Jacques Faitlovitch (1881–1955) was an anthropologist.
Biography
An Ashkenazi Jew born in Łódź, Congress Poland, Faitlovitch studied Ethiopian languages at the Sorbonne under Joseph Halévy. He travelled to Ethiopia for the first time in 1904, with support from the French banker, Baron Edmond de Rothschild.
He travelled and lived among the Ethiopian Jews, and became a champion of their cause.[dubious – discuss] In 1923 he opened a Jewish school in Addis Ababa.[1][2][3][4]
A Zionist, he settled in Tel Aviv in the 1930s and had links with Yitzhak Ben Zvi and with the revisionist movement. Faitlovitch bequeathed his valuable library to the Tel Aviv Municipality, with the collection now located at the Sourasky Library of the Tel Aviv University.[5]
A film about Faitlovitch's life was planned by Six Point Films. A film entitled Jacques Faitlovitch and the Lost Tribes, directed by French filmmakers, Maurice and Sarah Dorès, was screened in 2012 and later in various film festivals.[6][7][8][9]
References
Sources
- Return of a Lost Tribe Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
- Emanuela Trevisan Semi, Tudor Parfitt. Jews of Ethiopia.
- Photos and letters of Dr. Faitlovitch appear in the Koren Ethiopian Haggada: The Journey to Freedom (pages 72–73) – Waldman, Menachem (2012-02-01). Koren Ethiopian Haggada: The Journey to Freedom (in Hebrew) (Hebrew/English ed.). Jerusalem; New Milford, CT: Koren Publishers Jerusalem. ISBN 9789653012929.
External links
- Works by or about Jacques Faitlovitch at Internet Archive
- Works by or about Jacques Faitlovitch in University Library JCS Frankfurt am Main: Digital Collections Judaica