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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2019
Due to the Israeli-Arab conflict that spans the twentieth century, Jewish and Arabic cultures are generally perceived as being in collision. However, since the inception of Islam in the sixth century and at least until the fifteenth century, the vast majority of the Jewish people dwelled in the Arab—and later on Ottoman—Empires. This close physical contact led, in spite of religious differences, to diverse types of cultural syntheses, such as the various Judeo-Arabic languages and literatures. It appears that music is one of the fields in which Jews and Arabs achieved their closest exchanges. The book by Kaufman Shelemay is a glaring document of this symbiosis.