Ethiopian News and Opinion Journal


  • HOME
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • CONTACT
  • FORUM
  • VIDEO
  • DIRECTORY
  • ADVERTISE
  • ALBUM
  • DICTIONARY
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EXERCISE
  • Login

The Ethiopian-Israeli experience captured by two plays

June 25th, 2009 |

By Rick Kardonne | Jewish Tribune

TEL AVIV — Winnipeg-born-and-raised theatre producer-director Howard Rypp’s Nephesh Theatre, which began in Toronto, has, for Tel Aviv’s 100th anniversary, presented two original plays about the Ethiopian-Jewish immigration to Israel, which have already been internationally acknowledged as major contemporary cultural works of great significance.

It Sounds Better in Amharic by Yossi Vassa and Shai ebn Attar, and starring Vassa, traces the personal story of his immigration to Israel and his integration into Israeli society.

The main theme is, as Rypp explains, “the clash of cultures between African culture and Israeli society.” Within Africa, Ethiopia is its own cultural entity: a fusion of a politically independent tradition, an ancient Christian culture and a surprisingly sophisticated modern jazz scene in Addis Ababa. Together with the often dangerous immigration into Israel from being an oppressed Jewish minority within Ethiopia and the normal difficult stresses of immigration into a religiously compatible society within Israel, It Sounds Better in Amharic is a master work on this uniquely Jewish topic.

This play has been performed worldwide. In Canada the English version has been performed four times: at Ashkenaz, Hillel, and, thanks to the well-known Toronto-Tel Aviv-based Jewish philanthropist Nathan Jacobson, to the Somali community in Toronto’s west end.

On May 11, Rachel Manelson, director of Europe, the UK and Canada for the Tel Aviv Foundation, presented It Sounds Better in Amharic to 100 British donors who came in from England to the Inbal Theatre in the Neve Tsedek district of downtown Tel Aviv. This gala event was also sponsored by Jacobson.

In contrast to this one-man show, the large-cast musical, One of a Kind, also written by Vassa and ben-Attar on the general topic of the Ethiopian-Jewish-Israeli experience, with music by Idan Zilbershtein, is being presented in Rehovot on May 18. This show has also toured internationally. Andy Webster of The New York Times termed this musical “impressive – exhilarating – inspirational – with much to offer.” Paulanne Simmons of Curtain Up Magazine defines it as being “filled with compassion and humour: perfect family entertainment.”

One of a Kind was the winner of the Best Play in Israel 2006 and eight other coveted prizes.

Since its inception in Canada in 1978 with the Toronto presentation of Gabriel Emmanuel’s gripping drama Children of Night about Janusz Korczak, the legendary teacher in the Warsaw Ghetto, Nephesh Theatre has been one of the world’s leading showcases of contemporary Jewish theatre. Since moving to Israel from Canada in 1983, Nephesh Theatre has produced dozens of new works, which have received international acclaim, including throughout the US, Canada, Mexico, Greece, England and Australia, as well as widespread Israeli exposure.

They continue to maintain a Canadian presence with their coming productions of a dramatized version of Isaac Bashevis Singer’s classic Gimpel the Fool at the Winnipeg and Saskatoon film festivals.

Nephesh receives funding from the Israeli ministry of culture, and the foreign ministry has produced many of its international productions, together with an increasing number of private investors.

Email This Post | Add a comment FORUM



Related Posts

  1. Israeli minister in Ethiopian racism row
  2. Belaynesh: The first Ethiopian-Israeli diplomat
  3. Israeli fighter jets scramble to intercept an Ethiopian plane
  4. Ethiopian member of Israeli Parliament to speak in New York
  5. Rate of Ethiopians joining Israeli Defence Forces higher than average

Leave a Comment

To write your comment in Amharic click here. አስተያየትዎን በአማርኛ ለመጻፍ እዚህ ይጫኑ:: ጽፈው ከጨረሱ በኋላ የጻፉትን ኮፒ አድርገው ወደዚህ ተመልሰው አስተያየት መስጫ ቦክስ ውስጥ ፔስት ያድርጉ::



Click to cancel reply








Recent Posts
  • Ethiopian Youth Public Meeting in Dallas – Saturday, Feb. 11
  • DC area Ethiopian churches under attack
  • Saudi pressured to release detained Ethiopians
  • International Ethiopian Women Conference March 9-11
  • ALEJE and OLF Public Meeting in Washington DC – Feb. 19
  • Where the truth lies in Ethiopia
  • Transformative Reconciliation for Unity in a Nutshell
  • When we were the peacemakers
  • Cooperative Behavior for Transformatve Reconciliation & Unity
  • A resurgent Ethiopian opposition in a new form
  • African Beggars Union Hall?
  • Kilil system is an instrument of Ethiopian disenfrachisement – Part 4
  • Several Meles Zenawi bodyguards arrested
  • UN experts dismayed by growing repression in Ethiopia
  • Swedish journalists appeal to Ethiopia’s dictator
  • Another sign of worsening repression in Ethiopia – IFEX
  • Using Anti-Terror Laws to Terrorize Dissent
  • We’ve met the enemy and he is us
  • Essentials to Resolve Differences for Reconciliation
  • Ethiopian delegation delivers letter to Saudi Arabia embassy in DC


©2012 Ethiopian Review
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief: Elias Kifle
Powered by WordPress