priority for saying, This is a movie to have a woman on it. Or, This is a Hispanic story, we should find a Hispanic writer to write it, Ms. Baer says.

Some are concerned that progress has been too concentrated in television. Marvels decision to hire Patty Jenkins to direct a big-budget film like Wonder Woman is only tokenism if it remains a one-off, says Professor Kozloff at Vassar.

Because television shows are lower budget and because they are so [much] more numerous, they will never quite have the cachet of the big-budget feature with major stars, she says. Will women be allowed to graduate, so to speak, from the streaming distribution channels or television to features?

Day and Jamora, however, arent too worried. The television world today is full of opportunities for those ready to take them, both say.

Ive been constantly been surrounded by a utopia of women in color in charge, Day says. Its been amazing.

I think its the golden age of American television right now, Jamora adds. There are a million channels looking for directors. I really want to pursue that.

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Beyond Oscars' glare, a glimpse of women on the rise - CSMonitor ... - Christian Science Monitor

Bomb threat closes building that houses Jewish Anti-Defamation League – KTVU San Francisco

Posted By on February 27, 2017

SAN FRANCISCO (KTVU) -- A building that houses the San Francisco offices of the Anti-Defamation League was evacuated Monday afternoon after officials received a bomb threat, authorities said.

Workers received a call that there was a bomb in the eight-story building, located at 720 Market Street between Grant and Kearny streets, sometime Monday afternoon.

The staffers called police and responding officers decided to close nearby streets in the area as a precaution just as the evening rush hour commute was shifting into high gear.

Motorists were urged to avoid the area while police investigated the incident.

No injuries have been reported.

The bomb threat in San Francisco is the latest among a series of threats made to Jewish centers and cemeteries in recent days.

Jewish centers and schools across the nation coped with another wave of bomb threats Monday as officials in Philadelphia made plans to repair and restore hundreds of vandalized headstones at a Jewish cemetery.

Jewish Community Centers and day schools in at least a dozen states received threats, according to the JCC Association of North America. No bombs were found. All 21 buildings -- 13 community centers and eight schools -- were cleared by Monday afternoon and had resumed normal operations, the association said.

It was the fifth round of bomb threats against Jewish institutions since January, prompting outrage and exasperation among Jewish leaders as well as calls for an aggressive federal response to put a stop to it.

"The Justice Department, Homeland Security, the FBI, and the White House, alongside Congress and local officials, must speak out -- and speak out forcefully -- against this scourge of anti-Semitism impacting communities across the country," said David Posner, an official with JCC Association of North America. "Members of our community must see swift and concerted action from federal officials to identify and capture the perpetrator or perpetrators who are trying to instill anxiety and fear in our communities."

The FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division are probing the threats.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions called the vandalism and bomb threats serious, unacceptable behavior and said the department will "do what it can to assist in pushing back ... and prosecuting anybody that we can prove to be a part of it."

"We are a nation that is a diverse constituency, and we don't need these kind of activities," Sessions said.

In Philadelphia, police investigated what they called an "abominable crime" after several hundred headstones were damaged during the weekend at Mount Carmel Cemetery, a Jewish cemetery dating to the late 1800s, said Steven Rosenberg, chief marketing officer of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia.

Police said the vandalism appeared to be targeted at the Jewish community, though they cautioned they had not confirmed the motive. Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney said authorities were doing everything possible to find those "who desecrated this final resting place."

"I'm hoping it was maybe just some drunk kids," said Aaron Mallin, who discovered the damage during a visit to his father's grave. "But the fact that there's so many, it leads one to think it could have been targeted," he told WPVI-TV.

The vandalism comes less than a week after a Jewish cemetery in suburban St. Louis was targeted. More than 150 headstones there were damaged, many of them tipped over.

Both acts of vandalism spurred offers of help.

The Philadelphia Building & Construction Trades Council, an umbrella group for more than 50 union locals that work in the construction industry, offered to repair the damage at Mount Carmel free of charge, calling it a "cowardly act of anti-Semitism that cannot be tolerated." A community cleanup organized by the Jewish Federation was to begin Tuesday with as many as 50 volunteers per hour.

And in Missouri, a Muslim crowdfunding effort to support the vandalized Jewish cemetery near St. Louis had raised more than $136,000 by Monday, with organizers announcing they would use some of the money for the Philadelphia cemetery.

Monday's bomb threats caused no physical damage but were no less worrisome.

"There's plenty of people who are scared," said Rosenberg, who denounced the hoaxsters as "an embarrassment to civilized society."

Some 200 people were evacuated from a Jewish Community Center in York, Pennsylvania, after a caller told the front desk there was a bomb in the building, said Melissa Plotkin, the York JCC's director of community engagement and diversity. Police entered the building and cleared it, she said.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, who has long ties to the York center, having served on its board, called the bomb threats and cemetery vandalism reprehensible.

"These acts are cowardly and disturbing," Wolf told reporters in a conference call Monday. "We must find those responsible and hold them accountable for these hate crimes."

Jewish centers and schools in Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island and Virginia also were threatened, according to the JCC Association of North America.

Since January, the group has tracked a total of 90 incidents in 30 states and Canada.

Paul Goldenberg, director of the Secure Community Network, a nonprofit founded by several national Jewish groups to bolster security in the Jewish community, said Jewish Community Centers and other Jewish institutions have extensive security protocols in place.

After dealing with Monday's threats, he said, the "Jewish community is back in business."

KTVU reporter Jana Katsuyamaand the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Bomb threat closes building that houses Jewish Anti-Defamation League - KTVU San Francisco

ADL Calls On Gorka To Disavow Past Links To ‘Anti-Semitic Hate Groups’ – TPM

Posted By on February 27, 2017

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ADL Calls On Gorka To Disavow Past Links To 'Anti-Semitic Hate Groups' - TPM

Israeli archaeologists find 1800-year-old synagogue donor plaque – WND.com

Posted By on February 27, 2017

(The Tower)Archaeologists have discovered and restored a stone column with Hebrew inscriptions from an 1,800-year-old synagogue in the town of Pekiin in the western Galilee region, the Israeli Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced this week.

The column was found as part of the Authoritys work on the ancient synagogue in Pekiin.

The stone was found upside down in the buildings courtyard, and upon discovery of the inscriptions, archeologists from the IAA arrived at the site to examine the special find, the IAA said in a statement Tuesday. A preliminary analysis of the engravings suggests that these are dedicatory inscriptions honoring donors to the synagogue.

Yoav Lerer of the IAA explained to The Jerusalem Post that the Talmud tells of numerous sages who lived in the area at the time, including Rabbi Shimon ben Zakai. While some doubt that modern Pekiin is the same Pekiin mentioned in the Talmud, Lerer said, I believe that these inscriptions will add an important tier to our knowledge about the Jewish settlement in the village of Pekiin during the Roman and Byzantine periods.

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Israeli archaeologists find 1800-year-old synagogue donor plaque - WND.com

When I was 5, I found a bomb in my synagogue – CNN

Posted By on February 27, 2017

In each case, JCC leaders have taken the bomb threat seriously and evacuated the building.

It was Feb. 22, 1997, and I was a precocious 5-year-old boy in Jacksonville, Florida. That Saturday, as was pretty typical, my family attended services at the Jacksonville Jewish Center, which doubled as my synagogue and Jewish day school.

Antsy and bored, my older brother and I left the main service room to play hide-and-seek in the hallway with a couple of friends. Lining the wall of the hallway were about a dozen large memorial plaques. I hid in a small nook between two of them.

There, I found a small item -- a pipe with some tape wrapped around it. I gave up hide-and-seek and showed my brother and our friends. We started playing with the thing, tossing it around and unwrapping the tape. I remember one friend said it could be an atom bomb. We laughed.

Then an adult came and took it away. That's my personal perspective.

Yep, that's me, one of the children who found the bomb. I survived, of course, as did everyone involved.

I remember later speaking to some large men in suits who interviewed me. And there was a sketch artist who turned my childish descriptions into a really accurate drawing of the bomb.

For 20 years now, I've told this story to friends, usually in the form of a "fun fact" during the icebreaker game "two truths and a lie."

"I'm originally from Florida. I've never left the United States. And I once found a bomb as a kid." (The second is the lie.) It was generally a good conversation starter and made for a memorable introduction.

Nine days before our childish discovery, Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres had planned to give a speech at my synagogue. Harry Shapiro, an Orthodox Jewish man who opposed Peres' policies, later admitted in federal court that he placed the pipe bomb in the synagogue.

Shapiro then called in a bomb threat to police -- he claimed he was with the American Friends of Islamic Jihad -- all in an attempt to get the speech canceled.

Police searched the building but didn't find the bomb, and the speech went on as planned. Shapiro was arrested, and he pleaded guilty to one federal charge. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

It's been 20 years to the day since I found that bomb. But all this time later, the same concerns color how Jewish centers have reacted to these threats around the country.

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When I was 5, I found a bomb in my synagogue - CNN

Historic E. 6th 'tenement synagogue' reopens – The Villager

Posted By on February 27, 2017


The Villager
Historic E. 6th 'tenement synagogue' reopens
The Villager
BY LESLEY SUSSMAN | The historic, more than 100-year-old Anshe Meseritz Synagogue, which was renovated to make room for luxury condominiums, reopened its doors in the East Village this month after a four-year hiatus. The original synagogue was ...

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Historic E. 6th 'tenement synagogue' reopens - The Villager

Man found dead after shooting in Beitar synagogue – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on February 27, 2017

Rescue workers alerted after shots heard in Matmidim synagogue in Beitar, south of Jerusalem.

David Rosenberg, 26/02/17 22:03

A man was found dead in a synagogue in the predominantly haredi city of Beitar Illit, south of Jerusalem Sunday evening.

The grisly discovery was made after gunshots were reported in the Matmidim synagogue on Darchei Ish Street.

Witnesses who heard the shots notified authorities, and within minutes emergency responders from United Hatzalah had arrived on the scene.

A man in his early 30s was found mortally wounded inside the synagogue. Emergency medical teams declared him dead at the scene.

The victim, a resident of Beitar Illit and father of five, was found with no vital signs, suffering from a gunshot wound to the head.

Police say there is no evidence the incident was related to either criminal activity or terrorism. The initial investigation suggests the fatal wound was self-inflicted.

The victim did not possess a firearm, and it is believed the weapon used in the shooting was taken from a guard standing not far from the synagogue.

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Man found dead after shooting in Beitar synagogue - Arutz Sheva

Ancient honors: Inscriptions uncovered at synagogue in Israel – Fox News

Posted By on February 27, 2017

The top of a limestone column discovered in the Western Galilee may pinpoint the location of the ancient village of Peqiin, where the Galilean sages hid in a cave from the Romans 1,800 years ago, Israeli antiquities experts say.

The stone, found upside-down during a renovation and conservation project, is engraved with two Hebrew inscriptions that experts believe were written to honor donors to the ancient synagogue that once stood there.

The Talmudic and Midrashic sources tell of the Galilean sages that lived in Peqiin, including Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, who hid from the Romans in a cave, said Yoav Lerer of the Israel Antiquities Authority, in a press release.

3,000-YEAR-OLD ROYAL TOMB DISCOVERED IN EGYPT

However, there are those who disagree with the identification of the location of Peqiin.

I believe that these inscriptions will add an important tier to our knowledge about the Jewish settlement in the village of Peqiin during the Roman and Byzantine periods.

The column was discovered amid the rehabilitation and conservation of the ancient synagogue and a visitor center at Peqiin and nearby Beit Zinati. The visitor center will tell the 2-millennia-long history of the Jews in the area, as well as the story of the villages oldest Jewish family, the Zinatis, one of whose descendants, Margalit Zinati, still lives in the house next door to the synagogue.

"Peqiin is one of the most significant sites in the Galilee, and is a place where there has always been a Jewish presence, said Zeev Elkin, minister of Jerusalem Affairs and Heritage, in the statement. It is a great honor for me that during my tenure in office such an important discovery has been made that tells this 2,000-year-old story of the Land of Israel.

12th DEAD SEA SCROLLS CAVE DISCOVERED IN ISRAEL

This is a historical discovery of unparalleled importance, said Uriel Rosenboym, director of Beit Zinati.

No one can argue with the written artifact. There was an ancient synagogue here, and the synagogue was built in its current form in recent centuries.

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Ancient honors: Inscriptions uncovered at synagogue in Israel - Fox News

Lost Language of AJMF8 – Atlanta Jewish Times

Posted By on February 27, 2017

Sarah Aroeste is passionate about two things, her love of Ladino music and sharing her culture with others. But thats not the only reason she was picked to perform five times during AJMF8. Aroeste brings so much to this years festival including her diverse cultural perspective, said AJMF Executive Director, Russell Gottschalk.

Aroestes life revolved around music throughout high school and college, where she trained in classical opera. However, it was not until she moved to Israel that her interest in Ladino music grew, thanks in part to her music coach, who shared her Sephardic background.

Upon returning to the United States, Aroeste continued to perform classical music while integrating Ladino music each performance. The outcome was a success. I had people come up to me and say that was their favorite part of the performance, said Aroeste. Thats when she realized Ladino music, not opera, was her true calling and decided to pursue it as a full-time career.

Ladino is a form of Judaea-Spanish or Judaismo language that originated in Spain. After the Castilians kicked out Jewish inhabitants in the fifteenth century, they immigrated to the Ottoman Empire and Ladino became frozen in time.

Aroeste receives her inspiration from various music genres including Israeli. I really like Israeli music because the artists understand how to navigate between their ethnicity and music. However, I was also brought up on American music, rock and roll, contemporary, electronica, jazz, and pop, said Aroeste. She is proud of her identity and attributes her passion for Ladino music to her ethnic background. Ladino contains a beautiful language and music, and I have been very fortunate to express myself through it for the past 15 years. said Aroeste.

Her concerts incorporate both entertainment and education as she informs audience members of her rich Sephardic background. You dont go into Ladino to become rich, but I love Ladino music and sharing it with people. Music crosses so many borders and Ladino is no exception. It is multifaceted and the language and themes are universal, said Aroeste. Ladino is not dead and the Jewish community can do so much to preserve it. After all, you cant understand Jewish history without Sephardic culture.

Aroeste is glad to be in this years Atlanta Jewish Music Festival. She will be performing at International Night, Ladino Shabbat Jam, Ladino Musical Purim Party, Purim Family Concert and at Epstein for a private event connecting children to Ladino and Sephardic music.

There are countless artists participating in this years AJMF and each one is sure to entertain. Gottschalk noted that planning the AJMF is very detailed, we have so many talented artists we would like to invite but have limited slots. In programming Aroeste we wanted to take full advantage of all she had to offer. Aroeste became a natural selection for Gottschalk due to her international background and recently released childrens album.

Aroeste enjoys working with Jewish and non-Jewish audiences and applauds Gottschalk for booking her for the AJMF. It allows various community members to gain exposure to so many different cultures and promotes the importance of Jewish diversity for everyone.

Sarah Aroeste is scheduled for five performances during the AJMF. (Photo credit: Dror-Forshee Photography)

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Lost Language of AJMF8 - Atlanta Jewish Times

Why a 400-Year-Old Jewish Music Tradition Continues To Thrive – Forward

Posted By on February 27, 2017

Klezmer, the Eastern European musical tradition of the Ashkenazi Jews, is constantly evolving. Played by musicians called klezmorim at weddings and other celebrations, it has enjoyed a world revival in recent years. The musician and researcher Walter Zev Feldman, an expert on Jewish and Ottoman Turkish music, is Visiting Professor of Music at NYU Abu Dhabi. As a performer, he has released the CDs Jewish Klezmer Music and Khevrisa: European Klezmer Music. His latest book, Klezmer: Music, History, and Memory is out from Oxford University Press. Recently Professor Feldman shared with The Forwards Benjamin Ivry some notions about what is, and what is not, klezmer:

**Benjamin Ivry: How much fun is authentic klezmer music? At an Ashkenazi wedding celebration, you describe music played before the chuppah as an invitation for the souls of the dead parents to come[an] almost necrophiliac fantasygiven even more scope when the community was facing an existential threat.

Walter Zev Feldman: In Eastern Europe among Jews, there had to be a balance of the serious penitential with the joyous, so a wedding among Jews in East Europe has very little to do with the concept of a wedding of Jews in America or Israel. It had to begin in a very sad and tragic way, otherwise it would have been considered ill-omened for the future. You had to earn your happiness; it wasnt just a given.

One klezmer tradition included a penitential song about how the brides happy life in her family home was over and responsibilities of marriage and childbearing were upon her. Was this gloomy prediction for women made because only males wrote and performed klezmer music at the time?

No, I dont think thats relevant. This is a confluence of rabbinic thinking about weddings with a penitential aspect in the old Ashkenaz tradition. There are also several gentile folk cultures from Turkey to Russia that emphasize sorrow for the bride. This question has never, ever been researched before, so it needs more study.

You explore what have been called moralishe niggunim or melodies of a high moral character, which although not as weepy as other klezmer tunes, nevertheless had plenty of high seriousness. Is the subject of klezmer inevitably somber due to the Holocaust and other factors and has klezmer become a funereal art for those interested in its past?

I did not mean to give that impression, actually. Its interesting that you read it that way. Klezmer: Music, History, and Memory is part one, the history of the music of the klezmorim into the Shoah, not about the immigration. My next book, Untold Stories, will show the aspect of the klezmer tradition which is actually kept alive. Its not entirely a dead thing.

You note that traditionally, klezmorim did not accompany singers and considered themselves superior to vocalists. Doesnt this contradict much of world instrumental tradition, in which musicians aspire to the expressivity of the human voice? What was wrong with singers?

There was nothing wrong with the chazzan. In Europe, the klezmer never accompanied the chazzan, a professional singer who performed with no accompanists. It was taboo because the rabbis forbade singing at weddings. The Ashkenazim were the only Jewish culture documented where women were not allowed to sing at weddings. That was obviously because of moral reasons, where rabbis for centuries were telling men they should not listen to the voice of women. But in other Jewish cultures, this was not taken as seriously.

The Argentine-born Israeli clarinetist Giora Feidman has claimed, Klezmer is not Jewish music. Would you agree?

I have no idea what he is talking about. Giora is a good musician from a klezmer family, but he has done zero research so you have to discount what he says, it has nothing to do with reality.

The Shirim Klezmer Orchestra released a klezmer-style version of Tchaikovskys Nutcracker Suite. If Tchaikovsky is added, can any room be left for klezmer?

I think that [crossover] fashion has ended. I dont think thats going anywhere. Klezmer music was one of the most stable features of Jewish music, with a class of professional musicians who developed it for 400 years. 400 years is no small thing.

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Why a 400-Year-Old Jewish Music Tradition Continues To Thrive - Forward


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