View/Print Page As PDF
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
July 26, 1985 30C Per Copy
h Historical R, I , Jewis 1 1 A Associat~on street 130 sessions 02906 p rovidence , RI \·MHO.DE I {l!iC~IIJU ~------ · ::.:.:::.:1 THE ONLY ENGLISH-JEWISH WEEKLY IN RI AND SOUTHEAST MASS VOLUME LXXII, NUMBER 34 FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1985 30C PER COPY After Operation Moses Director Urges Israeli Women by Rabbi Davi~ SaPerstein visit the Gondar villages prior to the To Fight For Political Clout arrival of the Congressmen, I was told I Two major concerns brought me to could not, "because of what the Israelis did by Roberta Elliott Ethiopia: fear for the 7,000 Beta Israel still in Operation Moses." The Director of The good news is that more women are living in towns and remote villages, and Tourism told me that it had been involved in municipal politics in Israel worry about the millions of Ethiopians determined at the highest levels of than ever. The bad news is that they are threatened with starvation. Few moments government that all foreign contact with not climbing the political ladder to the in my life have made me more proud Or the villages was to be cut off to prevent Knesset and ministerial positions. being an American Jew than when I saw outsiders from "instigating" these Jews to According to Sharon Shenhav, who starving children being fed from sacks of leave. Recent statements by the heads the Jerusalem legal- services office food marked "From the U.S.A.", or when I government indicating that it would no of Na'amat, Israel's largest women's orga watched Abie Natlian arrive with tents longer consider Falashas as Jews reflect its nization, about 100 women sit on city marked "From Jerusalem With Love" - determination to further isolate the Beta councils in Israel, and 21 municipalities tents purchased with funds donated by I~rael from world Jewry. -
From Falashas to Ethiopian Jews
FROM FALASHAS TO ETHIOPIAN JEWS: THE EXTERNAL INFLUENCES FOR CHANGE C. 1860-1960 BY DANIEL P. SUMMERFIELD A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON (SCHOOL OF ORIENTAL AND AFRICAN STUDIES) FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (PhD) 1997 ProQuest Number: 10673074 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 10673074 Published by ProQuest LLC(2017). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 ABSTRACT The arrival of a Protestant mission in Ethiopia during the 1850s marks a turning point in the history of the Falashas. Up until this point, they lived relatively isolated in the country, unaffected and unaware of the existence of world Jewry. Following this period and especially from the beginning of the twentieth century, the attention of certain Jewish individuals and organisations was drawn to the Falashas. This contact initiated a period of external interference which would ultimately transform the Falashas, an Ethiopian phenomenon, into Ethiopian Jews, whose culture, religion and identity became increasingly connected with that of world Jewry. It is the purpose of this thesis to examine the external influences that implemented and continued the process of transformation in Falasha society which culminated in their eventual emigration to Israel. -
H-Diplo FRUS Review No. 9 (2012)
20H-Diplo FRUS12 Reviews H-Diplo FRUS Review Editors: Thomas Maddux and H-Diplo Diane Labrosse H-Diplo FRUS Reviews Web and Production Editor: George Fujii h-diplo.org/FRUS/ No. 9 Commissioned for H-Diplo by Thomas Maddux Published on 17 February 2012 Reissued, 9 June 2014 Edward C. Keefer, Nina Howland, and Craig Daigle, eds. Foreign Relations of the United States 1969-1976, Vol. XXV, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1973. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office, 2011. xxxiii + 1278 pp. Notes, maps, and index. http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v25 . Stable URL: http://h-diplo.org/FRUS/PDF/FRUS9.pdf Review by William B. Quandt, University of Virginia he FRUS volume on the Arab-Israeli October 1973 war weighs in at a hefty 1200 pages and contains some 425 documents. The searchable PDF version is available T at: http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v25 . Anyone already familiar with the extensive literature on this crisis – Henry Kissinger’s voluminous memoirs and his book entitled Crisis (Simon and Schuster, 2004), my own Peace Process: American Diplomacy and the Arab-Israeli Crisis Since 1967 (Brookings, 2005, Third edition), and Alistair Horne’s recent Kissinger (Simon and Schuster, 2009), among many others – will know the main lines of the story and the current volume will primarily add nuance and texture. There are no bombshells here, nothing truly astonishing, although some of the documents are new and genuinely fascinating for what they show, especially about the relationship between President Richard Nixon and his colorful National Security Adviser- cum-Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger. -
Out of Africa: Human Capital Consequences of in Utero Conditions
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES OUT OF AFRICA: HUMAN CAPITAL CONSEQUENCES OF IN UTERO CONDITIONS Victor Lavy Analia Schlosser Adi Shany Working Paper 21894 http://www.nber.org/papers/w21894 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 January 2016 Victor Lavy acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council through ERC Advance Grant 323439 and the Falk Institute. Analia Schlosser acknowledges financial support from the Sapir Center for Development and the Foerder Institute for Economic Research. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer- reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2016 by Victor Lavy, Analia Schlosser, and Adi Shany. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source. Out of Africa: Human Capital Consequences of In Utero Conditions Victor Lavy, Analia Schlosser, and Adi Shany NBER Working Paper No. 21894 January 2016 JEL No. I1,I2,J13,O15 ABSTRACT This paper investigates the effects of environmental conditions during pregnancy on later life outcomes using quasi-experimental variation created by the immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel in May 24th 1991. Children in utero prior to immigration faced dramatic differences in medical care technologies, prenatal conditions, and prenatal care at the move from Ethiopia to Israel. -
State Department Airs Disagreement with Israel
.., R.I. JEWISH HISTORICAL ASSOC. 130 SESSIONS ST. PROVIDENCE, RI 02906 Support Read -By Jewish More Thon Agencies 35,000 With Your People Membership THE ONLY ENGLISH-JEW/SH WEEKLY IN R. /. AND SOUTHEAST MASS . VOLUME LXI, NUMBER 43 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1978 25¢ PER COPY Rabbi Kushner To Speak Hebrew Day School Plans At Emanu-E1 C·.enference Melave Malkas For 1979 The Annual Mid-Winter Teachers' Conference of the Bureau of Jewish Educa J n keeping with this year's theme, The second Melave Malka will take tion of Rhode Island will take place on Sun "Medieval and Early Modern East Euro place, Feb. 3 at 8:30 p.m. It will feature an day, January 14, at 2 p.m. in the foyer of pean Jewry," the Providence Hebrew Day. evening with the Bostoner Rebbe, Rabbi Temple Emanu-El's Meeting House in School is presenting a series of three post Levi I. Horowitz. The final event in the Providence. Shabbat dinners. series will occur March 3 at 9 p.m. Guest· The theme of the conference is "How to The first dinner, or Melave Malka, will speaker for the evening will be Dr. Sergio Deal With Children's Questions" and the take place Jan. 6 at 8 p.m. at the Providence Della Pergola, a visiting research associate keynote speaker will be Rabbi Harold S. Hebrew Day School. It will feature Dr. at Brown University. Dr. Della Pergola will Kushner, author of the popular book, Boruch Brody, chairman of the speak on "Strategies for Survivial: A When Children Ask About God. -
List of the Archives of Organizations and Bodies Held at the Central
1 Guide to the Archival Record Groups and Collections Notation Record group / Collection Dates Scanning Quantity 1. Central Offices of the World Zionist Organization and of the Jewish Agency for Palestine/Israel abroad Z1 Central Zionist Office, Vienna 1897-1905 scanned 13.6 Z2 Central Zionist Office, Cologne 1905-1911 scanned 11.8 not Z3 Central Zionist Office, Berlin 1911-1920 31 scanned The Zionist Organization/The Jewish Agency for partially Z4 1917-1955 215.2 Palestine/Israel - Central Office, London scanned The Jewish Agency for Palestine/Israel - American Section 1939 not Z5 (including Palestine Office and Zionist Emergency 137.2 onwards scanned Council), New York Nahum Goldmann's offices in New York and Geneva. See Z6 1936-1982 scanned 33.2 also Office of Nahum Goldmann, S80 not Z7 Mordecai Kirshenbloom's Office 1957-1968 7.8 scanned 2. Departments of the Executive of the World Zionist Organization and the Jewish Agency for Palestine/Israel in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa not S1 Treasury Department 1918-1978 147.7 scanned not S33 Treasury Department, Budget Section 1947-1965 12.5 scanned not S105 Treasury Department, Section for Financial Information 1930-1959 12.8 scanned partially S6 Immigration Department 1919-1980 167.5 scanned S3 Immigration Department, Immigration Office, Haifa 1921-1949 scanned 10.6 S4 Immigration Department, Immigration Office, Tel Aviv 1920-1948 scanned 21.5 not S120 Absorption Department, Section for Yemenite Immigrants 1950-1957 1.7 scanned S84 Absorption Department, Jerusalem Regional Section 1948-1960 scanned 8.3 2 Guide to the Archival Record Groups and Collections not S112 Absorption Department, Housing Division 1951-1967 4 scanned not S9 Department of Labour 1921-1948 25.7 scanned Department of Labour, Section for the Supervision of not S10 1935-1947 3.5 Labour Exchanges scanned Agricultural Settlement Department. -
Camp David's Shadow
Camp David’s Shadow: The United States, Israel, and the Palestinian Question, 1977-1993 Seth Anziska Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2015 © 2015 Seth Anziska All rights reserved ABSTRACT Camp David’s Shadow: The United States, Israel, and the Palestinian Question, 1977-1993 Seth Anziska This dissertation examines the emergence of the 1978 Camp David Accords and the consequences for Israel, the Palestinians, and the wider Middle East. Utilizing archival sources and oral history interviews from across Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, the United States, and the United Kingdom, Camp David’s Shadow recasts the early history of the peace process. It explains how a comprehensive settlement to the Arab-Israeli conflict with provisions for a resolution of the Palestinian question gave way to the facilitation of bilateral peace between Egypt and Israel. As recently declassified sources reveal, the completion of the Camp David Accords—via intensive American efforts— actually enabled Israeli expansion across the Green Line, undermining the possibility of Palestinian sovereignty in the occupied territories. By examining how both the concept and diplomatic practice of autonomy were utilized to address the Palestinian question, and the implications of the subsequent Israeli and U.S. military intervention in Lebanon, the dissertation explains how and why the Camp David process and its aftermath adversely shaped the prospects of a negotiated settlement between Israelis and Palestinians in the 1990s. In linking the developments of the late 1970s and 1980s with the Madrid Conference and Oslo Accords in the decade that followed, the dissertation charts the role played by American, Middle Eastern, international, and domestic actors in curtailing the possibility of Palestinian self-determination. -
Israeli Housing and Education Policies for Ethiopian Jewish Immigrants, 1984-1992
The Center for Comparative Immigration Studies CCIS University of California, San Diego Politics, Race and Absorption: Israeli Housing and Education Policies for Ethiopian Jewish Immigrants, 1984-1992 By Fred A. Lazin Ben Gurion University of the Negev Working Paper 28 November 2000 Lazin / 2 Politics, Race and Absorption: Israeli Housing and Education Policies for Ethiopian Jewish Immigrants, 1984-1992 Fred A. Lazin Ben Gurion University of the Negev In response to a question about policies to absorb the recent influx of Soviet and Ethiopian immigrants (1989-1992) a former Israeli Prime Minister responded: “There was no policy... immigration itself creates solutions... and solves problems.” To the same question, a senior Jewish Agency absorption official commented: “... at the university you have ideas of vast plans... in life we do not have the time needed to make one... there is a need for quick and immediate decisions.” If education is the key to success for any group, it is doubly so for the Ethiopians. For them, it not only affects their chances for upward mobility, it plays a critical role in their integration into Israel's mainstream-modern, technological and mostly urban society (JDC, 1997). Introduction Since the early 1980s and until 1993 over 50,000 Black African Ethiopian Jews immigrated to Israel. Most "came from one of the most conservative, rural regions of Ethiopia, where modern means of communication and transportation were undeveloped, illiteracy among the adult population was more than 90 percent…" (Wagaw, 1993:26-28). As with previous Jewish immigrants, the Israeli government and Jewish Agency assumed responsibility to absorb them into Israeli society.1 Since independence in 1948 Israeli governments have pursued the goal of providing every Jewish immigrant a “decent home in a suitable living 1 Established in 1929 the Jewish Agency represented world Jewry and the World Zionist Organization in efforts to establish a Jewish State in Mandatory Palestine. -
Ethiopian Immigrants in Israel.Pdf
Foreword economy in an individualistic society. Moreover, there was an unpredictable psychological Are ye not as the chtldren of the Ethiopians unto element: the status of the Ethiopian Jewish Me, O children of lsrael? saith the Lord. community was inverted-from that of a pariah (Amos lX,7) group and religious minority (albeit part of the majority in terms of colour and language) in Africa, The manner in which the old-new nation of lsrael to that of part of the dominant Jewish majority practises the biblical Jewish value of tzedakkah- (albeit, in terms of language and colour, a readily social justice-in the contemporary world is the identifiable group) in lsrael. subject of this important and timely report by Steven Kaplan and Hagar Salamon. lt introduces a ln analyzing the problems of resettling the new human rights 'track'within JPR's lsrael Ethiopian Jews in lsrael, we enter the famrliar Programme that signifies a commitment to widen territory of current political debate in free societies our policy research agenda to include issues on the contentious area of public policy-welfare, concerning the treatment of minority communities. jobs, housing, education-and the limits of interventionist strategies and social engineering The dramatic rescue of thousands of Ethiopian by even well-meaning governments. Ouestions of Jews from war, famine and oppression and their race, disadvantage and social exclusion bedevil transportation 'on eagles' wings' (Exodus XlX, 4) most contemporary Western societies. lntegrating by the lsrael airforce to a sanctuary in the large numbers of poor, black immigrants into an 'Promised Land' appears to fulfil in our days the affluent society is not a problem unique to lsrael. -
Ethiopian Jews in Israel
Ethiopian Jews in Israel by STEVEN KAPLAN and CHAIM ROSEN KJF THE MANY DIASPORA JEWISH communities, none has under- gone more dramatic change in recent years than the Beta Israel (Falashas).1 Prior to 1977 all but a handful of Beta Israel lived in Ethiopia. During the 1980s, almost half the community emigrated to Israel, and the center of Beta Israel life shifted from Ethiopia to Israel. In 1991, "Operation Sol- omon" put an end to the Beta Israel as an active and living Diaspora community, and by the end of 1993 virtually all Beta Israel were in Israel. This article describes and analyzes the process of their immigration (aliyah) to, and absorption (klitah) in, Israel. Although every attempt has been made to provide as much quantitative statistical data as possible, significant gaps remain. Most of the research undertaken on the Ethiopians in Israel has been qualitative in nature. Even in those cases where attempts have been made to carry out precise surveys of immigrants, the results have not always been satisfactory.2 Since Ethiopian immigrants usually arrived in Israel with few official documents, basic "facts" such as age and family status were often unverifiable, and immigrants were registered on the basis of their own or family members' testimony. Once they were settled in the country, the multiplicity of agencies dealing with the immigrants further complicated the process of compiling comprehensive and authoritative information.3 'In Ethiopia, the members of the group usually referred to themselves as Beta Israel (the House of Israel) or simply Israel. They were more widely known as "Falashas." Today, they prefer to be called Ethiopian Jews. -
Guide to the Archival Record Groups and Collections
GUIDE TO THE ARCHIVAL RECORD GROUPS AND COLLECTIONS Jerusalem, July 2003 The contents of this Guide, and other information on the Central Zionist Archives, may be found on Internet at the following address: http://www.zionistarchives.org.il/ The e-mail address of the Archives is: [email protected] 2 Introduction This edition of the Guide to the Archival Record Groups and Collections held at the Central Zionist Archives has once again been expanded. It includes new acquisitions of material, which have been received recently at the CZA. In addition, a new section has been added, the Maps and Plans Section. Some of the collections that make up this section did appear in the previous Guide, but did not make up a separate section. The decision to collect the various collections in one section reflects the large amount of maps and plans that have been acquired in the last two years and the advancements made in this sphere at the CZA. Similarly, general information about two additional collections has been added in the Guide, the Collection of Announcements and the Collection of Badges. Explanation of the symbols, abbreviations and the structure of the Guide: Dates appearing alongside the record groups names, signify: - with regard to institutional archives: the period in which the material that is stored in the CZA was created. - with regard to personal archives: the birth and death dates of the person. Dates have not been given for living people. The numbers in the right-hand margin signify the amount of material comprising the record group, in running meters of shelf space (one running meter includes six boxes of archival material). -
Ethiopian Jewish Immigrants in Israel Living Well and “Becoming Deaf” in the Homeland
Ethiopian Jewish immigrants in Israel Living well and “becoming deaf” in the homeland Tanya Schwarz Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Anthropology The London School of Economics and Political Science University of London May 1998 UMI Number: U615552 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U615552 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 I S F 7-S/f9 OF POLITICAL AND Abstract This thesis is an ethnographic study of the Ethiopian Jews, or Beta Israel, a few years after their migration from rural Ethiopian to urban Israel. For the Beta Israel, the most significant issue is not, as is commonly assumed, adaptation to modem society, which to a large extent they have successfully achieved. But rather, their primary concerns revolve around the notion o f “belonging” in their new homeland, and the loss of control they are experiencing over their lives and those o f their children. The thesis analyses the experience of immigration from the Beta Israel’s own perspective and focuses on: first, the factors which contribute to the Beta Israel’s sense of well-being in Israel, second, the problems and difficulties they experience, and finally, the strategies they are developing to overcome these difficulties.