A
Message on Sephardic Pride and Responsibility
By
Shelomo Alfassa
(June
19, 2005) I would like to take this opportunity to introduce
myself and discuss Sephardic pride and responsibility,
but first I want you to know a little bit about me and
where I come from. My family are from Ottoman Rhodes and
Turkey, they came to the United States in 1921. I was
raised in a home with lots of Sephardic relatives, they
spoke Ladino around the house. "Sephardic life"
is in my blood, and over the past ten years, I have worked
with various Sephardic organizations from the Sephardi
Federation of Palm Beach to the International Committee
for Judeo-Spanish in Paris; I have done all I can to be
a good public citizen for my people, the Sephardic Jews.
In the past I served as director of research for Sephardic
House in New York at the Center for Jewish History and
was a consultant to the American Sephardi Federation.
I currently serve on the board of the Foundation for the
Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture, the oldest
Sephardic studies organization in North America. I am
also the publisher and editor of the International Sephardic
Journal, the world's first English language academic Jewish
publication oriented solely to Sephardic topics.
One
of the projects I have been working on lately is to have
Holocaust education be inclusive to the fact that Sephardim
living in North Africa and the Middle East were affected
by the Nazis influence. While the entire world knew about
the affects of the Holocaust in Central Europe, few knew
it had extended outside of Europe. As an example of this,
while most have heard of Kristallnacht, few had heard
of the Farhud, where Arabs trained by the Nazis in Baghdad,
killed, maimed and committed numerous atrocities against
the Sephardim over the holiday of Shavuot in 1941. When
I telephoned Holocaust centers around the United States
to initially discuss the events which affected Iraqi Sephardim,
very few Holocaust center directors even had heard of
it. "The Farhud, what is that, some kind of food?"
one ignorantly squawked.
People
ask me, Shelomo, how come you always talk about everything
from a Sephardic perspective? And I answer them with the
words of the Talmudic sage, Hillel: "If I am not
for myself, then who will be for me? And if I am only
for myself, then what am I? And if not now, when?"
- First,
"If I am not for myself, then who will be for
me?" This is a primary issue. We can not leave
it up to non-Sephardim to defend and honor Sephardic
tradition, while they are busy doing the same for
their own people. It is up to us to be for "us."
If we are not for us, no one else will be.
- Second,
"And if I am only for myself, then what am I?"
As Sephardim, we realize we are Jews first. No ethnic
or cultural division displaces the fact we are Jewish
people first and foremost. When we observe a holiday,
or attend an event with Ashkenazi friends, we honor
and show respect to both God and our Ashkenazi brothers.
It is not that we are only for ourselves, but we strive
to honor the traditions and culture of our fathers,
to ensure that we do not lose their traditions and
culture-our Sephardic traditions and culture. This
is something we have every right to do, and are even
commanded to do. As God tells us in the Humash, "Remember
the days of old, consider the years of many generations;
ask your father, and he will show you, your elders,
and they will tell you."
- Third,
"And if not now, when?" This is one of the
most vital sayings which lend credence to our plight.
We must act-and we must act now. Assimilation, as
well as indifference is destroying us. Assimilation
is the "big gun" which must be unloaded.
We can do it, we all have to make an effort.
In
most of the world prior to 1900, our various Sephardic
communities were fertile, they were perpetuating themselves
by indoctrinating new generations of children with our
customs and traditions. The old ways were being handed
down, the traditional ways of the Sephardim were perpetuated
from Rabat to Mosul and from Constantinople to Alexandria.
Back when a young boy or girl reached an age in his or
her community that was socially acceptable for marriage,
the family made arrangements with another family, or the
community marriage maker would set up the child with a
potential partner. Like society itself, some things must
change, life evolves; some changes are for the better,
and some not so. We should realize marriage is the single
most important key to keep precious traditions alive,
it is through the union of the man and woman, the nuclear
and extended family that culture is best made accessible
for children. The plague of indifference has struck the
Jewish people a severe blow. It had been rising ever so
gently since the late 1950's, but in just the last few
decades we have seen Jewish self-destruction grow into
high numbers. The rampant assimilation the Jewish people
have dealt with for decades must be suppressed. Assimilation
is in no way a problem of North American Jewry, or even
European Jewry. Countries in South America and Central
America are undergoing this problem as well. Even locations
such as Turkey, Greece, Italy, Australia, South Africa
and even Israel experience this issue. No country is immune
from this, no place where Jewish people exist is free
from assimilation.
In
addition to the general Jewish problem of assimilation,
Sephardim have a unique issue which faces them. Sephardic
culture has faded to such incredible ailing levels, that
if we were animals we would be placed on the endangered
species list! As we are now in the 21st century, there
are only a few Sephardim still alive who were born in
the "old country." Even their children, the
first American born generation, are sadly at the upper
limits of their age group. The unity of the Sephardic
Jews is critical for various Sephardic cultures to survive
in the future. This is the time to unite, this is the
time to come together and make a stand, we should all
shout: "we have a treasured heritage and we want
it to survive."
As
we all know, the OU, or Orthodox Union is the world's
largest kashruth organization, but does anyone realize
it was founded by Sephardim? Yes, not Ashkenazim, but
Sephardic Jews, including Henry Pereira Mendes of New
York City's Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, home to
Congregation Shearith Israel, founded in 1654 by refugees
fleeing the Inquisition in Brazil. If you went to the
OU website, would you find any of this-no. If you asked,
do you think they would remember-no. But this is not the
only organization which the Sephardim founded, which seems
to have fallen on the way side.
Although
today it is now an arm of the Conservative Ashkenazi movement,
the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City was founded
by Sabato Morais a Sephardic rabbi from Italy with the
assistance of Henry Pereira Mendes. Morais received his
rabbinical training in his native Livorno, Italy and served
as the Haham of the Spanish and Portuguese Congregation,
Mikveh Israel, in Philadelphia from 1851 until his death
in 1897. This Sephardic Jew was so important and so respected,
that when he died a funeral took place in Philadelphia,
where masses of Sephardim and Eastern European Ashkenazim,
including thousands of Russian Jews, lost a day's pay
to attend his burial on a rainy Monday afternoon. And
in New York City, he was honored with a massive march
in his honor, with thousands of people blocking the street
from sidewalk to sidewalk. The New York Times remembered
Morais as "the most eminent rabbi in this country
a
powerful and aggressive factor in discussions of vast
import and interest to millions of people; a deep, incisive,
fearless thinker, speaker, and writer." But do you
think Sephardim realize this, have we forgotten? Do you
think non-Sephardim care to perpetuate Sephardic history?
Acknowledging that if we are not there to remember important
people, they will be forgotten-an author recently published
a scholarly paper with the bleak title, "The Funeral
and Forgetting of Sabato Morais." So this begs the
question, who is the keeper of our history? Who will be
the keeper of our culture and heritage in the future?
The
traditional Sephardic model since Maimonides has always
been to be a "person of the world," a person
who can work in modern society but a person who could
hold on to his strong Jewish identity and who respected
both the Jewish world and the larger non-Jewish secular
world. The rabbis will agree; the Torah is the central
marker of which all Jews rally around. Although some Jews
will rally closer to the Torah than others, it still belongs
to all of us. I say to you, whether you are religious,
secular, or in between, no matter where you stand, remember
you are part of a people with a splendid heritage, one
that deserves to be perpetuated. You, the young Jew, you
have been handed the torch, you must pick it up and carry
it, run with it. Do all you can to imbibe in Sephardic
history, read, write, participate in discussion groups.
Act, visit Israel, support Sephardic organizations, attend
lectures and programs which will teach and inspire you
on your honorable Sephardic heritage; and most of all,
be proud-be proud to be Sephardic, and be proud enough
that you want your descendants to not only be Sephardic,
but understand what it means to be Sephardic. We must
keep the flame alive, and we can if we try.
Shelomo
Alfassa is an international advocate for Sephardic Jewry.
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