A SUPPLEMENTARY FALASHA BIBLIOGRAPHY
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III. ARTICLES AND BOOKS ON THE FALASHAS
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86. Lifschitz, D. Un sacrifice chez les Falacha, Juifs d'Abyssinie. La Terre et la Vie, Vol. IX, No. 4 (1939), pp. 116-123. |
87. Millgram, A. E. The Sabbath among the Falashas, in his Sabbath, the Day of Delight. Philadelphia, 1944, pp.374-377. Taken from Faitlovitch and Stern. |
88. Leslau, Wolf. A religious Falasha dispute. Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, XVI (1947), pp. 71-95. Edition and Commentary on an Amharic text dealing with a dispute between the Falashas and the Protestant missionaries. Excursion 3: Did the Falashas speak Hebrew? |
89. Leslau, Wolf. The Black Jews of Ethiopia. Commentary, VII (1949) pp. 216-224 Reprinted in Negro bDigest, October, 1949, pp. 73-81. |
90. Leslau, Wolf. Falasha Anthology. New Haven, 1951. (Yale Judaica Series, 6). Pages i-xliii: Falasha research today; religious life; the literature of the Falashas; history and origin. |
91. Leslau, Wolf. Les Fallachas. Evidences. Paris, Vol. VI, No. 43 (1954) pp. 28-33. On the basis of the Falasha Anthology. |
91a. Messing, Simon D. Journey to the Falashas. Commentary, XXII (1956) pp. 28-40. |
91b. Friedenberg, Daniel M. The decline and fall of the Falashas. Judaism, V (1956) pp. 239-247. See No. 91 C (99 in this database) |
91c. Leslau, Wolf. To the defense of the Falashas. Judaism, VI (1957) pp. 142-147. A reply to no. 91B. (98 in this database) |
91d. Leslau, Wolf. Coutumes et croyances des Falachas (Juifs d'Abyssinie). Paris, 1957. (Travaux et memoires de l'Institut d'ethnologie, vol. 61) Amharic text on the costumes of the Falashas translated into French. Notes dealing with information on the Falashas given in various sources. |
91e. America's Black Jews. Ebony. Vol. XI, No. 7 (1957) pp. 96-100. The Commandment Keepers maintain close spiritual and sentimental ties to Ethiopia, where some 60,000 Black Jews, called Falasha, live. Like the Falashas of Ethiopia, the Commandment Keepers claim to be descendants of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba (p. 96). |