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  • Period
    • Prehistory3000000 BCE - 5001 BCE
    • Antiquity5000 BCE - 399 CE
    • Middle Ages400 CE - 1500 CE
    • Age of Reason1500 CE - 1879 CE
    • Modern Times1880 CE - 1980 CE
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  • he
  • Login
  • Register
  • Period
    • Prehistory3000000 BCE - 5001 BCE
    • Antiquity5000 BCE - 399 CE
    • Middle Ages400 CE - 1500 CE
    • Age of Reason1500 CE - 1879 CE
    • Modern Times1880 CE - 1980 CE
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
    • English subscription
  • News
  • Past Issues
  • Reviews
    • Book Reviews
  • Holidays Archive
    • Holidays Archive
    • Festivals of Tishrei
    • Hanukkah
    • Tu BiShvat
    • Purim
    • Pesach
    • Holocaust
    • Independence Day
    • Lag baOmer
    • Jerusalem Day
    • Shavuot
    • Tisha B’Av
  • en
  • he
  • -3000000
  • -2900000
  • -2800000
  • -2700000
  • -2600000
  • -2500000
  • -2400000
  • -2300000
  • -2200000
  • -2100000
  • -2000000
Prehistory
  • -1900000
  • -1800000
  • -1700000
  • -1600000
  • -1500000
  • -1400000
  • -1300000
  • -1200000
  • -1100000
  • -1000000
  • -900000
Prehistory
  • -800000
  • -700000
  • -600000
    • 500000 BCE :

      Flints Galore
  • -500000
    • 500000 BCE :

      Flints Galore
  • -400000
  • -300000
  • -200000
  • -100000
    • 60000 BCE :

      Not Just Cave Dwellers
    • 20000 BCE :

      Rhinos in Samaria
    • 7000 BCE :

      Masking Death Prehistoric City
    • 3000 BCE :

      What would you like, Egyptian or Philistine ?
    • 2000 BCE :

      4,000 Year Old Jerusalem Tomb: a Treasure Trove of Decapitated Toads
    • 1150 BCE :

      Where did the Philistines come from?
    • 1100 BCE :

      Is This Ziklag?
    • 1000 BCE :

      Babylonian Deluge
    • 800 BCE :

      Horses in the rain Ruin of Samaria!
    • 750 BCE :

      Which Isaiah? How many clerks ?
    • 650 BCE :

      Temple Off the Mount
    • 590 BCE :

      Stamped by the Mayor
    • 586 BCE :

      Signs of Destruction
    • 516 BCE :

      Who are You, Samaritans?
    • 480 BCE :

      Esther – the Persian Version
    • 460 BCE :

      Nehemiah on the Wall
    • 200 BCE :

      Forgotten Archive
    • 167 BCE :

      A Brief History of the Hasmoneans
    • 164 BCE :

      Pools and Palaces
    • 160 BCE :

      Fighting for Heart and Soul The Youngest Maccabee
    • 150 BCE :

      Telltale Tremor
    • 141 BCE :

      Cast a Giant Shadow
    • 110 BCE :

      A Dig Full of Holes
    • 100 BCE :

      אוצר ממצולות ים Anonymous Hasmonean
    • 20 BCE :

      Mystery of Caesarea’s Disappearing Port Jerusalem Potters
    • 18 BCE :

      Paving the Past
    • 0 BCE :

      Nabateans in the Bible Lords of the Desert Pilgrim City
  • 0
  • 100000
  • 200000
Prehistory
  • -5000
  • -4980
  • -4960
  • -4940
  • -4920
  • -4900
  • -4880
  • -4860
  • -4840
  • -4820
  • -4800
Antiquity
  • -4780
  • -4760
  • -4740
  • -4720
  • -4700
  • -4680
  • -4660
  • -4640
  • -4620
  • -4600
  • -4580
Antiquity
  • -4560
  • -4540
  • -4520
  • -4500
  • -4480
  • -4460
  • -4440
  • -4420
  • -4400
  • -4380
  • -4360
Antiquity
  • -4340
  • -4320
  • -4300
  • -4280
  • -4260
  • -4240
  • -4220
  • -4200
  • -4180
  • -4160
  • -4140
Antiquity
  • -4120
  • -4100
  • -4080
  • -4060
  • -4040
  • -4020
  • -4000
  • -3980
  • -3960
  • -3940
  • -3920
Antiquity
  • -3900
  • -3880
  • -3860
  • -3840
  • -3820
  • -3800
  • -3780
  • -3760
  • -3740
  • -3720
  • -3700
Antiquity
  • -3680
  • -3660
  • -3640
  • -3620
  • -3600
  • -3580
  • -3560
  • -3540
  • -3520
  • -3500
  • -3480
Antiquity
  • -3460
  • -3440
  • -3420
  • -3400
  • -3380
  • -3360
  • -3340
  • -3320
  • -3300
  • -3280
  • -3260
Antiquity
  • -3240
  • -3220
  • -3200
  • -3180
  • -3160
  • -3140
  • -3120
  • -3100
  • -3080
  • -3060
  • -3040
Antiquity
  • -3020
    • 3000 BCE :

      What would you like, Egyptian or Philistine ?
  • -3000
    • 3000 BCE :

      What would you like, Egyptian or Philistine ?
  • -2980
  • -2960
  • -2940
  • -2920
  • -2900
  • -2880
  • -2860
  • -2840
  • -2820
Antiquity
  • -2800
  • -2780
  • -2760
  • -2740
  • -2720
  • -2700
  • -2680
  • -2660
  • -2640
  • -2620
  • -2600
Antiquity
  • -2580
  • -2560
  • -2540
  • -2520
  • -2500
  • -2480
  • -2460
  • -2440
  • -2420
  • -2400
  • -2380
Antiquity
  • -2360
  • -2340
  • -2320
  • -2300
  • -2280
  • -2260
  • -2240
  • -2220
  • -2200
  • -2180
  • -2160
Antiquity
  • -2140
  • -2120
  • -2100
  • -2080
  • -2060
  • -2040
  • -2020
    • 2000 BCE :

      4,000 Year Old Jerusalem Tomb: a Treasure Trove of Decapitated Toads
  • -2000
    • 2000 BCE :

      4,000 Year Old Jerusalem Tomb: a Treasure Trove of Decapitated Toads
  • -1980
  • -1960
  • -1940
Antiquity
  • -1920
  • -1900
  • -1880
  • -1860
  • -1840
  • -1820
  • -1800
  • -1780
  • -1760
  • -1740
  • -1720
Antiquity
  • -1700
  • -1680
  • -1660
  • -1640
  • -1620
  • -1600
  • -1580
  • -1560
  • -1540
  • -1520
  • -1500
Antiquity
  • -1480
  • -1460
  • -1440
  • -1420
  • -1400
  • -1380
  • -1360
  • -1340
  • -1320
  • -1300
  • -1280
Antiquity
  • -1260
  • -1240
  • -1220
  • -1200
  • -1180
  • -1160
    • 1150 BCE :

      Where did the Philistines come from?
  • -1140
  • -1120
    • 1100 BCE :

      Is This Ziklag?
  • -1100
    • 1100 BCE :

      Is This Ziklag?
  • -1080
  • -1060
Antiquity
  • -1040
  • -1020
    • 1000 BCE :

      Babylonian Deluge
  • -1000
    • 1000 BCE :

      Babylonian Deluge
  • -980
  • -960
  • -940
  • -920
  • -900
  • -880
  • -860
  • -840
Antiquity
  • -820
    • 800 BCE :

      Horses in the rain Ruin of Samaria!
  • -800
    • 800 BCE :

      Horses in the rain Ruin of Samaria!
  • -780
  • -760
    • 750 BCE :

      Which Isaiah? How many clerks ?
  • -740
  • -720
  • -700
  • -680
  • -660
    • 650 BCE :

      Temple Off the Mount
  • -640
  • -620
Antiquity
  • -600
    • 590 BCE :

      Stamped by the Mayor
    • 586 BCE :

      Signs of Destruction
  • -580
  • -560
  • -540
  • -520
    • 516 BCE :

      Who are You, Samaritans?
  • -500
    • 480 BCE :

      Esther – the Persian Version
  • -480
    • 480 BCE :

      Esther – the Persian Version
    • 460 BCE :

      Nehemiah on the Wall
  • -460
    • 460 BCE :

      Nehemiah on the Wall
  • -440
  • -420
  • -400
Antiquity
  • -380
  • -360
  • -340
  • -320
  • -300
  • -280
  • -260
  • -240
  • -220
    • 200 BCE :

      Forgotten Archive
  • -200
    • 200 BCE :

      Forgotten Archive
  • -180
    • 167 BCE :

      A Brief History of the Hasmoneans
    • 164 BCE :

      Pools and Palaces
    • 160 BCE :

      Fighting for Heart and Soul The Youngest Maccabee
Antiquity
  • -160
    • 160 BCE :

      Fighting for Heart and Soul The Youngest Maccabee
    • 150 BCE :

      Telltale Tremor
    • 141 BCE :

      Cast a Giant Shadow
  • -140
  • -120
    • 110 BCE :

      A Dig Full of Holes
    • 100 BCE :

      אוצר ממצולות ים Anonymous Hasmonean
  • -100
    • 100 BCE :

      אוצר ממצולות ים Anonymous Hasmonean
  • -80
  • -60
  • -40
    • 20 BCE :

      Mystery of Caesarea’s Disappearing Port Jerusalem Potters
  • -20
    • 20 BCE :

      Mystery of Caesarea’s Disappearing Port Jerusalem Potters
    • 18 BCE :

      Paving the Past
    • 0 BCE :

      Nabateans in the Bible Lords of the Desert Pilgrim City
  • 0
  • 20
    • 40 CE :

      Wanton Destruction on a Calamitous Scale Golden Nostalgia
  • 40
    • 40 CE :

      Wanton Destruction on a Calamitous Scale Golden Nostalgia
    • 44 CE :

      King’s Canopy in Shilo
Antiquity
  • 60
    • 62 CE :

      The Pilgrims’ Progress
    • 66 CE :

      Don’t Call Me Joseph Dead Sea DNA
    • 67 CE :

      Romans on the Roofs of Gamla
  • 80
  • 100
  • 120
    • 130 CE :

      Backs to the Western Wall
    • 132 CE :

      Bar Kokhba in Jerusalem
  • 140
  • 160
  • 180
    • 200 CE :

      Bathing Rabbis
  • 200
    • 200 CE :

      Bathing Rabbis
  • 220
  • 240
    • 250 CE :

      Trio in Togas
  • 260
Antiquity
  • 280
    • 300 CE :

      Washed Out by the Rain
  • 300
    • 300 CE :

      Washed Out by the Rain
  • 320
  • 340
    • 350 CE :

      זה השער
  • 360
  • 380
    • 400 CE :

      Blessed Wine
  • 400
    • 400 CE :

      Blessed Wine
  • 420
  • 440
  • 460
  • 480
    • 500 CE :

      Shofar – Blasting Away Pilgrims’ Riches Playing with Water? Byzantine Cistern in Jerusalem Playground
Antiquity
  • 400
    • 400 CE :

      Blessed Wine
  • 410
  • 420
  • 430
  • 440
  • 450
  • 460
  • 470
  • 480
  • 490
    • 500 CE :

      Shofar – Blasting Away Pilgrims’ Riches Playing with Water? Byzantine Cistern in Jerusalem Playground
  • 500
    • 500 CE :

      Shofar – Blasting Away Pilgrims’ Riches Playing with Water? Byzantine Cistern in Jerusalem Playground
Middle Ages
  • 510
  • 520
  • 530
    • 539 CE :

      Georgians in Ashdod
  • 540
  • 550
  • 560
  • 570
  • 580
  • 590
  • 600
  • 610
Middle Ages
  • 620
    • 630 CE :

      The Fire of Faith
  • 630
    • 630 CE :

      The Fire of Faith
  • 640
  • 650
  • 660
  • 670
  • 680
  • 690
  • 700
  • 710
    • 717 CE :

      What’s a Jewish Menorah doing on early Islamic coins and vessels ?
  • 720
Middle Ages
  • 730
  • 740
  • 750
  • 760
  • 770
  • 780
  • 790
    • 800 CE :

      Whose Head is it Anyway? Potter’s Treasure
  • 800
    • 800 CE :

      Whose Head is it Anyway? Potter’s Treasure
  • 810
  • 820
  • 830
Middle Ages
  • 840
  • 850
  • 860
  • 870
  • 880
  • 890
  • 900
  • 910
  • 920
  • 930
  • 940
    • 950 CE :

      Cave of Revenge
Middle Ages
  • 950
    • 950 CE :

      Cave of Revenge
  • 960
  • 970
  • 980
  • 990
  • 1000
  • 1010
  • 1020
  • 1030
  • 1040
  • 1050
Middle Ages
  • 1060
  • 1070
  • 1080
  • 1090
    • 1096 CE :

      Heroes on the Walls of Haifa
    • 1099 CE :

      Heroes on the Walls of Haifa
  • 1100
  • 1110
  • 1120
  • 1130
  • 1140
  • 1150
  • 1160
Middle Ages
  • 1170
  • 1180
    • 1187 CE :

      Locking Horns at the Battle of Hattin
  • 1190
  • 1200
  • 1210
  • 1220
  • 1230
  • 1240
  • 1250
  • 1260
  • 1270
    • 1280 CE :

      Z-rated: For Forties Plus
Middle Ages
  • 1280
    • 1280 CE :

      Z-rated: For Forties Plus
    • 1286 CE :

      Mystery of the Zohar Zohar Unzipped
  • 1290
    • 1300 CE :

      Ancient Ring in the Flowerbed
  • 1300
    • 1300 CE :

      Ancient Ring in the Flowerbed
  • 1310
  • 1320
  • 1330
  • 1340
  • 1350
    • 1354 CE :

      Ready for Elijah
  • 1360
  • 1370
  • 1380
    • 1390 CE :

      Divinely Plagued
Middle Ages
  • 1390
    • 1390 CE :

      Divinely Plagued
  • 1400
  • 1410
  • 1420
  • 1430
  • 1440
  • 1450
  • 1460
  • 1470
    • 1475 CE :

      A Widow in Print
  • 1480
  • 1490
    • 1496 CE :

      Once Bitten, Twice Shy – Portuguese Jewry
Middle Ages
  • 1500
    • 1501 CE :

      Portuguese Messiah at the Stake
  • 1510
    • 1520 CE :

      Salonika’s Mystic Quartet
  • 1520
    • 1520 CE :

      Salonika’s Mystic Quartet
    • 1526 CE :

      Who Was David Ha-Reuveni?
  • 1530
    • 1533 CE :

      Kabbalists in Salonika
  • 1540
  • 1550
  • 1560
  • 1570
  • 1580
  • 1590
  • 1600
Age of Reason
  • 1610
  • 1620
    • 1630 CE :

      The Price of Dissent
  • 1630
    • 1630 CE :

      The Price of Dissent
  • 1640
  • 1650
  • 1660
    • 1667 CE :

      Was ‘The Jewish Bride’ Really Jewish? Messianic Mania
  • 1670
    • 1675 CE :

      Topsy Turvy
  • 1680
  • 1690
    • 1700 CE :

      Newton’s Fourth Law In the Service of the Czar Haman’s Pockets Trying to Belong
  • 1700
    • 1700 CE :

      Newton’s Fourth Law In the Service of the Czar Haman’s Pockets Trying to Belong
  • 1710
Age of Reason
  • 1720
  • 1730
  • 1740
  • 1750
  • 1760
  • 1770
  • 1780
    • 1790 CE :

      Groping for Truth
  • 1790
    • 1790 CE :

      Groping for Truth
  • 1800
    • 1806 CE :

      Napoleon’s Jewish Court
  • 1810
    • 1812 CE :

      Red Rose of Petra
  • 1820
    • 1827 CE :

      A Soul Divided
Age of Reason
  • 1830
    • 1832 CE :

      Blackface Minstrel Shows
    • 1840 CE :

      With Thanks from Damascus
  • 1840
    • 1840 CE :

      With Thanks from Damascus
    • 1842 CE :

      Charlotte Rothschild – First Jewish Female Artist
    • 1845 CE :

      The Angry Convert
    • 1848 CE :

      Jewish? French? Italian!
    • 1850 CE :

      Matza – More Than Just Crumbs
  • 1850
    • 1850 CE :

      Matza – More Than Just Crumbs
    • 1852 CE :

      Mum’s the Word Mum’s the Word
    • 1860 CE :

      Written Off
  • 1860
    • 1860 CE :

      Written Off
    • 1868 CE :

      Hungarian Schism
    • 1870 CE :

      A Man unto Himself The Kaiser’s Cap
  • 1870
    • 1870 CE :

      A Man unto Himself The Kaiser’s Cap
    • 1873 CE :

      Boy Wonders
    • 1875 CE :

      The Many Faces of Maurycy Gottlieb Shtreimel Variations: The History of a Hat
    • 1877 CE :

      Off the Boat
    • 1880 CE :

      Fastest Jew in the West
  • 1880
    • 1880 CE :

      Fastest Jew in the West
    • 1881 CE :

      The Jewish Girl who Set the Wild West Ablaze
    • 1882 CE :

      When Etrogim Briefly Grew on Trees
    • 1883 CE :

      Kafka – Too Short A Story
    • 1884 CE :

      The Original Zionist Congress
    • 1886 CE :

      Place in the Sun
    • 1887 CE :

      Marc Chagall – the Surrealist Jew
    • 1889 CE :

      New York – A Community in Flux
    • 1890 CE :

      PIONEER POET
  • 1890
    • 1890 CE :

      PIONEER POET
    • 1892 CE :

      When Shakespeare Spoke Yiddish
    • 1894 CE :

      Herzl’s Psychodrama Egypt’s Jewish Molière The Too Jewish Missionary
    • 1895 CE :

      Zionist with Cello
    • 1897 CE :

      The Jewish Father of French Impressionism The Congress that Founded the Jewish State The Pied Piper of Yom Kippur
    • 1900 CE :

      Healing Minds with Sigmund Freud
  • 1900
    • 1900 CE :

      Healing Minds with Sigmund Freud
    • 1906 CE :

      The Saga of a Budapest Family Sukka
    • 1908 CE :

      The Jewish American Secret Police
    • 1909 CE :

      black wedding
    • 1910 CE :

      One Hundred Good Years
  • 1910
    • 1910 CE :

      One Hundred Good Years
    • 1913 CE :

      Planting Seedlings Mark Gertler – Nothing but Art
    • 1914 CE :

      Did Jew Know? Tomorrow’s War Ticket to Riches
    • 1915 CE :

      Albert Einstein’s Quantum Leap Forgotten Jews of Bisan
    • 1916 CE :

      Amedeo Modigliani – Jewish Expressionism
    • 1917 CE :

      The Gateway The Viscount of Megiddo Return of the Spies Guard Down Long Before Balfour
    • 1918 CE :

      Luboml City Post Dying in Vain
    • 1920 CE :

      Isidor Kaufmann – Jewish Ritual Beauty My Son, the Gangster The Fourth Commandment and the Eighteenth Amendment
  • 1920
    • 1920 CE :

      Isidor Kaufmann – Jewish Ritual Beauty My Son, the Gangster The Fourth Commandment and the Eighteenth Amendment
    • 1921 CE :

      Make Art, Not War
    • 1924 CE :

      God Save the Dutch Queen It Takes a (Hasidic) Village
    • 1927 CE :

      Painter of Jerusalem Breaking the Sound Barrier No Business Like Show Business
    • 1929 CE :

      Painting Propaganda
    • 1930 CE :

      The Wedding That Wasn’t
  • 1930
    • 1930 CE :

      The Wedding That Wasn’t
    • 1933 CE :

      Haifa and Salonika – the Jewish Ports
    • 1935 CE :

      Gefilte Jazz
    • 1936 CE :

      Megilla with a Secular Twist
    • 1940 CE :

      A Beautiful Mind 9 Things You Didn’t Know About Hedy Lamarr
Age of Reason
  • 1880
    • 1880 CE :

      Fastest Jew in the West
    • 1881 CE :

      The Jewish Girl who Set the Wild West Ablaze
    • 1882 CE :

      When Etrogim Briefly Grew on Trees
    • 1883 CE :

      Kafka – Too Short A Story
    • 1884 CE :

      The Original Zionist Congress
    • 1886 CE :

      Place in the Sun
    • 1887 CE :

      Marc Chagall – the Surrealist Jew
    • 1889 CE :

      New York – A Community in Flux
    • 1890 CE :

      PIONEER POET
  • 1890
    • 1890 CE :

      PIONEER POET
    • 1892 CE :

      When Shakespeare Spoke Yiddish
    • 1894 CE :

      Herzl’s Psychodrama Egypt’s Jewish Molière The Too Jewish Missionary
    • 1895 CE :

      Zionist with Cello
    • 1897 CE :

      The Jewish Father of French Impressionism The Congress that Founded the Jewish State The Pied Piper of Yom Kippur
    • 1900 CE :

      Healing Minds with Sigmund Freud
  • 1900
    • 1900 CE :

      Healing Minds with Sigmund Freud
    • 1906 CE :

      The Saga of a Budapest Family Sukka
    • 1908 CE :

      The Jewish American Secret Police
    • 1909 CE :

      black wedding
    • 1910 CE :

      One Hundred Good Years
  • 1910
    • 1910 CE :

      One Hundred Good Years
    • 1913 CE :

      Planting Seedlings Mark Gertler – Nothing but Art
    • 1914 CE :

      Did Jew Know? Tomorrow’s War Ticket to Riches
    • 1915 CE :

      Albert Einstein’s Quantum Leap Forgotten Jews of Bisan
    • 1916 CE :

      Amedeo Modigliani – Jewish Expressionism
    • 1917 CE :

      The Gateway The Viscount of Megiddo Return of the Spies Guard Down Long Before Balfour
    • 1918 CE :

      Luboml City Post Dying in Vain
    • 1920 CE :

      Isidor Kaufmann – Jewish Ritual Beauty My Son, the Gangster The Fourth Commandment and the Eighteenth Amendment
  • 1920
    • 1920 CE :

      Isidor Kaufmann – Jewish Ritual Beauty My Son, the Gangster The Fourth Commandment and the Eighteenth Amendment
    • 1921 CE :

      Make Art, Not War
    • 1924 CE :

      God Save the Dutch Queen It Takes a (Hasidic) Village
    • 1927 CE :

      Painter of Jerusalem Breaking the Sound Barrier No Business Like Show Business
    • 1929 CE :

      Painting Propaganda
    • 1930 CE :

      The Wedding That Wasn’t
  • 1930
    • 1930 CE :

      The Wedding That Wasn’t
    • 1933 CE :

      Haifa and Salonika – the Jewish Ports
    • 1935 CE :

      Gefilte Jazz
    • 1936 CE :

      Megilla with a Secular Twist
    • 1940 CE :

      A Beautiful Mind 9 Things You Didn’t Know About Hedy Lamarr
  • 1940
    • 1940 CE :

      A Beautiful Mind 9 Things You Didn’t Know About Hedy Lamarr
    • 1942 CE :

      Flowing But Not Forgotten All-American Rebbe
    • 1943 CE :

      Fight for the Spirit Spark of Rebellion Drawing for Dear Life
    • 1945 CE :

      Damned If You Do Lights, Camera, Zionism!
    • 1946 CE :

      Escape Room
    • 1947 CE :

      United Nations Vote – 29 November 1947
    • 1948 CE :

      Posting Independence The Battle on the Hill Sky-Heist Scent of Freedom The Best Defense Cable Car to Jerusalem
    • 1949 CE :

      Shmuel Zanwil Kahane and the Legend of the Holy Ashes
    • 1950 CE :

      Lost in Eilat Eilat’s Treasures Strength in Numbers The Shrine on the Mountain Voice Behind the Iron Curtain
  • 1950
    • 1950 CE :

      Lost in Eilat Eilat’s Treasures Strength in Numbers The Shrine on the Mountain Voice Behind the Iron Curtain
    • 1951 CE :

      Curator or Creator
    • 1952 CE :

      The Night of the Murdered Poets
    • 1955 CE :

      The Hitchhikers’ Guide to Jew York
    • 1957 CE :

      Shmuel Zanwil Kahane’s Map of Holy Sites
    • 1960 CE :

      Jewish as Can Be
  • 1960
    • 1960 CE :

      Jewish as Can Be
    • 1967 CE :

      1967 Declassified Comments Through Lions’ Gate De-Classified Comments New Life in Jerusalem’s Old City
  • 1970
    • 1973 CE :

      Faith Under Fire
  • 1980
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Breaking the Sound Barrier

Nothing to Say
Mute Melodrama
The Screen Comes to Life
A Wrenching Dilemma
Staring Back from the Mirror
To Wild Applause
By: Yuval Rivlin

From the creative team behind it right down to its story line, the first talking film couldn’t have been more Jewish. The protagonist of The Jazz Singer was the latest in a long line of Jewish cantors

Nothing to Say

There’s an old joke about a boy who hadn’t uttered a word since birth. Years passed, until one evening, he turned to the person sitting next to him at the dinner table and asked him to pass the salt. When asked why he had never spoken before, he replied with a shrug, “I didn’t have anything to say.”

The film industry was silent throughout its first thirty-two years, but not for lack of what to say. Silent movies were packed with artistic innovations and social as well as moral statements; the technical limitations of the medium were the only reason they lacked a voice. Still, in comparison with The Jazz Singer, they’re like the mute boy at the dinner table – they have nothing to say. The first sounds to issue from the silver screen did more than mark the end of the silent film era. They echoed with the existential questions haunting the filmmakers and much of their audience: who am I, and where do I belong? And the way the cinema framed these questions in 1927, in the first feature-length film with synchronized dialogue, was typically Jewish.

Mute Melodrama

The poster advertising The Jazz Singer omits any mention of sound, yet gives particular prominence to cantor Yossele Rosenblatt’s cameo performance. Was Warner Brothers hedging its bets?-

The poster advertising The Jazz Singer omits any mention of sound, yet gives particular prominence to cantor Yossele Rosenblatt’s cameo performance. Was Warner Brothers hedging its bets?

The fact that all its characters were mute forced the young film industry to adopt a melodramatic style quite contrary to its inventors’ intentions. The first silent clips, screened at a small Parisian café on Friday night, December 28, 1895, were entirely realistic. They focused on mundane, everyday events – workers leaving a factory, a train pulling into a station, and a snowball fight on the streets of Paris.

Auguste and Louis Lumière had hoped the moving images captured by their cameras would open people’s eyes to the uniqueness of each moment in their lives. But the Lumières’ inability to integrate their pictures with a recorded soundtrack detracted drastically from the realism they’d hoped to achieve. The silent motion on screen was so far removed from the noisy world of its audience that it lacked credibility; the grandiose gestures with which the actors attempted to compensate for the lack of dialogue, and the live music played to accompany the silent screen, pushed the medium toward escapism, histrionics, and extreme artistic experimentation.

For many filmmakers, such limitations were untenable. Artists dreamed of films that would “hold a mirror up to nature,” and the search for a technical solution that would tear down the sound barrier dividing reality from the silver screen became a challenge attacked by engineers from every side.

The long-awaited breakthrough was finally achieved in the mid-1920s. Western Electric developed the “Vitaphone” and offered it to leading Hollywood studios. This technique connected the film projector to a phonograph. A slight time lag remained between the actors’ facial expressions and the sound, but short scenes in which the cast’s voices were projected over prerecorded background music could now be integrated into otherwise silent films.

Studio owners were skeptical. Incorporating the Vitaphone into movie theaters was complex and expensive, and who knew whether the new technology would be a hit? Faced with a choice between guaranteed income and a risky investment in the film industry’s future, moguls preferred their cash in hand. In desperation, Western Electric finally peddled their product to the ambitious managers of a small, dynamic studio, who agreed to give the Vitaphone a chance.

The Jazz Singer was Samson Raphaelson’s first play, adapted in just one weekend from his short story. The film launched him as one of Broadway’s most successful and prolific playwrights. Raphaelson and below, a copy of his playCourtesy of Ianvannest

The Jazz Singer was Samson Raphaelson’s first play, adapted in just one weekend from his short story. The film launched him as one of Broadway’s most successful and prolific playwrights. Raphaelson and below, a copy of his play

-lanvannest

–

The Screen Comes to Life

The four Warner brothers – Albert, Harry, Sam, and Jack – had been a part of the film industry since 1903. Their chain of movie theaters provided a decent income for the family, but the Warners were determined to work their way up and create their own films instead of selling and distributing those produced by other studios. The small, family-owned studio was falling behind the big names; its only big success had been its Rin Tin Tin series, featuring the exploits of a daring dog.

Generation gaps often center on the tension between modern and traditional values. Jakie serenades his mother in a scene from The Jazz Singer

Relations between Harry, Albert, Sam, and Jack Warner were fine when they set up Warner Brothers, but later deteriorated, culminating in a takeover engineered by Jack Warner in 1956. Sam, the brother who pushed hardest for the introduction of sound, died and was buried the day The Jazz Singer premiered

Unlike Paramount and MGM, Warner Brothers had nothing to lose. They hoped the Vitaphone would be the breakthrough they’d been looking for. In 1926 they began showing short talkies as a warm-up to their main, full-length features, which remained silent. Finally, in late 1927, the time was ripe for the appearance of The Jazz Singer, the first full-length motion picture to include sequences with dialogue. Though silence dominates the eighty-eight-minute film, sound breaks through briefly at several points. In the climactic final scenes, the actors can be heard speaking – and singing. Finally sound had come into its own. The Jazz Singer proved conclusively that pictures and sounds could indeed be synchronized, and marked the beginning of the end of the silent movie era. For the first time, sound was introduced not as a gimmick but as an integral part of a film’s story line. The actors’ initial silence symbolized repressed parts of their characters; they finally began speaking only when the progression of events allowed them to “find their voice.”

A Wrenching Dilemma

The Jazz Singer is Alan Crosland’s film adaptation of a play by the same name written by Samson Raphaelson, a prominent Hollywood screenwriter. The play was based on a short story by Raphaelson called “Day of Atonement,” which had appeared in Everybody’s Magazine in January 1922. Jack Robin, formerly Jakie Rabinowitz, hails from a dynasty of Jewish cantors. He dreams of breaking the mold and making a name for himself in the nightclubs and concert halls frequented by the younger generation. His spirit chafes at the traditional melodies of the synagogue, yearning to express itself in the freedom of jazz. In the film, Jakie is played by Al Jolson, born Asa Yoelson, a well-known entertainer and himself a cantor’s son. Jakie’s father pressures him to abandon his newfound love and remain within the Jewish community. Sold on jazz, convinced that it captures the spirit of the age, Jakie leaves home.

Years later, the long-lost son is summoned to his father’s deathbed. On Yom Kippur eve, Jakie’s parents and their entire community beg him to sing the Kol Nidrei prayer in the synagogue that evening instead of his father. But that evening is the opening night of a show that could be the long-awaited turning point in Jakie’s career. Torn between his family, his Jewish identity, and the American individualism on which he’s built his life, Jakie has to choose.

The Jazz Singer is a journey between identities. It begins with the Jewish community’s attempt to imbue young Jakie with traditional values. These Jews expect him to play his part, dutifully passing the torch of faith and tradition to the next generation. Aware that by succumbing to the temptations of the outside world, he could sever his connection to his roots forever, Jakie risks becoming a stranger to his own family. For Raphaelson, the greatest pull of tradition was the warm embrace of the Jewish home. As Tevye the milkman says in Fiddler on the Roof, “Because of our traditions, every one of us knows who he is, and what God expects him to do.” Secure in that knowledge, “every one of us is a fiddler on the roof, trying to scratch out a pleasant, simple tune without breaking his neck.”

Jakie’s problem is that the “pleasant, simple tune” is no longer enough. He is drawn to the world beyond his community, where each individual defines himself, making the collective irrelevant. With Judaism no longer a liability, he has no need for the warmth of a support group. The community’s sheltering wings are suffocating, preventing him from spreading his own. Yet anxious as he is to break away from Judaism, when it comes to cutting his ties to his father, and particularly his mother, he hesitates. Traditional ideals may seem meaningless in the modern world, but everyone needs a home and a family. How can he throw away the trappings of religion without losing his family, the kernel of his being?

To follow in his father's footsteps or make his own way - on Broadway? Jakie's dilemma, scene from the film-

To follow in his father’s footsteps or make his own way – on Broadway? Jakie’s dilemma, scene from the film

Staring Back from the Mirror

One of the film’s most poignant scenes occurs on the eve of the Day of Atonement, just as dress rehearsals for Jakie’s opening night performance are to begin. Sitting in his dressing room, Jakie is wracked with indecision. The soundtrack plays several notes of Al Jolson’s hit song “Mammy,” and Jakie’s gaze settles on a photograph of his mother on the table. His beloved Mary enters the dressing room and sees the grief in her lover’s eyes. She realizes he’s worried about his father. Jakie tells her how torn he is, adding, “I don’t really belong there – here’s where I belong, on Broadway. But there’s something in the blood that sort of calls you – something apart from this life.” Mary nods understandingly but reminds him: “No matter how strong the call, this is your life.”

Jakie rises determinedly and starts making up for the show. In the mirror, he sees the synagogue as he imagines it. The soundtrack, too, reflects his thoughts, playing the familiar notes of Kol Nidrei. He bangs his fist on his chest, as is customary when saying the confessional prayer of Yom Kippur. “The Day of Atonement is the most solemn of our holy days,” he bursts out, “and the songs of Israel are tearing at my heart!” His girlfriend tries to save him from his anguish. “Your career is the place God has put you. Don’t forget that, Jack,” she reminds him. He agrees, adding, “My career means more to me than anything else in the world.” “Even more than me?” she asks. “Yes,” he answers, “even more than you.” Her winning smile proves that she has made her point. “Then don’t let anything stand in your way!” she says. “Not even your parents, not me, not anything!”

Jack’s dilemma is clear. Stuck between the ties of tradition and the allure of modernity, he realizes that though the bright lights may dazzle, they don’t guarantee happiness. The price of success is life without a home, without family and community, forswearing love for the false comforts of fame and fortune.

This scene, like many others depicting Jakie’s inner turmoil, is silent. His lips move, but his voice is unheard. Torn between conflicting worlds, represented by two musical themes on the soundtrack – one hauntingly Jewish, the other typically American – Jakie struggles to find his own path, his own voice. Unable to appreciate his own worth, he is dumbstruck figuratively as well as literally, finding solace only in thoughts of his distant mother.

Jakie pines for his mother’s warmth, not for the rigors of his forefathers’ traditions. He knows he will never find its substitute in show business. It is no coincidence that the first sounds in the film are related to his mother. In one scene, he visits her without his stubborn father’s knowledge and serenades her with a song from his current show – “Blue Sky” by Irving Berlin (born Israel Beilin). Mother and son relish these stolen moments and the forbidden music played on a piano usually reserved for holy melodies. On the soundtrack, we hear the mother harmonizing with her son as the music bridges the gap between them. In another scene, Jakie attends a performance by cantor Yoselle Rosenblatt. In this vintage performance by the famous Rosenblatt, we hear the Yiddish song “The Memorial Candle,” which reminds Jakie of his mother and her slowly fading world.

רבנים וחזנים על המסך הגדול. סצנות מתוך הסרט-

Rabbis and cantors on the silver screen. Scenes from The Jazz Singer

To Wild Applause

To find his voice, Jakie must first find the path that suits him and his generation. He embraces both the warm, maternal atmosphere of the traditional world and the modern freedom to realize his dreams and utilize his talents to the full. He rejects his father’s values and the temptations of wealth, leaving behind the restrictions of Judaism to pursue the American dream. Yet even as he ventures further into the outside world, he steers homeward. Having succeeded in bridging two worlds, Jakie finally finds his voice. He chants Kol Nidrei in his father’s stead, but as a “jazz singer singing to his God,” as his girlfriend puts it. His mother enters the music hall, and he dedicates a song to her as the audience cheers – both on screen and off.

At the beginning of the film, secular and sacred seem irreconcilable. By the end, we understand that the two worlds need not conflict. “Jazz is prayer,” claimed the souvenir program that accompanied the movie, quoting Raphaelson’s preface to his play. “It is too passionate to be anything else.” And the author goes further: “One of the Americas of 1925—that one which packs to overflowing our cabarets, musical revues, and dance halls—is praying with a fervor as intense as that of the America which goes sedately to church and synagogue.” The film producers aspired to reconcile the two Americas and bridge the generation gap between immigrant parents and their assimilated children. But that required the parents to recognize the legitimacy of their children’s ways, admitting that jazz can indeed be prayer.

The historical significance of The Jazz Singer far exceeds its technical achievements. It defined the challenges facing a generation of immigrants trying to embrace a new world without losing the old.

The questions of identity addressed by the film remain potent for any society struggling to balance integration and assimilation. It struck a chord with Italian, Irish, and Hispanic families as well as Jewish ones.

But the film plays above all to Jewish audiences, faithfully reflecting the world of its creators, who, like Jakie, sought to prove that filmmaking was not so far removed from the culture of their fathers. These artists too hoped to be “jazz singers singing to their God,” believing, like generations of cantors before them, that their talents were a divine gift and came with a mission. Once sound restored film to the realm of realism, Raphaelson, Jolson, and the Warner brothers used it to illuminate the complexity of their own Jewish identities – many aspects of which echoed in The Jazz Singer. In doing so, they provided an entire generation of Jewish immigrants, hitherto silent, with a voice. Of The Jazz Singer’s many messages, perhaps the most Jewish is those immigrants’ dream of finally finding a place where they belonged.

 

In addition to the film’s success, the soundtrack of The Jazz Singer became a blockbuster in its own right. Crowds gather outside Warner Brothers’ theater for the film’s opening, October 6, 1927 Getty Images

In addition to the film’s success, the soundtrack of The Jazz Singer became a blockbuster in its own right. Crowds gather outside Warner Brothers’ theater for the film’s opening, October 6, 1927

Modern Times

1927
CE

Tags

Al Jolson, Broadway, cinema, Crosland, Hollywood, jazz singer, Jewish, Kol Nidrei, Raphaelson, Warner Brothers, אל ג'ונסון, ברודוויי, פס קול, קול נדרי, ראינוע
By: Yuval Rivlin

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