Jews in the Modern World, Band 1Jacob Freid Twayne Publishers, 1962 |
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Ergebnisse 1-3 von 90
Seite 96
... population and a marked increase in the percentage of indus- trial laborers and " intellectuals " -lawyers , engineers , doctors , sci- entists , teachers , etc. The extent of the changes involved may be measured by the fact that some ...
... population and a marked increase in the percentage of indus- trial laborers and " intellectuals " -lawyers , engineers , doctors , sci- entists , teachers , etc. The extent of the changes involved may be measured by the fact that some ...
Seite 131
... population of 412,000 , has 40,000 Jews . Bobruisk- total population , 150,000 ; Jewish population , about 60,000 . Gomel -total population , 144,000 ; Jewish population , 15,000 . Mogilev -total population , 106,000 ; Jewish population ...
... population of 412,000 , has 40,000 Jews . Bobruisk- total population , 150,000 ; Jewish population , about 60,000 . Gomel -total population , 144,000 ; Jewish population , 15,000 . Mogilev -total population , 106,000 ; Jewish population ...
Seite 142
... population . This steady increase has paralleled the general population growth . Today about 160,000,000 people live in the twenty - five countries of Latin America . Eighteen of these countries have Jewish communities of at least 1,000 ...
... population . This steady increase has paralleled the general population growth . Today about 160,000,000 people live in the twenty - five countries of Latin America . Eighteen of these countries have Jewish communities of at least 1,000 ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 9 |
Diaspora and Galut | 15 |
Jacob Lestchinsky | 30 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted action activities American Jewish Committee American Jewish Congress American Jewry anti-Jewish anti-Semitism Argentina attitudes bigot broadcasting Buenos Aires Catholic century cities civil club Communist Constitution countries Daily democracy Diaspora economic Egypt emigration equality established ethnic Europe European existence fact feel Gentile Hebrew hostility immigration important industry influence institutions Israel Jewish community Jewish Congress Jewish population Jewish schools Jewish students Jewish youth Judaism Kehillah Kehillot Latin America less prejudiced Lithuania lived major ment minority groups Moslem munity Nazi Negroes non-Jews number of Jews official organizations parents Pekelis percent person Poland political position practice prej prejudice problem question rabbis radio relations religion religious freedom restrictions result Russia scapegoating secular separation of Church social discrimination Soviet Jews Soviet Union status synagogue tion tradition udice United victimized White Russia World Jewish Congress Yiddish Zionist