<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>mauriceamadofdn.org</title>
	<atom:link href="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://mauriceamadofdn.org</link>
	<description>The World According to Maurice</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 06:37:49 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator>
		<item>
		<title>A Brief Review Of Maurice Amado Foundation</title>
		<link>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/a-brief-review-of-maurice-amado-foundation/</link>
		<comments>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/a-brief-review-of-maurice-amado-foundation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2012 06:37:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>aliwaqas1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[About Maurice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maurice Amado Foundation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mauriceamadofdn.org/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; In 1961, Maurice Amado built this foundation. Mr Amado was a Sephardic Jew descendent, who settled in the Ottoman Empire after the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492. In 1940, Mr Amado moved to Los Angeles. He was a prominent financier and he helped the Jewish community with his wealth. He died in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="google_plus_one"><g:plusone size="standard" count="false" url="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/a-brief-review-of-maurice-amado-foundation/"></g:plusone></div><p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In 1961, Maurice Amado built this foundation. Mr Amado was a Sephardic Jew descendent, who settled in the Ottoman Empire after the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492. In 1940, Mr Amado moved to Los Angeles.</p>
<p>He was a prominent financier and he helped the Jewish community with his wealth. He died in 1968 then Amado’s family carried his charity work. The Foundation also promotes the culture and religious life of Sephardic Jews who originated from Iberian Peninsula. The foundation also aims at reaching to the top level of present and future leaders of American Jewry.</p>
<p>The foundation has sponsored the Sephardic Education Initiative. It involves a 3 year training of more than 1000 teachers in the Jewish schools, supplementary and Hebrew Teacher colleges.</p>
<p>The foundation has also sponsored a ‘National Summer Teacher Training Institute’ in Sephardic Studies, previously.</p>
<p><strong>Middle East Institute Columbia University</strong></p>
<p>The foundation gave the resources for the book as well as the CD, ‘The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times’. The book is meant for every kind of audience including teachers, scholars, college and school students and University Professors and everyone who wish to gain information regarding all the cultures that had been part of the Middle East. It also gives information about Jews. This book can be found in Columbia University Press.</p>
<p><strong>Out of Spain</strong></p>
<p>This is a new curriculum for young students from age group of ten to twelve years old. This book takes the student to a journey through the past when Jews first arrived on the Iberian Peninsula to present day. The curriculum consists of three books, a video, an audio tape and a guide for teachers.</p>
<p>The heritage of Sephardic Jews consists of their background and its contribution towards the Spanish Jews prior to Inquisition, its effect on Jewish faith and culture, the history of the land of Sephardim after their expulsion, and new Sephardic culture and their contributions towards religion and life of Jews</p>
<p>At the moment 3<sup>rd</sup> generation of Amado family is looking after the affairs of The Foundation.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/a-brief-review-of-maurice-amado-foundation/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>11/30/11 Updates and Videos</title>
		<link>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/113011-updates-and-videos/</link>
		<comments>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/113011-updates-and-videos/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Dec 2011 05:17:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mazel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mauriceamadofdn.org/?p=18</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While thousands of prokaryotic cry out to the demilitarization of Egyptian power and the peaceful transition to civilian democracy, in wielding sabers Ferraz socialist to lead the bitter consequences of their defeat. The struggle for change between the Egyptian insurgency dissatisfied with the PSOE militancy open the parallels linking two separate civil desires in order [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="google_plus_one"><g:plusone size="standard" count="false" url="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/113011-updates-and-videos/"></g:plusone></div><p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/kffacxfA7G4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/_Z5-P9v3F8w" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/LXUSaVw3Mvk" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p>While thousands of prokaryotic cry out to the demilitarization of Egyptian power and the peaceful transition to civilian democracy, in wielding sabers Ferraz socialist to lead the bitter consequences of their defeat.<br />
The struggle for change between the Egyptian insurgency dissatisfied with the PSOE militancy open the parallels linking two separate civil desires in order to regenerate the institutional cracks such social phenomena.<br />
After seven hours of Federal Committee opens the period regeneracionista social discourse endemic to demolish the stem of the rose and sow new seeds sap the flower socialist future.</p>
<p>The loss of class consciousness, that both Marx argued, was primarily responsible for the blue roll right on red from Spain&#8217;s idiosyncrasies. The right turn from the middle class, though not like to recognize Mr. Rubalcaba has been the basic premise that has produced the worst results of the project history failed Zapatero. The ideological bases of the right, based on utilitarian ethics of Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill have been absorbed by the voter on the left. The general interest as a synonym of the Kantian ethics of the left has been replaced by the current neoliberal individual interest. The &#8220;left turn&#8221; of ZP back in May 2010 was the poison environment that broke the ideological foundations of the vote and opened the gap between a &#8220;class for itself&#8221; and a &#8220;class in itself&#8221;. This breakdown of civic interest has given way to individualism on the left as the cornerstone of the rightward, we said earlier.</p>
<p>The return of red evaporated vote will be achieved through a mix of the future socialist leader and political praxis on the right. Mariano neoliberal prescriptions, or put another way, the output of the crisis through the door of social spending in the style of Aguirre , Cospedal and Artur Mas  will lead to the victory of Rajoy, &#8220;food for today and hunger tomorrow&#8221; in its new room in the Moncloa. For its part, the centralization of the People&#8217;s Party policies and look to their new voters on the left will cause &#8220;sine quan nom&#8221; a bleeding ulcer in the Socialist ranks.<br />
The new leader of the &#8220;rose&#8221; should be elected under the moral Post election defeat, in other words, militancy has said NO to the continuity of the shoemaker. Before this lesson pragmatic and common sense, it is advisable not to step on the mud of the past and choose the direction of rupture to avoid successive blows pendulum swing of history. That said, the interest of party must be over the personal ambitions of power of those who have stuck stigma of &#8220;ex-ministers of ZP,&#8221; such as, Rubalcaba and Chacon. The democratic election of the new leader should not be based on biological age but by their candidate&#8217;s identity with the different stages of his party.</p>
<p>PSOE regeneration depend on the path breaking their new leadership and winks to the left to make the gray man Moncloa. Both variables contribute to the &#8220;modern proletariat&#8221; class awareness and general interest as a paradigm of an ethical foundation in a progressive return next horizon, to the polls on the left.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/113011-updates-and-videos/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>About the Foundation</title>
		<link>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/about-the-foundation/</link>
		<comments>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/about-the-foundation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Sep 2011 04:44:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mazel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[About Maurice]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mauriceamadofdn.org/?p=1</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[About the Foundation Maurice Amado established the foundation that bears his name in 1961. Mr. Amado was a descendant of Sephardic Jews who settled in the Ottoman Empire after their expulsion from Spain in 1492. He immigrated to New York from Izmir, Turkey in 1903 and moved to Los Angeles in 1940. A successful financier, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="google_plus_one"><g:plusone size="standard" count="false" url="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/about-the-foundation/"></g:plusone></div><p> <iframe height="345" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/jq7vb_fREPc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>
<p>About the Foundation<br />
Maurice Amado  established  the foundation that bears his name in 1961. Mr. Amado was a descendant of Sephardic Jews who settled  in the Ottoman Empire after their expulsion  from Spain in  1492. He immigrated  to New York  from Izmir, Turkey in 1903 and moved to Los Angeles in 1940.</p>
<p><a href="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b.png"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-6" title="b" src="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b.png" alt="" width="182" height="277" /></a> A   successful financier, he was committed  to sharing his wealth with the Jewish community. During his lifetime, Mr. Amado supported  organizations that perpetuated Sephardic heritage  and culture. Since his death in 1968, Mr. Amado&#8217;s  nieces, nephews  and their  descendants have  carried on his  charitable work. Three generations of the Amado family currently direct the Foundation&#8217;s activities.<br />
A major  focus of the  Maurice   Amado Foundation is to  ensure that Sephardic heritage is woven into the fabric of American Jewry. The Foundation has a special  interest in integrating information about the religious life and culture of Sephardic Jews whose ancestors originated in the Iberian Peninsula into the education of all  American Jews, with a special  emphasis on reaching leaders, both present and future, of American Jewry. The heritage of Sephardic  Jews includes a) the history and contributions  to Jewish thought of the Spanish Jews before the Inquisition, b)  the  effects of  the Inquisition on Jewish religious, cultural and  intellectual life, c) the history of the Sephardim in the lands  of their dispersion after the Expulsion, and d) modern Sephardic cultural and religious contributions to Jewish life. <a href="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b1.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-7" title="b1" src="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b1.jpg" alt="" width="323" height="282" /></a>Our Grantmaking  Focus<br />
A major focus of the Maurice Amado Foundation is to ensure that Sephardic  heritage is woven into the fabric of American Jewry. The Foundation has  a  special interest in integrating information about the religious life and culture of Sephardic Jews whose ancestors originated in the Iberian Peninsula into  the education of   all American Jews, with a special emphasis on reaching leaders, both present and future, of American Jewry. The heritage  of Sephardic Jews includes a) the history and contributions to Jewish thought of the Spanish Jews before the Inquisition, b) the effects  of the Inquisition on  Jewish religious, cultural and intellectual life, c) the history of the Sephardim in  the lands of  their dispersion after  the  Expulsion, and d) modern Sephardic cultural and religious  contributions to Jewish life. Institute for Sephardic Studies at the Graduate School of  the  City University of  New York<br />
The Foundation has funded the Sephardic Education Initiative, a three-year effort to  train   approximately 1,000 teachers in Jewish day schools, supplementary schools and Hebrew Teacher colleges. Previously,  the Foundation funded a National Summer Teacher Training   Institute in Sephardic Studies. For more information contact Jane  Gerber, Director, Center  for Jewish Studies and Institute for Sephardic Studies at The City University of New York<br />
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute  of Religion. The Foundation is funding a major initiative to integrate Sephardic Studies into the curricula  of HUC-JIRs professional schools to expand students&#8217; knowledge and  develop students&#8217; capacity to incorporate the  Sephardic  experience into their view of Jewry and Jewish identity.</p>
<p>Middle East Institute Columbia University</p>
<p>The Foundation provided funds for both the book and a CD to accompany the text, The Jews  of the Middle East and  North Africa in Modern Times. The  book, edited by Reeva Spector Simon, Assistant Director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia University,  Michael Manachem Lasker, Department of Middle East  History at Bar-Ilan  University and Sara Reguer, chair Department of Judaic Studies  of Brooklyn College  of the City University of New York was published in 2003. This  book is geared to a varied  audience; scholars, teachers in secondary schools as well as college and university professors who wish  to teach about all cultures that once existed  in the Middle East,  and to teach about all Jews, to study them comparatively. The book is available through Columbia University Press.<br />
Jewish Publication Society The Foundation is provided assistance for the publication of the book Folktales of Joha:  Jewish Trickster by Matilda Koen-Sarano. The  Sephardic folk character know as Joha is a combination of trickster, villain and fool.  The nearly  300 stories  in the volume are from  Sephardic oral literature and  ethnic culture. It is the first collection of these tales  to appear in   English. The target audience for this book  is storytellers, teachers, folklorists and Jewish educators. The  book was   published in February    2003 and is available through  the Jewish Publication  Society<br />
Judéo-Espagnol A Auschwitz The  Foundation  provided funds for  the  distribution of the  booklet, The Judeo-Spanish People: Itineraries of a Community.  The edition is in English and Judeo-Spanish. Union of American  Hebrew Congregations (UAHC) Press. The Foundation provided funds for The Atlas of Great Jewish Communities: A Voayage Through History  by Sondra Leiman. This  full-color book uses colorful mapa, timelines, photographs and art to bring Jewish  history  alive for young people. There is also A  Teacher’s Guide that  includes a music CD. For more information  contact Rabbi Hara Person, Editorial Director, UAHC Press</p>
<h3>Out of Spain</h3>
<p>Out of Spain  is a new curriculum for 10-12-year-old students.  Out  of Spain takes  students on a journey through history  from the earliest arrival of Jews on the  Iberian Peninsula to the present day. The series consists of three class books, a video, an audio tape and a teacher&#8217;s guide. For more information go to<br />
Folk Literature of Sephardic Jews The Foundation has provided funds for a web-based digital archive titled &#8220;The Folk Literature  of  the Sephardic Jews.&#8221; This collection, called the  Armistead-Silverman archive contains 1500  Judeo-Spanish narrative ballads,  together with   other genres, including lyric poetry, folktales, proverbs  and riddles. You can access the site at</p>
<h3>Stanford University Libraries</h3>
<p>The Foundation  provided funds for the Library to purchase the Rifat Bali  collection of 20th  century Sephardic Judaica published  in Turkey. This collection consists of 700 monographic and  serial titles, mostly  in Turkish but also in French, English,  Hebrew and Judeo-Spanish.  Subject areas  covered include history, social issues, politics, literary publications, religious books and Turkish-Jewish authors. Lower East Side Tenement Museum The Foundation provides ongoing supporting of the Confino apartment. The Confino  apartment is an interactive exhibit designed for children and families. This exhibit explores and celebrates Sephardic  culture through  the story of  the Confino family  who immigrated to America  from Kastoria.The Rhodes Jewish Historical Foundation. The Foundation has supported the work  of  The Rhodes Jewish Historical Foundation which is dedicated to preserving   the Jewish history of Rhodes. The Foundation&#8217;s support has helped to expand and improve the  Jewish Museum of Rhodes, restoration of the Kahal Shalom synagogue as well as  the preservation of the Jewish cemetery.<br />
Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles, California. The Foundation provided support for the exhibit,  Myer Myers, Jewish  Colonial Silversmith  in Colonial New York (see). The exhibit closed May 26, 2002. The Foundation  also provided   support for the exhibit, &#8220;The Jewish Wedding,&#8221; which closed in February 2002. For more information about  the Skirball go to theAutry Museum of Museum   of Western Heritage, Los Angeles, California. The Foundation supported an exhibition titled The Jewish West. This show explored  the Jewish presence  and influence in the region from  the late 16th century  through the early  20th century.</p>
<p>&#8220;A Portion   of the People&#8221;  Three Hundred Years of Jewish Life in South Carolina</p>
<p>A cooperative venture of the McKissick Museum, the College  of Charleston and the Jewish Historical Society of South Carolina, this exhibition  was at the  Gibbes Museum of Art in   Charleston in  September 2002.<a href="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b2.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-8" title="b2" src="http://mauriceamadofdn.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/b2.jpg" alt="" width="314" height="235" /></a><br />
&#8220;They Came  for Good: A History of the Jews in  America&#8221; is a two-set video  series that tells  the story  of Jews in America. The film highlights the experience of the Sephardic Jews who arrived in 1654. Contributions  Sephardim made to American history are woven throughout the film. This  film has been widely distributed on  PBS  stations and  is available for purchase. For more information contact the  Isaac in America Foundation at 212-643-1717.</p>
<p>Flory Jagoda video</p>
<p>The Foundation made a grant for the film, &#8220;The Key from Spain: The Songs and Stories of  Flory Jagoda. The  film focuses on  the  life  of Flory Jagoda,  a survivor of World War II from Sarajevo, Bosnia. Ms. Jagoda is a well-known composer of modern Ladino songs. This film documents her life and her  music.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Optimists&#8221;</p>
<p>The Foundation provided support to produce this award-winning documentary which is the story of the rescue  of Bulgarian Jews from the Holocaust. For more information about the film go to the Sephardic Education Center. The Foundation helped underwrite   the 6th Annual Los Angeles Sephardic Film Festival that took  place in November  2002.Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 17th Annual Jewish Music   Festival The Foundation underwrote two concerts by the Gerard Edery Ensemble,  a Sephardic music group, in a program entitled, Music in the Land of Three Faiths.  Winner  of  the 1997 Sephardic Heritage Award,  Edery and his group  presented a program of songs from  the Golden Age of Spain. The program   features 12th and  13th century songs in Ladino, Hebrew, Arabic, Galician-Portuguese and Latin and provided a historical content  for the interwoven influences of each  culture upon the other during this pre-Expulsion era. For  more information go to<br />
Brandeis-Bardin Institute  The Foundation helped underwrite a weekend arts festival, Bezalel  2002: A Weekend of Jewish Arts. This festival celebrated Jewish music, dance, drama and art.  The  festival took place March 15 &#8211; 17, 2002  at the Brandeis-Bardin Institute located in Simi Valley, California (a 45  minute drive from  West Los Angeles). Bezalel 2002 comprised  of a 3-day residential experience for Jewish artists and arts educators as well as an arts festival open to the entire community. Master artists will explore Sephardic and Ashkenazic   cultures on equal  footing. For more information go  to.</p>
<h4>Applying for a grant</h4>
<p>Applicants should send an initial email letter of   inquiry  to the Foundation   at  <a href="mailto:inquiry@mauriceamadofdn.org">inquiry@mauriceamadofdn.org</a>. This email should include:</p>
<p>1. Background and purpose of your organization<br />
2. Short description of the specific program or project for which  the organization is requesting funds<br />
3. Dollar amount of the request<br />
4. The subject line of the email should read: &#8220;Grant Inquiry&#8221;<br />
If  the Foundation  is interested in your project, you will be sent instructions  on how to submit a grant proposal.<br />
Program/Project  Description<br />
If requesting support for a project  or program the following is also required:<br />
1. Project goals<br />
2. Description of specific project  activities<br />
3. Intended  audience<br />
4. Timeline<br />
5. Project budget<br />
6. Staff and their  qualifications<br />
7. Evaluation plan</p>
<p>Deadlines:</p>
<p>The Foundation  awards  grants in the spring and the fall. The deadline for an email  letter of inquiry to be considered for the spring meeting is  March 15; the deadline for the fall meeting  is   August 31. Note: Grants are made only  to qualified tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organizations. The Foundation  does not make grants directly to individuals.</p>
<p>CDs/Videotapes/Books</p>
<p>The Foundation receives many requests for grants to produce CDs, videotapes,  films and books  with Sephardic themes.  These  projects will be considered, but in addition to the required information, the proposal  must also include a distribution plan. If you are submitting a  sample CD, videotape, or  book, please send  the Foundation 5 copies. Note: the  Foundation is unable to return these items. Center for Jewish Studies at UCLA for the Maurice Amado Foundation Research Fund in Sephardic Studies. The Foundation supports  scholarly research in Sephardic Studies through a  fund administered by the Center for Jewish Studies at UCLA. For more information please   visit their website. At  this site you will find detailed   information about who  is eligible to apply in addition to how and when to apply.<br />
Out of Spain<br />
Out of Spain is a brand new curriculum  for 10-12-year-old students.  Out of Spain takes students  on a journey through history from the earliest arrival of Jews on the  Iberian Peninsula to the present day. The series  consists of three class books, a video,  an audio tape and a teacher&#8217;s guide. For more information go to.<br />
The Rhodes Jewish   Historical Foundation<br />
The Foundation has supported the work of The Rhodes Jewish Historical Foundation which is dedicated to preserving the Jewish history  of Rhodes. The  Foundation&#8217;s support has  helped to expand and  improve the Jewish  Museum of Rhodes, restoration   of the Kahal  Shalom synagogue as well as the preservation  of the Jewish cemetery<br />
Skirball Cultural Center<br />
The Foundation provided support for the  exhibit, Myer Myers, Jewish Colonial Silversmith in  Colonial New York  (see). The exhibit runs through May 26, 2002. For more information  contact  the Skirball at<br />
The  Foundation also provided support for  the exhibit, &#8220;The Jewish Wedding,&#8221; which closed in February 2002.<br />
Yale University Art Gallery<br />
The Foundation provided support for the exhibition  Myer Myers, 1723-1795: Jewish Silversmith  in Colonial New  York. This exhibition is on view at  Yale from  September 14, 2001 to January 5, 2002 before traveling to the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles from February 19 to May 26, 2002 and to the  Henry Francis du  Pont Winterthur in  Delaware in the summer  of 2002. Myer Myers  was the   most productive silversmith working in New York during the late Colonial period and his ritual and secular silver is  the largest  body  of  work by a Jewish   silversmith  from anywhere in Europe or   America prior to the nineteenth century.<br />
Autry Museum of Museum of Western  Heritage<br />
The Foundation  is supporting an  exhibition titled The Jewish West which opens in Los Angeles in February  2002.  This show will explore the Jewish presence and influence in the region from the  late 16th century through the early 20th century.<br />
&#8220;A Portion  of the People&#8221;  Three Hundred Years of Jewish Life    in  South Carolina<br />
A cooperative venture of the McKissick  Museum, the College of Charleston and the Jewish Historical Society of South  Carolina, this exhibition will be at the Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston in  September 2002.<br />
Jewish Book Council<br />
The Foundation  sponsors the Maurice  S. Amado Foundation Award in Sephardic Studies. The 2001 award was given to Reluctant Cosmopolitans by   Daniel  M. Swetschinski. This book details the growth of the 17th  century Sephardic community in Amsterdam in the wake of  explusions and immigration  of Jews  from  Spain and Portugal.<br />
&#8220;They  Came for Good: A History of the Jews in America&#8221;  is a two-set video series that tells the story of Jews in America. The film    highlights  the experience of the Sephardic Jews who arrived in 1654. Contributions Sephardim made  to American history are  woven throughout the film. This film has been widely distributed on PBS stations and is available for purchase. For more information  contact the Isaac in America Foundation at 212-643-1717.<br />
Flory Jagoda  video<br />
The Foundation made  a grant for  the film, &#8220;The Key from Spain: The Songs  and Stories of Flory Jagoda. The film focuses  on the life of Flory Jagoda, a survivor of World  War II from  Sarajevo, Bosnia. Ms.  Jagoda is a well-known composer of modern Ladino songs. This film documents her life and  her music.<br />
&#8220;The Optimists&#8221;<br />
The  Foundation provided support   to  produce this award-winning documentary which is the story of the rescue of Bulgarian Jews from the  Holocaust. For more information about the  film go to<br />
Institute for Sephardic Studies  at the  Graduate School of the City University of New York<br />
The Foundation  has funded a  National Summer Teacher Training Institute for each of the last three  years. Approximately 20 teachers participate in an intensive  two-week course of study developed by Jane Gerber of CUNY and  Reeva Simon of    the Middle  East  Institute at Columbia University. This interdisciplinary   institute explores the history, culture, life styles, popular religion, cuisine, and customs of  the Sephardim.   The Foundation underwrites  tuition costs and teachers receive a $1,000 honorarium.<br />
Middle East Institute Columbia University<br />
The Foundation provided  funds to  produce a CD  to accompany the text, History of the Jews in the Middle East and North  Africa. This book will be published by Columbia University Press.<br />
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion<br />
The Foundation is funding a major initiative to integrate Sephardic Studies  into the curricula of HUC-JIRs professional  schools to expand students&#8217; knowledge and develop students&#8217;  capacity to incorporate the  Sephardic  experience into their view of Jewry and Jewish identity.<br />
University of California at  Davis<br />
The Foundation has provided  funds for a web-based digital archive titled &#8220;The  Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews.&#8221; This  collection, called the Armistead-Silverman archive contains 1500 Judeo-Spanish narrative ballads, together  with other genres, including lyric poetry, folktales, proverbs  and riddles. You can access the site at<br />
Stanford University Libraries<br />
The Foundation provided funds for the Library to purchase the Rifat Bali collection of 20th century Sephardic Judaica published in Turkey. This collection consists of   700 monographic and   serial titles, mostly in Turkish but also in French, English,  Hebrew and Judeo-Spanish. Subject areas covered include  history, social issues, politics, literary publications, religious books and Turkish-Jewish authors.<br />
San Francisco Jewish Film Festival<br />
The Foundation provided funding to underwrite a program  of  Sephardic cinema  at the film  festival.<br />
Los  Angeles Jewish Symphony<br />
The Foundation underwrites a  Sephardic  Music Education for students in Jewish  Day Schools in Los  Angeles. This program educates these students about Sephardic Jewish music and  helps cultivate a greater understanding  of   Sephardic music in relation to Sephardic Jewish history, heritage and culture.<br />
Lower East Side Tenement Museum<br />
The Foundation was instrumental in supporting the development of the Confino apartment. The Confino  apartment is an interactive exhibit designed  for children and families. This exhibit explores  and celebrates Sephardic culture  through  the  story of the  Confino family who immigrated to America from Kastoria.<br />
Jewish Publication Society<br />
The  Foundation is providing assistance  for the publication  of the book Djoha Tales: Sephardic Trickster and  Fool. The Sephardic folk character know as Djoha is a combination of trickster, villain and fool. This book will be translated from a bi-lingual Italian-Hebrew edition  that is a collection of  200 pieces gathered from 82 storytellers in 17 countries. It will be the first collection of these tales to appear in English. The  target audience for  this book is storytellers, teachers, folklorists and  Jewish educators.<br />
Sephardic Education Center<br />
The Foundation helped underwrite the 5th  Annual Los  Angeles  Sephardic Film Festival that took place   in November 2001.<br />
Berkeley Richmond Jewish Community Center 17th Annual Jewish Music Festival<br />
The Foundation   underwrote two concerts by the Gerard Edery Ensemble, a Sephardic music group,  in a program entitled, Music in the Land of Three Faiths. Winner of the 1997 Sephardic Heritage Award, Edery   and his group will present a program of  songs from the Golden Age of Spain. The program will feature 12th and 13th century songs in Ladino, Hebrew, Arabic, Galician-Portuguese and Latin and provide a historical content for the interwoven  influences of each culture upon the other during this  pre-Expulsion era. For more information go to<br />
Brandeis-Bardin  Institute<br />
The Foundation helped underwrite a weekend arts festival, Bezalel  2002: A Weekend of Jewish Arts. This festival celebrated Jewish music, dance, drama and art. The festival took place March 15  &#8211; 17,   2002 at the Brandeis-Bardin Institute located in Simi Valley, California (a 45 minute drive from West  Los Angeles). Bezalel  2002  comprised of a 3-day  residential experience for Jewish artists and arts  educators as well as an  arts festival open  to the entire community. Master artists will explore Sephardic and Ashkenazic cultures on  equal  footing. For   more information go to</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://mauriceamadofdn.org/about-the-foundation/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

