Azoulay
Azoulay, sometimes spelled Azoulai, Azulay, Azulai, Azoolai (Hebrew: אזולאי[1]), etc. is a Sephardi Jewish surname, common among Jews of Moroccan descent.
People
Azoulay family of Fes
Azoulay, is the name of a notable Jewish family descended from Spanish exiles who, after the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492 and following decades, settled in the city of Fez, Morocco. The family includes:
- Abraham Azulai (c. 1570 – 1643) – Kabbalistic author and commentator best known for his Chessed le-Avraham
- Chaim Yosef David Azulai (1724–1807) – a rabbinical scholar and a noted bibliophile, who pioneered the history of Jewish religious writings.[2]
- Raphael Isaiah Azulai (died 1830) – rabbi and writer.
Others
- André Azoulay – Senior adviser to King Mohammed VI of Morocco
- Audrey Azoulay – French Minister of Culture
- Daniel Azulay – Brazilian visual artist, comic book artist, and educator
- Shay K. Azoulay – Israeli writer
- Jean-Luc Azoulay – French filmmaker, see AB Disques
- Ariella Azoulay – Israeli scholar and documentarian, see Herzliya Biennial
- Jom Tob Azulay – Brazilian film producer and director
- Simon Azoulay Pedersen – Danish football player.
See also
- Azoulay v. The Queen, landmark 1952 Canadian Supreme Court case, wherein Dr. Leon Azoulay was accused of murder after the death of a patient receiving an abortion
- The Policeman, Hashoter Azoulay was the original title of the Israeli film The Policeman
References
- minus the Aleph before the Yud, which is the actual acronym from the biblical phrase, and is how Chaim Yosef David Azulai spelled it
- http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/111929/jewish/Rabbi-Chaim-Joseph-David-Azulai.htm
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