-
prepared by
Moroccan Jews,
Algerian Jews,
Tunisian Jews,
Libyan Jews,
Djerban Jews, and also by
French Jews,
Jewish Americans, and Israelis, due to the...
- East. In a 2012
study by
Campbell et al., however, the Moroccan/Algerian,
Djerban/Tunisian and
Libyan subgroups of
North African Jewry were
found to demonstrate...
- The
history of the Jews in
Tunisia extends nearly two
thousand years to the
Punic era. The
Jewish community in
Tunisia grew
following successive waves...
-
Palestinian non-Jews when
compared to
European non-Jews. The Moroccan/Algerian,
Djerban/Tunisian and
Libyan subgroups of
North African Jewry were
found to demonstrate...
- King
Frederick II. Over the next few centuries,
there are
instances of
Djerban Jews
found in the
responsa across the Maghreb, such as that of Salomon...
-
Saadia Gaon's words.
Rabbi Mazuz postulates this
hypothesis through the
Djerban (Tunisia)
Jewish dialect's use of
gimmel and quf,
switching to
jimmel and...
-
Moroccan and
Algerian Jews
tending to be
genetically closer to
Europeans than
Djerban Jews, the
latter being a
highly endogamous group.
History of the Jews in...
-
Moroccan and
Algerian Jews
tending to be
genetically closer to
Europeans than
Djerban Jews. The
study found that Yemenite, Ethiopian, and
Georgian Jews formed...
-
having established clear religious rules that are
still in
effect among the
Djerban-Jewish community. He
forbade the
consumption of locusts,
which had previously...
- (less than 250 mm per year) and the
consequent lack of
drinking water, the
Djerbans have
gained the
habit of
building cisterns to
collect and
store rainwater...