## *SEPHARDIC WORLD MEETING, SUNDAY 17 OCTOBER 2021*## *WITH HANS WALLAGE *## *SEPHARDIC DIPLOMATIC POWER*Under Dutch rule in Brazil (1630-1654), the local and Amsterdam Sephardic communities tried to convince Dutch authorities to intervene and protect their interests. When asking for help, they emphasised their value as international merchants, as well as other areas in which Jews contributed to the Dutch colony. *** Hans Wallage ***will discuss some of these arguments and will provide new insights into how Jews valued their own contributions in the Dutch colonies.***Hans Wallage*** is a young historian specialising in Jewish Migration History. Since February 2019, Hans has been affiliated with the University of Amsterdam as a PhD candidate. He works within the VICI Project: 'The Invention of the Refugee in Early Modern Europe’. In his dissertation, he examines the organisation and forms of Jewish charity in the Dutch Republic during various early modern Jewish refugee crises. In his studies, he has mainly focused on Jewish history, transnationalism within Jewish societies and Jewish migration patterns. Hans also studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and worked as a student assistant at the University of Manchester.The meeting is on 17 October 2021 at 11am in LA, 2pm NYC, 7pm London, 8pm Paris/Amsterdam and 9pm Jerusalem. Patrons can join us on Zoom. The link is shared at our Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/sephardiEveryone is invited to join us for free at: https://www.youtube.com/SephardicGenealogyAndHistory/ Please subscribe to the YouTube channel. It helps us a lot and reminds you when we are going live!Over the last year and a half Sephardic World has become the leading forum for learning about Sephardic history and genealogy. We have no commercial sponsorship or public funding. There is no charge to attend our meetings or to view our content. If you are not a patron and can afford it, please consider supporting our work: https://www.patreon.com/sephardi*Best wishes,**Ton and David**Sephardic World**Image: Dutch Governor's palace in Recife, Pernambuco. Brazil*