Matilda Koen-Sarano Explained

Matilda Koen-Sarano
Birth Date:31 July 1939
Birth Place:Milan, Italy
Nationality:Israeli
Alma Mater:Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Matilda Koen-Sarano (in Hebrew: מתילדה כהן-סראנו; 31 July 1939 – 4 June 2024) was an Italian-born Israeli writer. Born to Turkish Jewish parents, she was one of the most widely known writers in the Ladino language.

Early life

Koen-Sarano was born in Milan on 31 July 1939, to a Sephardic family from Turkey.[1] Her grandfather, Moshe, was born in Bergama in 1874. Her parents, Alfredo Sarano and Diana Hadjes, were both born in Aydın. Her father lived in Rhodes until 1925, while her mother in İzmir until 1938, marrying in Milan in 1938. During World War II, the family hid in the Italian mountains from the Nazi persecutions. Her father became the Secretary of the Jewish Community of Milan from 1945 until 1969. She married Aaron Koen and made aliyah in 1960.[2]

Career

Koen-Sarano studied in the Jewish Community School of Milan, and also studied languages at the Bocconi University in Milan and also Italian literature and Judaeo-Spanish literature and Judaeo-Spanish folklore at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

In 1960, she made aliyah. In the summer of 1979, she participated in the seminar for Ladino language radio producers held at Kol Israel. This sparked in her the desire to write in this language and of putting the spotlight on everything she lived by the end of her childhood. In order to achieve this, she started interviewing several people from the Sephardic world to record and keep hundreds of folk tales and traditional stories. Besides, this activity she made her return to the university as a scholar. Then she published her first book of Sephardic folk tales, named Kuentos del Folklor de la Famiya Djudeo-Espanyola (Folk Tales of the Judaeo-Spanish Family) in 1986,[3] in Jerusalem.

In April 2009 she published her last book, Kon bayles i kantes, Sefaradis de dor en dor (With Dances and Songs, Sephardim from Generation to Generation).[4]

Koen-Sarano taught Ladino at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev since 1996 and a course for Ladino teachers, organized by The National Authority for Ladino and its Culture, in Jerusalem, since 1998. She also wrote Judaeo-Spanish news copy and served as a frequent contributor in Ladino at Kol Israel.[5] [6]

Personal life and death

Koren-Sarano was a mother of three and grandmother of at least eight.[5] Her daughter, Liora Kelman, co-authored with her the cookbook Gizar kon Gozo.[7]

Koen-Sarano died on 4 June 2024, at the age of 84.[8]

Published works

Story books

Scripts

Audiobooks

Language courses

Cookbooks

Dictionaries

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/koen-sarano-matilda-1939-matildah-cohen-kohen-sarano-mathilde-cohen-sarano-matilda-cohen-sarano Koén-Sarano, Matilda 1939- (Matildah Cohen Kohen-Sarano, Mathilde Cohen Sarano, Matilda Cohen Sarano, Matilda Koen Sarano)
  2. http://www.radiosefarad.com/la-guisendera-de-matilda-koen-sarano-en-judeoespanol-desde-el-cidicsef-de-buenos-aires/ “La guisendera” de Matilda Koen Sarano, en judeoespañol, desde el CIDICSEF de Buenos Aires
  3. http://www.grijalvo.com/Matilda_Koen_Sarano/b_Matilda_curriculum_espanol.htm Resume of Matilda Koen-Sarano (in Spanish)
  4. http://www.salom.com.tr/news/detail/11744-El-ultimo-livro-de-Matilda-Koen-Sarano-Kon-bayles-i-kantes.aspx El ultimo livro de Matilda Koen-Sarano “Kon bayles i kantes”
  5. http://www.sephardicstudies.org/sarano.html Friend of the Foundation: Matilda Koen-Sarano
  6. http://www.sefaradinfo.org/Home/livres/notes-de-lecture/l-anthologie-de-comedies-judeo-espagnoles-de-matilda-koen-sarano L’anthologie de comédies judéo-espagnoles de Matilda Koen-Sarano
  7. https://forward.com/culture/438232/why-ladino-will-rise-again/ Why Ladino will rise again
  8. https://esefarad.com/fallecio-matilda-koen-sarano-activista-y-escritora-sefaradi-luchadora-incansable-por-la-lengua-y-la-cultura-judeoespanola/ Fallecio Matilda Koen Sarano, activista y escritora sefaradi, luchadora incansable por la lengua y la cultura judeoespañola