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Resources and articles on Jews Around the World
Have a million lost Jews really been discovered in the United States? And, if so, where have they been until now? And how is "Jew" even defined?
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By:
Sergio Della Pergola
Jews Around the World
On February the 27th, 2006 at Havana, Cuba passed away Dr. José Miller, leader of the Cuban Jewish community and a close friend of our department and his president. In posthumous homage to his action for his people we present this article “In Memoriam” from the pen of the historian Dr. Margalit Bejarano.
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By:
Margalit Bejarano
Jews Around the World
A young American who served as volunteer in Israel, shares with us his memorable learning experience at the "Save a Child's Heart" organization, where a group of cardiologists, pediatric heart surgeons and nurses donate their time in order to save as many children's lives as possible. With the slogan of “a child is a child”, they operate on any child in need regardless of religion, race, sex, or background creating the wonderful side effect of spreading tolerance and acceptance of each other's cultures.
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By:
Hagshama Department
Aliyah InfoBase
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Life in Israel
Israel
Israel
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Advocacy
Jews Around the World
Social Action Organizations
Voices of the Young
Muslim Arabs have coexisted more or less peaceably with Jewish minorities within their dominant theocratic polities, in several parts of the world for a millennium-and-a-half. So it was in Yemen, where, additionally, both groups were always exceedingly devout.
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By:
Ephraim Isaac
Jews Around the World
There is a common misconception that Zionism is purely Ashkenazi. To learn about the Sepharadic roots of Zionism, read on….
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By:
Solomon Gaon
Jewish History
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0600 - 1789: Middle Ages
Jewish History
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1860-1948: Early Zionist Age
Jews Around the World
People
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0600 - 1789: Middle Ages
People
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1789-1860: Haskala (Emancipation)
People
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1860-1948: Early Zionist Age
Zionism
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Zionism and the Diaspora
The Jew cannot settle down in freedom to be himself, "just like everybody else." When in his own inner consciousness he begins to approach a real feeling of at-homeness within the larger society, what remains of his Jewish identity is too little and to personalized to sustain a community. It inevitably follows that there is only one possible mode for the survival of a Jewish community in a free society. It can live only by emphasizing what is unique to itself and by convincing its children that that uniqueness is worth having.
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By:
Arthur Hertzberg
Jewish History
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1948-Today: Modern Zionist Age
Jews Around the World
Zionism
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Zionism and the Diaspora
Continuing his series on Jewish communities around the world, Mann introduces us to the Jews of Paris, France- a history filled with both light and darkness.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
Continuing his series on Jewish communities around the world, Mann introduces us to the Jews of Russia with a long, illustrious, and varied history.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Anti-Semitism
Jewish History
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0600 - 1789: Middle Ages
Jewish History
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1860-1948: Early Zionist Age
Jews Around the World
Continuing his series on Jewish communities around the world, Mann introduces us to Berlin- a place which represents both some of the best and worst of Jewish history.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
Continuing his series on Jewish communities around the world, Mann introduces us to Yemen- where a rich and unique Jewish history can be found.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
The lure of the Orient attracts scholars, writers and tourists to unearth, record and experience its history and folklore. The history of its minute Jewish Diaspora also draws much interest, perhaps due to the survival of a community in isolation from mainstream Jewish centers for about a millenium.
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By:
Batsheva Pomerantz
Jews Around the World
Jews Around the World
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Lost Tribes
Shapiro argues convincingly that, contrary to popular opinion, 'the Kishinev pogrom is not just another tragic event in the history of the persecution of the Jews... but an officially planned action.'
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By:
Andrei Shapiro
Anti-Semitism
Jews Around the World
This is the story of the immigration of Iraqi Jewry, the oldest Jewish Diaspora on our planet, and their settlement in Israel.
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By:
Sue Tourkin-Komet
Aliyah InfoBase
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Aliyah Statistics
Jews Around the World
Continuing his series on Jewish communities around the world, Mann introduces us to Morocco- place of origin for one of the largest Jewish groups in Israel.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
The first of two articles on Iraqi Jewry in Israel, this article explores Iraqi aliyah to Israel and the Shavuot pogrom that helped to trigger it through two Israeli museums dedicated to this community.
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By:
Sue Tourkin-Komet
Jews Around the World
Museums and Memorials
As a continuation of his series on Jewish communities around the world, Stanley Mann introduces us to Vilna with a long and illustrious Jewish history.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
This report provides a window into the changing face of European Jewry using Sweden as a case study.
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By:
Lars Dencik
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
Judaism
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Jewish Identity
A hundred years ago, Theodor Herzl proposed a radical idea-that the Jewish people would find a "normal" place among the nations if it reorganized itself into a nation-state. That would be the solution to "the Jewish Problem."
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By:
Arthur Hertzberg
Jews Around the World
Zionism
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Zionism and the Diaspora
As a continuation of his series on Jewish communities around the world, Stanley Mann introduces us to the unique history of the Venician Jews.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
As a continuation of his series on Jewish communities around the world, Stanley Mann introduces us to Cracow, Poland, which has a long and vibrant Jewish history.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
As a continuation of his series on Jewish communities around the world, Stanley Mann introduces us to Vienna where the Jewish community has undergone many changes.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
As a continuation of his series on Jewish communities around the world, Stanley Mann introduces us to Budapest where, despite its tragic history, Jewish life continues to thrive.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
The history and impact of the Holocaust in the Former Soviet Union has been largely ignored. Andrei Shapiro discusses the ramifications of this and an educational initiative working to create change.
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By:
Andrei Shapiro
Education
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
Today, January 1, 2003, Luiz Inacio da Silva (Lula) assumed the Presidency in Brazil. After winning a landslide election on October 27, 2002, da Silva will serve as Brazil's first leftist president, marking a major change in the political set-up of the country. This document will address the new political reality in Brazil and its influence on the Jewish community.
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By:
Nadav Anner
Jews Around the World
It has always been fascinating for me to see how so much of history is enveloped by events that take place as much on the world stage as by seemingly inconsequential personal anecdotes. I watched this theory play out this past Shabbat, when I was an observer to a family reunion whose roots reach far back into Hungary and whose ancestors were responsible for some of the very first rumblings of Zionism in Europe.
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By:
Ilene Bloch-Levy
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
Zionism
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Zionism and the Diaspora
This quote, taken from the Danish National Anthem, captures the essence of Denmark's relations with its Jews. In addition to providing history on the Jews of Denmark, this article outlines the extraordinary effort made by the Danes to save their Jewish citizens during the Holocaust.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
Warsaw often brings up associations of death and destruction. However, Warsaw has a long and varried Jewish history and continues to house a Jewish community. In the following article, Stanley Mann explores all of these aspects of Warsaw with us.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
Museums and Memorials
Jewish Amsterdam is often associated with Anne Frank and as the site of the Secret Annex where her diary was written. However, Amsterdam has a long and varried Jewish history. In the following article, Stanley Mann explores this with us.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Holocaust
Jews Around the World
In his diaries, Franz Kafka, 1883-1924, the famous writer born in the city of Prague, noted, "We were living in the house which separates the Little Square from the Old Town Square." And this is how you feel when you visit one of the grand European capitals that at times seems separated in time and space, with its history, its castles, and not far away, 60 kilometers from the city, the cries in the night from those who perished ins the concentration camp, Thersienstadt.
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
Out of a general population of 1,000,000,000 in India, the number of Jews
living there today is like a pebble in the water. Small but yet not
insignificant. Most of the Jewish community of 6,000 live today in the city of
Bombay. When you think of India you think of the teeming masses of people,
streets crowded with the bustle of its citizens, open markets and the feeling in
the air of the exotic. You think of the classes, of the very rich and the very
poor, of the white marble tomb of the famous Taj Mahal and its weaving tale of a
prince who built it in the memory of deceased wife. It is here that many
Israelis come to seek another world and time, as they leave behind them the time
spent in the army. But, after their wanderings and travels in the vast country
and their eventual return home do they know of the beginnings of the Jewish
community?
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By:
Stanley Mann
Jews Around the World
Shabbat Zachor is the Shabbat of Remembrance. It dedicates a Shabbat to our Jewish brethren suffering around the world. For the most part, these are Jews experiencing political oppression for the simple fact that they are Jews.
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By:
12th House
Jews Around the World
Judaism
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Holidays with a Twist
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Shabbat
In 1975, the World Organization of Jews of Arab Countries (WOJAC) was founded in Paris. WOJAC offered representation for the other Middle East refugee situation - that of Jews from Arab lands.
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12th House
Jews Around the World
These are difficult days for the Jewish people in several
parts of the world, but the region needing the most help these days is Latin America.
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By:
Elias S. Farache
Jews Around the World
The latest contribution by Suzanne Kokkonen reflects on relations between the British occupiers, the Jewish refugees and the Italian authorities immediately after the Second World War.
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By:
Suzanna Kokkonen
Jewish History
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1860-1948: Early Zionist Age
Jews Around the World
New contributor Suzanna Kokkonen provides an historical background to the Jews of Italy and describes in detail the existence of Jewish Fascists and their relationship to Zionism.
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By:
Suzanna Kokkonen
Jews Around the World
The Jewish Guide School DOR was founded in Moscow in April 1999 thanks to the mutual cooperation of the Hillel student organization and the Youth Department of the Jewish Agency for Israel in Russia. The aim of such a joint project was to create a high quality educational and cultural program for students of Jewish Studies and graduates of Moscow institutes.
Among the numerous goals of the project, the most important are to distribute knowledge of the history of Jewish community of Moscow and Russia to young people, to involve them in the modern community's life and to satisfy the existing demand of the Diaspora for highly qualified specialists in the history and sites of Jewish Moscow.
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Jews Around the World
Living in Jewish communities deep in the Amazon jungle, in places with names like Cameta, Obidos, Itacoatiara, Manaos and Tefe in Brazil or Tarapoto, Yurimaguas, Pucallpa, and Iquitos in Peru, 20 year old Moshe Levy brushes the bugs away from his suntanned face and thinks of his family in Morocco as he drifts down the river. His boat is ladden with the supply of rubber he bartered for and accumulated from his jungle contacts. Further down river he will meet his old childhood pal Shlomo Menashe who used to sit in the bench next to him in school in Tetuan. As he had done repeatedly before, he will hand his rubber supplies to Shlomo and load up more pots and pans and other utensils to use for bartering up-river.
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By:
Jeff Malka
Jews Around the World
Judaism
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Cholent: Little bit O' this, Little bit O' that
In this opus Gustavo Perednik draws a fascinating parallel between two seemingly unrelated histories of cultural flowering, destruction, struggle and rebirth: that of the great Inca Empire, annihilated by Francisco Pizarro and a small band of adventurers (and the colonial might of Spain) in 1534; and the scattered Jewish people during the long centuries of the Diaspora, generally victims of whatever reigning power had dominion over them. By deepening our understanding of history from a non-Eurocentric perspective, this article offers an impassioned plea for recognition of the contributions of those peoples who do not conform to the "Western" model, in this case, the Quechua speaking nations of Ecuador and Peru, and the Jews.
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By:
Gustavo Perednik
Jews Around the World
Jews Around the World
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Lost Tribes
North American Jewry makes up over 43% of world Jewry (with Israeli Jewry the second largest at 36%). In fact between Tel Aviv and New York we have a third of the total world Jewish population. If we are going to try and understand Diaspora Jews we should probably look to America. It is, after all, the most dominant Jewish culture outside of Israel.
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By:
Judith Williams
Jews Around the World
Judaism
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Jewish Identity
Judaism in Cuba, like other religions there, was severely restricted for almost three decades. Now it is being rebuilt by the ten percent of the Jewish population which remained after the "revolution."
As the individual congregations struggle for survival with only a remnant of their former population, new strains are put upon them as entire families leave for Israel. Can Judaism in Cuba survive? A tentative "yes" can be given, but the question is still open.
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By:
Robert M. Levine
Jews Around the World
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