FEBRUARY
A Virtual Conversation on Writing Jewish History – with Nancy Sinkoff and Natalia Aleksiun
Thursday, February 4
1:00 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Nancy Sinkoff (Rutgers University) and Natalia Aleksiun (Touro College)
About This Event
Nancy Sinkoff, From Left to Right: Lucy S. Dawidowicz, the New York Intellectuals, and the Politics of Jewish History (Wayne State Univ. Press, 2020)
Natalia Aleksiun, Conscious History: Polish Jewish Historians before the Holocaust (Littman Library, 2021)
moderated by Avinoam Patt, Director, Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life University of Connecticut
Nancy Sinkoff is Associate Professor of Jewish Studies and History, and Director of the Center for European Studies, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey.
Natalia Aleksiun is Associate Professor of Modern Jewish History at Touro College, Graduate School of Jewish Studies, New York.
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire: Out of Tragedy Comes Social Justice with Pamela Nadell
Tuesday, February 9
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Pamela S. Nadell (American University)
About This Event
Pamela Nadell: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire: Out of Tragedy Comes Social Justice
Nadell's scholarship focuses on American Jewish history, especially the history of American Jewish women. Nadell discusses the fire and its aftermath in her award-winning recent book, America’s Jewish Women: A History from Colonial Times to Today, recipient of the 2019 National Jewish Book Award “Jewish Book of the Year.”
While the book traces the evolution of the American Jewish woman’s experiences and activism over four centuries, Nadell will discuss East European immigrant women in New York City in the first decade of the twentieth century. Sewing until their aching fingers bled and starving on the pennies paid for each cuff stitched, shirtwaist makers brazenly struck in 1909. But the concessions they won then did not include fire alarms and sprinklers. Less than two years later, 146 workers perished in a horrific industrial fire.
Professor Nadell holds the Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women’s and Gender History at American University where she directs the Jewish Studies Program and received the university’s highest award, Scholar/Teacher of the Year. A past president of the Association for Jewish Studies and the recipient of the American Jewish Historical Society’s Lee Max Friedman Award for distinguished service, her consulting work for museums includes the National Museum of American Jewish History and the Library of Congress.
Made possible by the Fishman Fund for American Jewish History and Jewish Communal Leadership
Co-sponsored by Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies
The Jew as Queer: An Intersectional Approach with Marla Brettschneider
Wednesday, February 10
2:00 p.m.
Virtual Event
Featuring Marla Brettschneider (University of New Hampshire)
About This Event
The Jew as Queer: An Intersectional Approach
In this talk, we will explore Jewish queer theory through the co-constructed frames of race, gender, sexuality, and class. Scholars in the field of Jewish queer studies have been examining this subject for decades. Recently scholars in related fields have begun to do this kind of queered analysis, for example, of Latinx populations and immigrants in the US, refugees and asylum-seekers, indigenous populations, Muslims, Arabs, and South Asians. These studies also crosscut with queered analyses of the historically constructed category of “terrorists” which has great import for Jewish studies today. However, these blossoming subfields do not fully take into account Jewish examinations of similar dynamics. This contemporary Jewish studies talk on The Jew as Queer will bring together these innovative interdisciplinary studies to widen the scope of diverse critical theories as well as Jewish, and even Jewish queer, studies. The talk is designed to enable UConn students, faculty, and community members to bring their interdisciplinary work into a Jewish studies frame as it will support these constituencies in bringing a Jewish lens into their studies in an array of related fields across campus.
Sarah Abrevaya Stein in conversation with Amy Weiss
Tuesday, February 23
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Sarah Abrevaya Stein (UCLA) and Amy Weiss (UHart)
About This Event
Sarah Abrevaya Stein in conversation with Amy Weiss
Sarah Abrevaya Stein’s ninth book, named a Book of the Year by The Economist and Mosaic Magazine, an Editors’ Choice by the New York Times, and a National Jewish Book Award Finalist, uses the Levy family’s correspondence to tell the story of their journey spanning generations and the globe. The Levys wrote letters to share grief and to reveal secrets, to propose marriage and to plan for divorce, to maintain connection. They wrote because they were family. And years after they frayed, Stein discovers, what remains solid is the fragile tissue that once held them together: neither blood nor belief, but papers.
For centuries, the bustling port city of Salonica was home to the sprawling Levy family. As leading publishers and editors, they helped chronicle life as it was experienced by Sephardic Jews across the Ottoman Empire. The wars of the twentieth century, however, redrew the borders around them, in the process transforming the Levys from Ottomans to Greeks. Family members soon moved across boundaries and hemispheres, stretching the familial diaspora from Greece to Western Europe, Israel, Brazil, and India. In time, the Holocaust nearly eviscerated the clan, eradicating whole branches of the family tree.
With meticulous research and care, Stein uses the Levys’ letters to tell not only their history, but the history of Sephardic Jews in the twentieth century.
Sarah Abrevaya Stein is a historian, writer and educator whose work has reshaped our understanding of Jewish history. Her commitment to research is matched by her love of teaching. At UCLA, she is Professor of History, the Director of the Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies, as well as the Viterbi Family Chair in Mediterranean Jewish Studies. She is the author or editor of nine books, including Family Papers: a Sephardic Journey Through the Twentieth Century and Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce.
Sarah has received many awards including the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, two National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships, a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Jewish Book Awards and the UCLA Distinguished Teaching Award.
She lives with her family in Santa Monica, CA.
Made possible by the Hartzel Lebed Endowment Fund and the University of Hartford’s Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies
Co-sponsored by Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies
Mandell JCC Virtual Hartford Jewish Film Festival 2021
From February 28 to April 2
Virtual Screenings and Panels
Featuring Susannah Heschel, Avinoam Patt, Amy Weiss, and Jeremy Pressman
About This Event
The inaugural Virtual Hartford Jewish Film Festival will be under way February 28 - April 2, 2021. Join us as we watch films - each at our own pace - from Germany, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Norway, Poland, and the US. Come together for weekly programs to discuss and learn more.
You can find the HJFF 2021 homepage here: hjff2021.eventive.org/
The entire brochure can be downloaded [here]
In addition to the movies, there are five panels featuring a number of UConn faculty. For a list of the panels, click [here].
MARCH
“In the Year 2125, Will American Jews Be Alive?” Grounds for Optimism or Pessimism for the Future of American Jewry
Tuesday, March 2
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Arnold Dashefsky (UConn) and Ira Sheskin (University of Miami)
About This Event
Join us for the George & Lillian Sandals Memorial Lecture with Arnie Dashefsky and Ira M. Sheskin:
“In the Year 2125, Will American Jews Be Alive?
Grounds for Optimism or Pessimism for the Future of American Jewry”
Arnie and Ira are co-editors of the American Jewish Year Book: The Annual Record of North American Jewish Communities.
“A century from now and more, the stately volumes of the American Jewish Year Book will stand as the authoritative record of Jewish life since 1900. For anyone interested in tracing the long-term evolution of Jewish social, political, religious, and cultural trends from an objective yet passionately Jewish perspective, there simply is no substitute.”
Lawrence Grossman, American Jewish Year Book Editor (1999-2008) and Contributor (1988-2015)
Dr. Arnold Dashefsky is a UConn professor at the Department of Sociology and at tge Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life in Storrs, CT.
Dr. Ira M. Sheskin is a professor at the Department of Geography and at the Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies at the University of Miami, Coral; Gables, FL.
This free and virtual event is sponsored by Beth Sholom B’nai Israel (Manchester) & UCONN Center for Judaic and Contemporary Jewish Life.
HJFF2021 Reel Talk: Holy Silence (2020)
Tuesday, March 2
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring director Steven Pressman, Dr. Suzanne Brown-Fleming and Father Kevin Spicer
About This Event
About the festival: The inaugural Virtual Hartford Jewish Film Festival will be under way February 28 - April 2, 2021. Join us as we watch films - each at our own pace - from Germany, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Norway, Poland, and the US. Come together for weekly programs to discuss and learn more.
You can find the HJFF 2021 homepage here: hjff2021.eventive.org/
The entire brochure can be downloaded [here]
Participants of the Reel Talk:
Steven Pressman, Emmy-nominated Film Director
Dr. Suzanne Brown-Fleming, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Director of International Academic Programs, author of The Holocaust and Catholic Conscience
Father Kevin Spicer,James J. Kenneally Distinguished Professor of History, Stonehill College, author of Hitler’s Priests: Catholic Clergy and National Socialism
Moderator: Prof. Avinoam Patt, Director, Center for Judaic Studies, UConn
Popular Music in Morocco – A Common Language between Jews & Muslims
Tuesday, March 9
11:00 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Vanessa Paloma Elbaz (University of Cambridge), Nicola Carpentieri (UConn), and Najib Mokhtari (Université Internationale de Rabat)
About This Event
Hosted by the University of Connecticut and Université Internationale de Rabat
Virtual | Free | Open to public
Event Synopsis
Morocco’s population has used music for generations to transmit unofficial and unwritten knowledge. It is the medium par excellence that has been mobilized to express the ideas of the masses or to shape desired intellectual trends historically and until today.
This form of mediated communication cuts transversally through boundaries of gender, linguistic and minority societal frontiers. Addressing questions such as: Is Moroccan Jewish popular music a common language with Moroccan Muslims? Is there then, a sonic perception of commonality? What could be the difference between the popular music written and sung by a Jew and that by a Muslim after Independence, if any? This talk will explore the way Moroccan popular music, otherwise known aschaabiand the Jewish version which has been recently labeledchgouri, function as a common language between Muslims and Jews in contemporary Morocco. Focusing on the period after the Arab Spring and Morocco’s constitutional referendum, Elbaz will develop the way music has been deployed for the cementing of commonality within diversity and the intrinsic belonging of Jews to the contemporary Moroccan state.
Event page can be found [here]
UConn Co-Sponsors:
Abrahamic Programs | Arabic & Islamic Studies | Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life
HJFF2021 Reel Talk: Till Kingdom Come (2020)
Tuesday, March 11
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Prof. Amy Weiss (UHart), Dr. Joel Lohr (Harfort Seminary), and Prof. Jeremy Pressman (UConn)
About This Event
About the festival: The inaugural Virtual Hartford Jewish Film Festival will be under way February 28 - April 2, 2021. Join us as we watch films - each at our own pace - from Germany, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Norway, Poland, and the US. Come together for weekly programs to discuss and learn more.
You can find the HJFF 2021 homepage here: hjff2021.eventive.org/
The entire brochure can be downloaded [here]
Participants of the Reel Talk:
Prof. Amy Weiss, Director, Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies, author of forthcoming book on American Jewish-evangelical interfaith relations and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Dr. Joel Lohr, President, Hartford Seminary, author of The Abingdon Introduction to the Bible: Understanding Jewish and Christian Scriptures
Moderator: Prof. Jeremy Pressman, Director of Middle East Studies, UConn, author of The Sword Is Not Enough: Arabs, Israelis, and the Limits of Military Force (Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 2020)
#TVGoneJewy: TV’s Jewish Renaissance with Ester Kustanowitz
Tuesday, March 16
7:00 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Esther Kustanowitz
About This Event
About the talk: Today’s Jewish writers are reclaiming and reshaping Jewish identity on-screen, and audiences are reacting to the increased Jewish representation with enthusiasm and worry, alternating between celebration and condemnation. So, what do we look for in Jewish representation on TV? We’ll look at some clips and talk about how Jewish identity is currently being portrayed on TV and in the world.
About the speaker: Esther D. Kustanowitz is a Los Angeles-based writer, editor, consultant and speaker.
Esther is a Contributing Writer at the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles, where she writes on topics ranging from comedy to grief, from women in Jewish leadership to social media culture; and is a TV columnist at J.: The Jewish News of Northern California. She co-hosts The Bagel Report, a podcast about Jews and entertainment, and speaks about #TVGoneJewy, a term she invented to describe the increase of Jewish content on TV.
Esther was also founding editor at GrokNation.com; has written for ModernLoss.com, Haaretz, JTA, the Forward, and eJewish Philanthropy, among others; and has worked with dozens of Jewish organizations. She is also working on a book about life after loss called Nothing Helps (But This Might Help).
As a Jewish early adopter of social media platforms including blogging, Facebook and Twitter, Esther is frequently sought-out as a source on social media engagement and culture, and is known as one of the Jewish world’s social influencers.
Esther has also consulted for and spoken at dozens of organizations and institutions in New York, Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area and Israel, including The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles, the ROI Community, IKAR, the American Jewish University, Yeshiva University, Slingshot, Limmud, UpStart Bay Area and the Jewish Federations of North America.
Feel free to share our [flyer]!
HJFF2021 & ALEPH Reel Talk: Shared Legacies (Blacks, Jews, and Black Jews)
Tuesday, March 18
7:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Prof. Susannah Heschel (Dartmouth) and Prof. Avinoam Patt (UConn)
About This Event
Blacks, Jews, and Black Jews
This lecture will explore three intertwined dimensions of relations between African Americans and Jewish Americans: Jewish involvement in the Civil Rights Movement, Jewish memory of the Civil Rights Movement in recent decades in light of the rise of white nationalism, and scholarship on racism and what they might contribute to our understanding of antisemitism. Many American Jews turn with pride to the active participation of Jews in the Civil Rights Movement (CRM), in which numerous rabbis and Jewish students took part in disproportionate number – and some died. The Black Jewish bonds of the CRM days remain a powerful and inspiring memory, and many Jews long to revive those alliances. To revive the alliances of the past, Prof. Heschel suggests we need to incorporate new understandings of the nature of racism, and recover the prophetic traditions that forged the alliances in the past.
Participants of the Reel Talk:
Prof. Susannah Heschel (Dartmouth College)
Moderator: Prof. Avinoam Patt, Director, Center for Judaic Studies, UConn
APRIL
Yom HaShoah Program: “Legacies of European Jewry – The Second Generation and Beyond”
Tuesday, April 6
7:00 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Dr. Andrew Zalewski, Leora Tec, Ralph Berger, and Frederick Roden
About This Event
Legacies of European Jewry: The Second Generation and Beyond
Annual Yom HaShoah Program, the University of Connecticut, Stamford, Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life
The Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life at the University of Connecticut, Stamford Campus will host a special panel discussion on the legacies of the European Jewish experience. Panelists will include Dr. Andrew Zalewski, vice president of Gesher Galicia (geshergalicia.org), an organization dedicated to the history of Jewish Galicia and author of two books on the subject; Leora Tec, founder of Bridge to Poland (https://bridgetopoland.com/), that promotes dialogue between contemporary Poles and American Jews; and Ralph Berger, an editor of his parents' writings as members of the Bielski partisans who survived Nazism in the Belorussian forests, the subject of Nechama Tec's book Defiance and its film adaptation. This program will be our annual Yom Hashoah commemoration.
Moderator: Dr. Frederick Roden, Professor of English and Coordinator of the UConn Stamford Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life.
Speaker Bios:
Leora Tec is the founder and director of Bridge To Poland, which seeks to educate people about Jewish history in Poland with an emphasis on how the Jews of Poland are being remembered by non-Jewish Poles today. Leora is the Special Projects Partner of Brama Grodzka-Teatr NN in Lublin, Poland and a Mary Elvira Stevens Traveling Fellow from Wellesley College (2018-2019). In cooperation with Brama Grodzka-Teatr NN Leora has created the online video archive, The Neshoma Project: Conversations with Poles Rescuing Jewish Memory. Leora sits on the board of the American Association for Polish-Jewish Studies. She is the author of several articles including “Bridge Building in the Polish Jewish Landscape in Jews in Dialogue (Brill 2020) and the forthcoming, “An Inclusive Model of Memory Work in Poland: Bridge To Poland as a Case Study” with Professor Jolanta Ambrosewicz-Jacobs in the Polish journal Politeja. Leora's mother, Nechama Tec, is a Holocaust survivor and Holocaust scholar whose book, "Defiance," was made into the film of the same name starring Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber. Leora holds a B.A. from Wellesley College and a J.D./LL.M. from Duke University School of Law.
Andrew Zalewski is vice president of Gesher Galicia, a non-profit organization carrying out genealogical and historical research on Galicia, once home to the largest Jewish community of Austria-Hungary. Gesher Galicia conducts archival research in Polish, Ukrainian, and Austrian archives making the findings available to general public on its website. Through special educational programs and the publication of its quarterly research journal, the organization also informs on the history of the former Jewish community of Galicia.
Andrew Zalewski is a frequent speaker at meetings of Jewish genealogical societies and cultural and academic institutions in the US and abroad. His lectures and writings have focused on Jewish cultural transformation and educational access, modernizing activities of Jewish physicians, and Jewish legal status in Galicia. Unique archival records—vital records, population surveys, maps, and old newspapers—provide the background for his in-depth descriptions of Galicia.
Andrew Zalewski authored two books on Austrian Galicia: Galician Trails: The Forgotten Story of One Family (Thelzo Press 2012) and Galician Portraits: In Search of Jewish Roots (Thelzo Press 2014), in which he traced the story of his ancestors in a historical context. He is a former professor of medicine at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
Ralph S. Berger is an arbitrator, mediator, attorney and adjunct lecturer for Cornell University. Albert S. Berger is a retired teacher, sports coach and mentor of teachers-in-training at Brooklyn College. They are the co-editors of With Courage Shall We Fight, a book that tells the incredible story of survival of their parents, Jewish Resistance fighters Murray “Motke” Berger, one of the original members of the Bielski Brigade (depicted in the movie “Defiance”), and Frances “Fruma” Berger, the first woman in the Brigade to be issued a weapon. Miraculously, first individually and then together as fighters in the Bielski Brigade, they escaped from the Nazis and certain death and literally fought back, saving not only their own lives but those of others as well. The book is a compilation of their first person written memoirs and their mother’s compelling poetry about the Holocaust and life as a Partisan. It tells the story of their lives before, during and after the War. In both prose and poetry, this memoir teaches readers about courage in the face of adversity and that the experiences of Holocaust martyrs and survivors must never be forgotten. Since the book was first published Ralph and Albert have lectured on it at, among other places, the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, the Museum of Jewish Heritage in NYC, the Holocaust Memorial of the Greater Miami Jewish Federation, Miami-Dade College, St. John’s Law School, Nazareth College, Colgate University and numerous temples and schools. All proceeds from the sale of the book are donated to support Holocaust education.
Translator’s Talk: Harry Potter in Yiddish with Arun Schaechter Viswanath
Tuesday, April 20
5:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Arun Schaechter Viswanath, the translator of Harry Potter Un Der Filosofisher Shteyn
About This Event
Join us for a conversation with this truly special guest: Arun Schaechter Viswanath's translation of the first volume of the Harry Potter world best-sellers appeared in 2020, titled Harry Potter Un Der Filosofisher Shteyn.
From the translator's homepage: Arun “Arele” Schaechter Viswanath grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey in a Yiddish- and Tamil-speaking home. His desire to translate Harry Potter grew from a strong feeling that a translation of such a popular children’s novel into Yiddish would be a boon and a resource for Yiddish students and teachers, Yiddish-speaking children and parents, and the Yiddish world more broadly. Arun resides with his wife Tali Adler in New York and works in tech as an operations strategist and data analyst. He enjoys bouldering, reading back-issues of , playing board games, and learning new languages and instruments.
Yair Rosenberg covered the Yiddish publication for Tablet Magazine, which you can read [here].
More details to follow soon.
Edward Lewis Wallant Award Ceremony w/ Peter Orner and Lee Conell
Wednesday, April 21
7:30 - 9:30 p.m. EST
Virtual Event
Featuring Lee Conell and Peter Orner
About This Event
Honoring the 2019 and 2020 Award winners
Peter Orner, Maggie Brown and Others (2019)
Lee Conell, The Party Upstairs (2020)
The Edward Lewis Wallant Award is presented annually by the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the Univ. of Hartford to an American writer whose published creative work of fiction is considered to have significance for the American Jew. A panel of three critics serves as judges, and seeks out a writer whose fiction bears a kinship to the work of Wallant, preferably an author who is younger or unrecognized. Past winners include Chaim Potok, Thane Rosenbaum, Dara Horn, Nicole Krauss, Julie Orringer, Joshua Henkin, Kenneth Bonert, David Bezmozgis, Rebecca Dinerstein, Ayelet Tsabari, and most recently, Eduardo Halfon.
More information [here]