The Jews of Kurdistan is profusely illustrated with wonderful color and black and white photographs of Kurdish Jews at home, work, and leisure. It presents a comprehensive visual and written portrait of this people’s rich heritage, history, religious and spiritual life, daily life, clothing, needlework, metalwork and jewelry, illuminated manuscripts, synagogues, and ceremonial and ritual objects. It includes striking paintings of Kurdish Jewish women, a table of common weaving patterns, a glossary, and a selected bibliography. In the two decades since the publication of the Hebrew edition of this seminal work, the culture of the Jews of Kurdistan has largely been integrated into mainstream Israeli culture, allowing Shwartz-Be’eri’s study to resonate as an ever more important ethnographic and historical document.
The Israel Musem, Jerusalem
272 pp. 506 illus. 8 1/2 x 11"
ORA SHWARTZ-BE’ERI is Curator of Jewish Ethnography at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. The Hebrew edition of The Jews of Kurdistan (1981) and the Israel Museum exhibition of the same name (1981—82) represented the culmination of five years of field research on the material culture of Kurdish Jews by Shwartz-Be’eri and her staff, and the pilot project of the Israel Museum’s Department of Jewish Ethnography.