The Convergence of Judaism and Islam. Religious, Scientific, and Cultural Dimensions
A Study of Jewish Communal Leadership in Meknes, 1750–1912 r 321
- Amar, Taqanot, 91. See also the required oath of honesty upon being assessed for
taxes (JNUL F 16107: 39).
- Gerber, Jewish Society in Fez, 69; Ben-Naeh, “Poverty,” 186; Deshen, The Mellah
Society, 68.
- See Cohen, Poverty and Charity, 200–204, and Yaacov Lev, Charity, Endowments,
and Charitable Institutions in Medieval Islam (Gainesville: University Press of Florida,
2005), 66–67.
- Cohen suggests the influence of Islam for both the prevalence and the form of
Jewish pious endowments in medieval Egypt. Cohen, Poverty and Charity, 202–203.
- The first taqanah is dated either 1747 or 1751. See JNUL F 43691: 19. The second is
from 1771. See Amar, Taqanot, 14. Another case of a heqdesh being dedicated to the poor
concerns a house that was transferred to Rabbi Yosef Berdugo in order to found a yeshiva
(AHJP MA/MK/28).
- On the importance of hazaqot in Jewish history, see Meir Benayahu, “Legal Agree-
ments Concerning ‘Hazaqot of Courtyards, Houses, and Stores’ in Salonika and the Rul-
ings of Rabbi Yosef Taitatzaq,” Michael 9 (1985) (Hebrew).
- JNUL F 16107: 32–33. These taqanot are from 1781.
- Amar, Taqanot, 258.
- YBZ 1822: 7. In 1895, its revenues yielded a donation of ten duoros, not a paltry
sum. See Le Tourneau, Fès avant le protectorat, 283.
- Amar, Dvar Shmuel, no. 29.
- Amar, Taqanot, 217, 385.
- The first such taqanah is from 1786 (ibid., 29). For similar stipulations, see the
nineteenth-century taqanot in JNUL F 44688: 2, and JNUL B 578: 1.
- Gerber, Jewish Society in Fez, 70–71.
- On traditional Jewish charity, see Eugene C. Black, The Social Politics of Anglo-
Jewry, 1880–1920 (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988), especially 76–78, 93, and Heinz-Diet-
rich Lowe, “From Charity to Social Policy: The Emergence of Jewish ‘Self-Help’ Orga-
nizations in Imperial Russia, 1800–1914,” East European Jewish Affairs 27, no. 2 (1997).
On the Middle Eastern context, see Mine Ener, Managing Egypt’s Poor and the Politics of
Benevolence, 1800–1952 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2003).
- Edward Fram, “The Limitation of Luxuries in the Jewish Community of Krakow
at the End of the Sixteenth Century and the Beginning of the Seventeenth Century,” Gal-
Ed on the History of the Jews in Poland 18 (2002): 17–23 (Hebrew).
- Amar, Taqanot: 73–74, 75–76, 85–88, 93–95, 144–46, 163, 168, 261–62, 265–69,
358–62, 363–70, 390–93.
- See Fram, “The Limitation of Luxuries”; Jay R. Berkovitz, “Social and Religious
Controls in Pre-Revolutionary France: Rethinking the Beginnings of Modernity,” Jewish
History 15, no. 1 (2001); Jay R. Berkovitz, Rites and Passages: The Beginnings of Mod-
ern Jewish Culture in France, 1650–1860 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
2004), 35–58; Yaron Ben-Naeh, “‘One Cup of Coffee’: Ordinances Concerning Luxuries
and Recreation; A Chapter in the Cultural and Social History of the Jewish Sephardi
Community of Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century,” Turcica 37 (2005).