Dean Holly Smith, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences reports
on changes at the Archives. From Southwest Jewish History, volume 1,
number 1, Fall 1994
After nine years as Director of the Bloom Southwest Jewish
Archives, Abraham Chanin retired from the University in July.
This transition marks the end of a remarkable era for the
Archives, since Abe was the founding Director. His energy and
dedication -- and that of his wife, Mildred -- brought the
Archives to its present flourishing state. Without his foresight
into the importance of saving crucial records concerning
Southwest Jewish family histories, businesses, and affairs, we
would not now have collected together the rich trove of materials
available to students, scholars, and the community at large who
wish to investigate the role Jewish families played in the
opening of the Southwest. All of us are grateful to Abe and
Mildred for their dedication to this project, and their role in
shepherding the earliest glimmer of this idea to maturity. Abe's
and Mildred's commitment to the success of the Archives
continues, and they are assured that the Archives will continue
to thrive, even though their hands at the helm will be sorely
missed.
This fall the Archives are under the capable direction of Ms.
Melissa Amado, who is serving as Acting Director. A member of a
distinguished Tucson Hispanic family with converso roots, Ms.
Amado received a master's degree in Sociology in 1991, and is
completing a second master's degree in Anthropology, conducting
research on converso families primarily in the Southwest. She
has previously worked for several years in the Archives, and in
her new capacity is exploring additional directions into which
the Archives can expand its activities. Some of these new
activities include acquisition of transcripts of seventy-five
taped interviews from the Jewish Historical Society of Southern
Arizona to expand the oral histories collections for Arizona. In
addition Ms. Amado is working with the University of Arizona Main
Library to integrate catalogues of holdings of the Bloom Archives
with catalogues of holdings in the University Main Library.
Portions of the Archival collections are being made available,
not just to scholars working in Tucson, but to scholars working
world-wide, via the Internet. We are planning to link the
Archives more effectively with the Main Library and enhance the
Archives' activities through access to the Library's expertise in
the building, maintenance, and publication of special archival
collections. When a new director for the Judaic Studies Program
at the University is appointed next July, he or she will be
charged with identifying a permanent director for the
Archives.
The Bloom Southwest Jewish Archives faces an exciting future.
This future would not have been possible without Abe and Mildred
Chanin's original idea to establish this historical collection,
and the generosity of the donors who have supported their work.
I am grateful to the Chanins for the idea, and for all their
efforts in developing it so successfully over the past nine
years. Students, scholars of Judaica, and members of the Tucson
community join me in wishing Abe and Mildred well in Abe's
retirement, and in the hope that they will remain in touch with
the Archives and continue to contribute to its growth.
Sincerely,
Holly M. Smith, Dean
College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
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