Moses Gaster Seminars
Jewish Studies. This academic year (2021-22) the John Rylands Research Institute will complete the online cataloguing of the codices in Hebrew script in the Rylands Library Manchester. Most of these manuscripts once belonged to Moses Gaster, who, with modest resources, assembled one of the most remarkable collections of Hebrew manuscripts of the 20th century. To mark the occasion the John Rylands Research Institute and the Manchester University Centre for Jewish Studies are hosting a series of seminars in autumn 2021 and spring 2022 which will explore aspects of the Rylands Gaster collection, and related collections. The first seminar will be Dr Zsofia Buda “The Rylands Gaster Codices and the problems of cataloguing them” and Dr Maria Cioata,“Moses Gaster: The Man and His Collections”. 2 - 3.30pm 19 Oct 2021, online. Further information.
Blog entry, 50 Jewish Objects
50 Jewish Objects Artwork. Juliet Goodden is the new artist commissioned by the Centre to respond with her art and creative practice to the 50 Jewish Objects project and to one or more items held at the John Rylands Research Institute and Library. In her second blogpost she leads us through her journey of discovery of the collection. Further information.
Research project, BRIC-19
Prayer in the age of COVID. The BRIC-19 project report British Ritual Innovation under COVID-19 is now available to download at (www.tinyurl.com/bric19). It includes Dr Katja Stuerzenhofecker’s case study of two online prayer groups by Orthodox Jewish women and girls that are attracting a global following. The project report aims to share best practice of digital solutions across religious communities that are useful for the duration of the pandemic and beyond.
A Buried Synagogue on Campus
Joint R&T and Archaeology on-campus tour. 'Walk & Talk: A Buried Synagogue on Campus’ with John Piprani (Archaeology) and Tereza Ward (R&T). Organised as part of Welcome Week on Fri 24 Sept 2021. Further information.
New publication
Jewish Studies. Philip Alexander, “‘If they are not Prophets, they are Sons of Prophets’. Folk Religion (Minhag) as a Source of Law in Rabbinic Judaism,” in: The Use and Dissemination of Religious Knowledge in Antiquity, ed. Catherine Hezser and Diana Edelman (Sheffield: Equinox, 2021), 122-144. Further information.
New publication
Jewish Studies. Philip Alexander, “Eschatology in the apocalyptic revival in Judaism (sixth to ninth centuries CE) in its historical context,” in: Eschatology in Antiquity: Forms and Functions, ed. Hilary Marlow, Karla Pollmann, and Helen van Noorden (Routledge: London and New York, 2021), 576-588. Further information.
Reading Group, Book of Esther (Biblical Hebrew)
Biblical and Jewish Studies. Philip Alexander will be leading a reading group focusing on the Book of Esther and Jewish commentaries. The class will meet via Zoom once a week. The primary aim of this non-credit course will be to provide students at BA, MA or PhD levels who have done some Hebrew with the opportunity to advance their knowledge. This semester the focus will be on the so-called Second Targum to Esther, and Prof. Alexander will give an introduction to the Targum in the first session. Knowledge of Hebrew and Aramaic will be a help, but is not necessary. English translations of the relevant texts will be supplied. 11am, Mondays, starting 27 Sept.
Blog entry, Council of Christians and Jews
Jewish Studies. Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz writes on the subject of 'Rosh Hashanah: In the Presence of the King.' 3 Sept 2021. Further information.
Public event, Bric-19
Prayer in the age of COVID. Dr Katja Stuerzenhofecker's ethnographic study of female-only Orthodox Jewish online prayer groups is part of the research study ‘Social Distance, Digital Congregation: British Ritual Innovation under COVID-19’. You are warmly invited to hear and discuss the results of this year-long research project into the ways in which the pandemic has shaped the ritual lives of religious communities of all kinds across the UK. Wed 29 September, 1-5pm BST, Manchester Metropolitan University city centre campus; also streamed online. The event is free and open to the public, but please register in advance. To sign up, see further infomration.
Podcast, Jewish Renaissance
Jewish Studies. 'Peh, Peh, Peh: Spitting at the Evil Eye and other Curious 'Kosher' Customs.' Have you ever worn an amulet? Or 'touched wood'? Or tied red thread on a baby’s cot? Recent research on Jewish women has revealed a wide array of customs that are still being used to protect people and ward off the angel of death. Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz investigates Jewish and anthropological definitions of magic and asks why people... Watch on YouTube.
Public event, Maharat
Jewish Studies. Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz speaks on 'Our Journey towards God: A Walk through the Piyutim of Erev Yom Kippur' as part of the Yeshivat Maharat (NY) 'Power Hour of Torah - High Holiday 5782 Edition'. Starts at 9:40 minutes. Watch on YouTube.
Online seminar
Jewish Studies. Moshe Behar gave a presentation on 'Genealogy of the Two-State solution in Israel/Palestine' at the International Webinar on the Prospect of Two-State Solution in Palestine, the National Institute of Management, Quetta, Pakistan. 19 June 2021. Further information.
Philip Alexander student essay prize 2021
Undergraduate student prize in Jewish Studies. The joint winners for 2021 are Ellie Birket for a dissertation on 'Voices of the past: narrating Red Army rape in post-war Eastern Europe' (supervised by Ewa Ochman) and Philippa Dennis for a dissertation on 'Is consent implied in the biblical narration of the sexual encounters of Bathsheba, Tamar and Dinah?' (supervised by Alex Samely). This £100 prize is awarded annually to the student with 'the highest grade in a Jewish Studies-related module or dissertation' at the University of Manchester. It honours the Centre's first co-director Philip Alexander, FBA. Further information.
New publication
Jewish and Biblical Studies. Rothschild Foundation Hanadiv Europe Post-Doctoral Fellow Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz, 'Mishlei/Proverbs: Weaving the Web of Wisdom' in European Judaism 54:2 (2021), 45-53. Further information.
Call for information, Limmud
Research in Anglo-Jewish history. Dr Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz, who is currently working on the history of Limmud, is still looking for Limmud programmes for the years 1984 (Portsmouth 1st year), 1988, and 1989 (both at Oxford). Any other Limmud documentation from the 1980s would also be very welcome! She is happy to receive originals or scans. If you have any of these, do please get in touch with her to arrange how to send/scan them: lindsey.taylor-guthartz@manchester.ac.uk
New publication
Dead Sea Scrolls. George Brooke, 'The Dead Sea Scrolls' (chap 3) in The Biblical World, 2nd edn, ed. Katharine Dell (Routledge: 2021). Further information.
Radio, Voice of Islam
Religion and Evolution. Daniel Langton was interviewed in relation to evolution and creationism during a panel discussion on 'Anthropogeny' (origins of humankind) on the radio station Voice of Islam. 20 July 2021. Listen again.
New Artists' Workshops
50 Jewish Objects artwork. Nicola Dale and Kremena Dimitrova, two artists commissioned by the Centre to produce a piece of art in response to one or more of the 50 Jewish Objects, have just made freely available two workshops to inspire you in creating your own art piece. You can download Nicola's instructions or follow them online: her words and hints will help you in getting new ideas for your art. And you can listen to Kremena in this video: she guides you through the steps to give life to a comic strip. You can see and enjoy the artwork of Nicola and Kremena, and of all the artists who colloborated with the 50 Jewish Objects project, here.
Modern Hebrew course
University level Hebrew tuition from Sept 2021. Modern Hebrew on three levels will be available at the University of Manchester from September 2021. The cost of auditing the courses is £600 and there will be no formal assessment. Apply for a place through the Language Centre. The courses will be taught in a mixed teaching environment for classroom-based students alongside distance-learning students (via a swivl robot and video-conferencing link). Audit fee bursaries are available to students at Universities belonging to the Northern Jewish Studies Partnership and other Universities. Further information.
Manchester's Response to Coronavirus
Jewish Studies. Among the projects listed by the Faculty of Humanities for their resource 'Contributing to the Fight Against Coronavirus', and the only one located in SALC, is Katja Stuerzenhofecker's work on 'How Jewish Orthodox women moved their religious practices online during COVID-19'. Further information.