The definitive guide to medicinal plant knowledge of Ashkenazi herbal healers, from the Middle Ages to the 20th century.
DEATRA COHEN is a former reference librarian, is a clinical
herbalist who trained with the Berkeley (formerly Ohlone) Herbal
Center, belongs to a Western Clinical Herbal collective, and is a
Master Gardener at the University of California. In her research,
Cohen became frustrated with the lack of practical information
available to Jews of Ashkenazi descent, and related to Eastern
European traditions in general. Ashkenazi Herbalism was written to
reconcile this lack, and the first work in any language to document
the herbal practices of Ashkenazi Jews.
ADAM SIEGEL is a research librarian at University of California,
Davis, and a historian of Central and Eastern Europe, studying
issues around cultural contact and plant knowledge in the region.
Siegel is a literary translator who has translated works from
Russian, Czech, German, Croatian, Serbian, French, Italian,
Swedish, and Norwegian, and was awarded a National Endowment for
the Arts Literary Translation Fellowship in 2014. Siegel conducted
the non-English research for this work, reviewing literature and
scholarship in Yiddish, Ukrainian, Russian, German, Polish, and
Hebrew.
“A significant contribution to Jewish studies—Cohen and Siegel have
successfully resolved the mystery of Ashkenazi herbal
traditions.”
—Marek Tuszewicki, deputy director of the Institute of Jewish
Studies at Jagiellonian University in Kraków and author of
A Frog Under the Tongue
“Meticulously researched, absorbing, and poignant, Ashkenazi
Herbalism is an important addition to the canon of herbal
literature, bequeathing to us a tradition of herbal practice that,
but for [Cohen’s and Siegel’s] efforts, would have remained lost to
the world.”
—Judith Berger, writer, herbalist, and author of Herbal Rituals
“A brilliant work that captures an important but long-ignored facet
of traditional herbal healing practices.”
—Rosemary Gladstar, herbalist and author of Rosemary Gladstar’s
Medicinal Herbs and Rosemary Gladstar’s Herbal Recipes for
Vibrant Health
“A delightfully written and highly original work that sheds new
light on a woefully understudied aspect of Eastern European Jewish
folk culture. The common stereotype of shtetl life is that Jews
were cut off from the natural environment that surrounded them.
Cohen’s and Siegel's pioneering book reveals, by contrast, some of
the ways in which Ashkenazi Jews in the Pale of Settlement and
neighboring regions were deeply embedded in their local ecologies
and possessed a rich heritage of herbal practices and
knowledge.”
—Nathaniel Deutsch, professor of history at the University of
California, Santa Cruz and author of The Jewish Dark Continent
“Reading Ashkenazi Herbalism is like finding a family heirloom you
thought had been lost forever. . . . This book, full of rigorously
researched ethnobotany and shtetl magic, is an answered prayer for
those of us who have longed to reconnect with Ashkenazi folk
healing traditions.”
—Dori Midnight, community healer, herbalist, and educator who
incorporates traditional healing practices and social justice in
her work
“Ashkenazi Herbalism explores the local and exotic plants Eastern
European Jews used as medicine. After a thorough discussion of
Jewish medical practitioners, especially female folk healers, it
draws on a wide range of sources to look at how
plants—alphabetically from aloe to nutmeg to violets—were used in
the Russian Jewish Pale of Settlement compared to other times and
places.”
—Gabriella Safran, Eva Chernov Lokey Professor in Jewish Studies at
Stanford University and author of Wandering Soul
“Ashkenazi Herbalism fascinates the reader with its deep detective
work and thorough research of a healing tradition that was mostly
lost by the horror and genocide of the Second World War, which
destroyed Jewish communities and culture throughout Europe. . . .
Thankfully, the authors have captured the Ashkenazi healing
traditions that were practiced by itinerant Kabbalists, feldshers,
and midwives so that these precious remnants of knowledge are not
forgotten. Whether you are an avid herbalist, history buff, or
plant lover, you’ll find something in this book to satisfy your
soul. What a gift to us all.”
—Phyllis D. Light, MA, herbalist and author of Southern Folk
Medicine
“[Cohen's] deep dive into the past to bring forth the plant
knowledge once practiced by the Ashkanazi people is a great
contribution to future generations.”
—Pam Fischer, executive director of the Berkeley Herbal Center
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