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The Cairo Genizah is Having a Moment - Melton’s New Course Explores this Fascinating Treasure

2020-Cairo-Genizah-Arabic_Document

In recent years, the Cairo Genizah has captured the attention of a public eager to learn about the once-hidden medieval world of Middle Eastern and North African Jewry. From Mark Glickman's history, Sacred Treasure of the Cairo Genizah, to Michael David Lukas's novel The Last Watchman of Old Cairo, to Michelle Paymar's feature film From Cairo to the Cloud, there is a renewed interest in this long-forgotten piece of Jewish history.

This burgeoning fascination with the medieval fragments found in the Genizah (a repository for timeworn sacred writings usually found in a synagogue attic or cellar) is sweeping the Melton community as well, with our new course, Exploring a Forgotten World: A Social History of Medieval Jewry as Revealed in the Cairo Genizah, written by Dr. Shelley Buxbaum, a long-time Melton teacher who served as Director of the Florence Melton School in Atlanta.

Our ten-lesson course which debuted in January 2020 focuses on the day-to-day lives of Jewish women, men, and families who lived along the Mediterranean more than a millennium ago.

The course explores questions including:

  • How did the Cairo Genizah documents come to the attention of the modern world?
  • How has the interest in these fragments evolved over time?
  • What role did technology play in reviving and revealing the secrets of these fragments?
  • What do these documents reveal about the customs, beliefs, and values of these communities?
  • What did the education, marriage, commerce, and travel look like during this period?
  • What window do these documents provide into the private lives of some of the prominent medieval Jewish thinkers and businesspeople?
  • How do these documents challenge our concept of the role of women in the medieval Jewish world?

Throughout the course, learners are prompted to compare the lives and values of medieval Jewry to those of our contemporary society.

This course was dedicated in memory of Susan Arnovitz Salz, of Atlanta, by her daughters Dara Grant, Shauna Grosswald, and Jessica Sacks.

For information about when the course will be offered, speak to your local director or search online offerings. 

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