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OverviewFor over a thousand years, the hearts of Sicily's Jews beat to the rhythm of the Mediterranean. Arriving in Roman times, they founded communities along the coast, in Palermo, Messina, Syracuse, and Catania, building lives of faith, craft, and learning. Synagogues rose beside marketplaces; the scent of wine and olives mingled with prayer, and scholars wrote as waves whispered beyond the walls. Under Arab rule, Jewish culture flourished even more. Physicians, merchants, and scholars moved freely between Sicily, Tunis, and Córdoba, their Hebrew interwoven with Arabic, psalms echoing alongside Andalusian hymns. The Normans and Hohenstaufens continued to protect these communities, allowing them to grow in strength and spirit. This fragile balance shattered in the fifteenth century with Spanish rule. The Church hardened its heart; blood libels, fear, and forced conversions disturbed the peace. Yet study houses remained open, and Sabbath candles still glowed at twilight. Then, in 1492, the royal decree arrived. Thousands were forced to pack their lives into small chests and flee across the very sea they had long mastered. Those who remained converted and lived in hiding; those who left carried with them the memory of Palermo's alleys and the scent of Catania's fields. Thus, the ancient light of Sicilian Jewry was extinguished, though its glimmer never truly died. It traveled with the exiles and remained etched in the memory of the Mediterranean. Against this turbulent backdrop, a forbidden love blossoms between Sofia Pellegrini, the daughter of a Catholic wine merchant, and Lorenzo di Montalbano, the youngest son of a powerful family from Syracuse. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Uri Jerzy NachimsonPublisher: Uri Jerzy Nachimson Imprint: Uri Jerzy Nachimson Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.259kg ISBN: 9798233087189Pages: 220 Publication Date: 26 December 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationUri Jerzy Nachimson was born in Szczecin, Poland, in 1947. Two years later, his parents emigrated to Israel. In 1966, he served in the Israeli army in the Northern Command for three years. He participated in the Six-Day War as a photographer in combat. As a freelance photographer, he wandered around Prague as crowds demonstrated in front of Soviet tanks. His travels to Egypt are the inspiration for his book, Seeds of Love. In 1990, he returned for the first time to Poland to seek his roots. He was deeply affected by the attitude of the Poles towards the Jews during and after World War II, and he started to research the history of the Jews of Poland. Thus, the trilogy was born: Lilly's Album, The Polish Patriot, and Identity. Uri's grandmother, Ida Friedberg, was the granddaughter of the Jewish writer A.S. Friedberg, editor of the Polish Jewish newspaper Hazefira, and the author of many books. In 2005, Uri moved to Tuscany, Italy, where he lives with his wife. While in Cortona, he wrote Two Margherita, Broken Hearts in Boulevard Unirii, Recalled to Life, Violette and Ginger, The Girl from Haukaloolloo, Isabella, In the Depth of Silence, and others. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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