Contributed by: Unknown (translation), Unknown, Aharon N. Varady (transcription)
The sephardic folk-song “Kuando el rey Nimrod” in Ladino with English translation. . . .
Contributed by: Unknown (translation), István Roboz, Aharon N. Varady (transcription)
This is a prayer for those fallen in the battle of Kápolna, a decisive battle during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, written by István Roboz (1826-1916). Translated into numerous languages, the prayer was widely misattributed to enlightened president of Hungary, Lajos Kossuth. Circulated in translation and attributed to Kossuth, the prayer helped to cement his popularity among Jews worldwide praying for liberty from despotic regimes inclined for various reasons towards Jew hatred. . . .
Contributed by: Unknown (translation), Yeshayahu ben Amōts, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)
A common practice among Sephardim both eastern and western is to read the aftará for the morning of the fast of Aḇ with a verse-by-verse midrashic translation. Western Sephardim use an Early Modern Spanish text, while Eastern Sephardim use a Judezmo (or Judeo-Spanish proper) text. Attached is a transcript of a Western Sephardic verse-by-verse targum of the aftará for the Shabbat before 9 Aḇ, based on the text found in Isaac Leeser’s Siddur Siftei Tsadiqim, volume 6: Seder haTefilot laTaaniyot (1838), pp. 174-184. Each verse is included in Hebrew, as well as the original Spanish text, and a slightly modernized Spanish text underneath to clarify archaic forms or words that have fallen out of use. Also included are from-scratch English translations. . . .
Contributed by: Shlomo Enkin Lewis (translation), Unknown (translation), Benjamin Feigenbaum
A revolutionary socialist, Yiddish adaptation of Ḥad Gadya in Aramaic, with Yiddish and English translations. . . .