Sasson Somekh
Author of Baghdad, Yesterday: The Making of an Arab Jew
About the Author
Sasson Somekh was one of the founders of the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at Tel Aviv University and is former head of the Israeli Academic Center in Cairo.
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Works by Sasson Somekh
Associated Works
Judaism and Islam : boundaries, communication, and interaction : essays in honor of William M. Brinner (2000) — Contributor — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1933
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Tel Aviv University (BA ∙ Hebrew Language ∙ Jewish History)
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (MA ∙ Hebrew Language ∙ Semitic Philology)
University of Oxford (Ph.D. ∙ 1968) - Awards and honors
- EMET Prize (2008)
Israel Prize (Middle East Studies, 2005)
Arberry Prize (Study of Arabic Literature, 1982) - Birthplace
- Baghdad, Iraq
- Places of residence
- Baghdad, Iraq
Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Cairo, Egypt
Tel Aviv, Israel
Members
Reviews
This was my third memoir from one of the many Jewish emigrés of the formerly large and thriving ancient Jewish community in Iraq (once comprising a third of the population, they are now said to number less than a dozen). Unlike the other two books, Sasson Somekh's was less a chronological autobiography and more a series of vignettes. Imagine going to chat with the author over tea once per week, and each week, he narrated a different recollection of his life -- that is much the flavor of show more this book. The chapters are self-contained and not long, which makes for easy reading. (Although, not necessarily FAST reading -- I found myself inclined to go slowly, re-reading often, and reflecting on what the author had written.) At times he writes with gentle humor; other passages are subtly -- but deeply -- poignant.
One of the delights of the book is that Somekh not only includes photographs but also gives descriptions of them. For instance, rather than simply saying, "This is a photo of the whole family at a wedding," he goes through the photo, pointing out individual family members, describing them, their history, what eventually becomes of them, and so on.
As a language buff, I found great interest in Somekh's discussions of Iraqi Arabic and other languages; and literary buffs will no doubt be interested in Somkeh's run-ins with and descriptions of literary notables from Iraq and elsewhere in the Arab world.
This would likely be a good book for those interested in the (former) Iraqi Jewish community; Arab Jews in general; and the history of Iraq. A history which, it should be noted, goes far deeper and is much richer than the modern-day headlines of bombings and political unrest. show less
One of the delights of the book is that Somekh not only includes photographs but also gives descriptions of them. For instance, rather than simply saying, "This is a photo of the whole family at a wedding," he goes through the photo, pointing out individual family members, describing them, their history, what eventually becomes of them, and so on.
As a language buff, I found great interest in Somekh's discussions of Iraqi Arabic and other languages; and literary buffs will no doubt be interested in Somkeh's run-ins with and descriptions of literary notables from Iraq and elsewhere in the Arab world.
This would likely be a good book for those interested in the (former) Iraqi Jewish community; Arab Jews in general; and the history of Iraq. A history which, it should be noted, goes far deeper and is much richer than the modern-day headlines of bombings and political unrest. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 35
- Popularity
- #405,583
- Rating
- 3.0
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 5

