Faculty and students of UC Santa Barbara’s Religious studies kicked-off the academic year with hopes of peace and collaboration in the department and among religious groups worldwide. Department chair Juan Campo urged the campus to focus on efforts to foster peace as students and faculty navigate times of immense violence and suffering on all sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Cookbook author Benedetta Jasmin Guetta spoke to a UC Santa Barbara audience about the evolution of Italian Jewish cuisine throughout history. The talk was sponsored by UCSB’s Taubman Symposium, a speaker series run by UCSB’s Jewish Studies Program.
In her upcoming novel Atomic Anna, author Rachel Barenbaum poses the question: What would happen if a woman was in charge of the Chernobyl nuclear plant in the Soviet Union in 1986? “Atomic Anna follows three generations of women – grandmother, mother, and daughter – as they build a time machine to stop the Chernobyl disaster and save their family,” Barenbaum said at a recent virtual luncheon hosted by UC Santa Barbara’s Taubman Endowed Symposia in Jewish Studies.
UC Santa Barbara religious studies professor Juan Campo and Arabic language lecturer Magda Campo spoke last week on Jewish kosher food and Islamic halal food, and they prepared a chicken and couscous meal for a CalFresh enrollment party co-hosted by UCSB Health & Wellness, Thrive, and the Educational Opportunity Program. The event publicized the CalFresh program and UCSB’s Halal and Kosher Grocery Program for food-insecure students who observe these religions’ dietary laws.
UCSB’s Middle East Ensemble has performed at Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall, marking their return to live performances since the COVID-19 pandemic required social distancing. The ensemble has been performing as an ethnomusicology performance ensemble in UCSB’s Music department for 33 years. The concert showcased the diversity of Middle East cultures through a series of music and dance performances from across the region, including pieces by Egyptian legend Umm Kulthum.