Creation of Tapestry

Loolwa Khazzoom, editor of The Flying Camel: Essays on Identity by Women of North African and Middle Eastern Jewish Heritage, has launched a new project called Tapestry, which “provides the tools necessary for community leaders to shift from a limited European Jewish paradigm to one that reflects the racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity of the global Jewish experience.”

Tapestry builds off of Khazzoom’s work in Jewish Multiculturalism, and includes resources from articles to keynotes to workshops on “Jews without Borders” and “The Color of Jews”.

Khazzoom writes for a number of publications, and recently wrote an article entitled, “Who Stole My Judaism?” for the Jewish Independent. You can find this article on JVoices–here’s a taste:

Traditionally, Middle Eastern and African Jewish communities emphasized the concept of chesed, or compassion, over that of mahmir, or strictness. Judaism was a vehicle for joy and celebration, not an instrument of fear and condemnation. One wall around the Torah was enough. We did not need a wall around a wall around a wall.

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3 Responses to “Creation of Tapestry”

  1. I have yet to see bigger nonsense. It is the Ashkenazi shtetl people who run liberal Judaism, and the Morrocan shtetl people who do not. This “traditionalism” still exists, except when she stops waxing nostalgic about it - she discovers it is nothing but oppression.
    Puh-Lease.


    Amit · August 22nd, 2006 at 3:54 am
  2. That’s the thing. Askenazers had to invent liberal judaism because Ashkenizism, that is, christianity was so hardcore. Coinicdently, sephardim, much like the muslims around them, stressed active piety less and spoken G-d praise from likeable hearts more.


    yoseph Leib · August 22nd, 2006 at 11:33 pm
  3. I’m all for jewish multiculturalism, but, while it may be dominated by people of european ancestry, mainline Jewish “culture” is so little connected to anything resembling actual ashkenasish culture or history that i think there’s a place for a grounded, informed ashkenazic cultural viewpoint within the multicultural voices, instead of seeing it as the hegemonic opressor that needs to be fought against and taken for granted.


    ephraim · August 28th, 2006 at 8:31 pm

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"I may attack a certain point of view which I consider false, but I will never attack a person who preaches it. I have always a high regard for the individual who is honest and moral, even when I am not in agreement with him. Such a relation is in accord with the concept of kavod habriyot, for beloved is man for he is created in the image of God." —Rav Joseph Soloveitchik

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