Oct 23, 2017

“A Night Without Borders”: Modern Israeli Poetry And Music With Yael Stolarsky & Richard Schwartz




Palestinian rapper Muhammad Mughrabi
and Israeli poet Adi Keissar, live, October
Mekudeshet festival, Jerusalem
This Tuesday's featured speakers at Curley's will jointly present material as part of  their engagement in the current Israeli literary and performance scene and its role in healing the near two-generational wounds between Palestine and Israel via joyous cultural interchange of Kulna/Kulantu (Arabic and Hebrew, respectively,  for “all of us”), rather than through the strident dogmatism of politics. 

Since last year, Yael Stolarsky has been working at the Jewish Community Center in Stamford as an emissary of Israel who brings a version of her land and people not usually found in the public media. A former intelligence research officer serving with the IDF for three and a half years, Yael worked as a counselor in a Jewish day camp in Philadelphia and in Nyack, New York. 

She is also active as an Israeli Poetry and Songs presenter with Richard Schwartz at the Jewish Historical Society of Fairfield.

Richard earned his Master's Degree from Columbia University, specializing in 17th Century English Literature (he elaborates on his particular fondness for this period here) and wrote his thesis on John Milton; Richard also received a J.D. in California.
Israeli & Palestinian peace marchers  





A photographer and poet, Richard’s love of the written word and instruction was first instilled in him by his mother, Helen, who taught classes in the Psalms at the local synagogue in Mt. Vernon. He carries on his mother’s zeal for creative guidance through an eponymous Connecticut- and New York-based consultancy, delivering logistical support to client artistic, publishing and photographic projects; presently, he is designing a liberal arts curriculum to be included in pre-medical studies. His blog, “Tell It Like It Is”, covers his passion for poetry, culture, mentoring and other topics (click here to listen to one of his readings).

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