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Alma Gottlieb
AGottlieb

Across the Seder Table:
The Jews of Cape Verde



Dr. Alma Gottlieb
Professor Emerita at the University of Illinois
Visiting Scholar at Brown University
Past President of the Society for Humanistic Anthropology

Jews fleeing anti-Semitism in Spain and Portugal in the 15th century were among the original settlers of the Cape Verde islands. After the Inquisition was established, they had to go into hiding. Later, as the Inquisition was losing power, other Jews arrived from Morocco, adding a new layer of Jewish influence to this island outpost.
Dr. Gottlieb explored the 500 years of Jewish influence in Cape Verde, looking especially at present day Cape Verdean-Americans of Jewish ancestry and how they understand their mixed religious heritage. Like New Mexicans, the ancestors of these people were forced to conceal or abandon their religion. What parallels—and differences—link them with the better-known crypto-Jewish experience of New Mexico?

Gottlieb has received awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, Social Science Research Council, National Endowment for the Humanities, Wenner-Gren Foundation, and other agencies for her research.


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The Santa Fe Distinguished Lecture Series is a program
of the Institute for Tolerance Studies is the 501-c-3 organization


This program is generously underwritten by Doris Francis in honor of the memory of Louis Erhard.

  It is made possible in part with support of the New Mexico Humanities Council.

Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in these programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities or the New Mexico Humanities Council.