Read In an Antique Land Online
Authors: Amitav Ghosh
42
But Surur had â¦Â another reason:
TâS 8 J 36, fol. 3, recto, lines 4â6.
43
Their parents, already prostrate:
Surur's letter home has not survived, but the letter his brother Shamwal wrote back in reply has. Its catalogue number is Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., b. 11 (Cat. no. 2874), fol. 15 (S. Shaked,
Tentative Bibliography
, p. 207).
44
âWe were seized with grief:
Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., b. 11 (Cat. no. 2874), fol. 15, recto, lines 8â9. I would like to thank Dr Geofrrey Khan for translating the Hebrew phrase in this passage (in italics).
45
âwell and in good cheer':
TâS 13 J 20, fol. 7, recto, lines 22â23.
46
Food was short:
Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., b. 11 (Cat. no. 2874), fol.
15, recto, lines 34â35 & 36â37.
47
âIf you saw [our] father':
Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., b. 11 (Cat. no. 2874), fol. 15, lines (recto) 45â(verso) 4 & (verso) 8â13.
48
âCome quickly home':
TâS 16.288, recto, lines 10â11.
49
The marriage did indeed take place:
S. D. Goitein,
Letters
, pp. 202.
50
Both Surur and Moshe:
Ibid., pp. 186 & 328.
51
I discovered that the name Abu-Hasira:
The most important scholarly work on the cult of saints amongst North African Jews is that of the eminent Israeli folklorist, Issachar Ben-Ami. See, for example, his article âFolk Veneration of Saints among Moroccan Jews', (in
Studies in Judaism and Islam
, ed. Shelomo Morag et al., Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1981). In the course of their fieldwork amongst Moroccan Jews Ben Ami and his associates compiled a list of 571 saints, twenty-one of whom were women. The French scholar, L. Voinot, estimated in 1948 that forty-five Jewish saints in Morocco were revered by Muslims and Jews alike while thirty-one were claimed by both Jews and Muslims as their own (quoted by Ben-Ami in âFolk Veneration of Saints', p. 283).
52
âThe tomb of Rabbi':
See Alex Weingrod's article, âSaints and Shrines, politics and culture: a Morocco-Israel comparison', pp. 228 (in
Muslim Travellers
, ed. Dale F. Eickelman and James Piscatori, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1990); Gudrun Krämer,
The Jews in Modern Egypt
, 1914â1952, pp. 114. University of Washington Press, Seattle, 1989; Issachar Ben-Ami, âFolk Veneration of Saints', pp. 324â328; and Baba Sali, His Life, Piety, Teachings and Miracles (Rav Yisrael Abuchatzeirah), by Rav Eliyahu Alfasi & Rav Yechiel Torgeman, written and edited by C. T. Bari, trans. Leah Doniger (Judaica Press Inc., New York, 1986).
1
The document is one of Ben Yiju's sets of accounts:
Dropsie 472. The following are the other Geniza documents I have used in reconstructing Bomma and Ben Yiju's lives. This list includes only those documents with which I have worked principally or in part from my own transcriptions, made directly from the manuscripts (in such instances where I have worked with published transcriptions or translations, the
references are provided in the endnotes). I would like to thank the Syndics of the University Library, Cambridge, for giving me permission to use and quote from these documents. I would also like to thank the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and the Annenberg Research Centre, Philadelphia, for allowing me to consult their Geniza collections.
l. TâS 12.235
2. TâS 12.337
3. TâS 16.288
4. TâS 20.130
5. TâS 20.137
6. TâS N.S. J 1
7. TâS N.S. J 5
8. TâS N.S. J 10
9. TâS K 25.252
10. TâS MS Or. 1080 J 95
11. TâS MS Or. 1080 J 263
12. TâS MS Or. 1081 J 3
13. TâS Misc. Box. 25, fragm. 103
14. TâS 6 J 4, fol. 14
15. TâS 8 J 7, fol. 23
16. TâS 8 J 36, fol. 3
17. TâS 10 J 9, fol. 24
18. TâS 10 J 10, fol. 15
19. TâS 10 J 12, fol. 5
20. TâS 10 J 13, fol. 6
21. TâS 13 J 7, fol. 13
22. TâS 13 J 7, fol. 27
23. TâS 13 J 20, fol. 7
24. TâS 13 J 24, fol. 2
25. TâS 18 J 2, fol. 7
26. TâS 18 J 4, fol. 18
27. TâS 18 J 5, fol. 1
28. Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., b. 11, fol. 15
29. Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., d. 66, fol. 61
30. Bod. Lib. Ox. MS Hebr., d. 66, fol. 139
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