AARRGGHH and Oy Vey: Jewish Pirates? Are you kidding me?
1-Time Lecture | Available
Jewish pirates bring to mind images of Blackbeard, gold earrings, and marauding ships, but the line between merchants and pirates was often blurred. Present in Mediterranean lore since the first millennium, their presence expanded after the 1492 Spanish Inquisition expelled Jews from Spain. They spread to North Africa, Turkey, the Americas, the Netherlands, and England.
Dr. Rebecca Staton-Reinstein presents the fascinating story of these Sephardic pirates as they survived, prospered, faced new challenges, and influenced numerous cultures. Here in South Florida, their descendants flourish and may even be your neighbors.
- OLLI Members save $10.
Please note that this lecture is part of our "Winter lecture series at VI at Aventura".
Valet parking is available.
Rebecca Staton-Reinstein
Rebecca Staton-Reinstein, Ph.D., president of Advantage Leadership, Inc. has served as an executive in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors and as a consultant in strategic leadership. She is the author of several books on strategic leadership and planning. Her best-selling Conventional Wisdom: How Today’s Leaders Plan, Perform and Progress Like the Founding Fathers allowed her to draw on her lifelong passion for history to draw parallels between the founders and contemporary leaders. Growing up in Virginia, the daughter of history-loving parents, the family visited every battlefield and historic home and read every historic highway marker. She followed in her mother’s footsteps and graduated from William and Mary. While there, she worked for the Restoration as a costumed guide and was hooked on the 18th century. Her programs examine the Enlightenment, the transition from colonies to independence, the creation of the Constitution, and lead up to the Civil War and its aftermath. In profiles of the women and men who were critical in the development of the U.S., she helps her audience understand them as human beings with their admirable qualities and their flaws. “Because these people were humans and not idealized superheroes, we can learn from them and apply the lessons of history to our situation today.”