Minhagim by Joseph Isaac Lifshitz Naomi Feuchtwanger-Sarig Simha Goldin Jean Baumgarten Hasia Diner

Minhagim by Joseph Isaac Lifshitz Naomi Feuchtwanger-Sarig Simha Goldin Jean Baumgarten Hasia Diner

Author:Joseph Isaac Lifshitz, Naomi Feuchtwanger-Sarig, Simha Goldin, Jean Baumgarten, Hasia Diner
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: De Gruyter
Published: 2020-01-20T13:14:05.436000+00:00


Coping with Diversity within the Ethnic Group: Variation within the Customs of Judezmo Speakers

As noted, Ladinokomunita members from all geographic regions which once had formed a part of the Ottoman Empire (and daughter communities elsewhere) express the sense of belonging to a single Jewish subculture group defined primarily by their “Ladino” language and shared customs. But, as already alluded to in messages by various members cited above, this does not mean that the language or customs-inventory of all members of this geographically widely dispersed group are identical in every respect. In fact, as already indicated in messages cited above, members are quick to point out the linguistic and cultural distinctiveness of the Sephardim of their own city or region, sometimes expressing the conviction that their own Judezmo dialect and customs are the best. Several members commented on regional divergences in customs-related terminology: “Rahel de ISRAEL” noted that the vigil against harmful forces held on the night before a circumcision was called shemirá in Izmir and viola in Salonika.57 Yehuda Hatsvi remarked that the Shabbat before Shavuot was humorously called “Shabat de dereh-eres” (Shabbat of good manners) in Salonika because, according to the midrash, “derekh erets (Heb. good manners/desired behavior) preceded the Torah.”58 Bortnick noted that in Izmir it was customary to raise a glass of rakı (arrack) to a bride and groom and say “May all say to him Mashallah [cf. Tk. maşallah ‘What wonders God has willed! No evil eye!’ < Ar. maša’Allah]; may they pass it well, Inshallah [cf. Tk. inşallah ‘God willing!’ < Ar. inša’Allah].”59 She also mentioned that in Izmir—and apparently only there—the custom was to give three pinches of sugar to someone who suffered a serious fright that might have psychological or physical repercussions.60

Barokas remembered that elderly Jews from Turkey used snuff in the synagogues on Shabbat, causing them to sneeze;61 “Rosina” countered that in the thirty-one years she had lived in Istanbul she never saw this custom—but she acknowledged that it might have been practiced in cities of the interior such as Izmir or Çanakkale.62 Rather than letting divergences in language and custom become a source of divisiveness among Judezmo speakers, however, “Cobert Rohen” suggested that they should accept them with humor: “Each family has its own language.”63



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Popular ebooks
The European Opportunity by Felipe Fernández-Armesto(541)
The European History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources by Dennis A. Trinkle Scott A. Merriman(498)
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World by Michael Denis Higgins(479)
European Security in a Global Context by Thierry Tardy(472)
European Security without the Soviet Union by Stuart Croft Phil Williams(472)
The Routledge companion to Christian ethics by D. Stephen Long Rebekah L. Miles(460)
Hudud Al-'Alam 'The Regions of the World' - a Persian Geography 372 A.H. (982 AD) by V. V. Minorsky & C. E. Bosworth(401)
Gorbachev And His Generals by William C. Green(392)
Get Real with Storytime by Julie Dietzel-Glair & Marianne Crandall Follis(391)
Tibetan Studies in Comparative Perspective by Chih-yu Shih Yu-Wen Chen(387)
Governance, Growth and Global Leadership by Espen Moe(384)
Hyperculture by Byung-Chul Han(379)
CliffsNotes on Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby by Kate Maurer(361)
The Oxford History of the World by Fernández-Armesto Felipe;(354)
How Languages Are Learned 5th Edition by Patsy M Lightbown;Nina Spada; & Nina Spada(353)
The Egyptian Economy, 1952-2000 by Khalid Ikram(353)
Oral Poetry and Narratives from Central Arabia: The Poetry of Ad-Dindan : A Bedouin Bard in Southern Najd (Studies in Arabic Literature, Vol 17) (English and Arabic Edition) by P. M. Kupershoek P. Marcel Kurpershoek(345)
The Oxford Handbook of the Incas by Sonia Alconini(335)
Europe Contested by Harold James(322)
The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Warfare by Peter Connolly John Gillingham John Lazenby(307)