Events
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Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:30 am
Thursday
05/06/10 10:30am
Pre-School storytime and activity
Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:30 pm
Thursday
05/06/10 7-9:30pm
Leonard Rogoff
reads from Down Home: Jewish Life in North Carolina
With musical
entertainment afterwards by The Magnolia Klezmer Band
A sweeping chronicle of Jewish life in the Tar Heel State from colonial
times to the present, this beautifully illustrated volume incorporates oral
histories, original historical documents, and profiles of fascinating
individuals. The first comprehensive social history of its kind, Down Home
demonstrates that the story of North Carolina Jews is attuned to the national
story of immigrant acculturation but has a southern twist.
Keeping in mind the larger southern, American, and Jewish
contexts, Leonard Rogoff considers how the North Carolina Jewish experience
differs from that of Jews in other southern states. He explores how Jews very
often settled in North Carolina's small towns, rather than in its large cities,
and he documents the reach and vitality of Jewish North Carolinians'
participation in building the New South and the Sunbelt. Many North Carolina
Jews were among those at the forefront of a changing South, Rogoff argues, and
their experiences challenge stereotypes of a society that was agrarian and
Protestant.
More than 125 historic and contemporary photographs
complement Rogoff's engaging epic, providing a visual panorama of Jewish
social, cultural, economic, and religious life in North Carolina. This volume
is a treasure to share and to keep.
Published in association with the Jewish Heritage
Foundation of North Carolina, Down Home is part of a larger documentary project
of the same name that will include a film and a traveling museum exhibition, to
be launched in June 2010.
Leonard Rogoff is historian for the Jewish Heritage
Foundation of North Carolina and president of the Southern Jewish Historical
Society.
In conjunction with this reading, we’ll have a
performance by The Magnolia Klezmer Band.
Based in the Triangle for 14 years, the band performs anti-depressive
Eastern European Jewish party music = Klezmer. Originally from the lands
bordering the Black Sea, this music emigrated to "Amerika",
encountered Jazz, Broadway, Sousa and flourished in the Yiddish Theater in
recordings and on the radio until WWII. An ongoing creative, worldwide revival started
in the 1970's. http://www.magnoliaklezmerband.com
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