Milton Public Library

Sephardic Jews and the Spanish language

Label
Sephardic Jews and the Spanish language
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Sephardic Jews and the Spanish language
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Series statement
Between Wanderings, 1
Summary
In 1903, four centuries after Spain expelled the Jews, a Spanish senator launched a campaign to have his country reopen relations with their descendants, the Sephardic Jews. To promote the campaign, he wrote this classic book, now available in a new annotated translation. Eager to let Jews speak for themselves, he devoted a third of the book to photos and letters from Sephardim in different countries, describing their communities, synagogues, schools, families, literature and aspirations. They also wrote to him about Ladino--the Judeo-Spanish language that many of them still used at home and in worship. The book documents Sephardic life at a turning point: the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, when many young Sephardim were starting to reject the Spanish language that their ancestors had passed down from generation to generation since 1492. Senator Pulido's writings, lectures and organizing earned him the nickname "the Apostle of the Sephardic Jews." His books on this topic continue to be cited frequently by scholars of Sephardic history
Target audience
adult
Contributor
Content

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