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Kalimah Press Kalimah Press is dedicated to publishing works of non-fiction and fiction in English about the Middl

A reminder: happening today. https://www.afikra.com/events/convo-linda-jacobs
12/10/2021

A reminder: happening today.
https://www.afikra.com/events/convo-linda-jacobs

Join us for an online conversation with author, archaeologist, and founder of KalimahPress Dr. Linda K. Jacobs to discuss her interest in promoting Middle Eastern culture and knowledge in the United States. Having all four of her grandparents’ members of the New York Syrian Colony, Linda is at wor

Afikra is holding a Conversation with Linda Jacobs on October 12. Save the Date. It will be fun and it's free!https://ww...
09/09/2021

Afikra is holding a Conversation with Linda Jacobs on October 12. Save the Date. It will be fun and it's free!
https://www.afikra.com/events/convo-linda-jacobs

Join us for an online conversation with author, archaeologist, and founder of KalimahPress Dr. Linda K. Jacobs to discuss her interest in promoting Middle Eastern culture and knowledge in the United States. Having all four of her grandparents’ members of the New York Syrian Colony, Linda is at wor

19/03/2021

The city's artists and designers are more determined than ever to survive—and thrive.

Here's Dr. Najib S. Taky Ud-Deen (Takieddine), a Druse from Bakaline, who got a medical degree from Baltimore College of...
02/02/2021

Here's Dr. Najib S. Taky Ud-Deen (Takieddine), a Druse from Bakaline, who got a medical degree from Baltimore College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1900 and joined the US Army as a Surgeon. He was posted to the Philippines.

After a three-year hiatus, Jacobs has resumed blogging about the Syrian diaspora in the United States. The latest can be...
04/12/2020

After a three-year hiatus, Jacobs has resumed blogging about the Syrian diaspora in the United States. The latest can be found here: https://kalimahpress.com/blog/carneys-carnival-impresarios-of-the-early-syrian-diaspora/. Enjoy, and feel free to share.

Carneys: Carnival Impresarios of the Early Syrian Diaspora by Linda K. Jacobs | Dec 4, 2020 | Uncategorized | 0 comments There is a long history of Arabs performing in the United States, beginning before the Civil War when North African acrobatic troupes (some including women) traveled around the Ea...

This is amazing
16/10/2019

This is amazing

The three women pictured in this incredible photograph taken on this day in 1885 -- Anandibai Joshi of India, Keiko Okami of Japan, and Sabat Islambouli of Syria -- each became the first licensed female doctors in their respective countries. The three were students at the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania; one of the only places in the world at the time where women could study medicine.

As Mallika Rao writes in HuffPost, "If the timing doesn't seem quite right, that's understandable. In 1885, women in the U.S. still couldn't vote, nor were they encouraged to learn very much. Popular wisdom decreed that studying was a threat to motherhood." Given this, how did three women from around the world end up studying there to become doctors? The credit, according to Christopher Woolf of PRI's The World, goes to the Quakers who "believed in women’s rights enough to set up the WMCP way back in 1850 in Germantown.”

Woolf added, "It was the first women’s medical college in the world, and immediately began attracting foreign students unable to study medicine in their home countries. First they came from elsewhere in North America and Europe, and then from further afield. Women, like Joshi in India and Keiko Okami in Japan, heard about WMCP, and defied expectations of society and family to travel independently to America to apply, then figure out how to pay for their tuition and board... . Besides the international students, it also produced the nation’s first Native American woman doctor, Susan La Flesche, while African Americans were often students as well. Some of whom, like Eliza Grier, were former slaves."

To introduce children to more pioneering female doctors, we highly recommend the picture books: "Dr. Jo: How Sara Josephine Baker Saved the Lives of America's Children" for ages 5 to 9 (https://www.amightygirl.com/dr-jo), "Who Says Women Can’t Be Doctors? The Story of Elizabeth Blackwell” for ages 4 to 8 (https://www.amightygirl.com/who-says-women-can-t-be-doctors), and “The Doctor with an Eye for Eyes: The Story of Dr. Patricia Bath” for ages 5 to 9 (https://www.amightygirl.com/the-doctor-with-an-eye-for-eyes)

There is also an excellent book about 21 trailblazing women in medicine, “Bold Women of Medicine" for ages 12 and up at https://www.amightygirl.com/bold-women-of-medicine

For a fascinating book for adults about America's first Native American doctor, Susan La Flesche, we highly recommend "A Warrior of the People" at http://amzn.to/2zdzcDf

For more books to show kids that science is for everyone regardless of gender, check out our blog post, "The Top STEM Books to Inspire Science-Loving Mighty Girls," at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=13914

And, to encourage your Mighty Girl to make her mark on the world as a doctor or scientist, you can find toys and kits to foster her interest in our blog post, "Top 60 Science Toys for Mighty Girls," at https://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=10528

08/10/2019

The Grey Art Gallery is NYU's fine arts museum. Closed and reopening at 18 Cooper Sq in spring 2024.

Thanks to all at Manhattan College for having me speak about the Syrian Colony in New York on Wednesday. It was great fu...
07/10/2019

Thanks to all at Manhattan College for having me speak about the Syrian Colony in New York on Wednesday. It was great fun--Linda

Happy to say that Linda Jacobs' new book, Strangers No More: Syrians in the United States, 1880-1900 is now out. You can...
30/09/2019

Happy to say that Linda Jacobs' new book, Strangers No More: Syrians in the United States, 1880-1900 is now out. You can purchase it here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/strangers-no-more-linda-k-jacobs/1133366826?ean=9780983539261&st=PLA&sid=BNB_ADL+Core+Good+Books+-+Desktop+Low&sourceId=PLAGoNA&dpid=tdtve346c&2sid=Google_c&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIgIjAiqz55AIViYjICh0Ivg4SEAQYASABEgKfJ_D_BwE

Syrian/Lebanese immigration to the United States began only in 1878, but by 1900, Syrian men and women had settled in every state and territory, from Alabama to Wyoming. First traveling 5,000 miles to reach New York, these wanderers peddled their way to the furthest corners of the country,...

30/06/2019

A new book is coming this fall!

30/06/2019

Linda Jacobs giving a talk on the Syrian colony of lower Manhattan in the Nineteenth Century. What a fun day!

25/06/2019

Linda Jacobs will speak at the Cultural Majlis on June 29.

28/11/2017
www.palestine-studies.org

Linda Jacobs' most recent article appearing in Jerusalem Quarterly:

http://www.palestine-studies.org/sites/default/files/jq-articles/Pages%20from%20JQ%2071%20-%20Jacobs.pdf

30/09/2017
29.Little Syria

A podcast, produced by Laura Carlson, on the food and restaurants of "Little Syria" past and present.

The Feast podcast presents delectable stories from the dining tables of history. Find out what wars were won & which kingdoms were lost, all for the sake of a good meal. Join us every two weeks as we learn the delicious details to history’s big moments.

22/09/2017
Phoenician or Arab, Lebanese or Syrian ~ Who were the early Immigrants to America?

A great article about the early "Syrian" political identities in the US

Phoenician or Arab, Lebanese or Syrian ~ Who were the early Immigrants to America? September 20, 2017  |  Akram Khater This article is authored by Dr. Akram Khater, Director of the Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies and Khayrallah Distinguished Professor of Lebanese Diaspora Studies, an...

25/07/2017
Francesco Medici

Francesco Medici

Una nuova recensione alla mia versione italiana di:
Ameen Rihani, Il Libro di Khalid (The Book of Khalid), illustrazioni originali di Kahlil Gibran, traduzione e cura di Francesco Medici, prefazione di Paolo Branca, postfazione di Khaled Fouad Allam, con il patrocinio dell'Associazione interculturale chiara.riva, Edizioni Mesogea Culture Mediterranee, Messina 2014.
(CanadaUsa.net)

01/07/2017
July 2017 - Words Without Borders

Yes....

, Contested Land Series—Mount of Olives, East Jerusalem, Digital Pigment Print, 23 inch x 23 inch each, 2007. Courtesy of Sama Alshaibi and Ayyam Gallery, Dubai.

15/05/2017

A pleasure to give a talk on the Syrian Colony of New York to the Victorian Society of America. An engaged audience!

04/05/2017

Here's a crowdsourcing challenge. This is the 1929 dinner honoring Kahlil Gibran. Can you identify attendees? We think we've found Gibran, Naimy, Diab, Abu-Madi, AM Haddad, Nedra Haddad, Cesar Abdelnour, Najib Barbour, and Nasib Arida, but several people disagree. Please help!

30/04/2017
The Syrian Colony of Boston, 1890-1910

It is interesting to compare the Syrian colonies of New York City and Boston. Both cities were major ports in the nineteenth century and, along with Providence and Philadelphia, were east coast entry points for Syrians. Boston’s Syrian colony was reputedly second only to New York’s in size. The Boston Syrians lived in a tightly circumscribed South Cove neighborhood whose hub was Oliver Place, a street which became synonymous with the colony. [ 730 more words ]

http://kalimahpress.com/blog/the-syrian-colony-of-boston-1890-1910/

Syrian women sewing at Denison House, Boston, 1912 It is interesting to compare the Syrian colonies of New York City and Boston. Both cities were major ports in the nineteenth century and, along wi…

22/03/2017
News at MCNY

Don't miss this! Elizabeth Saylor will give a talk about Afifa Karam at Metropolitan College tomorrow nigh.

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