Travail in an Arab Land
Samuel Romanelli
1792
Free of any preoccupations, I allowed myself to seek out and investigate the Jews, their manners and customs. They are good-hearted folk, charitable and hospitable to strangers. They honor the Torah and study it. They hold the European Jews who come there in high esteem and call them “freemen.”
The lack of books and news mires their hearts in the…
Creator Bio
Samuel Romanelli
Italian Hebrew poet, translator, and playwright Samuel Aaron Romanelli was born in Mantua and traveled extensively throughout his life. He is best known for his Hebrew travelogue Masa ba-arav, which describes Jewish life in Morocco from a Western perspective. His language drips with condescension when he regards the seemingly primitive and exotic Jews of North Africa, but he preserved a priceless picture of their lifeways. While living in Germany, Romanelli befriended Berlin maskilim such as Isaac Euchel and David Friedländer. He worked as a proofreader in Vienna and published his play Alot ha-minḥah in honor of the marriage of Charlotte Arnstein. A number of his Hebrew works appeared with Italian translations. He returned to Mantua in 1807 and died in Casale Monferrato.
Related Guide
Literature and Modernity
Jewish writing in the period spanning 1750–1880 reflects the profound changes that confronted Jews in modernity. Some writers self-consciously broke with traditional and religious models; others definitely embraced it.
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Travel Writing
The proliferation of the press and travel by steamship (and toward the end of the period, railroad) brought descriptions of far-flung parts of the world and reports about Jews living in them from one corner of the globe to another.
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