Jews in the Modern World, Band 1Jacob Freid Twayne Publishers, 1962 |
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Seite 31
... Yiddish or Hebrew . In the 1926 census in Soviet Russia 73 % of the Jews gave Yiddish as their mother tongue ; and in White Russia the figure was as high as 90 % . According to the 1930 census taken in Bessarabia and Bukovinia , more ...
... Yiddish or Hebrew . In the 1926 census in Soviet Russia 73 % of the Jews gave Yiddish as their mother tongue ; and in White Russia the figure was as high as 90 % . According to the 1930 census taken in Bessarabia and Bukovinia , more ...
Seite 101
... Yiddish is one of the official languages . Before the war , there were five Jewish national districts ; three in the Ukraine ( Kalinindorf , New Zlotopol and Stalindorf ) and two in the Crimea ( Friedorf and Larindorf ) . The population ...
... Yiddish is one of the official languages . Before the war , there were five Jewish national districts ; three in the Ukraine ( Kalinindorf , New Zlotopol and Stalindorf ) and two in the Crimea ( Friedorf and Larindorf ) . The population ...
Seite 102
... Yiddish language , Yiddish literature , and Yiddish folklore . It is not easy to ascertain whether there was any popular interest in these studies or whether they were " official " works . The official historian of Soviet Jewry sees the ...
... Yiddish language , Yiddish literature , and Yiddish folklore . It is not easy to ascertain whether there was any popular interest in these studies or whether they were " official " works . The official historian of Soviet Jewry sees the ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 9 |
Diaspora and Galut | 15 |
Jacob Lestchinsky | 30 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action activities American Jewish American Jewish Committee American Jewish Congress American Jewry anti-Jewish anti-Semitism Argentina arrested assimilation attitudes broadcasting Buenos Aires centers century cities club Commission Communist Constitution countries Daily Diaspora Eastern Europe economic Egypt emigration equality established ethnic European Jewry existence fact feel Gentile German ghettos Hebrew homes hostility important industry institutions intellectual Israel Jewish children Jewish community Jewish Congress Jewish cultural Jewish education Jewish population Jewish schools Jewish students Jewish youth Judaism Kehillah Kehillot language Latin America leaders Lithuania lived major ment million minority groups Moslem munity Nazi Negroes newspapers non-Jews number of Jews official parents percent persons Poland political position practice prejudice problem question rabbis radio religion religious freedom restrictions result separation of Church situation social discrimination Soviet Jews Soviet Union status synagogue Syria tion tradition United White Russia World Jewish Congress Yiddish Zionist