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28th
Annual Southern Jewish Historical Society Conference
Memphis,
Tennessee
October 30, 2003 - November 2, 2003
at the Park Vista
Memphis, affiliate
of the Hilton Hotels
CONFERENCE INFORMATION: Registration
Speaker Bios
CONFERENCE HOTEL INFORMATION
Park Vista
Memphis

Memphis
Attractions
Memphis Visitors and Convention Bureau
|
AGENDA
& PROGRAM
|
Thursday, October 30 |
| 6:30 P.M. |
SJHS
Board Meeting & Dinner |
|
Friday, October
31 |
| 8:30--10:15 |
Bus
Tour of Memphis conducted by Perre Magnus, foremost Memphis
historian |
| 10:30--11:15 |
Tour
National Civil Rights
Museum, with emphasis of Jewish involvement in Civil Rights
movement |
| 11:30--12:30 |
"An
Orthodox Oasis in the South" |
| Moderator: |
Dr.
David Patterson, Director, U of Memphis Bornblum
Judaic Studies Program |
| Panelists: |
|
| 12:45--1:30 |
Marie
and B. Lowenstein Foundation Lunch at the Center
for Southern Folklore featuring Corky's
Bar-B-Que and many old southern recipes. Visit Southern Folklore
Museum |
| 1:45--2:45 |
Tour
Marilyn and Jack Belz
Museum of Judaica |
| 3:00-4:00 |
Tour
"Jewish" Memphis (from the Pinch to the Pyramid and other
modern structures) conducted by Judy
Peiser, Director, Center
for Southern
Folklore |
| 4:00 |
Return
to Hotel |
| 5:30--7:00 |
Temple
Israel Sisterhood and Brotherhood Shabbat dinner.
Welcome by Rabbi Micah
Greenstein, Senior Rabbi of Temple Israel, Memphis |
| 7:15 |
Services
with Rabbi Greenstein sermon:
"Why History Matters"
After Services Oneg Shabbat sponsored by the Temple Israel
Sisterhood and Brotherhood and conducted tours of the Temple Israel
museum. |
| Saturday,
November 1 |
| 8:00--8:30 |
Services to be conducted by
Dr. Bruce Beeber, past president SJHS |
| 8:45--10:15 |
"Shalom Y'All: The
Jewish Community of Memphis---Mid-South Jews and Medical Issues" |
| Moderator: |
Harry
K. Danziger, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Israel, Memphis, TN |
| Panelists: |
-
Patricia
LaPointe, Curator, Memphis & Shelby County Room, Memphis/Shelby
County Public Library. Past secretary SJHS, "Memphis's
Jewish Medical Community and early Memphis Jewish settlers."
-
Cornelia
Wilhelm, University of Munich, Department of Jewish
History & Culture. Author and teacher, Wilhelm is writing
a history of B'Nai Brith and is the author of the book, Nazi
Folkdom Politics in the USA, 1933-1945. "Yellow Fever
Diary."
|
| 10:30--11:45 |
"Say it with Food: A
Culinary Tour of the Jewish South" |
| Moderator: |
Cathy
Kahn, Immediate Past President SJHS |
| Panelists: |
- Marcie
Cohen Ferris. Visiting professor in American
Studies at the University of North Carolina. Ferris received
her Ph.D. from George Washington (2003), and is currently writing
a book based on her dissertation.
- Joan
Nathan. Author of eight cookbooks, including most
recently The Foods of Israel Today Nathan is the recipient of
numerous awards and honors for her print and broadcast
achievements.
|
| 12:00--2:00 |
Lunch Featuring Special
Recipes by Joan Nathan
Gumenick Lecturer, "Cues, Blues, and Jews: Southern Music and
Southern Jews" |
| Moderator: |
Stephen
Whitfield, Whitfield has written and taught about the
life and culture of American Jews. He is the author of "Voices
of Jacob, Hands of Esau: Jews in American Life and Thought."
Whitfield is a professor of American Studies at Brandeis University. |
| Panelists: |
- David Less.
Writer, producer, and researcher based in Memphis. Less has
published in Rolling Stone, Down Beat, and Blues Revue. He is
former president of the Blues
Foundation.
- David
Loebel. Director and conductor of the Memphis
Symphony Orchestra, Loebel's commitment to American composers has
been recognized by three ASCAP awards for adventuresome
programming of contemporary music.
- Daniel
S. Mariaschin. Executive vice-president of B'nai
B'rith International and director of B'nai B'rith's Center for
Public Policy. Mariaschin is the author of " Elvis and the
Jews of Memphis."
|
| 2:15--3:30 |
"Parallel
Lives: Growing up Jewish and Black in Mississippi" |
| Moderator: |
Stuart
Rockoff. Director, History Department, Goldring/Woldenberg
Institute of Southern Jewish Life. |
| Panelists: |
- Clifton
L. Taulbert. Widely acclaimed for his memoirs,
Taulbert has written in depth about the South, has spoken at The
Library of Congress, and has been a visiting professor at Harvard
University's Principal's Center.
- Gene
Dattel. Author of well regarded critique of
Japanese financial institutions, "The Sun that Never
Rose."
|
| 3:45--5:15 |
"What Drives Miss
Daisy?" |
| Moderator: |
Phyllis
Leffler, professor on the Judaic Studies Faculty at the
University of Virginia has written about the "forgotten women at
the University of Virginia." |
| Panelists: |
- Mark
Greenberg. Director, University of Southern
Florida, Florida Studies Center, Greenberg is writing a book on
the Jews of Savannah. "A Life of Meaning: Southern Jewish
Women in the Nineteenth Century."
- Jennifer
Ann Stollman. On the faculty of the University of
Mississippi, Stollman has written and taught about Jewish women in
the antebellum and Civil War South.
"Delta Jewish Women in the 20th Century."
|
| 7:00--7:45 |
Memphis Jewish Federation
Cocktail Hour at Beth
Shalom Synagogue Klezmer
Music Concert and Tour of Stained Glass Windows. |
| 8:00 |
Memphis Jewish Federation
Banquet at Baron Hirsch Synagogue. The 3 Cantors will perform before
the program.
"Personal Reflections on the Southern Jewish Experience"
William R.
Ferris, Senior Associate Director, Center for the Study of
American South, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Former
Chairman, National Endowment for the Humanities. |
|
Sunday, November 2 |
| 8:00--8:45 |
Breakfast
meeting: local Jewish Historical Societies, chaired by Sherry Zander. |
| 9:00--9:45 |
SJHS
Business Meeting |
| 10:00--12:00 |
Meet the
Authors |
| Moderator: |
Dr.
Mark Bauman: Author and Editor |
|
Panelists: |
-
Emily
Bingham, "Mordecai: An Early American
Family." Bingham uses family and gender, religion and
ethnicity, class
and culture to weave together a story of 19th Century America
and of an American Jewish family. An influential advocate of
traditional Judaism, Jacob Mordecai founded an important school
in Warrenton, Virginia, and a clan that struggled with
acculturation in America and in the South.
-
Harriet
Keyserling, "Against the Tide: One Woman's
Political Struggle." Keyserling, a former South Carolina
legislator, grew up
in a New York Jewish family and was transplanted through
marriage to Beaufort, South Carolina. Her memoir is the story of
her transformation as a woman, as a Jew, and as a fighter for
culture and social causes. Hers, like Rapoport's, is an
unfinished journey on the road to positive change.
-
Bernard
Rapoport, "Being Rapoport: Capitalist
with a Conscience." Rapoport's memoir is the story of a
second-generation immigrant in Texas who yearns to be an
academic but who learns business through family-owned jewelry
stores Rapoport himself is legendary among Texans for his
influence on state and national Democratic politics and for his
commitment to philanthropy.
|
| 12:15--2:00 |
Bornblum
Institute of Judaic Studies Luncheon
"With a Southern Accent: The Contributions of Southern Jews to
Jewish Publishing in America"
Ellen
Frankel, CEO and Editor-in-Chief of the
Jewish Publication Society |
| 2:00 P.M. |
Close of
Convention |
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