Film attitude
April 25, 2008
This film is not about facts, though they plau a part.
It is about my own feelings and voyage of discovery.
It is about my personal sense of a place, made up of memories, old images, family memorabilia, research and conversations. The place that will be depicted in this very short animated film .. never existed.. except in my mind
Questions
April 25, 2008
If anyone can help me understand these things….please post
Education
- What kinds of schools were there?
- What was education like for girls?
- What was religious education like?
Marriage
- Was there arranged marriage? if so, how did it work?
- What kind of celebration and ritual surrounded marriage?
Homelife
- What was life like for women in the household?
- How was cokking handled, for everyday and for holidays?
“It was a Paradise”
April 25, 2008
“It as a paradise” this was what I heard when I asked Lillo Naim about Tripoli ,yet as i researched i learned about changes in the political atmosphere that impacted negatively on the community. i learned of religous and government laws limiting Jewish behavior.
When I sat down and spoke to Lillo Naim and Ruggiero Parienti, I asked how was” this a a paradise”? They explained it was a small community. The air was clean. The beach was within walking distance. Everyone knew each other. Life was simpler.
An interesting perspective looking back from the complexity of his life in New York.
If you are part of the community at large please respond.. Was it a Paradise in retrospect?
A place for Community
April 25, 2008
This a space for family and others from the community in Libya to post, memories, stories and random facts.
Please use this as a gathering place for information about the community… extend my knowledge.
Websites
April 21, 2008
Web References
http://geoimages.berkeley.edu/libyajew/index.html
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=16658165
PINKAS HAKEHILOT
Encyclopedia of Jewish Communities
LIBYA & TUNISIA
http://www.jewishgen.org/Yizkor/Pinkas_tunisia/pinkas_tunisia.html
The Holocaust in Libya
http://www.zchor.org/libya/libya.htm
Forgotten Jews Libya – Reparations
http://jewishrefugees.blogspot.com/2007/07/discussions-
with-libya-on-lost-jewish.html
http://www.jimena.org/forgotten/Jews%20of%20Libya.pdf
open letter-Raphael Luzon
Chairman of Jews of Libya- UK
http://www.rluzon.com/jewsOfLibya.php
Forced migration
http://www.iflac.com/jac/jac/THE_FORCED_MIGRATION_lybia.htm
Libyan writers- Personal stories
http://www.libyanwritersclub.com/uk/?p=335
Forgotten Refugees
http://www.theforgottenrefugees.com/index.php?option=com_
content&task=view&id=30&Itemid=38
The Final Exodus of the Libyan Jews in 1967
http://www.jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowPage.asp?DRIT=5&DBID=1&LNGID=1&TMID=111&FID=253&PID=0&IID=1901&TTL
=The_Final_Exodus_of_the_Libyan_Jews_in_1967
Tripolitania
April 21, 2008
Tripolitania or Tripolitana is a historic region of western Libya, centered on the coastal city of Tripoli. Formerly part of the Ottoman Empire, Tripolitania was captured by Italy in 1911 during the Italo-Turkish War. Italy officially granted autonomy after the war, but gradually occupied the region. Originally administered as part of a single colony, Tripolitania was a separate colony from 26 June 1927 to 3 December 1934, when it was merged into “Libya”. During World War II, Libya was occupied by the Allies and until 1947 Tripolitania (and the region of Cyrenaica) were administered by Great Britain. Italy formally renounced its claim upon the territory in the same year.
[edit]
Protected: Visual inspiration – film
April 21, 2008
Why a Mirage?
April 21, 2008
- Mirage: an optical illusion in which atmospheric refraction by a layer of hot air distorts or inverts reflections of distant objects.
- Mirage: something illusory and unattainable
Even though a mirage is a real phenomenon, the interpretation of what is seen is up to the individual.
So, my impression of the Libya of my heritage is part illusion, part imagination and part fact. It remains a mirage.
Recipes and food
April 21, 2008
In any culture, food is a source of continuity. Wherever you go, you take the tastes of childhood with you. The Jews of Tripoli have been displaced from their homeland, but have not forgotten it’s tastes.
I enjoyed the special delights of this cuisine as I visited my aunts and uncles after they emigrated to Brooklyn.. These are warm, happy memories of family…. so, I was delighted to find a record has been made of the cuisine of the Jews of Libya.
- In Sephardic cooking by Copeland Marks..there is a section on the food of the Magreb… including a section on Libya . Featured are recipes for foods I know such as Mafrum, T’fina, Couscous, Burekas and Hrieme. There are also foods I do not know such as Bestil ,Tabikhsa bil Houmas and Tabikhsa bil Karrate. The section on Tunisia featured other familar foods such as Dabla, Harissa and Makroud.
- Most recently I was introduced to a cookbook published in Italy- La Cucina Tripolina by Linda Guetta Hassan. Sadly, I am so far not able to get the book here in New York.
Precedents-Video images of a bygone Libya
April 21, 2008