Yakob Yoná

1847–1922

Yakob Abraham Yoná was a renowned collector, writer, and publisher of Ladino koplas (couplets) and Sephardic folklore. Born in the southern European reaches of the Ottoman Empire in Monastir (today Bitola, North Macedonia), he spent his life in Salonika, the great capital of Ottoman Sephardic culture. In addition to his literary output, Yoná worked as a combibador, a Sephardic messenger sent to invite guests to celebrations through an oral performance, often with spontaneous poetry. The numerous chapbooks of Ladino ballads he printed attracted the attention of the celebrated Spanish philologist Ramón Menéndez Pidal. Yoná’s koplas, originally a genre of rabbinic poetry for the masses, include a discussion of the 1910 visitation of Halley’s Comet, which came into naked-eye view in mid-April. Like many sensationalist publications, Yoná’s poem interprets the comet’s appearance as an omen of wars and other divinely wrought calamities to make people return to God’s ways.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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A Comet Portending War

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Text
I have seen other stars with a tail before, but the people were frightened by this awesome torch. As an omen of war it does sadden my heart. Let us turn to our God, let us try to please Him.