Posts Tagged ‘Sephardim’

The Jewish Palate: The Jews of Colombia

By DENNIS WASKO
06/13/2011 16:24
Jerusalem Post

Colombia’s Jewish community is hundreds of years old; mix of Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, and Ashkenazi communities.

Marrano Jews, secret Jews who were forced to convert to Catholicism or be murdered by the Inquisition, were the first Jews to settle in Colombia. The Marranos fled Spain and Portugal in the 16th and 17th centuries. It is believed that some of them settled in Northern areas of Colombia, which at the time was known as New Granada.  Most of these earliest Jewish settlers assimilated into Colombian society.

Observant Jews from Jamaica and Curacao settled in Colombia in the 18th century.  These Jews were not interested in assimilation, and openly practiced their faith even though it was illegal.  Eventually Judaism was legalized and the Jews were allowed to openly practice Judaism and their life cycle events. The government even gave the Jewish community a plot of land to use as a cemetery.   Many of the Jews who arrived during the 18th and 19th centuries were very successful in business and achieved prominent positions in Colombian society, but they were forced to abandon or hide their Jewish identity.

In the early 20th century a large immigration of Sephardic Jews from Greece, Turkey, North Africa, and Syria settled in Colombia. After the Sephardic Jews, large numbers of Jews from Eastern Europe arrived and after the rise of Hitler in 1933, more than 7,000 Jews arrived from Germany.  The Jewish population of Colombia grew again in the 1950’s and 1960’s.

Today, most of Colombia’s 3,000 Jews are concentrated in the big cities, with the largest population centered in Bogotá.  The size of the Ashkenazi and Sephardic communities is about equal and there are nine official synagogues throughout the country.

The unstable economy and rise of violence and kidnappings during the final decade of the 20th century compelled many Colombian Jews to immigrate to Miami and other locations in the United States.  Today, however, with a decline in violence, many of Colombia’s Jews are returning and other Jews from Venezuela are finding refuge in Colombia.

The cuisine of the Colombian Jews is a blend of traditional Jewish recipes and local Colombian ingredients.  Sephardic, Ashkenazi, and German identities are very strong in Colombia, and the Jewish culinary tradition is diverse.  Colombian cuisine is full flavored but mild, and not as spicy or complex as other Latin American Cuisines.  It is delicious, hearty cooking, strongly influenced by peasant traditions.

The following recipe is for Sancocho de Gallina, traditional Colombian Chicken Soup.  Colombia’s Jews make this soup often as it is easy to prepare, nutritious, and delicious.

Sancocho de Gallina (Colombian Chicken Soup)
Serves 6 – 8

1 whole chicken, about 3 pounds
3 ears fresh corn, shucked and cut into thirds
2 green plantains, peeled and cut in half and then into 2 inch pieces
½ cup diced red pepper
½ cup diced green pepper
1 large onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
3 quarts water
6 medium potatoes, halved
1 pound yucca, cut into big pieces (optional)
½ cup chopped cilantro
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

1.Place the chicken, corn, plantains, peppers, onion, and garlic into a large soup pot.  Add the water and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat, cover, and allow to simmer for 45 minutes, skimming the surface from time to time to remove scum.
2.Add the potatoes and yucca and continue cooking for an additional 20 minutes or until the potatoes and yucca are tender.
3.Stir in the cilantro and season to taste with salt and pepper.
4.Serve the chicken and vegetables in large soup bowls and ladle the broth over.

RELATED:
The Jewish Palate: The Jews of Brazil
From Israel to Colombia with love

Pierre Bensusan: Creating “Vividly”

National Public Radio

When Pierre Bensusan sat down to write and record his latest album, Vividly, the project needed to come to him organically. Taking his time, Bensusan says, he’d spent five years fighting the music in his head before making his 10th studio album.

“It was not a project I was aware of beforehand,” he tells Weekend Edition Saturday host Scott Simon. “All the tunes were saying, ‘Play me! Play me! No, me first! Me first!’ And I said, ‘Wait a minute. I hear you, but I’m going to take my time.’ ”

Born in Oran, Algeria, before he and his parents fled to Paris during the Algerian revolution, Bensusan taught himself guitar at the age of 4 and has been called “the acoustic Jimi Hendrix” for his experimentation with alternative tunings. Bensusan says he considers his background instrumental to the creation of his music.

“It’s going to reflect in the music,” he says. “In the music, I feel like I’m a sponge. I had to adapt myself and it’s good to feel home anywhere — to belong anywhere.”

You can hear the full interview and performance here.

Scholarship Available for Sephardim

American Sephardi Federation is pleased to announce that the Broome and Allen Scholarship will be available for the 2011-2012 academic year.

The Broome & Allen Scholarship is awarded to students of Sephardic origin or those working in Sephardic studies. Both graduate and undergraduate degree candidates as well as those doing research projects will be considered.

Application deadline is May 15, 2011.

Click here to download an application.

For more information email info@americansephardifederation.org or call Ellen Cohen at 212-294-8350 x4.

B’nai Mitzvah in Guatemala

Birthland Bar Mitzvah is designed especially to meet the individual needs of Jewish families formed by adoption from Guatemala. Jewish studies, tailored to the talents and abilities of each Bar or Bat Mitzvah child, culminate in a family expedition to the birthland where Jewish identity and Guatemalan roots are woven together in a tapestry of discovery and celebration.

Families work with Nancy Hoffman (via e-mail), based in Guatemala, to custom design their visit to Guatemala. Families work with Rabbi Julie Greenberg to create a learning plan to prepare for the Bar or Bat Mitzvah ceremony. Your Birthland Bar Mitzvah experience is built around five days in Guatemala that include a mitzvah/service project, rehearsal, relaxation and exploration of beautiful Guatemala and a personally meaningful Bar/Bat Mitzvah weekend.

Jews From Around Latin America Find Home in NYC

Published: Sept. 17, 2010

Jewish Latin Center: http://www.jewishlatincenternyc.org/

NEW YORK (AP) Deborah Apeloig arrived at the Chelsea Synagogue in Manhattan for a recent Shabbat service, greeting other women with a kiss and taking a seat with them away from the men.

The rabbi welcomed them to the service in English and Spanish, before beginning prayers in Hebrew.

A year ago, Apeloig, the Venezuelan granddaughter of Polish Holocaust survivors, was searching for a place where she could connect more deeply with her religion and meet other Latin American Jews living in New York City.

“I missed having a synagogue where I could I feel at home,” said Apeloig, 26.

She had gone to several synagogues since coming to New York about two years ago, but none seemed as welcoming as those she had attended back in Venezuela.

Then she learned about the Jewish Latin Center, which had its first anniversary in August with a celebration for Shabbat, which marks the beginning of the day of rest for Jews before sunset on Friday and ends by sundown Saturday.

In September 2009, Rabbi Mendy Weitman, who was born in Brazil, decided to create the center as a space for the Latin Jewish community of New York to gather. It is temporarily being housed at the Chelsea Synagogue while Weitman seeks a permanent home for it.

Other Latin American social Jewish networks already existed, but the rabbi’s initiative added a spiritual touch. The center, which performs both religious and social activities, has about 700 members who said they have found a home there.

“I always felt we had a common problem, that people were looking for a synagogue, a community with Latin warmth and that they couldn’t find it,” said Weitman, who has been based in the U.S. for the last six years. “Latin American Jews come from countries with strong communities and want to be members of a community.”

There are no official figures on the number of Latin American Jews in the United States. There are some 495,000 Jews living in Latin America, according to the Argentina-based Latin American Jewish Congress, with the largest Jewish communities in Argentina and Brazil.

Jews from Latin America first began arriving in what is today’s New York City in 1654, when a group of 23 Sephardic Jews escaped from Portuguese rule in the Dutch colony of Recife in Brazil and came to New Amsterdam.

On a Friday in late August, the center organized a celebration with about 200 Latin American Jews.

The night began with the traditional prayer that begins the Sabbath.

Rebeca Rubinstein, a Venezuelan Jew, lit a couple of candles in a ritual carried out by women only, marking the formal start of the Sabbath. Attendees followed the rabbi’s prayers in the Siddur, the prayer book. For about an hour, men and women sat separated by bamboo screens, the men wearing yarmulkes and most women in elegant skirt suits.

After finishing the recitation, the screens were removed and men and women greeted each other warmly with hugs. Later they went into a room where a kosher meal was offered. It began with the ritual washing of hands and the blessing of the wine, Kiddush, and the passing around of braided bread known as challah.

Among the dishes offered were hummus, Israeli-style cucumber and tomato salad, matzo ball soup, fish, chicken and chocolate mousse for dessert. Between dishes, the attendees danced and sang songs in Hebrew like the popular “Hava Nagila.” The celebration lasted until about midnight.

“The anchor is religion, but over time, we feel like we are part of a community,” said Ariel Fischman, 31, Apeloig’s husband and a Mexican of Russian and Polish Jewish ancestry. “You can come to a party or to watch a soccer game and all these people that you didn’t know before become your friends. … We don’t have to gather for religious purposes.”

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Online:

Jewish Latin Center: http://www.jewishlatincenternyc.org/