Dr. Eve Georges Sada
Ethnomusicologist · Choral Conductor · Researcher · Assyrian Cultural Scholar
Background & Education
- Dr. Sada is Assyrian; she was born and raised in Iraq.
- She holds a Master’s degree in Music Education (2010) and a Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) in Choral Conducting (2021), both from the University of Oklahoma.
Research, Position & Focus Areas
- She is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR), Harvard Divinity School.
- Her doctoral research was entitled “Assyrian-Syriac Chants from the Liturgy of the Church of the East”. In it, she examined some of the earliest surviving chants and hymns composed between the 4th-7th centuries by figures such as Mar Aprem (Ephrem) and Mar Narsai.
- She analyzed the major hymnody genres within the Church of the East, including Soghyāthā, Madrāshe, Tešbḥatha, \`Onyatha, and Memre.
- Her work also included discussion of the earliest known church women’s choirs.
Other Activities & Impact
- Dr. Sada has also worked in Jordan in academic roles, including in the University of Jordan, contributing to music education and school music environments.
- She has publications in both liturgical (sacred) and secular Assyrian/Chants traditions, and participates in preserving Assyrian chant heritage and increasing its visibility in the academy and broader community.
- She won the Provost’s Dissertation Award for Humanities & Fine Arts at the University of Oklahoma for her doctoral work.
