Sefer ve Sefel explained

Sefer ve Sefel
Founder:Shai and Judy Robkin
Hq Location City:Jerusalem
Hq Location Country:Israel
Num Locations:1
Num Locations Year:2020
Key People:Michael and Zia Rose, owners
Profit:-->
Profit Year:-->

Sefer ve Sefel (he|ספר וספל, "Book and Mug") is an English-language secondhand bookshop in downtown Jerusalem, Israel. It was established in 1981 as the first combination bookshop/coffee shop in the country. Though the café was closed in 2002, the shop continues to carry a large selection of used books, with an estimated 26,000 titles in stock. It is frequently cited by guidebooks and travel sites as the best secondhand English bookshop in Jerusalem and the Middle East.

History

Sefer ve Sefel was established in August 1981 by American immigrants Shai and Judy Robkin.[1] [2] It was the first combination bookstore/coffee shop in Israel.[2] The Robkins sold the shop in August 1984 when they returned to the United States.[1] [3] Uri Rucham managed the shop until 2015, when he sold it to Michael and Zia Rose, the present owners.[4]

Located on the second floor of a stone building at 2 Ya'avets Street in downtown Jerusalem, Sefer ve Sefel is noted for its extensive collection of secondhand English-language books, with more than 26,000 titles displayed on two floors.[3] [5] Genres include fiction, English literature, science fiction, New Age, Middle Eastern history and politics, philosophy, Jewish literature, reference works, children's literature, self-help, cookbooks, and more.[6] [7] Shop inventory expanded as customers sold to the store books that they had purchased on the internet or brought with them from overseas.[3]

Sefer ve Sefel's return policy offers store credit for books purchased from its shop. The owners provide assistance and recommendations, and the atmosphere is described as "cozy and inviting".[4]

Sefer ve Sefel is frequently listed in guidebooks and travel sites as the best secondhand English bookshop in Jerusalem and the Middle East.[3] [4] [7] [8]

Café

Sefer ve Sefel originally sold coffee and ice cream in a small café on its balcony.[9] The café's noticeboard was a popular site for announcements of Anglo events and services.[9]

The café was certified as kosher but this was threatened in 1982 when the owner joked about his clientele that "the Israelis liked history, the Americans fiction, and the Orthodox pornography". He was actually referring to books about sex education which were favoured by local Haredi women who preferred not to visit male gynecologists. To convince the rabbinate to maintain the kosher certification, the owner submitted a signed statement that no true pornography would be sold on the premises.

In 2002,[10] the café was closed and the outdoor space was filled with discounted books.[3] [6]

Sefer ve Sefel Publishing

During Rucham's tenure, Sefer ve Sefel operated a small publishing house which reprinted out-of-print books and used books still in demand.[10] Its publications included Legends of Jerusalem, Legends of Judea and Samaria, and Legends of Galilee and Jordan and Sinai by Zev Vilnay; Genesis 1948: The First Arab-Israeli War; The Kuzari: An Argument For The Faith Of Israel by Judah Halevi; History of Jewish Mysticism by Ernst Mueller; Selected Essays by Ahad Ha'am.[10] [11] [12] [13]

Sources

31.7828°N 35.2183°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biography. shairobkin.com. November 5, 2018.
  2. Web site: What Israel Means To Me: Judy Robkin. April 12, 2018. Atlanta Jewish Times. November 5, 2018.
  3. Web site: Second Helpings. Aliyana . Traison. Daphna. Berman. December 1, 2006. November 5, 2018. Haaretz.
  4. Web site: Turning Over an Old Leaf. Keren. Preiskel. August 6, 2016. November 5, 2018. The Jerusalem Post.
  5. Web site: About Us. Sefer ve Sefel. 2018. November 5, 2018.
  6. Web site: The top five bookstores in Jerusalem. November 5, 2018. Go Jerusalem.
  7. Web site: 26 bookstores every book lover must visit in their lifetime. Jacob. Shamsian. Ashley. Lutz. November 5, 2016. November 5, 2018. .
  8. Web site: Bookstores Worth a Trip. August 8, 2007. November 5, 2018. Condé Nast Traveler.
  9. Web site: Sefer Vesefel. jerusalemite.org. November 5, 2018.
  10. Web site: From Commodity to Collectible. Max. Schindler. February 9, 2012. November 5, 2018. The Jerusalem Post.
  11. Web site: Sefer ve Sefel Publishing. 2018. November 5, 2018. Sapna Online.
  12. Web site: Eretz Israel: History, Archaeology, Religious and Cultural Settings: An Annotated Bibliography. B.. Kvasnica. Jerusalem Biblical Studies Society. November 19, 2018.
  13. Book: Isaacs, Alick. A Prophetic Peace: Judaism, Religion, and Politics. 2011. Indiana University Press. 9780253356840. 194.