Temporary Exhibitions
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The Lives of the Jews of Horažd'ovice
The lives of the Jews of Horažd’ovice In Memoriam WESTMINSTER SYNAGOGUE Our community’s visit to Horažďovice confirmed that no brutality or oppression can ever destroy the spirit of humanity. #e inhabitants of that little town not only showed us their respect and love for those who were so cruelly taken from their midst but also that no amount of fear placed into people’s minds and hearts whether it was through fascism or communism can destroy the spark of godly spirit implanted within us. #e preservation of the Horažďovice scroll and the scrolls from other Czech cities is a reminder of our duty to foster their memories both within the Jewish community and outside, to pass it on to our children and to future generations, forming a chain strong enough to always overcome. It also tells us how important it is to respect one another and not allow prejudice to rear its ugly head. #ere has to be tolerance and understanding and our role here, with our friends in Horažďovice and with the world at large, is to ensure that this never ever should happen again. We must be vigilant and never remain silent in the face of danger or where truth is at stake. We owe this duty to all those who have perished in the horrors of the Holocaust and also to those who today, in different parts of the World, suffer because they are seemingly different. Humanity is only one, just as there is One God whose watchword we say twice a day, Hear O Israel the Lord our God the Lord is One. -
Newsletter 2/3 2013
ŽIDOVSKÉ MUZEUM V PRAZE Newsletter 2/3 2013 EXHIBITIONS AT THE ROBERT GUTTMANN GALLERY Symbols of Emancipation – Nineteenth-Century Synagogues in the Czech Lands The exhibition Symbols of Emancipation – Nineteenth-Century Synagogues in the Czech Lands was on view at our Robert Guttmann Gallery until 4 August (for more information about the exhibition, see Newsletter 1/2013). Focusing on the stories behind more than two dozen synagogues in Bohemia and Moravia, this show traced the development of Jewish communities in the period when the Jewish population became an important part of the economic, cultural and social life of the Czech lands. It was seen by more than 7,500 separately paying visitors. Truth and Lies: Filming in the Ghetto Terezín, 1942–1945 The exhibition Truth and Lies: Filming in the Ghetto Terezín, 1942–1945 has been on view at our gallery since 29 August. This show – prepared in collaboration with the National Film Archive in Prague – charts the history behind the making of propaganda films about the Terezín ghetto on the basis of the latest findings. The first film, Ghetto Theresienstadt, was made in the autumn of 1942. A fictional story about the Holländer family, its purpose was to depict the transfer of people of Jewish origin to the ghetto. The film was shot and documented by a professional camera crew from Berlin, and a group of prisoners under the film producer and director Irena Dodalová were ordered to take part in the filming. The film had to be rewritten but was never actually completed. An increasing amount of reports were reaching the public about atrocities committed against European Jews at the time. -
Children's Drawings from the Terezín Ghetto, 1942-1944
The Jewish Museum in Prague JMP Explore Permanent collection Children’s Drawings from the Terezín Ghetto, 1942-1944 Children’s Drawings from the Terezín Ghetto, 1942-1944 The exhibition is on the first floor of the Pinkas Synagogue The story of children deported to the Terezín ghetto Comprised of 19 sections, this exhibition outlines the story of Jewish children deported to the Terezín ghetto during the Second World War. In 1941–1945, Terezín served as a way station to the concentration and death camps in the east. The story begins with reflections on the events immediately following 15 March 1939, when Bohemia and Moravia were occupied by the Nazis and transformed into a Protectorate. This is followed by a description of transports to the Terezín ghetto (starting on 24 November 1941), everyday ghetto life and the conditions in the children's homes. There are also depictions of holiday celebrations and of the dreams that the imprisoned children had of returning home or of travelling to Palestine. This section provides a sort of poetic interlude between the brutal uprooting from their homes and deportation to Auschwitz, which is the final and most tragic chapter of the whole story. Friedl Dicker-Brandeis and art classes in Terezín The story is depicted through children’s drawings which were created in the Terezín ghetto between 1942 and 1944. These drawings were made during art classes that were organized by Friedl Dicker-Brandeis (1898–1944), a painter, interior and stage designer, graduate of the Bauhaus, and pupil of Franz Čížek, Johann Itten, Lyonel Feininger, Oskar Schlemmer and Paul Klee. -
To Read the November 2019 Jjmm
The Jewish Journal Non-Profit Org. Monthly Magazine U.S. Postage PAID Youngstown, OH MM Permit #607 JJ Youngstown Area Jewish Federation November 2019 ON THE COVER: INSIDE: Oct. 27 Marked One Year Since Family Member Works to Replace Christian Grave Marker for Jewish Bombadier the Shooting at the Pittsburgh see page 3 Tree of Life Building Dallas Jewish Federation and see pages 11–13 JCC Buildings Damaged by Tornadoes see page 22 YOUNGSTOWN AREA Volume 16, Number 11 • November 2019 • Heshvan/Kislev 5780 JEWISH FEDERATION Commentary Musings with Mary Lou: The High Holidays By Mary Lou Finesilver Temple and at home. We had 13 people The services were a delight. A very ability: “‘to those I may have wronged, for dinner after services on the first day benevolent family sponsored a cantor I ask forgiveness. To those I may have Well, it’s that of Rosh Hashanah, and 13 was a very and his so talented accompanist to helped, I wish I had done more. To time again. As I good number. The week before, we come from Israel. They brought not those I neglected to help, I ask for sit here staring had family over to learn how to make only beautiful sound, but such Ruach understanding. To those who helped at the computer, kreplach (the Jewish ravioli), so that (spirit) to the service, and the time me, I sincerely thank you. May you be many thoughts was perfect and enjoyed by all. Add went so quickly it was amazing. We sealed in the Book of Life for another are running to that Diane’s brisket, Beth’s carrot hope they will be able to come again good year.” through my ring, my nephew’s mouthwatering next year. -
Historiography on the Jews of the Bohemian Lands in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries*
Studia Judaica 19 (2016), nr 1 (37), s. 41–64 doi:10.4467/24500100STJ.16.002.5348 Ines Koeltzsch Modernity, Identity, and Beyond: Historiography on the Jews of the Bohemian Lands in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries* Abstract: The author discusses the main developments in the historiography on the Jews of the Bohemian Lands in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, which has expanded considerably since the 1980s. The historiographical debates have been focused mainly on conceptions of modernization/modernity and iden- tity/loyalty and are characterized by a desire to avoid linear and homogeneous ascriptions. Nevertheless, a number of gaps still exist in the research. So far, the Jewish history of the Bohemian Lands has been focused mainly on its cen- ter, Prague, and lacks distinct studies in comparative history, the history of cul- tural transfer and/or entangled history. These analytical restrictions need to be overcome in order to achieve a more succinct contextualization within modern European Jewish history. Keywords: historiography, Jews, Bohemian Lands, modernity, identity, center, periphery, Czechoslovakia. In the atmosphere of Czechoslovak cultural liberalization in 1967, the medievalist František Graus raised one of the key questions of Jewish history: “Were the Jews in the past a nation, a group with a clearly defined economic function, a Schicksalsgemeinschaft [a community bound together by a common fate], or a religion?” To which he proposed the answer: “They were a little bit of all of these and yet none of the above—they * Research on this article was enabled by my postdoc project at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences (research scheme: RVO 67985921) and by my fellowship at the Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies in 2014/15. -
JEWISH HERITAGE SITES in South Bohemia
JEWISH HERITAGE SITES in South Bohemia www.jiznicechy.cz JEWISH HERITAGE SITES in South Bohemia There used to be several hundred Jewish communi- ties in Bohemia, each of which had a synagogue or at least a prayer house or room, and a Jewish cemetery. Several dozen such communities existed in South Bohemia as well, but today not a single one remains. Most of their members died during World War II in concentration and extermination camps, whereas many of those who survived emigrated after 1948 or 1968. The South Bohemian Region also falls under the jurisdiction of the Jewish community in Prague, which also manages all Jewish cemeteries and several other preserved South Bohemian Jewish heritage sites. Another problem was that in the second half of the 19th century, many Jews migrated from the villages to the cities. Many rural Jewish communities became extinct and many synagogues were abandoned, some were sold to private individuals and modified for other purposes, and others were purchased by Christian church organizations. Since the Velvet Revolution, some of these have been reconstructed and now serve as museums; in South Bohemia, for example, these are the synagogues in Bechyně, Český Krumlov, and Čkyně. Of the fifty South Bohemian Jewish cemeteries, the rarely preserved Jewish cemetery in Jindřichův Hradec deserves particular attention; it is one of the oldest preserved Jewish cemeteries in the Czech Republic. JEWISH HERITAGE SITES in South Bohemia JEWISH HERITAGE SITES in South Bohemia 1 Babčice 2 Bechyně According to written sources, Jews lived in Babčice from the middle Written sources show that Jews were in Bechyně from the second half of the 18th century at the latest. -
Jewish Museum in Prague 2018 Annual Report Obsah
Jewish Museum in Prague 2018 Annual Report Obsah 1 Legal framework for the JMP’s activities and bodies | 2 2 Basic information about the JMP | 4 a) Properties and sites overseen by the JMP | 4 b) Services provided by the JMP | 5 3 Visitor numbers and visitor services | 6 4 Organizational structure and staff | 8 5 Exhibitions | 10 a) Exhibitions at the Robert Guttmann Gallery | 10 b) Exhibitions at the Department for Education and Culture | 11 c) Exhibitions held in co-operation with other institutions | 11 6 Collections and their documentation | 13 a) Care of the collections | 13 b) Collections management | 14 c) Archives | 15 d) Library | 16 e) Shoah History Department | 17 7 Academic and research work | 19 a) Collections Department | 19 b) Shoah History Department | 21 c) Department of Jewish History and Jewish Studies | 22 d) Archives | 24 e) Library | 25 f) Representation in other organizations in the Czech Republic and abroad | 26 8 Preparation of new exhibitions and modernization | 27 9 Acquisitions | 29 10 Educational activities | 31 11 Cultural activities | 34 a) Evening programmes at the Department for Education and Culture | 34 b) Concerts and other cultural events in the Spanish Synagogue | 37 12 Publications | 38 13 Co-operation with institutions | 40 a) Loans | 40 b) Not-for-profit sector, information, consultation and media | 40 c) Involvement in other projects | 41 14 Maintenance and reconstruction | 44 15 Security | 46 16 Investments | 47 17 Grants and donations | 48 18 Finances | 49 Appendix 1 – 2018 budget implementation | 50 Appendix 2 – Profit and loss statement (CZK ’000) | 51 Appendix 3 – Balance sheet (CZK ’000) | 52 Appendix 4 – Staff structure | 53 Appendix 5 – Building repairs and reconstruction (CZK ’000) | 54 Legal framework for the JMP’s activities and bodies The Jewish Museum in Prague (JMP), an association of legal entities with common interests, was reg- istered by the Prague 1 District Authority on the 30th of September 1994. -
Lelov: Cultural Memory and a Jewish Town in Poland. Investigating the Identity and History of an Ultra - Orthodox Society
Lelov: cultural memory and a Jewish town in Poland. Investigating the identity and history of an ultra - orthodox society. Item Type Thesis Authors Morawska, Lucja Rights <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by-nc-nd/3.0/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by- nc-nd/3.0/88x31.png" /></a><br />The University of Bradford theses are licenced under a <a rel="license" href="http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Licence</a>. Download date 03/10/2021 19:09:39 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10454/7827 University of Bradford eThesis This thesis is hosted in Bradford Scholars – The University of Bradford Open Access repository. Visit the repository for full metadata or to contact the repository team © University of Bradford. This work is licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence. Lelov: cultural memory and a Jewish town in Poland. Investigating the identity and history of an ultra - orthodox society. Lucja MORAWSKA Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Social and International Studies University of Bradford 2012 i Lucja Morawska Lelov: cultural memory and a Jewish town in Poland. Investigating the identity and history of an ultra - orthodox society. Key words: Chasidism, Jewish History in Eastern Europe, Biederman family, Chasidic pilgrimage, Poland, Lelov Abstract. Lelov, an otherwise quiet village about fifty miles south of Cracow (Poland), is where Rebbe Dovid (David) Biederman founder of the Lelov ultra-orthodox (Chasidic) Jewish group, - is buried. -
The Mughrabi Quarter Digital Archive and the Virtual Illés Relief Initiative
Are you saying there’s an original sin? The Mughrabi True, there is. Deal with it. Quarter Digital – Meron Benvenisti (2013) Archive and the Few spaces are more emblematic of Jerusalem today than the Western Virtual Illés Relief Wall Plaza, yet few people – including Initiative Palestinian and Israeli residents of Jerusalem alike – are aware of the Maryvelma Smith O’Neil destruction of the old Mughrabi Quarter that literally laid the groundwork for its very creation. For the longue durée of almost eight centuries, the Mughrabi Quarter of Jerusalem had been home to Arabs from North Africa, Andalusia, and Palestine. However, within two days after the 1967 War (10–12 June 1967), the historic neighborhood, located in the city’s southeast corner near the western wall of the Noble Sanctuary (al-Haram al-Sharif), was completely wiped off the physical map by the State of Israel – in flagrant violation of Article 53 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which stipulates: Any destruction by the Occupying Power of real or personal property belonging individually or collectively to private persons, or to the State, or to other public authorities, or to social or cooperative organizations, is prohibited, except where such destruction is rendered absolutely necessary by military operations.1 Two decades prior to the Mughrabi Quarter demolition, Jerusalem’s designation as a “corpus separatum” had been intended to depoliticize the city through internationalization, under [ 52 ] Mughrabi Quarter & Illés Relief Initiative | Maryvelma Smith O’Neil Figure 1. Vue Générale de la Mosquée d’Omar, Robertson, Beato & Co., 1857. Photo: National Science and Society Picture Library. -
The Europe Trip
TEMPLE ISAIAH • HERITAGE JOURNEY TO PRAGUE, KOLIN AND BERLIN • LED BY CANTOR LISA DOOB GE JOURN A 2 0 2 0 E IT 2 3 , Y R 6 - E 1 i l H r H p A IA A S I E THE L P EUROPE M E TRIP T TOLL FREE 888-811-2812 | Search on arzaworld.com for more details 888.811.2812 New York: 500 7th Ave | 8th Floor | New York, NY 10018 Prague: Soukenicka 1194/13 | 110 00 Prague 1 | Czech Republic Jerusalem: 19 Washington Street | P.O. Box 71047 | Jerusalem, Israel 9171000 Tel Aviv: 6 Beit Hillel Street | Tel Aviv, Israel 6701709 YOUR TOUR EDUCATOR Every journey we offer is accompanied by a Tour Educator (TE) who brings your itinerary to life. Some of our TE’s have decades of firsthand experience leading people to particular places. Your TE will provide you with an authentic understanding of the locations you will visit, will introduce you to the locals, and will share his/her enthusiasm and passion for the local culture. The result is a journey that transforms your understanding of a place, connecting you to the people and places you encounter in a way that is palpable and unforgettable. Our TE's are like no other: intelligent, knowledgeable, engaging and fun. They will become an indispensable part of your experience and some might just become lifetime friends. OUR TRIP APRIL 16-23, 2020 FROM $2,995 LAND ONLY HIGHLIGHTS A journey of inspiration and education Connect to Jewish history in Prague, Kolin, and Berlin Bauer Villa, Prague's Castle District, and Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate: European gems Explore Czech and European art Shabbat in Prague Outstanding service with expert tour educator DAY 1 DEPARTURE were buried here. -
Anti-Semitic Bigotry : a Retrospective As Chronicled by Historical Medals
Anti-Semitic Bigotry : A Retrospective As Chronicled By Historical Medals by Benjamin Weiss Anti-Semitic Bigotry: A Retrospective As Chronicled By Historical Medals Benjamin Weiss Anti-Semitic Bigotry : A Retrospective As Chronicled By Historical Medals 1 Published by Kunstpedia Foundation Haansberg 19 4874NJ Etten-Leur the Netherlands t. +31-(0)76-50 32 797 www.kunstpedia.org Text : Benjamin Weiss Design : Kunstpedia Foundation Publication : 2015 Copyright Benjamin Weiss. Anti-Semitic Bigotry: A Retrospective As Chronicled By Historical Medals by Benjamin Weiss is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.kunstpedia.org. Anti-Semitic Bigotry : A Retrospective As Chronicled By Historical Medals 2 BIGOT A person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices; especially one who regards or treats the members of a group (as a racial or ethnic group) with hatred and intolerance. Merriam Webster.com 2013 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND hile prejudice exists towards many religious and ethnic groups (Endnote 1), over the ages bigoted acts against the Jews have been among the most prevalent, severe and unrelenting. W This intolerance has manifested itself from the relatively inconsequential, such as slurs, insults and distribution of anti-Semitic paraphernalia (Eisler, 2014), to the devastating, including confiscation of property, expulsion from countries, and mass slaughter. Volumes have been written about anti-Semitism and its effects, but the question still remains as to the root causes of anti-Semitic attitudes: Why have they existed for centuries? and How have they been passed on from generation to generation? This article will attempt to examine this issue using historical medals as a backdrop and primary source of information. -
The Shul B”H Weekly Magazine
The Shul B”H weekly magazine Weekly Magazine Sponsored By Mr. & Mrs. Martin (OBM) and Ethel Sirotkin and Dr. & Mrs. Shmuel and Evelyn Katz Shabbos Parshas Vayishlach Kislev 13 - 14 December 1 - 2 CANDLE LIGHTING: 5:11 pm Shabbos Ends: 6:06 pm Yud Tes Kislev Rosh Hashana of Chassidus Thursday, December 7 Te Shul - Chabad Lubavitch - An institution of Te Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem M. Schneerson (May his merit shield us) Over Tirty Years of Serving the Communities of Bal Harbour, Bay Harbor Islands, Indian Creek and Surfside 9540 Collins Avenue, Surfside, Fl 33154 Tel: 305.868.1411 Fax: 305.861.2426 www.TeShul.org Email: [email protected] The Shul Weekly Magazine Everything you need for every day of the week Contents Nachas At A Glance Weekly Message 3 Some of our Youth visiting Holocaust survivors on Erev Shabbos Thoughts on the Parsha from Rabbi Sholom D. Lipskar Celebrating Shabbos 4 -5 Schedules, classes, articles and more... Everything you need for an “Over the Top” Shabbos experience Community Happenings 6-7 Sharing with your Shul Family A Time to Pray 8 Check out all the davening schedules and locations throughout the week Inspiration, Insights & Ideas 9-15 Bringing Torah lessons to LIFE Get The Picture 16-29 The full scoop on all the great events around town One of our Youth Groups learning CPR French Connection 30 Refexions sur la Paracha Latin Link 31 Refexion Semanal In a woman’s world 32 Issues of relevance to the Jewish woman The ABC’s of Aleph 33 Serving Jews in institutional and limited environments.