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Alliance Israélite Universelle

The Alliance israélite universelle (AIU; Hebrew: כל ישראל חברים; transl. "Universal Israelite Alliance") is a Paris-based international Jewish organization founded in 1860 with the purpose of safeguarding human rights for Jews around the world. It promotes the ideals of Jewish self-defense and self-sufficiency through education and professional development. The organization is noted for establishing French-language schools for Jewish children throughout the Mediterranean, Iran, and the former Ottoman Empire in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Alliance israélite universelle
כל ישראל חברים
Door detail of Mikveh Israel, 2009
AIU, Paris
AIU, Paris
Founded1860; 164 years ago (1860)
PurposeHumanitarianism
HeadquartersParis, France
Official language
French, Hebrew
Key people
Mark Ayzenberg (president)
AffiliationsJudaism
Websitehttp://www.aiu.org/fr/
Entrance to the seat of the Société d'histoire des Juifs de Tunisie and the Alliance israélite universelle in Paris.

The motto of the organization is the Jewish rabbinic injunction kol yisrael arevim ze laze (כל ישראל ערבים זה לזה), translated into French as tous les israélites sont solidaires les uns des autres (transl. "all Jews are responsible for one another").[1]

History edit

 
Adolphe Crémieux, an early supporter of the Alliance and its president 1863-67 and again 1868-80[2]

In 1860, Alliance Israelite Universelle embarked on a "mission civilisatrice" to advance the Jews of the Middle East through French education and culture.[3] It was founded by Jules Carvallo, Isidore Cahen [fr], Narcisse Leven (secretary of Adolphe Crémieux), Élie-Aristide Astruc, and Eugène Manuel May 1860 in Paris,[4][5] and opened its first school in Tétouan, Morocco in 1862.[6] The original members of the society were Jews, and by far the largest number of its members belong to that faith, but the association has enjoyed the sympathy and cooperation of many prominent Christians.[who?] As outlined in its prospectus, the program of the society included the emancipation of the Jews from oppressive and discriminating laws, political disabilities, and defense of them in those countries where they were subjected to persecution.[4]

 
Medal by Emmanuel Hannaux for the 50th anniversary of the Alliance Israélite Universelle (1910) in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland, Basel (inv no. JMS 557): Female personification with the symbols of the Alliance. The other side shows Narcisse Leven in profile.

For the attainment of its objectives, the society proposed to carry on a campaign of education through the press and by the publication of works on the history and life of the Jews. In the beginning, however, the course of action adopted by the society for bringing relief to their oppressed brethren in other countries was to secure the intercession of friendly governments on their behalf. Thus, as early as 1867 the governments of France, Italy, Belgium, and the Netherlands made the renewal of existing treaties with Switzerland conditional upon that country's granting full civil and political rights to the Jews. In 1878, representatives of the Alliance laid the condition of the Jews in the Balkan Peninsula before the Congress of Berlin, as a result of which the Treaty of Berlin stipulated that in Romania, Serbia, and Bulgaria no discrimination should be made against any religion in the distribution of civil rights.[4]

Schools edit

 
Gate of the school of Alliance israélite universelle (1882), on Jaffa Road in Jerusalem
 
Inscriptions at the fountain in front of the former school of the Alliance Israélite Universelle in Rhodes

Over time, the activity of the Alliance became more focused on education and especially on improving the welfare of Jews.[4] Two years after the first school was opened in Tétuan, an Alliance school opened in Baghdad in 1864.[7] In 1870, Charles Netter, a founding member of Alliance israélite universelle, received a tract of land from the Ottoman Empire as a gift and opened the Mikveh Israel agricultural school, the first of a network of Jewish schools in Palestine before the establishment of the State of Israel. Over 60 Alliance schools operated in the Ottoman Middle East, Iran, and North Africa, providing Jewish children from poor families with formal elementary school and vocational training. Many of the teachers were educated at Alliance teacher training schools in Turkey and France.[8]

The Alliance founded a free school in Jerusalem in 1868.[9] This was followed by Mikveh Israel near Jaffa in 1870.[10] In 1882 a secondary school for boys was established in Jerusalem. Amin al-Husseini was one of their pupils.[11] The original building on Jaffa Road was demolished after 1967.[12]

In 1903, the Zionist group Bnei Moshe was to be given a grant to open a school but the funding was withdrawn due to Beni Moshe's insistence that lessons should be in the Hebrew language. The following year the Alliance donated the property which later became Neve Tzedek (girls) and Gymnasia Hezliya (boys) schools.[13] In 1906 the Alliance opened a secondary school for girls in Jerusalem.[14]

By 1900, Alliance Israelite Universelle was operating 100 schools with a combined student population of 26,000. Its greatest efforts were concentrated in Morocco, Tunisia, and Turkey.[6] After decades of teaching in French exclusively, the schools began teaching Hebrew to their students after the eleventh Zionist Congress insisted, amidst the modern revival of the Hebrew language, that it be included in the curriculum.[15]

In 1912 the Alliance had 71 schools for boys and 44 for girls, with schools in Baghdad, Jerusalem, Tangier, Istanbul, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus and Salonica. For Jews, it was the chief provider of modern education.[16]

A 1930 report found that there were 10 Jewish schools in Baghdad educating 7,182 children. Two of them were run by the Alliance Israélite Universelle. The boy's school had originally been the David Sassoon school founded in 1865. Albert Sassoon had given it to the Alliance in 1874. It contained 475 boys. Four languages were taught: Hebrew, Arabic, French and English. There were classes in the Sciences, Geography, and History. All were taught in French except for moral and religious studies which were in Hebrew. The Alliance School for Girls was established by Elly Kadoorie with 1177 pupils and with a similar syllabus.[17]

As a result of the influence of the French-language schools, Judaeo-Spanish acquired many neologisms from French.[citation needed]

Schools by country edit

Schools in Israel edit

 
Alliance girls' school in Jerusalem, 1935

Alliance israélite universelle continues to operate dozens of schools and educational programs in Israel today. Historic schools include the Alliance High School in Tel Aviv, Alliance israélite universelle High School in Haifa, René Cassin High School, and the Braunschweig Conservative High School in Jerusalem. The network also includes the School for the Deaf in Jerusalem, in which deaf students, Jews, and Arabs, with various mental and physical disabilities, study together. The Mikve Israel Youth Village operates a state high school, a state-religious high school specializing in life and natural sciences, environmental sciences, and biotechnology; and a French-Israeli high school established in 2007 as a joint initiative of the Israeli and French governments.[18]

Schools in Turkey edit

When French-medium schools operated by Alliance Israélite Universelle opened in the 1860s, the position of Judaeo-Spanish (Ladino) began to weaken in the Ottoman Empire areas.[19] Judaeo-Spanish was not used as a language of instruction in any time in history, and was instead acquired though families; therefore Hebrew was perceived as the ethnic instructional language for Jewish people, used for religious reasons, in the empire.[20] In time Judaeo-Spanish became perceived as a low status language, so people avoided learning it.[19]

As time progressed, Judaeo-Spanish language and culture declined, and in 2017 writer Melis Alphan described Judaeo-Spanish as "dying in Turkey".[19]

Impact on Girls and Women edit

The Alliance Israelite Universelle (AIU) changed and shaped the roles and opportunities for women in North Africa. Before the establishment of the AIU, primarily girls from wealthy or rabbinical families received an education.[21] Literacy and skilled training provided an opportunity for upward social mobility, especially to Jewish girls of underprivileged backgrounds who could not attain an education previously. Curricula featured foundational mathematics, such as arithmetic, and exposure to European subjects such as European geography and the French language.[21] Additionally, girls received vocational training in fields such as needlework, sewing, bookkeeping, secretarial work, laboratory assistance, and industrial chemistry; this training promoted the economic independence of Jewish women in the region.[21] Many North African women were also educated and trained as AIU teachers in France, returning thereafter to their countries of origin to teach.

Along with economic change, the AIU changed cultural norms for Jewish girls in the Maghreb as well. Primarily, the AIU lobbied to extend the typical marriage age from twelve to fifteen by 1948.[21] This changing role of women led to controversy regarding the secularization of Jewish society through Western-style education.

The AIU and Secularization edit

The AIU, and more generally, the French colonization of swaths of North Africa, shifted education from the hands of rabbis and religious leaders to secular, European instructors. In Algeria, this shift resulted in a legal mandate: in 1845, a law required Jews of Algeria to be registered in French schools and to only attend a religious school as a supplement.[22] Although the AIU did teach both secular and religious subjects, such as Hebrew and Biblical History, religious leaders still questioned and bemoaned the secularization.[21]

Similarly, the AIU attempted to secularize the Jewish legal systems in North Africa. Before colonization, Jews in Morocco operated their legal system according to Halacha, Jewish law. In 1913, the AIU appealed to the French government to try the "indigenous [Jewish] inhabitants, in French courts instead of rabbinical tribunals.[23]

Political Influence edit

Along with secularization, the AIU used its power to advocate the political assimilation of Maghrebi Jews into French society. AIU instructors were instrumental in the movement of naturalization for educated Moroccan Jews.[24]


Presidents edit

Notable alumni edit

 

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Leff, Lisa Moses (August 24, 2006). Sacred Bonds of Solidarity: The Rise of Jewish Internationalism in Nineteenth-Century France. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804752510 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Mrejen-O’Hana, Simone (2003). "Isaac-Jacob Adolphe Crémieux, Avocat, homme politique, président du Consistoire central et de l'Alliance israélite universelle". Archives Juives. 36 (2): 139–146. doi:10.3917/aj.362.0139. ISSN 0003-9837.
  3. ^ Beinin, Joel (August 24, 2005). The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry: Culture, Politics, and the Formation of a Modern Diaspora. American Univ in Cairo Press. ISBN 9789774248900 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainGilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Alliance Israelite Universelle" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  5. ^ "Alliance israélite universelle". Encyclopedia of Jewish History and Culture Online. doi:10.1163/2468-8894_ejhc_com_0017. Retrieved 2021-07-17.
  6. ^ a b Mark A. Tessler (1994). A History of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. Indiana University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-253-20873-6. OCLC 1020226308.
  7. ^ Eppel, Michael (January 1, 1998). "The Elite, the Effendiyya, and the Growth of Nationalism and Pan-Arabism in Hashemite Iraq, 1921–1958". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 30 (2): 227–250. doi:10.1017/S0020743800065880. S2CID 163021316 – via www.academia.edu.
  8. ^ Lewis, Bernard (August 24, 1984). The Jews of Islam. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780691008073 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Parfitt, Tudor (1987) The Jews in Palestine, 1800–1882. Royal Historical Society Studies in History (52). Woodbridge: Published for the Royal Historical Society by Boydell. ISBN 0-86193-209-9 p.155
  10. ^ Sanders, Ronald (1983) The High Walls of Jerusalem - A History of the Balfour Declaration and the Birth of the British Mandate of Palestine. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 0-03-053971-4. p.13
  11. ^ Blincoe, Nicholas (2019) More Noble Than War. The Story of Football in Israel and Palestine. Constable. London ISBN 978-1-47212-439-5 p.27
  12. ^ Gilbert, Martin (1996) Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century. Chatto & Windus. ISBN 0-7011-3070-9. p.36
  13. ^ Blencoe pp.45,46
  14. ^ Gilbert p.36
  15. ^ Gilbert, Israel: A History, (2008), p.29
  16. ^ Ammiel Alcalay (1993). After Jews and Arabs: Remaking Levantine Culture. U of Minnesota Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-4529-0001-8. OCLC 748858670.
  17. ^ Sassoon, David Solomon (1949) A History of the Jews of Baghdad. Published posthumously by his son Solomon David Sassoon. 5709-1949. pp.171,172
  18. ^ "Israel Haverim history".
  19. ^ a b c Alphan, Melis (2017-12-09). "Ladino: A Judeo-Ottoman language that is dying in Turkey". Hurriyet. Retrieved 2023-12-25.
  20. ^ Zetler, Reyhan (2014). "Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 – What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews?" (PDF). Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft für Judaistische Forschung (23): 26 (PDF p. 14/28). OCLC 865002828.
  21. ^ a b c d e "Morocco: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries | Jewish Women's Archive". jwa.org. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
  22. ^ Taieb-Carlen, Sarah (2010-02-23). The Jews of North Africa: From Dido to De Gaulle. University Press of America. ISBN 9780761850441.
  23. ^ Laskier, Michael M. (1983). "Aspects of the Activities of the Alliance Israélite Universelle in the Jewish Communities of the Middle East and North Africa: 1860-1918". Modern Judaism. 3 (2): 147–171. doi:10.1093/mj/3.2.147. JSTOR 1396078.
  24. ^ Laskier, Michael M. (1997-06-01). North African Jewry in the Twentieth Century: The Jews of Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. NYU Press. ISBN 9780814752654.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2013-11-09.

Further reading edit

  • Laskier , Michael M. The Alliance Israelite Universelle and the Jewish Communities of Morocco, 1862-1962 (1984) online
  • Levy, Richard S., ed. Antisemitism: A historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution (Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO, 2005) pp 10–12.
  • Sciarcon, Jonathan. Educational Oases in the Desert: The Alliance Israélite Universelle's Girls' Schools in Ottoman Iraq, 1895-1915. Albany State Univ of New York Press (SUNY), 2017. 196 pp. ISBN 978-1-4384-6585-2.

In French edit

  • Ktziya Aviali-Tevivian, Voyage vers le passé: un nouveau monde est né-le XIXe siècle, Ed. Matah techn, 2003.
  • André Chouraqui, L'Alliance israélite universelle et la Renaissance juive contemporaine, 1860-1960, P.U.F., 1965.
  • Matia Kam, Mikvé-Israël, Ed. Matah techn. Fonds Avi Haï.
  • André Kaspi, Histoire de l'Alliance israélite universelle - De 1860 à nos jours, Ed. Armand Colin, 2010.
  • Narcisse Leven, Cinquante ans d'histoire: l'Alliance israélite universelle (1860-1910), Paris, 1911.
  • Aharon Rodrigues, Éducation, société et histoire: L'Alliance israélite universelle, Ed. Institut Yad Ben-Zvi, 1991.
  • Chevalier-Caron, C. "L’héritage des activités de l’Alliance israélite universelle dans les relations entre accueillants.es et accueillis.es à Montréal et en France des années 1950 aux années 1980: le cas des migrations d’origine marocaine." Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes, 34, 112–129, 2022. https://cjs.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cjs/article/view/40294.

External links edit

  • Official website (in French)
  • History of Alliance Israelite Universelle

alliance, israélite, universelle, alliance, israélite, universelle, hebrew, כל, ישראל, חברים, transl, universal, israelite, alliance, paris, based, international, jewish, organization, founded, 1860, with, purpose, safeguarding, human, rights, jews, around, wo. The Alliance israelite universelle AIU Hebrew כל ישראל חברים transl Universal Israelite Alliance is a Paris based international Jewish organization founded in 1860 with the purpose of safeguarding human rights for Jews around the world It promotes the ideals of Jewish self defense and self sufficiency through education and professional development The organization is noted for establishing French language schools for Jewish children throughout the Mediterranean Iran and the former Ottoman Empire in the 19th and early 20th centuries Alliance israelite universelleכל ישראל חברים Door detail of Mikveh Israel 2009AIU ParisShow map of FranceAIU ParisShow map of EuropeFounded1860 164 years ago 1860 PurposeHumanitarianismHeadquartersParis FranceOfficial languageFrench HebrewKey peopleMark Ayzenberg president AffiliationsJudaismWebsitehttp www aiu org fr Entrance to the seat of the Societe d histoire des Juifs de Tunisie and the Alliance israelite universelle in Paris The motto of the organization is the Jewish rabbinic injunction kol yisrael arevim ze laze כל ישראל ערבים זה לזה translated into French as tous les israelites sont solidaires les uns des autres transl all Jews are responsible for one another 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Schools 2 Schools by country 2 1 Schools in Israel 2 2 Schools in Turkey 3 Impact on Girls and Women 4 The AIU and Secularization 5 Political Influence 6 Presidents 7 Notable alumni 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 In French 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp Adolphe Cremieux an early supporter of the Alliance and its president 1863 67 and again 1868 80 2 In 1860 Alliance Israelite Universelle embarked on a mission civilisatrice to advance the Jews of the Middle East through French education and culture 3 It was founded by Jules Carvallo Isidore Cahen fr Narcisse Leven secretary of Adolphe Cremieux Elie Aristide Astruc and Eugene Manuel May 1860 in Paris 4 5 and opened its first school in Tetouan Morocco in 1862 6 The original members of the society were Jews and by far the largest number of its members belong to that faith but the association has enjoyed the sympathy and cooperation of many prominent Christians who As outlined in its prospectus the program of the society included the emancipation of the Jews from oppressive and discriminating laws political disabilities and defense of them in those countries where they were subjected to persecution 4 nbsp Medal by Emmanuel Hannaux for the 50th anniversary of the Alliance Israelite Universelle 1910 in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland Basel inv no JMS 557 Female personification with the symbols of the Alliance The other side shows Narcisse Leven in profile For the attainment of its objectives the society proposed to carry on a campaign of education through the press and by the publication of works on the history and life of the Jews In the beginning however the course of action adopted by the society for bringing relief to their oppressed brethren in other countries was to secure the intercession of friendly governments on their behalf Thus as early as 1867 the governments of France Italy Belgium and the Netherlands made the renewal of existing treaties with Switzerland conditional upon that country s granting full civil and political rights to the Jews In 1878 representatives of the Alliance laid the condition of the Jews in the Balkan Peninsula before the Congress of Berlin as a result of which the Treaty of Berlin stipulated that in Romania Serbia and Bulgaria no discrimination should be made against any religion in the distribution of civil rights 4 Schools edit nbsp Gate of the school of Alliance israelite universelle 1882 on Jaffa Road in Jerusalem nbsp Inscriptions at the fountain in front of the former school of the Alliance Israelite Universelle in RhodesOver time the activity of the Alliance became more focused on education and especially on improving the welfare of Jews 4 Two years after the first school was opened in Tetuan an Alliance school opened in Baghdad in 1864 7 In 1870 Charles Netter a founding member of Alliance israelite universelle received a tract of land from the Ottoman Empire as a gift and opened the Mikveh Israel agricultural school the first of a network of Jewish schools in Palestine before the establishment of the State of Israel Over 60 Alliance schools operated in the Ottoman Middle East Iran and North Africa providing Jewish children from poor families with formal elementary school and vocational training Many of the teachers were educated at Alliance teacher training schools in Turkey and France 8 The Alliance founded a free school in Jerusalem in 1868 9 This was followed by Mikveh Israel near Jaffa in 1870 10 In 1882 a secondary school for boys was established in Jerusalem Amin al Husseini was one of their pupils 11 The original building on Jaffa Road was demolished after 1967 12 In 1903 the Zionist group Bnei Moshe was to be given a grant to open a school but the funding was withdrawn due to Beni Moshe s insistence that lessons should be in the Hebrew language The following year the Alliance donated the property which later became Neve Tzedek girls and Gymnasia Hezliya boys schools 13 In 1906 the Alliance opened a secondary school for girls in Jerusalem 14 By 1900 Alliance Israelite Universelle was operating 100 schools with a combined student population of 26 000 Its greatest efforts were concentrated in Morocco Tunisia and Turkey 6 After decades of teaching in French exclusively the schools began teaching Hebrew to their students after the eleventh Zionist Congress insisted amidst the modern revival of the Hebrew language that it be included in the curriculum 15 In 1912 the Alliance had 71 schools for boys and 44 for girls with schools in Baghdad Jerusalem Tangier Istanbul Beirut Cairo Damascus and Salonica For Jews it was the chief provider of modern education 16 A 1930 report found that there were 10 Jewish schools in Baghdad educating 7 182 children Two of them were run by the Alliance Israelite Universelle The boy s school had originally been the David Sassoon school founded in 1865 Albert Sassoon had given it to the Alliance in 1874 It contained 475 boys Four languages were taught Hebrew Arabic French and English There were classes in the Sciences Geography and History All were taught in French except for moral and religious studies which were in Hebrew The Alliance School for Girls was established by Elly Kadoorie with 1177 pupils and with a similar syllabus 17 As a result of the influence of the French language schools Judaeo Spanish acquired many neologisms from French citation needed Schools by country editSchools in Israel edit nbsp Alliance girls school in Jerusalem 1935Alliance israelite universelle continues to operate dozens of schools and educational programs in Israel today Historic schools include the Alliance High School in Tel Aviv Alliance israelite universelle High School in Haifa Rene Cassin High School and the Braunschweig Conservative High School in Jerusalem The network also includes the School for the Deaf in Jerusalem in which deaf students Jews and Arabs with various mental and physical disabilities study together The Mikve Israel Youth Village operates a state high school a state religious high school specializing in life and natural sciences environmental sciences and biotechnology and a French Israeli high school established in 2007 as a joint initiative of the Israeli and French governments 18 Schools in Turkey edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2023 When French medium schools operated by Alliance Israelite Universelle opened in the 1860s the position of Judaeo Spanish Ladino began to weaken in the Ottoman Empire areas 19 Judaeo Spanish was not used as a language of instruction in any time in history and was instead acquired though families therefore Hebrew was perceived as the ethnic instructional language for Jewish people used for religious reasons in the empire 20 In time Judaeo Spanish became perceived as a low status language so people avoided learning it 19 As time progressed Judaeo Spanish language and culture declined and in 2017 writer Melis Alphan described Judaeo Spanish as dying in Turkey 19 Impact on Girls and Women editThe Alliance Israelite Universelle AIU changed and shaped the roles and opportunities for women in North Africa Before the establishment of the AIU primarily girls from wealthy or rabbinical families received an education 21 Literacy and skilled training provided an opportunity for upward social mobility especially to Jewish girls of underprivileged backgrounds who could not attain an education previously Curricula featured foundational mathematics such as arithmetic and exposure to European subjects such as European geography and the French language 21 Additionally girls received vocational training in fields such as needlework sewing bookkeeping secretarial work laboratory assistance and industrial chemistry this training promoted the economic independence of Jewish women in the region 21 Many North African women were also educated and trained as AIU teachers in France returning thereafter to their countries of origin to teach Along with economic change the AIU changed cultural norms for Jewish girls in the Maghreb as well Primarily the AIU lobbied to extend the typical marriage age from twelve to fifteen by 1948 21 This changing role of women led to controversy regarding the secularization of Jewish society through Western style education The AIU and Secularization editThe AIU and more generally the French colonization of swaths of North Africa shifted education from the hands of rabbis and religious leaders to secular European instructors In Algeria this shift resulted in a legal mandate in 1845 a law required Jews of Algeria to be registered in French schools and to only attend a religious school as a supplement 22 Although the AIU did teach both secular and religious subjects such as Hebrew and Biblical History religious leaders still questioned and bemoaned the secularization 21 Similarly the AIU attempted to secularize the Jewish legal systems in North Africa Before colonization Jews in Morocco operated their legal system according to Halacha Jewish law In 1913 the AIU appealed to the French government to try the indigenous Jewish inhabitants in French courts instead of rabbinical tribunals 23 Political Influence editAlong with secularization the AIU used its power to advocate the political assimilation of Maghrebi Jews into French society AIU instructors were instrumental in the movement of naturalization for educated Moroccan Jews 24 Presidents editLouis Jean Koenigswarter 1860 1863 Adolphe Cremieux 1863 1867 Salomon Munk 1867 1867 Adolphe Cremieux 1868 1880 Salomon Hayum Goldschmidt 1882 1898 Narcisse Leven 1898 1915 Arnold Netter 1915 1920 interim Sylvain Levi 1920 1935 Arnold Netter 1936 1936 Georges Leven 1936 1941 Rene Cassin 1943 1976 Jules Braunschvig 1976 1985 Adolphe Steg 1985 2011 Marc Eisenberg 2011 Notable alumni edit nbsp Gal MekelDin Din Aviv Israeli pop and folk singer Gal Mekel born 1988 Israeli NBA basketball player 25 Ori Yogev Israeli businessman David Alliance British Iranian businessmanSee also editEducation in Israel France Israel relations Jews of FranceReferences edit Leff Lisa Moses August 24 2006 Sacred Bonds of Solidarity The Rise of Jewish Internationalism in Nineteenth Century France Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804752510 via Google Books Mrejen O Hana Simone 2003 Isaac Jacob Adolphe Cremieux Avocat homme politique president du Consistoire central et de l Alliance israelite universelle Archives Juives 36 2 139 146 doi 10 3917 aj 362 0139 ISSN 0003 9837 Beinin Joel August 24 2005 The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry Culture Politics and the Formation of a Modern Diaspora American Univ in Cairo Press ISBN 9789774248900 via Google Books a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Alliance Israelite Universelle New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Alliance israelite universelle Encyclopedia of Jewish History and Culture Online doi 10 1163 2468 8894 ejhc com 0017 Retrieved 2021 07 17 a b Mark A Tessler 1994 A History of the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Indiana University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 253 20873 6 OCLC 1020226308 Eppel Michael January 1 1998 The Elite the Effendiyya and the Growth of Nationalism and Pan Arabism in Hashemite Iraq 1921 1958 International Journal of Middle East Studies 30 2 227 250 doi 10 1017 S0020743800065880 S2CID 163021316 via www academia edu Lewis Bernard August 24 1984 The Jews of Islam Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780691008073 via Google Books Parfitt Tudor 1987 The Jews in Palestine 1800 1882 Royal Historical Society Studies in History 52 Woodbridge Published for the Royal Historical Society by Boydell ISBN 0 86193 209 9 p 155 Sanders Ronald 1983 The High Walls of Jerusalem A History of the Balfour Declaration and the Birth of the British Mandate of Palestine Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 0 03 053971 4 p 13 Blincoe Nicholas 2019 More Noble Than War The Story of Football in Israel and Palestine Constable London ISBN 978 1 47212 439 5 p 27 Gilbert Martin 1996 Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century Chatto amp Windus ISBN 0 7011 3070 9 p 36 Blencoe pp 45 46 Gilbert p 36 Gilbert Israel A History 2008 p 29 Ammiel Alcalay 1993 After Jews and Arabs Remaking Levantine Culture U of Minnesota Press p 44 ISBN 978 1 4529 0001 8 OCLC 748858670 Sassoon David Solomon 1949 A History of the Jews of Baghdad Published posthumously by his son Solomon David Sassoon 5709 1949 pp 171 172 Israel Haverim history a b c Alphan Melis 2017 12 09 Ladino A Judeo Ottoman language that is dying in Turkey Hurriyet Retrieved 2023 12 25 Zetler Reyhan 2014 Turkish Jews between 1923 and 1933 What Did the Turkish Policy between 1923 and 1933 Mean for the Turkish Jews PDF Bulletin der Schweizerischen Gesellschaft fur Judaistische Forschung 23 26 PDF p 14 28 OCLC 865002828 a b c d e Morocco Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Jewish Women s Archive jwa org Retrieved 2018 04 14 Taieb Carlen Sarah 2010 02 23 The Jews of North Africa From Dido to De Gaulle University Press of America ISBN 9780761850441 Laskier Michael M 1983 Aspects of the Activities of the Alliance Israelite Universelle in the Jewish Communities of the Middle East and North Africa 1860 1918 Modern Judaism 3 2 147 171 doi 10 1093 mj 3 2 147 JSTOR 1396078 Laskier Michael M 1997 06 01 North African Jewry in the Twentieth Century The Jews of Morocco Tunisia and Algeria NYU Press ISBN 9780814752654 Gal Mekel Bio GoShockers com Official Web Site of Wichita State Athletics Archived from the original on 2014 12 10 Retrieved 2013 11 09 Further reading editLaskier Michael M The Alliance Israelite Universelle and the Jewish Communities of Morocco 1862 1962 1984 online Levy Richard S ed Antisemitism A historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution Vol 1 ABC CLIO 2005 pp 10 12 Sciarcon Jonathan Educational Oases in the Desert The Alliance Israelite Universelle s Girls Schools in Ottoman Iraq 1895 1915 Albany State Univ of New York Press SUNY 2017 196 pp ISBN 978 1 4384 6585 2 In French edit Ktziya Aviali Tevivian Voyage vers le passe un nouveau monde est ne le XIXe siecle Ed Matah techn 2003 Andre Chouraqui L Alliance israelite universelle et la Renaissance juive contemporaine 1860 1960 P U F 1965 Matia Kam Mikve Israel Ed Matah techn Fonds Avi Hai Andre Kaspi Histoire de l Alliance israelite universelle De 1860 a nos jours Ed Armand Colin 2010 Narcisse Leven Cinquante ans d histoire l Alliance israelite universelle 1860 1910 Paris 1911 Aharon Rodrigues Education societe et histoire L Alliance israelite universelle Ed Institut Yad Ben Zvi 1991 Chevalier Caron C L heritage des activites de l Alliance israelite universelle dans les relations entre accueillants es et accueillis es a Montreal et en France des annees 1950 aux annees 1980 le cas des migrations d origine marocaine Canadian Jewish Studies Etudes Juives Canadiennes 34 112 129 2022 https cjs journals yorku ca index php cjs article view 40294 External links editOfficial website in French History of Alliance Israelite Universelle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alliance Israelite Universelle amp oldid 1205023686, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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