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Sephardic Jews???
Hi Everyone ... this is so totally off topic of MLU but I'm sure that because so many French roots soldiers were WW2 Canadian soldiers, then this sorta-kinda fits in here? :p :D
I received a couple of interesting emails from a stranger today regards a geneology search I'm doing and this guy mentioned that my French roots (Vezina's and varied other spellings) come from "Sephardic Jews" ... of which some studies he's done, even DNA tests, makes him say that probably most, if not all, French Canadian's hail from Sephardic Jews. I have NEVER heard of "Sephardic Jews" before ... have you? La Heim (spelling?) :D Karmen |
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I knew one Sephardic Jew. He was a student in Poland and he was as black as the blackest Africans. Moreover I think that majority of the people interested in history and politics have heard about the Sephardic Jews when several years ago Israel organized great action and airlift between Israel and North Africa to rescue and evacuate the Sephardic Jews from that region. Best regards :cheers: :salute: C. :) |
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I did a little searching and found some amazing sites that I got lost in about Jewish History and of course the Holocaust. Harsh history... but a tidbit I picked up somewhere on was that apparently "Sephardic Jews" relates back to Portugal and Spain ... I believe the 1700's. I have to research a little more to clarify and/or verify all of this. Maybe I'll discover that it's MY family that has the Holy Grail too? :smoker: :D If this is all true then I shall have to insist on circumcision and bar mittzvahs all round for the family ... males only of course. :p At any rate, this has all been interesting ... Ma :yappy: |
Link
The link below is one of the sites that I got lost in following links today ... many of the photos are not for the weak-stomached.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org Karmen |
Another link ...
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Edit, edit, edit...I should have read the other link; disregard what is written above. BTW, it's "L'Chaim". |
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:drunk: Karmen |
What am I?
I guess I'm a true Heinz 57! Lessee now, what am I:
English Cree (Saulteaux) / mayhaps Ojibway French Scottish (Orkneys) Icelandic Irish too (said Mom) JEWISH of Spain or Portugal now too? No wonder I keep getting called different things! :eek: :) Karmen aka everything else |
more recent history?
If my memory serves me right there is a Sephardic community in New York State. They were in the news a couple of years ago when they tried to have their town declared a religeous community and therefore not subject to State Taxes. I forget the details of the case but the interesting part of the story is that the entire town is made up of Sephardic Jews.
Sephardic Jews are heavily involved in the diamond trade often becoming easy targets for robbers as they carry thousands of dollars in gems on their person, they are easily identifiable from their mode of dress. |
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Back to the Reconquista
Without the benefit of reference (I am on the faculty room computer not in my home library) and with the benefit of the rusty memory, I think the term, "Sephardic Jews," may redate the Reconquista, the Christian reconquest of Spain that occurred between about 1100 and 1492. When the Christians finally took Granada, they issued a decree requiring all non-Christians (Moslems and Jews) to either leave, convert, or die. Most left, becoming members of established Jewish communities around Europe. Up a few posts, someone makes reference to Portugal. I thin (emphasis: THINK) that the Azkenazi (again, me too on spelling) were from Portugal.
If my memory works on this when I get home, I'll check into this further. Bob Potter :teach: |
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L'Chaim and Yah Voll (spelling?) Bob ... :D:D:D Karmen |
Here is the page I read about the differences between the two ... Karmen
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Where does the name originate from? A location named "Sepharad" is mentioned in the Tanakh (Bible) in the book of Obadiah, where the prophet refers to the Jerusalemite exiles in Sepharad. There is no scholarly concensus as to the geographical location to which this passage originally referred. Some scholars have suggested locations in Mesopotamia, Sardis in Asia Minor, or Sparta in Greece. From late Roman times, some Jews assumed that Sepharad referred to Spain. In any case, this was but one instance of the transference of biblical terms such as Sepharad, Tzarefat and Ashkenaz from their original Middle-Eastern referents to European locales. By the Middle Ages, Sepharad was the normal term used by Jews to refer to Spain. Judaism in Spain According to Sephardic tradition, the first Jews to arrive in Spain were the exiles from Jerusalem to whom Obadiah referred, who came in the sixth pre-Christian century. Many scholars assume Jews settled in Spain in Roman times, but we have little information about Jewish life in Spain until the time of the Visigothic Spanish kingdom, which outlawed Judaism at the end of the seventh century after the kings had become Catholics. Spain was conquered by the Muslims in 711. In the tenth and eleventh centuries, Spanish Judaism flourished under the Muslims, producing poets, scholars, and courtiers of the first order. After the Christian Reconquista gained Toledo in 1085, when the Almoravids came to rule the Islamic side of the frontier, Jewish cultural achievements in Muslim Spain began to decline, disappearing under the Almohades in the mid-twelfth century. But Christian Spain meanwhile developed its remarkable convivencia in which Jews (and Muslims) were involved in cultural, intellectual, financial and even political life all over Christian Spain. By the mid-thirteenth century, the Christians controlled all of the Peninsula except for a small area from Granada to the Mediterranean. In many of the independent Spanish kingdoms, the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries still saw striking religious, cultural and literary achievements among the Jews, but Jews also faced increasing religious pressures and occasionally were forced to participate in religious "disputations" with Christians. Violent anti-Jewish riots broke out in several cities in 1391, causeing many to flee, and leaving thousands of Spanish Jews dead. The fifteenth century was marked by continuing hardships and religious pressure, leading many Jews to convert or to leave Spain. In January, 1492, the Muslims were driven out of their last stronghold, Granada, completing the Reconquista. In March, 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella decreed the expulsion of the Jews from Spain. Many Jews converted or left the Iberian peninsula; other Jews went to Portugal, where Judaism could still be practiced freely. But Portugal expelled its Jews in 1497, and the tiny kingdom of Navarre followed suit in 1498. Judaism could be practiced openly nowhere in the Peninsula. The exact number of Jews who left Spain and Portugal at the end of the fifteenth century is debated by scholars, but may be estimated at several hundred thousand, significant enough to enable Sephardim to establish their own congregations in such places as Morocco, Italy, Egypt, the Ottoman Empire, the Land of Israel, and elsewhere. http://www.sephardicstudies.org/intro.html |
Thanks!
Hey Alex,
Thanks a lot for this ... it's interesting stuff. ;) Karmen :) |
Just like the best of us - pure mongrel !! LMAO :smoker: :p
(hey - just noticed we now have an emoticon for genealogists = :bang: ) |
Good Grief there are a bunch of smart people who hang out here!
You lot are amazing, truly. I pop in here from time to time and seem to confirm my status as village idiot. You can even spell better than my fat fingers can. There is a lot of good info up there, nicely sorted out and carefully explained.
Bob Potter |
Laine pure
Good stuff above on Sephardim/Ashkenazim - but to come back to Karmen's original point - it would totally freak out the "pure wool" nationalists in La Belle Province if it were proven they were descendants of Jews.
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Cool, eh?
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Here are the variations on my FRENCH surname (SEPHARDIC JEWISH?) relatives in different Canadian documents, many of whom were Canadian WW2 Vets (to keep this in context of MLU ;) ) Many documents referring to the same person, each one had a different spelling variation in each different document! Argh ... cross-check cross-check cross-check Viznaugh Visnaugh Vezina Visnaw Vesigneault Visigneault Visneauve Visneau Visneaux Visina Visna Vizna ARGH (I just know I'm forgetting some of the spellings I've come across ... and Smith seems so simple except there are so many) Hmmmm, my Quebec French relations may be upset to know their roots may root back a little farther than pure France and that perhaps their lovely dark and tan-able complexions come from :bang: and perhaps they also speak Spanish and Portuguese in their sleep when they have nightmares about bar mitzfahs and other ... rituals ... but their loved ones are too kind to tell them??? Mais oui? :devil: Ma :yappy: |
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...."a mushy-softy Grandpa", my A*S I am....... :p |
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THINK PINK nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah Ma :yappy: :p |
I guess Karmen would rather not get into that whole thing about the Icelanders originally coming from Persia while she sorts out those Sephardic Quebecois.
Mazel Tov |
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:D |
I have a superb Persian carpet, but it can give you a nasty burn
As for the Persian Icelanders - I checked my sources - it's a bit roundabout, how they got there from here and back there again - here are some links: http://web.missouri.edu/~tm104/who_w...varangians.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varengians |
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Pardon me? Whatever do you use your carpet for? :eek: Quote:
I've always figured that none of us are pure anything ... Adam and Eve had many globe travelling descendents ... funny how every generation tends to rebel against the traditions of their parents generations and start new ... nations and "original" nationalities :rolleyes: :idea: Hey, do you think that the Cree/Ojibway part of me could get part of my land back that was ripped off if I show my original birth registration that lists my Mom's nationality as a SCOTCH HALFBREED? Rent here is a killer ... and maybe your Persian carpet belonged to my Persian ancestors and you should just give it back to me as a family heirloom! Now goodnight :p |
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Little Miss Yappy from down-under...... :eek: Good Morning Karmen...... :p |
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I think Adam and Eve's last name must have been SMITH! Hey, Tim Tam Tony, are you my brother? :) |
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