Jews in the Modern World, Band 1Jacob Freid Twayne Publishers, 1962 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 22
Seite 14
... possible in the Diaspora , and particularly in America which has become the new gravitational center of world Jewry in the wake of the destruction of the East European hub of Jewish culture , scholarship and religion ? These essays ...
... possible in the Diaspora , and particularly in America which has become the new gravitational center of world Jewry in the wake of the destruction of the East European hub of Jewish culture , scholarship and religion ? These essays ...
Seite 49
... possible , add what has been lost to their own experience so that the continuity of the Jewish heritage will remain unbroken . Both Eastern European and German Jews , who composed the two major streams of Jewish immigration to this ...
... possible , add what has been lost to their own experience so that the continuity of the Jewish heritage will remain unbroken . Both Eastern European and German Jews , who composed the two major streams of Jewish immigration to this ...
Seite 95
... possible on the land and to collectivize individ- ual farmers ; to enroll craftsmen into cooperatives ; to draw large numbers of Jews into industry . According to official information , the program resulted in the THE JEWS IN THE SOVIET ...
... possible on the land and to collectivize individ- ual farmers ; to enroll craftsmen into cooperatives ; to draw large numbers of Jews into industry . According to official information , the program resulted in the THE JEWS IN THE SOVIET ...
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 European Jewry existence fact feel Gentile German 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 less 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 prejudiced problem 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