Salamone Rossi, a Jewish composer in the Mantua Ghetto, publishes in 1622 his unique collection of Hebrew texts set to music. The first of its kind. The music of it are in the general style practiced at the time by Christian composers
[link to NL]
In 1987, Joshua Jacobson, a scholar from the US visits the National Library in Jerusalem and finds there that one melody by Rossi [link to NL]
that has some similarity to oral recording from the 1950s made by the ethnoimusicologist Leo Levi
[link to NL]. He publishes his finds in an article in Musica Judaica
[link to NL].
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You get the knight's helmet on your way to join the National Library's young knights club! did you know there were Jewish knights? (continue the game and learn all about it)
Umberto Genazzani left Italy to Israel following the Italian Racial Laws, before WWII.
Check out his photo riding his car, in the country roads of Umbria. Working as doctor (part of the National Library's collection of historical photographs):
The Racial Laws forbade Jewish doctors from treating Christian patients, and when they were declared Umberto was fired from his work.
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