Heritage – Civilization and the Jews DVD Set

T-HCJD
About

Nine one hour programs on three DVDs plus an interactive DVD-ROM.

Winner of the coveted Peabody Award, Heritage: Civilization and the Jews is the monumental nine-part series hosted by former Israeli Ambassador to the United States Abba Eban. This epic production from public television station Thirteen/WNET New York traces the history of the Jewish people from biblical times to the present, telling their story as part of the broader history of Western civilization. Five years in the making, and filmed on four continents, Heritage: Civilization and the Jews became a landmark, a television portrait of the Jewish experience with a scope and depth that is unlikely to ever be duplicated. Now, after a national public television broadcast, it will be available for the first time in a dramatically expanded form including on DVD with an interactive DVD-ROM.


Heritage: Civilization and the Jews is a deluxe four-disc DVD boxed set. The set includes nine hour-long episodes on three DVDs and the Heritage Interactive DVD-Rom. The DVDs include maps and excerpts from Encyclopedia Judaica, which can be explored in more depth on the accompanying DVD-Rom.


The comprehensive DVD-Rom, Heritage Interactive, is an “interactive museum of Jewish experience”, which includes over 650 annotated historical documents; 541 map views with over 2,250 explanatory essays; over 3,600 encyclopedia articles; 4,000 captions that accompany the 9 hours of original series video; over 100 interactive multimedia presentations containing over 800 historical images; an unlimited book marking system; a built-in ‘Help’ feature, and a fully searchable index of over 7000 multimedia elements.



Features

The DVD-Rom includes:

Full Nine Hour Original Series Video
Heritage Interactive is organized into five interconnected components. The nine hours of the television series will form the core of this new product. Users can choose to watch the programs full-screen or in a window accompanied by tools for rapidly navigating and exploring the video. Every image will be annotated, so that, with a click of the mouse, a user can learn the name of each work of art or the location of any important site that appears on screen.

Historical Documents
Original documents from every period of Jewish history will be included: sacred texts, eyewitness accounts, political treaties, and literary works. Documents of a more personal nature - letters and journals - will also be included to offer glimpses of everyday life long ago.

Multimedia Presentations
Combining sound, video, graphics, animation, and text, these exhibits will constitute a multimedia museum of the art, artifacts, and documents of Jewish history. Selections will include biographies, brief documentaries on historical issues, and audio guided tours of past times and places. One exhibit might include readings of poetry from the golden age of Spanish Jewry. Another might narrate the life of the founder of Hadassah. Yet another might let users sample klezmer music and learn the role it played in the Jewish world of Eastern Europe. Linked together in intriguing ways, these presentations will add significantly to the amount of material in the original series.

Historical Atlas
Almost a thousand full-color maps will enable users to follow the odyssey of the Jews from their captivity in ancient Egypt to their role in shaping the modern world. Users can zoom in until the streets of Jerusalem fill the screen or pull back to gain a view of the entire earth. Specially designed to change dramatically, the maps will allow the user to move quickly through history and watch as empires come and go, and cities rise to prominence or fall into neglect. The maps are also extensively annotated so that the user need only click on a city, a trade route, or an important site, to learn of its role in the culture or politics of its time.

Encyclopedia
An abridged version of the Encyclopedia Judaica, the unparalleled 16-volume reference work published in 1973, will be available in electronic form. This edition, produced specially for Heritage Interactive by the editors of Encyclopedia Judaica, will include almost a third of the articles of the full Encyclopedia, abbreviated for ease of use in the computer environment.

Index
A powerful index will allow users to locate quickly and easily any map, article, document, or section of video. Users can take advantage of a special set of tools to create their own pathways through Heritage Interactive, browsing the material by date, region, culture, and subject of interest. A set of simple choices will allow the user to focus on a specific topic such as architecture, religion, or literature, and explore the relevant documents, maps and video.

Minimum computer requirements:
· DVD-ROM drive
· 200mhz Windows-compatible processor (Intel, AMD, or Cyrix)
· 32 MB RAM
· 50 MB free hard drive space
· 16-bit sound and video

Recommended computer configuration:
· DVD-ROM drive
· 300mhz or better MMX processor
· 64 MB or more RAM
· 275 MB or more free hard drive space


Reviews

Judy Siegel-Itzkovich - Jerusalem Post (2/6/2002) wrote:
We haven¹t seen Abba Eban for some time.
Unfortunately, the 87-year-old former diplomat and statesman was too unwell
last year to receive his Israel Prize in person at the Jerusalem Theater,
and his wife Suzy went to receive it on his behalf. But this incomparable
and monumental set presenting the history of the Jews from their biblical
beginnings until today will be the articulate Eban¹s worthy legacy.
One would have to be a genuine anti-Semite if, after watching all nine hours
of the video presentation and exploring the interactive material added to
the videos on the DVD-ROM, one did not feel genuine sympathy for the
travails of the Jewish People and admiration for their ongoing contribution
to the world¹s civilization. It wouldn¹t hurt to send the DVDs to the
libraries, schools and leaders of Syria, Iraq, Iran, the Palestinian
Authority and some hostile European countries.
Never having seen the series ­ which first appeared on Public Broadcasting
System TV in New York in 1984 and received a prestigious Peabody Award ­ I
had intended to view several hours of it and examine some of the interactive
material to review this set. But starting from the first section, A People
is Born, about the ancient Israelites, I just couldn¹t stop. I watched the
entire series, start to finish, from my laptop as the DVD-ROM drive twirled
the disk around.
As a major force in the development of Western culture as a whole, he notes,
the Jews have survived continued persecution while adding tremendously to
the richness of human history. Eban not only narrates the series with great
insight, but he also appears in many locations, from Jerusalem to Prague,
Venice and Dachau. ³I am Abba Eban, a Jew, a citizen of Israel, educated in
England, by training a scholar of history and language, in recent decades, a
diplomat and member of my country¹s parliament,² he introduces himself at
the onset (leaving out the fact that he was born in South Africa).
Although Eban presents a torrent of words, they flow seamlessly with the
visual material, which consists of many rare video clips, photographs,
illustrations and maps. And, at any point in the story, you can click on an
icon called Explore Topic at the bottom of the screen; this leads to even
more information on a specific theme being presented at that moment. In this
treasure trove, you can choose historical documents (such as an anti-Semitic
children¹s book or a personal recollection of the Nazi boycott of Jewish
stores), graphic material (drag your mouse to view the interior of the
19th-century New Synagogue in Berlin) or music (such as a snippet of klezmer
music) or poetry readings (from the golden age of Spanish Jewry).
After the biblical first chapter, the disk moves toThe Power of the Word,
dealing with the exile from Judea to Babylonia, where, Eban says, ³they
forged their identity as a people.² Bereft of the Holy Temple and their
priests, the Jews had to relate to God by pursuing their traditional way of
life, writing down the laws that had been handed down orally from generation
to generation. Since Iraq is obviously out of bounds, the customs of Iraqi
Jews ­ including women in traditional garb separating a piece of dough
before making bread ­ are presented in a videoclip apparently from an
Israeli cultural center celebrating these traditions. Jews of millennia ago
are sometimes depicted by Israelis in a dark silhouette or even by Arabs
shown working the land or trekking through wasteland with their camels.
In the third episode, The Shaping of Traditions, Eban relates explains the
influences of their Greek rulers on the Jews, the story of the Maccabees,
the depredations of the Roman Empire and its decline, followed by a process
extending over 400 years in which the Jewish faith continued to survive. The
Crucible of Europe section focuses on the Golden Age of the Jews in Spain
when Arabs and Jews lived (mostly) peaceably side by side, on to Northern
Europe, where the Latin Church was gradually consolidating its authority,
and then to the Spanish Inquisition, which led to the expulsion of the Jews
and their dispersion to north Africa, parts of Europe and the Middle East.
In The Search for Deliverance, the influence of the Renaissance on Jewish
history, the difficulties of ghetto life and the Jewish artists, composers
and poets who transcended the ghetto walls are recalled. The sixth episode,
Roads from the Ghetto,covers a very dramatic period of history in which Jews
briefly won political rights but anti-Semitism was poisonous, as illustrated
by the Dreyfus affair in France. Born in New York, I quickly decided my
favorite of the nine was The Golden Land, which describes the Jewish
presence in and unparalleled contributions toAmerica. The rare films of
Jewish immigrants being examined at Ellis Island (and often having their
unpronounceable names Americanized and forever changed by immigration
clerks), their hellish conditions in Lower East Side tenements, their
struggle for workers¹ rights and the anti-immigrant reaction of the Twenties
are all unforgettable.
Eban painstakingly presents life in the European shtetl; the viewer feels
the urge to scream and warn the Jews on the screen to ³Get out!² but no one
listens. He retells the signs of the coming Holocaust in Out of the Ashes
and brings personal testimony from survivors. ³[The month of] May should be
abolished. May hurts. There should be only 11 months in a year. May should
be set aside for eons... for 6 million years... to cleanse the earth.² says
an anonymous Auschwitz inmate, writing about the month of her mother¹s death
In the final chapter, Into the Future, the birth pangs of the Israel are
presented, along with an examination of the Jewish State¹s five-decade
relationship to its Arab neighbors, the US and various Jewish communities
around the world, with updated material on the last 15 years of the 20th
century.
Aside from the unforgettable videos, the DVD-ROM disk offers icons for an
atlas and index (searchable by category or word). All told, there are over
100 interactive multimedia presentations containing over 800 historical
images, 650 translated and annotated historical documents, 541 map views
with over 2,250 explanatory essays, information provided by scholar advisors
and consultants from 21 universities and academic institutions, plus some
3,600 articles from the Concise Judaica (an abridged version of the
Encyclopedia Judaica). All of these cover 5,000 years of history. But you
won¹t get lost in this cornucopia of material; a virtually unlimited
bookmarking system lets you click and save the locations of any video
segment or text to which you want to return.
Incredibly, all the nine hours are on the single interactive DVD-ROM, so I
couldn¹t figure out why one needs the accompanying three DVDs with only the
video sections ­ except perhaps to share with someone who has a DVD player
but no DVD-ROM drive on his computer.
But the set is undoubtedly one of the most important ever to be made into a
disk, a priceless education for Jews of all ages, an irrefutable historical
document.

$99.95
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