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While in Yemen, the Jews kept Talmudic wedding traditions which have long since died out in other communities. However, in Israel, and other lands in which Yemenites have settled, many of these traditions have gone by the wayside, in favor of...
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Perhaps the most impressive Yemenite event is a wedding, together with the prenuptial celebrations. About a week before a wedding, the bride and groom attend a "Henna" celebration. This tradition is common in the Middle East among Muslims, and is...
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For many years after Maimonides, the Yemenite community followed his path both in Halachah (Jewish law), which, as we have seen, was very close to their own ancient practices, and in his philosophical approach to Jewish theology. Beginning in the...
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Maimonides was faced with a difficult choice. Should he risk his position...and his life...in order to respond to the pleas from Yemen? Would his intervention really accomplish anything? He finally decided that he must save a Jewish community from...
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A non-Yemenite rabbi whose name will forever be associated with that community is Moses Maimonides (1138-1204), known and beloved by the Jewish world by the acrostic RAMBAM, but by the Yemenites simply as Rabbenu (our rabbi, our teacher). He is...
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There have been many classic (and not so classic) movies about lands forgotten by time. People living in the Stone Age, Vikings whose culture has survived in tact in the Arctic, ancient civilizations long hidden in the Amazon, were all parts of...
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This part is difficult for me to write, and will be difficult for many to hear. If you are offended, I am sorry. These are facts. Israel was founded as a Socialist Paradise, for European, secular Jews. David Ben Gurion, the head of the Jewish...
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All in all, some 4,500 Yemenite children "died" in hospitals from the late 1940s until the mid 1950s. Bodies were never returned to families. This also happened to other Mizrahi (Eastern) Jews,. as well as those from the Balkans, albeit on a...
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Things have gone much better for the Yemenites after the 1950s. Many have "made it" in Israeli life, becoming businessmen, merchants, writers, even politicians. Ironically, although Yemenites and other Mizrahi Jews have political views that are...
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