Features - The Lost Communities - 6 CD Gift Set
Individual lectures:
Hungary/Slovakia - The
picture of Eastern European Jewry in all its piety and glory comes to life as
Rabbi Wein reviews the history of the Jews of Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania.
Each was home to several prospering yeshivos as well as a variety of Chassidic
Rebbes and their adherents, but each unfortunately suffered a unique fate at the
hands of the Nazis.
Solonika - For centuries, Jews were
so central to trade in this Greek port city that its ports and businesses were
closed on Shabbos. Strategically located between Europe and the Middle East,
Solonika was caught in the middle of every major trend that affected the Jewish
world, from the Shabsai Tzvi debacle in the Middle Ages to World War II and the
Holocaust. Though the Jewish community of Solonika has virtually disappeared,
its survivors were supplanted mainly to Israel where their distinctive character
continues to show itself today.
Frankfurt Am Main -
Three words sum up the history of the Jews in Frankfurt: pogroms,
rabbis, and disputes. With a thorough retrospect of the Jews of Germany, Rabbi
Wein takes us through the Jewish days of money lending in the Middle Ages to the
Reform movement and its promises of social equality, proven altogether false in
the cataclysm of the Holocaust.
Prague - The history of
the Jews of Prague is filled with amazing twists and turns of fate. From the
famous legend of the Maharal and his golem to the story of a pogrom started from
one stone-throwing child, Rabbi Wein weaves a chain of astounding anecdotes that
depict a pious, tenacious, and long-lasting Jewish
community.
Tunisia/Morocco - The ancient North African
Jewish communities date as far back as the First Temple, but in all the
millennia of their existence, they never knew a day of peace. Though at times
North Africa was preferable to Spain as a haven for Jews, at other times, the
situation was reversed, but either way, Spanish and North African Jewry were
always closely connected. As a result, Torah study thrived there for centuries
until the mass aliyah to Israel in the 20th century.
Egypt -
As every Jewish schoolchild knows, the Jews became slaves in Egypt only
after a long stint of favor because of Joseph. The Jewish experience in Egypt
since the times of Tanach have followed precisely that pattern. Sometimes they
enjoyed great privilege, while at others they were bitterly oppressed. Home to
the Saadia Gaon and the Rambam, Rabbi Wein presents the glory days of the Jews
in Egypt and shows its bitter end with President Abdul Nasser in the 20th
century.