ARBELL, MORDECHAI

ARBELL, MORDECHAI
ARBELL, MORDECHAI (Mario Varssano; 1929– ), Israeli diplomat, businessman, and researcher of Sephardi and Caribbean Jewish history. Born in Sofia, Bulgaria, to a prominent Sephardi family, Arbell settled in Tel Aviv in 1941. After serving in the Israeli Air Force in the War of Independence and studying at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he entered the Israeli foreign service, holding various positions, including ambassador to Panama and Haiti. In 1977 he became the general manager of International Operations of the Eisenberg Group, consisting of 80 companies in 42 countries. His studies of the Spanish-Portuguese Jewish communities in the Caribbean and the Guianas began in 1965 and included research trips all over the Caribbean basin. He studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and was a research fellow at the Ben-Zvi Institute in Jerusalem, at the John Carter Brown Library of Brown University and at the American Jewish Archives of the Hebrew Union College. Among his publications are "La Nacion" – The Spanish and Portuguese Jews of the Caribbean (1981, an exhibition and catalogue); Comfortable Disappearance, Lesson from the Caribbean Jewish Experience (1998); Spanish and Portuguese Jews in the Caribbean, A Bibliography (1998); The Portuguese Jews of Jamaica (2000); and The Jewish Nation of the Caribbean (2002). Arbell also studied Sephardi Jewish history in Vienna, Austria, and Madras, India, the Inquisition in Manila, and the history of the Jews in Vlor (Valona), Albania. He is also an expert in the history of postage stamps featuring Sephardi Jews and has published Filatelia Sefaradi (1999). Active in many communal and research institutes, Arbell was adviser to the World Jewish Congress and chairman of its Research Institute; chairman of Sefarad for the Preservation of the Sephardi Heritage; adviser to the National Council for Ladino and Its Culture and to the Israeli National Council for Foreign Affairs. Among his other activities, he served on the board of directors of the Museum of the Jewish Diaspora, the Institute of Cultural Relations Israel-Iberoamerica, and the Association for Research of Latin American Jewry.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Spanish and Portuguese Jews — are a distinctive sub group of Sephardim who have their main ethnic origins within the crypto Jewish communities of the Iberian peninsula and who shaped communities mainly in Western Europe and the Americas from the late 16th century on. These… …   Wikipedia

  • CARIBBEANS, SPANISH-PORTUGUESE NATION OF THE: LA NACION — Introduction Many of the Jews expelled from Spain in 1492 sailed to seek refuge in other Mediterranean lands. A group estimated at 50–100,000 crossed the frontier into Portugal where they joined a Jewish community that has been established for… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • History of the Jews in Latin America — The history of the Jews in the Americas dates back to Christopher Columbus and his first cross Atlantic voyage on August 3, 1492, when he left Spain and eventually discovered the New World. His date of departure was also the day on which the… …   Wikipedia

  • Miguel de Barrios — Die Judenbraut. Gemälde von Rembrandt 1667. Angeblich Miguel de Barrios und seine Frau Abigail darstellend. Don Miguel de Barrios (hebr. Daniel Levi; * 1635 in Montilla; † 6. Oktober 1701 in Amsterdam) war ein spanisch …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • SYNAGOGUES — Interior view: Holy of the El Ghriba synagogue, Djerba, Tunisia, 1981. Photo: Jan Parik. By courtesy of Beth Hatefutsoth Photo Archive, Tel Aviv.   THE SYNAGOGUE, A GATHERING PLACE FOR THE JEWS, BECAME A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE TEMPLE OF JERUSALEM… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • BARBADOS — BARBADOS, Carribean island. The uninhabited island of Barbados was visited in 1625 by Captain John Powel, who took possession of it in the name of James I, king of England. The first Jews reportedly arrived by the year 1628. Later on Jews arrived …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • CAYENNE — CAYENNE, island separated by rivers from the mainland of French Guyana, today a French overseas department. On September 12, 1659, the Dutch West India Company (Amsterdam chamber) granted David Nassy, a refugee from Dutch Brazil, and his partners …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • COLOMBIA — COLOMBIA, South American republic; population 43,800,000 (2003); Jewish population estimated at approximately 3,400. History Jewish settlement in the country dates back to the arrival of the crypto jews during the Colonial Period. The first to… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • CURAÇAO — CURAÇAO, an island near the northern coast of Venezuela, South America, under the Dutch Crown part of the Netherland Antilles. Sighted by the Conquistador Alonso de Ojeda in 1498, it was captured from the Spanish by the Dutch in 1634. The Dutch… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • DOMINICAN REPUBLIC — DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, republic in the Caribbean islands comprising two thirds of the island of Hispaniola. This region (Santo Domingo) has quite a convoluted history. By the treaty of Ryswich (1607) it was given to Spain, but the treaty of Basel… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”