2/14 LUNCH & LEARN | Exile, Diaspora, and the Jews in the Roman and Byzantine Era with Mika Ahuvia
Thomson Hall 317 Thomson Hall 317, SeattleA presentation by historian Mika Ahuvia on her forthcoming paper about the range of ways in which Jews adapted to exile in the Roman and Byzantine eras.
2/22 LECTURE | Jerusalem in Rome and Galilee: Encountering the Holy City in Jewish and Christian Mosaics
Thomson Hall 101 2023 King Lane, Seattle, WA, United StatesPresentation by Karen Britt and Ra'anan Boustan on depictions in Jewish and Christian religious spaces of Jerusalem in antiquity.
2/28 LUNCH & LEARN | The Invention of the Postcard: The Circulation of Jewish Visual Culture in Ottoman and Greek Salonica with Shalom Sabar
Thomson Hall 317 Thomson Hall 317, SeattleA presentation by art historian Shalom Sabar on what Jewish postcards from Ottoman and Greek Salonica teach us about the experiences of the people who sent them and about how they understood their identities.
3/27 EVENT | A Spark of King David: The Musical Poetry of Rabbi Israel Najara Then and Now
Kane Hall 220 4069 Spokane Ln, Seattle, WA, USEdwin Seroussi of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will discuss the pizmonim (musical religious poems) of 16th-century rabbi Israel Najara.
3/28 LECTURE | Sonic Ruins of Modernity: Ladino Folksongs Today
Kane Hall 220 4069 Spokane Lane, Seattle, WA, United StatesEdwin Seroussi of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem will discuss Judeo-Spanish folk songs in modern times.
4/11 LECTURE | Contemporary Ethiopian Artists in Israel and the Question of Hyphenated Identity
Thomson Hall 101 2023 King Lane, Seattle, WA, United StatesArtist and researcher Efrat Yerday will present on how Ethiopian Jewish artists in Israel navigate challenges around their work and their identities.
5/7 STROUM LECTURE | The Complexities of Jewish Friendships: Jews and Non-Jews in Imperial Germany
RSVP for Zoom linkHistorian Marion Kaplan will explore grassroots social interactions between Jewish and non-Jewish Germans in Imperial "Enlightenment" Germany.
5/9 STROUM LECTURE | Hitler’s Jewish Refugees: Hope and Anxiety in Portugal
In this lecture, historian Marion Kaplan will discuss the experiences of Jewish refugees as they fled Hitler’s regime and lived in limbo in Portugal, seeking safer havens abroad.
6/25 LECTURE | Not a Good Time for Hebrew? Novelist Maya Arad & “The Hebrew Teacher”
RSVP for locationHebrew-language author Maya Arad will discuss her latest collection of novellas, "The Hebrew Teacher," with Naomi Sokoloff.
10/15 PANEL | The Scholarly Legacy of Hayim Katsman
UW Campus 1410 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WAA panel of scholars will discuss the scholarly legacy of Hayim Katsman, UW Ph.D. '21, who researched Religious Zionism and was killed by Hamas last year on October 7.
10/23 COSPONSORED TALK | Rabbis in Zoroastrian Fire Temples: New Histories of Babylonian Jews
UW Campus 1410 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WASimcha Gross (University of Pennsylvania) will discuss Jews in Babylonia (modern-day Iraq) in late antiquity, and how the Persian, Zoroastrian Sasanian Empire influenced rabbis' creation of the Talmud.
10/29 COSPONSORED TALK | Were the Ancient Greeks Responsible for Antisemitism?
UW Campus 1410 NE Campus Parkway, Seattle, WAErich Gruen (UC Berkeley) will discuss the roots of antisemitism in the Greek and Hellenic world in antiquity, surveying historic evidence related to the topic.
12/8 LADINO DAY | “The Familiar” with Author Leigh Bardugo
Kane Hall 210 4069 Spokane Ln NE, Seattle, WAAcclaimed fantasy author Leigh Bardugo ("Shadow and Bone") will discuss her newest novel and its use of the Ladino (Judeo-Spanish) language in this year's event.