Ashkenaz

Part of Spotlight: Diversity in Israel
If you’re sure you have a clear picture of the “white� Jews in Israel, you’re probably wrong. Ashkenaz, a pithy but panoramic view, will show why. The documentary upends preconceived notions and exposes contradictions inherent in crafting one definition of Jewish ethnicity.
Berkeley native Rachel Leah Jones, its director-producer, flits from experts and scholars to just plain folks while illustrating that Ashkenazim are hard to pinpoint. They are, she shows, much broader-based than their Rhineland beginnings and subsequent migration to Poland, Lithuania, Russia and Ukraine might indicate.
Indeed, she focuses on the blurring. The Ashkenazim she introduces us to include dark-skinned Jews, kibbutzniks, soldiers, sociologists—a you-name-it-we’ve-got-it collage. The film, peppered as well with the views of Mizrahim and with evocative lyrics by a pub singer, probes the notion that the Ashkenazim are “the Establishment� and others “the troublemakers.� It touches on architecture and neighborhoods, “white� and “black,� superiority and inferiority.
In an almost Talmudic cinematic exercise, Ashkenaz connects apparently unconnected dots—ranging from an Ashkenazi Identity Movement that emphasizes universality to citizens who appear to spit out the word “Ashkenazim.� It is, in short, a fascinating study in diversity within a single word.
—Woody Weingarten
Presented with In Search of the Bene Israel
Co-sponsored by Abe & Marian Scheuer Sofaer
Co-presented by Congregation Sherith Israel and 3rd I San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival (SFISAFF)
About the Film
2007 | Netherlands | Israel | Color | North American Premiere | 72 min
Screenings
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