honorable mention
FIORELLA BALDISSERRI ISABELLA FRANCESCHINI italy
title
Cracking the Monolith
The scenes of this quiet Bolognese jewish liturgy speak instead, have a voice. Feminine and plural. The voice is the centre of redemption. Voice is integration. It is equality.
And so it is. The voice that drags the Bolognese reformist community is the voice of a progressive Sephardic Jewish mother who wants equality in front of God and men for her children, through one of the oldest and most important moments of worship. And here the Bat Mitzvah in Reform Judaism becomes the future and hope for Noa, the daughter, who carries the sacred scrolls in her arms while a rabbi officiates the rite recognizing the powerful religious, symbolic and legal value of becoming an adult.
A small big step that respects Jewish laws but inserts them into the contemporary world. And it is the lyrical chanting of the persuasive female voices that unites and harmonizes the Bolognese community: within the Reformed congregations, about 1200 in 40 countries, situations like that in Bologna, bring together one and a half million Jews, witnesses, once again, of a capacity for adaptation that overcomes any stereotype.
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entry description
Sometimes a consonant is enough to discover a revolution and a hope. From Bar Mitzvah to Bat Mitzvah there is only one R that becomes a T, but what happens in Bologna IT in 2021, is something much more powerful: it is the access to adulthood of young girls from Jewish families belonging to the reform movement. It is them who read the Torah in a religious context that for four centuries has pursued a possible change. Inclusion and preservation of tradition.The scenes of this quiet Bolognese jewish liturgy speak instead, have a voice. Feminine and plural. The voice is the centre of redemption. Voice is integration. It is equality.
And so it is. The voice that drags the Bolognese reformist community is the voice of a progressive Sephardic Jewish mother who wants equality in front of God and men for her children, through one of the oldest and most important moments of worship. And here the Bat Mitzvah in Reform Judaism becomes the future and hope for Noa, the daughter, who carries the sacred scrolls in her arms while a rabbi officiates the rite recognizing the powerful religious, symbolic and legal value of becoming an adult.
A small big step that respects Jewish laws but inserts them into the contemporary world. And it is the lyrical chanting of the persuasive female voices that unites and harmonizes the Bolognese community: within the Reformed congregations, about 1200 in 40 countries, situations like that in Bologna, bring together one and a half million Jews, witnesses, once again, of a capacity for adaptation that overcomes any stereotype.
about the photographer
Fiorella Baldisserri, classical studies and an interest in art in all its forms, is a photographer from Bologna who loves travelling for profession and passion.The professional approach to photography took place in 2016 when she attended some courses on study of the image and history of photography. She then deepened her education with the photojournalism Masterclass in Rome.Currently Fiorella feels very close to the photographic genre of reportage, which allows her to observe people, enter stories and tell them through images, investigating herself.Fiorella has seen some shots published by international newspapers both in print and online. Photovogue, Corriere. In the Archaeological Museum of Olbia, as part of the popular photography festival, the project Drops in New York is exhibited. Finalist in the Bologna Design Week 2017 competition. Two shots published on the book Urban Life Photobook 2017. Erodoto108 published Hang in New York.Her latest project developed during Covid-19, entitled “With their eyes” on 118 Bologna Emergenza Sanitaria was chosen and published by CORTONA ON THE MOVE.back to gallery