10 May 2009

Moment Magazine: Heritage Guide



In honor of Jewish American Heritage Month - celebrated in May - find a Jewish American Heritage Guide in this month's issue of Moment. This will be an annual feature.

We invite you to use it as a starting point for your journeys and discover the dynamic Jewish cultural organizations that exist, sometimes in the least expected places.
According to the Guide's intro, the average American knows more about the Jews who left Egypt 3,000 years ago than about the Jews who came to America over the past 355 years. When American history textbooks mention Jews, it’s often in connection with the Holocaust.

However, Jews have been part of American life since their New Amsterdam arrival in 1654. This date gets pushed back earlier when one considers the arrival of the Sephardic conversos in the late 1500s and early 1600s into what is now the Southwestern US.

The archives, historical societies, museums and more listed in the Guide have taken the lead in preserving and informing that story.

Jews have extended the boundaries of American pluralism, serving as a model for other religious minorities and expanding the definition of American religious liberty so that they and others would be included as equals. Jewish American history offers us the opportunity to explore how Jews have flourished in a free and pluralistic society where church and state are separated and religion is entirely voluntary.
The Guide includes:

California
Judah L. Magnes Museum: Jewish cultural life and history. Archives of the Western Jewish History Center, documenting Jewish influence in the American West.

Simon Wiesenthal Center Museum of Tolerance: Pioneering work in tolerance training. Exhibits highlight consequences of extreme intolerance - including the Holocaust.

Skirball Cultural Center: In a building designed by Moshe Safdie, the museum explores connections between 4,000 years of Jewish heritage and American democratic ideals.

Colorado
Mizel Museum: Interactive cross-cultural programming. Exhibits beyond Judaism beyond Judaism explore rituals of African-American, Latino, Muslim, Native-American and Asian-Pacific cultures.

Florida
Jewish Museum of Florida: A Jewish presence more than 250 years old. Highlights Jewish Floridians in all aspects of life during their presence.

Illinois
Spertus Museum: Cross-cultural influences in Jewish Art, library, Institute of Jewish Studies.

Mississippi
Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life/Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience: Jews settled in the South in the late-17th century. Two sites in Utica and Natchez (site is an 1843 synagogue now a Jewish history center).

New York
Museum of Jewish Heritage: Stories of lost lives and communities in the Shoah and the story of survivors.

Tenement Museum: A time capsule of Lower East Side immigrant life.

Oklahoma
Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art: Jewish history from the Early Bronze Age to Jewish Oklahoma. Collection includes a cross-stitched Ten Commandments created in 1771 by Canadian Jewish pioneer Elizabeth Judah, 8.

Pennsylvania
National Museum of American Jewish History: Chronicles US Jewish history, artifacts. New building to open 2010.

Washington, DC
Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington/SmallJewish Museum: Photo archive, oral histories, walking tours, programs and more.

Toronto, Canada
Beth Tzedec Reuben & Helene Dennis Museum: International collection of Jewish historian and Encyclopedia Judaica editor Cecil Roth, with more than 1,000 ceremonial objects.

St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands
Weibel Museum/St. Thomas Synagogue: Built 1796 by Sephardic Jews - one of the New World’s oldest synagogues.

Cyberspace
Jewish Women’s Archive: Online interactive multimedia “Museum of the Jewish Woman,” with an oral history project, film, blog.

See the links for more information.

2 comments:

  1. In April you mentioned an article by Nashville historian Annette Rankin that appeared on "Nashville Past And Present", and I would like to thank you for mentioning my publication on "Tracing The Tribe".

    I am writing to inform your readers of two specific resources available for genealogists who are researching ancestors in Nashville.
    Links to both resources are available at nashvillepastandpresent.blogspot.com

    The Jewish Federation Archives and Library in Nashville has information on many of Nashville's ( and Tennessee's) early Jewish families and businesses. The library's archivists actively update their collection.
    The 1924 city directory is available for online research. The directory lists the name of each Nashville head of household, their spouse, their address and their occupation.

    Thanks again for the nice post.

    Betsy Thorpe

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi, Betsy,

    Family history researchers rely on local experts - like yourself - to inform us of available data. Thank you for your comment here and for your blog post on Hasville's Jewish history.

    With best wishes
    Schelly

    ReplyDelete