February 17
1411: Musa Celebi became Sultan of the Ottoman Empire which turned out well for a portion of the Jewish population because during his reign the small Jewish community of Manisa grew in size and wealth after it had been conquered by the Ottomans.
1525(24th of Adar): Rabbi Isaac Eizik Margoliot author of Seder Gitten ve-Halizahpassed away.
1537: “Pope Paul III” issued “a call for a general council to deal with the Reformation.” This is the same pontiff who issued “Licet Judaei” a bull that spoke against the blood libel.
1609: Fifty-nine-year-old Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany who “enacted an edict of tolerance for Jews and who issued an invitation to Jewish merchants asking them to settle in Livorno and Pisa passed away today.
1634: After a year’s imprisonment in the Tower of London, the Puritan leader who was an outspoken opponent of re-admitting Jews to England, “was sentenced today to be imprisoned during life, to be fined £5,000, to be expelled from Lincoln's Inn, to be deprived of his degree by the university of Oxford, and to lose both his ears in the pillory” for his attacks on dramatic performances and King Charles I.
1697: Today, Gideon Sampson’s father, Rowland Gideon, “a West India merchant” and “a freeman of the city of London” was admitted to “the court of Painter Stainers’ Company,” “an organization of painters of metals and wood is known to have existed as early as 1283.”
1732: Birthdate of English dramatist Richard Cumberland who “The Jew” a comedy about a Jewish moneylender that was first produced at London’s Drury Lane Theatre in May of 1794. Unlike earlier English portrayals of Jewish moneylenders, in this case, Sheva the moneylender is the benevolent hero.
1736: In Buchau, Katherine and Samuel Wallersteiner gave birth to Hirsch Naphtali Wallersteiner, the husband of Judith Essinger with whom he had four children.
1745: Sara Pereyre and Aaron Nones, the Bordeaux born son of Judica and Raphael Nones gave birth to Aaron Nones, the brother of Benjamin Nones.
1764(14thof Adar I, 5524): Purim Katan
1772: First partition of Poland by Russia, Prussia and Austria. The multi-parted partition of Poland would mean the demise of the Polish nation until after World War I. Much to the disappointment of the Russians, they acquired a large Jewish population as a result of the partition; a Jewish population that the Russians did not want.
1774: In Darmstadt, Germany Biene and Mordachai Salomon Reiss gave birth to Nathan Reiss, the husband of Guthel Gottlieb with whom he had eleven children.
1776(27thof Shevat, 5536): Parashat Mishpatim; Shabbat Shekalim
1776(27thof Shevat, 5536): The first volume of Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire was published today.
From the reign of Nero to that of Antoninus Pius, the Jews discovered a fierce impatience of the dominion of Rome, which repeatedly broke out in the most furious massacres and insurrections. Humanity is shocked at the recital of the horrid cruelties which they committed in the cities of Egypt, of Cyprus, and of Cyrene, where they dwelt in treacherous friendship with the unsuspecting natives, and we are tempted to applaud the severe retaliation which was exercised by the arms of the legions against a race of fanatics whose dire and credulous superstition seemed to render them the implacable enemies not only of the Roman government, but of human kind.
- Edward Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776)
1785: Birthdate of Nachman Kohen Krochmal, the native of Brody who interrupted his studies to become a businessman who wrote Moreh Nebuke ha-Zeman
1791: Birthdate of Lutgeneder, Germany native Johanna Schonholz, the wife of Lehmann Leffman Kohlberg with whom she had seven children.
1798(1stof Adar, 5558): Parashat Terumah, Rosh Chodesh Adar; Shabbat Shekalim
1801: An electoral tie between Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr is resolved when Jefferson is elected President of the United States and Burr Vice President by the United States House of Representatives. Thomas Jefferson was the first President to appoint a Jew to a Federal post. In 1801 he named Reuben Etting of Baltimore as U.S. Marshall for Maryland. More importantly from a Jewish perspective was the fact that Jefferson was a strong defender of the concept of separation of church and state.
1809: Miami University is chartered by the State of Ohio. According to recent figures a thousand of the school’s 15,000 undergrads are Jewish and 100 of its 1,000 grad students are Jewish. The school offers approximately 20 Jewish Studies courses and a Major in Jewish Studies. The school hosts a robust Hillel Chapter offering a wide variety of programs including a weekly Friday night Shabbat services and dinner.
1817(1stof Adar, 5577): Rosh Chodesh Adar
1817(1stof Adar, 5777): Twenty-five-year-old Myer Jacobs, the Philadelphia born of Moses Jacobs married Rebecca Lazarus today.
1819: Birthdate of historian Philip Jaffe who overcame German anti-Semitism to “one of the most important medievalists of the 19th century.”
1826: One day after he had passed away, 86 year old Michael Davis was buried today at the “Canterbury Jewish Cemetery.”
1828: Moshe Simeon ben Joseph married Bluma bat Jacob today at the Western Synagogue
1829: Middlesex natives Hannah Levy and Michael Emanuel gave birth to Alfred Emanuel.
1829: In Paris James Mayer de Rothschild and Betty Salomon von Rothschild gave birth to their second son Gustave Samuel de Rothschild, Baron de Rothschild, the “consul-general for Austria-Hungary, director of the Chemin de Fer du Nord and the Paris-Lyons and Mediterranean Railway; member of the board of directors of the Rothschild Hospital and Hospice and president of the Jewish Consistory of Paris
1830: Israel Phillips married Maria Sampson today at the Western Synagogue.
1830: David D. Cohen married Mary Hart, “the eldest daughter of Nathan Hart” in Charleston, SC, today.
1830:Dr. Daniel Moses Levy Maduro Peixotto, the Amsterdam born son of Cantor Moses Levy Maduro Peixotto and Judith van Samuel Peixotto and his wife Rachel Lopes Mendes Peixotto gave birth to Moses Levy Maduro Peixotto, II.
1840: Frederick David Goldsmid, the fifth born child of Baron Isaac-Lyon Goldsmid and the former Caroline Samuel, the daughter of Philip Samuel gave birth to their second child Walter Henry.
1844(27thof Shevat, 5604): Parsahat Misphatim; Shabbat Shekalim
1844: In Alexandria, Egypt, Isacco Saul Sonnino and Georgiana Sophia Arnaud Sonnino gave birth to Giorgio Sonnino, the husband of Elena Sonnino and the father of Margherita Sonnino and Giorgina Sonnino
1846: Birthdate of Bestland, VA native Solomon W. Fleishman, the operator of mercantile businesses in Danville and Richmond who passed away in December of 1916 leaving large bequests to several organizations including Hebrew Union College, the Ladies’ Hebrew Benevolent Society, the Home for Confederate Women and the Hebrew Home for Aged and Infirm.
1846: In Finsbury, London natives Rachel Levy and Samuel Samson Genese gave birth to Abraham Samuel Genese.
1847: In Frankfurt, Charlotte Rothschild and Anselm von Rothschild the manager of “the family-owned S M von Rothschild bank” in Vienna gave birth to their “eighth and youngest child” Alice Charlotte von Rothschild
1847: Israel Coleman married Julia Cohen at the Great Synagogue today.
1850: Yehuda ben Aharon married Ryna bat Mikal at the Great Synagogue today.
1852(27th of Shevat, 5612): Five days before his 40th birthday, Hebrew Poet Micha Joseph Levenson passed away.
1852: Two days after he had passed away, Joseph Safir, the father of Elisabeth, Roaslia, Marie and Markus Saphir was buried today in the Central Bohemian Region of what became the Czech Repubic.
1853: Three days after she had passed away, Adelaide Elkin, the daughter of Samuel and Jane Stiebel and the wife of Isaac Benjamin Elkin was buried today at the “Balls Pond Jewish Cemetery.”
1853: A Hungarian tailor makes an unsuccessful attempt on the life of Emperor Franz Josef. Jews are erroneously thought to have colluded with Italian dissidents in the attempt.
1856(11thof Adar I, 5616): “English tenor and composer John Braham” who received his earliest musical training in the Great Synagogue where his father Abraham was a chorister” and who “in 181t collaborated with Isaac Nathan on a work called ‘Hebrew Melodies” for which Lord Byron wrote the text” passed away today.
1856: Heinrich Heine passed away. The famed poet was born to a Jewish family but converted to Christianity in 1825 seeing it as the only way to fully enter German and European society. Reportedly Heine saw his conversion as matter of practical convenience saying that “As Henry IV said, 'Paris is worth a mass'; I say, 'Berlin is worth the sermon.'" Heine remained ambivalent about his decision for the rest of his life. When the Nazis decided to burn books by Jewish authors, they included the works of Heine. Heine has prophetically written, “Where they burn books, they will ultimately also burn people."
1857: Abel Dreyfous, an immigrant from Belfort Alsace and Caroline Kaufman Dreyfous, a native of Bavaria gave birth to Felix Jonathan Dreyfous in New Orleans “at the corner of Florida Walk (then Marigny Canal) and Elysian Fields Street where” they “for a time attempted to operate a soap factory under unfavorable circumstatnces
1858: In Baltimore, MD, Israel Cohen, the son of Benjamin I. and Kitty Cohen and his wife Cecilia Eliza Cohen gave birth to Eleanor Septima Cohen whose interest in both Jewish and non-sectarian charities can be seen her endowment scholarships in the Medical Department of the University of Maryland and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America as well as her membership in the “Associated Jewish charities to which she was a liberal contributor, the Municipal Art Society of Baltimore, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Maryland Historical Society, the Zionist Organization of America and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America.” (As reported by the Maryland Historical Society)
1863: Birthdate of British political leader David Lloyd George. Lloyd George was the Prime Minster of Great Britain during the last half of World War I. His resolve helped to bring victory to the Allies. For Jews, Lloyd George will be remembered as the Prime Minister whose government issued the famous Balfour Declaration. Unlike some of his wartime contemporaries, Lloyd George remained a loyal supporter to both the letter and the spirit of the Balfour Declaration after the Great War when it was no longer fashionable to keep the promises made to the Jewish people.
1865: In “Melsungen, Hessen, Germany,” Leiser and Tels Delza Speyer gave birth “Isak Isaac Itzig Speier,” the “husband of Flora Speier” and the father of Leo Speyer.
1866: A correspondent for the New York Times arrived in Kai-fun-fee, the capital of Honan where he has gone in search of the remnants of an ancient community of Chinese Jews.
1866: In New York City Jacob Strauss and Betty Danenbaum gave birth to Carrie Strauss, who as Carrie Taubenhaus, the wife of Rabbi Godfrey Taubenhaus, who served as a trustee of the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Hebrew Educational Society and was the “first president of Brooklyn Section of the Council of Jewish Women.”
1870: In Milwaukee, WI, Temple Emanu-E which had been formed in 1869 was formally incorporated, making I the city’s second oldest congregation. E.M.V. Brown was the first Rabbi to serve the congregation.
1871(26thof Shevat, 5631): Sixty-four-year-old Eleazer (Eugene) Moss, the son of John Moss and Rebecca Lyons and husband of Mary Levy passed away today in Philadelpha.
1871: The victorious Prussian Army parades though Paris after the end of the Siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian War. Jews fought in the armies of the victorious Prussians and the vanquished French. More importantly, the humiliating defeat in 1871 led to World War I which in turn led to World War II and the Shoah.
1872: In Salisbury, MD, Simon Ulman, the Myersdale, PA born son of Joseph and Sarah Ullman and his wife Caroline Ulman gave birth to Joseph Ulman
1872: It was reported today that of the $528,742.47 that New York City gave to sectarian charitable institutions in 1869 and 1870, Hebrew institutions received $14,404.49 as compared to the $412,082.56 that went to Roman Catholic Intuitions.
1873: In Baltimore, MD, Moses and Rose (Levi) Moses gave birth John Hopkins grad and University of Maryland trained attorney Jacob M. Moses, the husband of Hortense E. Guggenheimer who was General counsel of the Sun Life Insurance Company and active in the Jewish community as can by his serving as vice president of the American Jewish Congress and honorary president of the Baltimore District of the ZOA.
1874(30thof Shevat, 5634): Rosh Chodesh Adar
1874(30thof Shevat, 5634): Eighty-six-year-old Georgetown, SC native Divinah Cohen, the wife of Philadelphia native Isaac Minis and the mother of France Minis passed away today.
1874: Benjamin Disraeli finished serving as leader of the Loyal Opposition as he prepared to assume the role of Prime Minister following the conclusion of the General Election in which the Conservative Party won a majority of seats in the House of Commons.
1875: Twenty-one-year-old Sophie Seligman became Sophie Walter when she married Moritz Walter today.
1875: The Israelite General Benevolent Society gave its 9th annual ball at the Turn Hall tonight. The affair was a fundraiser to raise money for destitute and poor Jewish families.
1876: Birthdate of New York City native and CCNY graduate Rabbi Moses Beckhardt, a forty-year veteran teacher in NY Public School System, a “chaplain at the Jewish Protectotry at Hawthorne, NY” and assistant superintendent of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum who was “connected with Beth Israel Congregation of Kingsburg for fifteen years.
1877(4thof Adar, 5637): Fifty-six-year-old German-born Austrian writer Salomon Hermann Mosenthal known for his “opera libretti” passed away today.
1877: In Hungary, Max and Regina Goldstein Englander to Henry Englander who came to the United States in 1879, graduated from the University of Cincinnati and HUC in 1901 who served as rabbi at several congregations staring with Ahavath Sholom Temple in Ligonier, Indiana before pursuing a career in Judaic academia.
1878: In Remiremont, Vosage, Albert Weth, “a draper” and his wife Sophia gave birth to “writer and critic” Leon Werth, the overage opponent of war who served as a volunteer on the Western Front in the French Army and with his wife Suzanne risked his life as member of the Resistance by turning their apartment into a safe house for everything from fellow Jews on the run to downed Allied pilots while raising his son Claude who would become a doctor.
1878: “Daniel – The Third Ruler in the Kingdom” published today discusses why Daniel who interpreted the inscription for the Babylonian king was referred to as the “third ruler” when Joseph who interpreted the dream for the Pharaoh was referred to as the “second ruler.”
1878: It was reported today that after four years, the Young Men’s Hebrew Association of New York City has 900 members.
1878: It was reported today that the Gemeindebund ("Union of Judæo-German Congregations") has been reorganized to better protect the Jewish communities in Germany
1878: It was reported today that more than one third of the Jews living in Amsterdam are paupers. These 13,000 individuals are supported by the Jewish community and the government. The Congregational Council spent 130,214 florins in 1877 to support a variety of community officials and institutions including a Chief Rabbi, Chief Cantor, free religious schools for 1,800 boys and 600 girls, a rabbinical college, an orphan asylum and a hospital and lunatic asylum “considered the best in the country.”
1879: In the United States Circuit Court, Judge Wallace and the jury began hearing the case brought by M.L. Hiller, who identified himself as “a Prussian and a Jew” who had become a Universalist, against the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad Company of Nebraska for breach of contract.
1879: Birthdate of Rostov, Russia native Samuel J. Kasindorf who in 1888 arrived in NYC where he became a businessman and served as one of the directors of the Young Men’s Hebrew Association Borough Park starting in 1920.
1880: “Historic Balds,” a comic look at the lack of hair among men through the ages printed today, not that based on the story of Elisha “baldness seems to have been considered a disgrace in remote ages…” On the other hand, the stories of Samson and Absalom would indicate that flowing locks are not a guarantee of good fortune or divine approval.
1880: After having been charged with arson, Jacob Naftal, a Jewish clothing merchant, went on trial today for his role in starting a fire at Red Bank, NY which destroyed 9 buildings. The 9 buildings, which included a store owned by the defendant, were in the town’s business district. The trial is expected to last for several days.
1880: “In Kharkoff, Russia, Mordecai and Rebecca (Rubenstein) Edelhertz gave birth to Bernard Edelhertz who in 1893 was brought to the United States where he graduated from NYU Law School, severed as “assistant to the attorney general of the United States” for five years, “purchased controlling interest of the American Hebrew Magazine and served as an executive with both Cyclopedia Juaica and the Independent American Jewish Public Company while raising two daughters with his wife, the former Clara Greenberg.
1881: Rabbi E.M. Meyer Rafael of Brooklyn provided his version of the conflict between Raphael Joseffy and Matthew Arbuckle who were supposed to be participating in an upcoming concert to provide funds for his Brooklyn synagogue. According to Meyer, Arbuckle, one of the leading coronet players had agreed to charge a reduced price for his performance and the Joseffy, one of the leading pianists, had agreed to play for free. However, when Joseffy’s secretary found out the Arbuckle was performing, the secretary said Joseffy would not perform if a coronet was being played. Joseffy expressed no opinion about Arbuckle. The objection would have been the same if it had been another coronet player. The dispute could derail this benefit event.
1881: Seventy-four-year-old German historian Theodor Hirsch who converted to Christianity was the cousin of historian Siegfried Hirsh, passed away today.
1882: The description of the conditions of the Jews in Kiev and its surrounding area provided by Russian speaking Protestant Englishman who had visited the area were published today. According to him the homes of the Jews had been “completely wrecked…with the…doors and windows…torn from their hinges. At least 2,000 Jews – men, women and children – were left with nothing but the clothes on their backs. During one 48-hour period of carnage, “numerous defenseless young women were completely at the mercy of the mob…” The authorities did nothing to prevent the violence and expressed sympathy for the attackers. When some of the attackers were put on trial, “the government prosecutor expressed sympathy with the motives” of the attackers. The light sentences showed that the populace supported the attacks and the violence. In some of the small towns outside of Kiev, the soldiers who were ordered to protect the Jews actually joined the rioters.
1882: Hamilton Disston wrote a letter from Jacksonville, FL to Mayor King of Philadelphia offering a free 40-acre tract of land owned by Okeechobee Land and Improvement Company of Florida to each of the 50 Jewish families fleeing Russian persecution that are on a boat bound for the City of Brotherly Love.
1882: It was reported today that at Kiev, Odessa, Elizabethgrad and other Russian cities “more than 250 women were outraged by Jewbaiters during the disturbances [“Outraged” is a euphemism for rape and “disturbances is a euphemism for Pogrom.]
1882: It was reported today that petroleum was poured on a Jew’s head in Odessa and that he was then set on fire.
1882: It was reported that at Kiev, General Dreutlen refused to protect the Jews because it was not worth risking the lives of his soldiers to do so.
1882: It was reported today that F.D. Moccatta has contributed £ 1,000 to the relief fund for the Jews of Russia. He has also to contribute 1 per cent of any sum collected within the next two years in an amount not to exceed £ 1,000,000. [F.D. Moccatta is Frederick David Mocatta]
1883: Birthdate of Anna Schmetterling, a native of Austria-Hungary, who became Anna Aberbach when she married Adolf Aberbach both of whom were passengers on the ill-fates S.S St. Louis.
1885: In Hungary, Isaac and Hannah (Rocker) Brav gave birth to Columbia, JTS and Hebrew Union College educated Rabbi Louis Brav, the husband of Viola Brav who was the Rabbi at Temple Sinai in Lake Charles, LA and a Professor of Romance Languages at Lawrence College in Appleton, Wisconsin.
1887: In Hungary, Max and Regina (Goldstein) Englander gave birth to University of Cincinnati graduate and Hebrew Union College Rabbi Henry Englander, the husband of Esther Straus, who joined the faculty of his rabbinic alma mater in 1910 as a Professor of Medieval Exegetical Literature and Registrar.
1888: Birthdate of Otto Stern, 1943 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics.
1889: Birthdate of Canadian native mezzo-soprano Irene Pavloska
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1962/02/14/107174368.pdf
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/irene-pavloska-emc/
1889: In “Kertch (Crimea) Russia,” “Boris M. and Maria (Zengin) Piastro: gave birth to gold medal winning violinist Josef Borissoff, the husband of Anna T. Berezowskaya.
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1943/11/03/87427489.html?pageNumber=21
1890: It was reported that the funds raised by the concert and reception hosted by the Seligman Solomon Society would go to the Seligman Solomon Prize Fund for the Hebrew Orphan Asylum. The society which is was founded three years ago is made up of those who had lived at the asylum and the late Seligman Solomon was one of its leading patrons.
1890: United States Commissioner John A. Shields continued to hear testimony regarding the Sixth National Bank case, which if true, would mean that Siegmund T. Meyer and his sons Philip and Arthur, “raided” the financial institution.
1890(27thof Shevat, 5650): Herman Frohman a wealthy New York butcher, the husband of Mary Frohman and the father of Henrietta Frohman, Lena Frohman Vollman, Fannie Frohman Adler, Bertha Frohman and Rebecca Frohman passed away today.
1890: The Hebrew Home for the Aged and Infirm of Richmond, VA led by President Henry S. Hutzler, Vice President Philip Whitlock and Secretary and Treasurer Isaac Held was incorporated today.
1891: In Winnsboro, SC, Rabbi David Levy of Charleston officiated at the wedding Sam Nathan from Denver, CO and Etta L. Wolfe,” the daughter of Saling and Sarah Wolfe”
1891: Birthdate of Abraham Fraenkel, the Munich native and “fervent Zionist” who became the first Dean of Mathematics at Hebrew University.
1891(9th of Adar I, 5651): In Leadville, CO, Abe Oliner passed away just two months short of his sixth birthday. Abe came to Leadville in 1885 with his father Isaac, age 30, mother Gilla, age 25, brother Jacob, age 4 and sister Fannie, age 2.
1891: Birthdate of German born Israeli mathematician Abraham Halevi Fraenkel.
1894(18th of Adar I, 5654): Sixty-three-year-old Albert S. Rosenbaum, a retired tobacco merchant and hotel proprietor passed away today in New York. A native of Cassel, Germany he came to the United States when he was 18 and settled in California where he made his fortune investing in San Francisco real estate. He moved to New York to better manage his tobacco interest.
1894: Birthdate of Minsk native Sidney Davidson the founder of “Davidson Brothers” a New York “underwear company, a founder, in 1939 “of the United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York” and the husband of “the former Sarah Machilis” with whom he had two children – Jean and Morton. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1965/08/10/101560339.pdf
1895: “Heine’s Pension” published today described Heinrich Heine’s life in France beginning with “his exile in Paris in 1831.” (Heine was the German literary figure who converted, a decision that he later came to regret but never rectified.)
1895: In St. Louis, Russian, Austrian, Polish, Hungarian and Scandinavian Jews who had become naturalized citizens of the United States form the Progressive Order of the West, a fraternal and benevolent organization. The Progressive Order's objectives were to familiarize members with the laws, customs, and institutions of this country; to create a fund to be used for charitable purposes, and to provide for the payment of death benefits to the families of members. In 1898, 7 lodges were in existence in St. Louis and steps were being taken to extend the order to other cities.
1895: It is reported today that the Government in Germany has taken the side of the striking tailors and seamstresses. (Considering the reactionary nature of the German ruling class this would seem rather strange except that the owners are described as being “mostly Jews.”)
1895: “Are Sisters of Mercy” published today described the Temple Emanu-El Sisterhood as one of “the pioneer of all Jewish sisterhoods: and “one of the most excellent institutions among…Hebrew charities.”
1896: It was reported today that Baron von Leonrod, the Bavarian Minister of Justice has said that it would be impossible to refund the 80,000 marks that Louis Stern of New York had left as bail even though he had received a pardon from the Prince Regent.
1896: In Paris, “playwright Pierre Verber and novelist Catherine Agadjanian” gave birth to journalist and screenwriter Pierre-Gilles Veber, the father of Francis Veber.
1896(3rdof Adar I, 5656): Sixty-four French author Aristide Félix Cohen passed away today.
1896: Under the will of the late Adolphe de Rothschild, with today’s date, he “bequeathed to the Institution for Sick Foreign Jews in Frankfort, founded in memory of his daughter, Georgine Sara, 2,000,000 marks and to the orthodox Jewish Congregation in Frankfort 200,000 marks, in trust, to distribute to the income among poor Jews of good character, on the anniversaries of his death and that of his wife.
1897: It was reported today that Professor Felix Adler is one of the speakers scheduled to address the upcoming conference on improving housing conditions in New York City.
1897: “Large Gift to Orphans” published today described the offer of Emanuel Lehman to provide “$100,00 for the endowment of an industrial and provident fund for the benefit of graduates” who have been under the care of the Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asylum Society.
1897: As Emanuel Lehman celebrated his 70th birthday it was reported today that “every charitable association” in New York City “in which Lehman is interested received a handsome check from him…with an explanatory note that it was a birthday present.
1897: Two day after she had passed away, 86-year-old Maria Jacobs, the daughter of David Nathan and Sarah Isaacs and the wife of Aaron Jacobs was buried today at the “Plashet Jewish Cemetery” in London.
1897: “Work of the United Hebrew Charities” published today showed that during January 114 people had received money to be used for transportation to other parts of the United States or Europe. During January, the UHC provided 53 free burials and provided medical assistance to 394 people including medicine and visits to the doctor. Finally the UHC provided clothing, shoes, furniture, lodgings, meals and cash to 5,422 applicants.
1898: Judge Meyer S. Isaacs will deliver a lecture entitled “The Old Guard” tonight at Temple Israel sponsored by the Young Men’s Hebrew Association.
1900(18thof Adar I, 5660) Parashat Ki Tisa
1902: The U.S. Senate voted to ratify the purchase by the United States from Denmark of the Danish West Indies, now the U.S. Virgin Islands where Jews had first settled in 1655 and which is the home to Congregation Beracha Veshalom Vegmiluth Hasadim as well as the milieu for Alice Hoffman’s novel The Marriage of Opposites.
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/virgin-islands-virtual-jewish-history-tour
1903: Herzl meets Dr. Abdullah Djevdet Bey whose poetry he reviewed in the Neue Freie Presse. Djevdet offers his help in gaining support for the Zionists in Turkey. Leopold Greenberg reports from Egypt that it will be impossible to obtain a Charter that will support Jewish colonization.
1904: In Akron, Ohio, 22 year old Bert A. Polsky, the son of Abram and Mollie Polsky who worked at A.Polsky, the family owned business married Hazel Steiner who would become a charter member and president of the Women’s Auxiliary Board of the Akron City Hospital.
1904: Birthdate of political scientist and historian Hans J. Morgenthau. Born and educated in Germany, Morgenthau came to the United States in the 1930’s. He gained fame as director of the Center for the Study of American Foreign and Military Policy while teaching at the University of Chicago. Morgenthau was a realist and opposed the Vietnam War “because the risks of military participation outweighed any benefits.” He was a leader in the fight to improve the conditions of Soviet Jewry and he spoke out against the PLO as a terrorist organization. He passed away in 1980.
1905: Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia, the brother of Emperor Alexander III and the nephew of Emperor Nicholas II who while serving as Governor General of Moscow oversaw “the expulsion of 20,000 Jews from Moscow” was assassinated today in Moscow.
1906: Carl Stettauer, “who represented the United States and Great Britain in the general distribution of the Jewish Relief Fund in Russia” met with a New York Times reporter today at the Waldorf-Astoria where he described his visit to Russia during which two million dollars, half of which had been raised in the United states was spent on relieving the suffering of the Jewish population.
1907: Birthdate of Brooklyn native Irving Philip Kartell the St. John’s University-trained lawyer, “an Assistant United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York from 1947 to 1953” and the Justice of the State of Supreme Court in Brooklyn who “ruled in favor of women bus drivers in a landmark discrimination case while raising two children –James and Karren – with his wife, the former Leonore Sweedler.”
1908: “Immigrant Children Unite” published today described how “nearly fifty little immigrant children who are now on parole at the Hebrew Sheltering House for Immigrants have become so attached to each other since their arrive in the United States, a few weeks ago, that they have pledged themselves to keep in communication with each other after they have left the Sheltering House for various cities in the Middle West.”
1909: “Oddest and Oldest of Weddings Here” published today described the wedding of two Sephardic Jews, Samuel Hanania and Rosa Penso based on the information supplied to reporters by Ephraim, a Sephardic Jew from Turkey “who used be an official interpreter at Ellis Island.”
1910: In New York City, Minerva Norma (née Sugarman) Goldsmith and Israel Simon Goldsmith gave birth to Max Goldsmith who gained fame as American cinema actor Marc Lawrence who was a friend and acting contemporary of John Garfield. Like Garfield, Lawrence ran into trouble during the McCarthy Period. Unlike Garfield, Lawrence survived professionally and personally. He passed away in 2005.
1911: Birthdate of Oskar Koplowitz, a native of Silesia, who as Oskar Seidlin became a noted American “literary scholar, poet and” an author of detective novels and books for children.
1912(29thof Shevat, 5672): Parashat Mishpatim; Shabbat Shekalim
1912: As Jews observe Shabbat, Colonel Roosevelt, who had enjoyed support among the Jewish population and who had appointed the first Jew to serve in the Cabinet is, today, as promised, contemplating a run for the Presidency after having been out of office for four years.
1913: The Armory Show opens in New York City, displaying works of artists who are to become some of the most influential painters of the early 20th century. William Zorach, Max Weber, Elie Nadelman, Maurice Becket and Abraham Walkowitz were among the Jewish artists invited to display their work.
1913: U.S. premiere of “The Miracle,” a British silent, color film based on the play by Max Reinhardt.
1914: “In a 142 page decision, the Georgia Supreme court denied Leo Frank a new trial” by dismissing allegations of juror bias and the influence of spectators on the verdict of the trial court.
1915: “Plea to New York Jews” published today described willingness of the U.S. Navy to ship “flour, sugar, rice and matzoth for Passover” aboard one of its vessels provided the Jewish community can raise the funds for the supplies which will unloaded at Jaffa.
1915: In Rhodes Island, at Brown University, several faculty members took part in a discussion following a lecture on Zionism delivered by Professor Richard Gottheil of Columbia University.
1915: In Chicago, Pia “Fannie” Brin and Solomon Brin gave birth to “Herb Brin, pugnacious journalist, editor, poet and dogged campaigner for liberal and Jewish causes.”
http://www.davidbrin.com/herbbrin/obituary.html
1915: Reverend Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the former Oriel Professor of Interpretation of the Scriptures at Oxford and who was one of the first “English scholars” to apply “the methods of Higher Criticism” to the study of the Old Testament – a methodology that had already become popular among some German-Jewish scholars – passed away today. Cheyne was the author of Job and Solomon: The Wisdom of the Old Testament, The Prophecies of Isaiah in two volumes and work on the prophet of Jeremiah.
1916: “Robinson Crusoe, Jr” a musical co-authored by Sigmund Romberg, co-starring Al Jolson and produced by Lee and Jacob Schubert opened at the Winter Garden Theatre.
1916: “A committee of those who have been active in Jewish relief work in New York City” headed by Leo Kamaiky and Mrs. Samuel Elkeles “called upon President Wilson” today “and thanked him for hiving set aside January 27 by proclamation as a day when all could contribute to relieve the destitute Jews in the war zone” who reportedly to number at least nine million souls.
1917: Rabbi Marius Ranson is scheduled to lead services today at Temple Israel of Harlem.
1917: Dr. Samuel Schulman is scheduled to deliver the sermon this morning at Temple Beth-El on Fifth Avenue.
1917: “The Women’s Proclamation Committee, the national women’s organization for Jewish relief” today “sent to the Joint Distribution Committee for Jewish War Relief a check for $3,000, its monthly contribution to the great 1917 fund being raised here for destitute Jews in the warring countries.”
1917: At Temple Emanu-El, Dr. Silverman is scheduled to deliver a sermon on “Sacredness of Life: Thou Shalt Not Murder” at Saturday morning services.
1917: “A young girl refugee” who “is a native Mihailovo Poland, a village about forty miles from the German border” “who after three months efforts succeeded in getting out Poland” and escaping to the United States made a statement from her uncle’s home on Seventh Avenue that “The Jews in that part of Russian Poland which is now occupied by Germans thought, before the war that the Russians were hard taskmasters. Now, they go down on their knees every night and pray for the return of the Russians; they do so covertly, though for if they were caught, they would be beaten or imprisoned.”
1917: General James Rowan O’Beirne, the Civil War and Medal of Honor winner who served as Superintended of Immigration in the 1890’s who opposed Jess Seilgman’s efforts to gain admittance to the United States for the 86 Jewish passengers aboard the SS Marsala passed away.
1918: Jacob H. Schiff, head of the special committee of the American Jewish Relief Committee that arranged the plan whereby the workers of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union will forego the holiday on Washington's Birthday and give their day's earnings to the Jewish war sufferers announced that almost no factory organized by the ILGU would be open and that many owners would be paying time and half or double time.
1918: Rabbi Stephen S. Wise announced that the Palestine Restoration Fund now totals more than $800,000 of which $250,000 was collected in New York.
1918: Saul J. Cohen, editor The Maccabean, the official Zionist journal received a cable from Israel Zangwill, founder of the Jewish Territorial Organization, saying that he has altered his position following the issuance of the Balfour Declaration and “now looks toward Palestine as the land of the Jews.”
1918: Morris Rothenberg, Chairman of the Zionist Committee of New York presided over a meeting of Zionists at the Casino Theatre who had gathered to honor the memory of Dr. Jechiel Tchlenow who died last month in London.
1919: Norman Hapgood, President of the League of Nations Association, Judge Julian W. Mack, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, Max Pam and Dr. Benzion Mossinson are the guests of honor at a kosher banquet scheduled to be held this evening at the Morrison Hotel as part of the Zionist Convention being held in Chicago.
1920: Birthdate of Bella Levy, of blessed memory, a pillar of the Little Rock Jewish Community and the wife of Manford Levy.
1921: Herah Lerner, his wife Elka and their daughter who had been born two days ago while aboard a ship bringing these Jews to the United States arrived in New York.
1921: After having been informed by the New York World that “the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which he has been reprinting with anti-Semitic commentary in his own newspaper the Dearborn Independent, are a forgery” Ford said he did not care replying "The only statement I care to make about the Protocols is that they fit in with what is going on. They are sixteen years old, and they have fitted the world situation up to this time. Indeed, they do."
1922: In Chile, Mary Grisel Lehmann (née Bissett) and Andrew William Lehmann, a mining engineer, gave birth to Professor Andrew George Lehmann
1922: Two days after he had passed away, 67-year-old Abraham Shapiro, the husband of the former Sarah Jacobs with who he had had eight children, was buried today at the “East Ham Cemetery.”
1924: A bazaar sponsored by the People’s Relief “Ort” of America which will raise funds for Jews of Central and Eastern Europe continued for a second day at the Grand Central Palace.
1925: In York, PA, Dorothy and Joseph Rosenmiller gave birth to Joseph Lewis Rosenmiller, Jr. “who earned a fortune building a chain of radio stations and then donated tens of millions to promote causes that he felt traditional philanthropies largely ignored, like voting rights and the empowerment of domestic workers…” (As reported by Leslie Kaufman)
1925, Florence Prag Kahn won a special election, becoming the fifth woman and first Jewish woman to serve in the United States Congress.
https://jwa.org/thisweek/feb/17/1925/florence-prag-kahn
1925: Birthdate of Libby Drescher Isaacs (Leiba bat Shmuel) who was buried in Durham, NC when she passed away in 1982.
1925: Harold Ross and Jane Grant found The New Yorker magazine. Numerous Jewish writers and artists have contributed to the sophisticated journal. These include two cartoonists – Jules Feifer and Roz Chast as well as such authors as Dorothy Park and S.J. Pearlman.
1926: In Brooklyn, “Joseph and Sarah Postel, who ran an egg and dairy products store” gave birth to Miriam Postel the future wife of diamond cutter Max Weinstein with whom she had two sons – movie-men Harvey and Bob Weinstein.
1927: David T. WIlentz, the Attorney General of New Jersey who prosecuted Bruno Hauptmann and his wife gave birth to Robert Wilentz, the longest serving Chief Just of the New Jersey Supreme Court.
1928: Birthdate of Bronx native Erwin “E.M.” Nathanson the author and novelist best known for writing The Dirty Dozen which provided the inspiration for one of the most famous WW II movies.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/em-nathanson-dead-dirty-dozen-881401
1929: In New York, Benjamin Max and Mollie (Friedman) Potok gave birth to Chaim Potok, a graduate of Yeshiva University, who was ordained as a Conservative Rabbi after studying at The Jewish Theological Society. He earned a PhD at the University of Pennsylvania. He decided to become a writer after reading Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited in 1945. He was fourteen years old, and all he had read were magazines and pulp fiction. He wanted to read a serious adult book, and he chose Brideshead Revisited at random from the public library. He later said about reading it, "I found myself inside a world the merest existence of which I had known nothing about. I lived more deeply inside the world in that book than I lived inside my own world." Potok’s work draws on his own life’s experiences – Judaism (The Chosen, The Promise,) and a stint as an Army Chaplain serving in the Far East (The Book of Lights) – as well as the conflicts he faced including becoming an artist despite family and cultural opposition (My Name Is Asher Lev and The Gift of Asher Lev). His success stems from many factors. One is that he opened doors to worlds that people did not know existed i.e. Chasidic Judaism and the Orient. The second is that he dealt with larger issues such as how a minority culture copes with a majority culture, how to temper brilliance with humanity, and the challenge of effective parenting in changing world, to name but a few.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/chaim-potok
http://potok.lasierra.edu/Potok.biographical.html
1929: In Tocopilla, Chile, Jaime Jodorowsky Groismann, “ a merchant” and reportedly an abusive husband and his wife Sara gave birth to filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky Prullansky.
1930: “The Vagabond King,” a musical operetta, produced by Adolph Zukor, written by Herman J. Mankiewicz and co-starring Lillian Roth was released in the United States today.
1930: Herman Bernstein was appointed the U.S. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Albania today.
1930: “Sol M Strock, the newly elected chairman of the Jewish Theological Seminary’s Board of Director told the annual meeting of the Seminary’s Philadelphia branch” about a soon to be launch $5,000,000 endowment fund campaign. (As reported by JTA)
1931(30thof Shevat, 5691): Rosh Chodesh Adar
1931: Masonic services are scheduled to be held this afternoon by the St. Cecile Lodge at the Plaza Funeral Home for 65-year-old comedian Louis Mann who passed away on February 15, 1931.
1932: Irving Berlin and Moss Hart’s musical "Face the Music" premiered in New York.
1932: Senator Norris, the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee appointed Senators Robinson, Schall and Ashurst to a subcommittee to hear people “who have protested the appointment of Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo to the Supreme Court.
1933: German author and socialist Oskar Graf, the husband of Mirjam Sachs and brother-in-law of Jewish journalist Manford George traveled to Vienna ostensibly to deliver a lecture but actuality to begin a self-imposed exile.
1933: The first edition of Newsweek makes its appearance. In 1961, America’s “perennially #2 newsweekly” will be purchased by Katherine Graham’s Washington Post Co.
1934(2ndof Adar, 5694): Parashat Terumah
1934: “Deficit In Exports Shocks the Nazis” published today described how the Nazis are blaming the first drop in exports in January, which is the first drop in four years” on the anti-German boycott organized by the Jews instead of looking at their own economic policies and the changing economic conditions brought on by the continuing worldwide depression.
1935(14th of Adar I, 5695): Purim Katan
1936: “A vigorous attack on anti-Semitism was made today by Premier Koscialkowski in a speech to the Sejm introducing the budget” today in Warsaw.
1936: S. N. (Samuel] Nathaniel) Behrman's "End of Summer" premiered in New York.
1937: Bronislaw Huberman, the violinist and founder of the Palestine Symphony Orchestra, received a rousing tribute at a concert here tonight with the Concertgebouw, under the auspices of the Society for Art for All.
1938: In New York, Evelyn D. and Jacob Levi gave birth to artist Josef Lev
http://www.wrgallery.com/josef_levi.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josef_Levi#mediaviewer/File:Josef-Levi-Self-Portrait-2011.jpg
1938: The Palestine Post reported that Austria had capitulated to the German ultimatum and appointed pro-Nazis to the cabinet, marking the effective end of the country's independence.
1938(16thof Adar I, 5698): Sixty-seven year old Joseph B. David, the Louisville born “son of Theobold and Adelaide (Strauss) David” and husband of Emma Siesel who practiced law in Chicago where he was a Special Assistant City Attorney before serving several terms as on the Superior Court of Cook County, first as a judge and then as Chief Justice.
1938: The Palestine Post reported that there was a major, festive ceremony when the District Commissioner, Mr. Keith Roach, opened Kalia, the first hotel and health resort on the Dead Sea, with the keys handed to him by Major T.C. Tuloch, Chairman of the Kalia Health Resort Company.
1938: The Palestine Post reported that Mohammed el-Rab, a Palestinian Arab, was executed at the Acre prison, one week after his arrest and an immediate Military Court trial, for possession of a loaded automatic gun and ammunition.
1938(16thof Adar I, 5698): David I Aaron passed away today after which he was buried at Beth Hamedrash Hagodol-Beth Jacob Cemetery in McKees Rocks, PA.
1938: In Vienna, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency issued a “reassuring” statement “to the effect that the change in government would not alter Dr. Schuschnigg’s toward the Jews” – statement which must have helped quell the fears in Austria “that Jewish alarm may start a flight of capital.”
1939: U.S. premiere of “The Three Musketeers,” a musical comedy co-starring the Ritz Brothers as “the Three Lackeys,” Joseph Schildkraut as “King Louis XIII” and Binnie Barnes (whose father was JewishP as “Milady De Winter.”
1939: U.S. premiere of “Gunga Din,” a film set in the days of the Raj starring Sam Jaffe as “Gunga Din” with a score by Alfred Newman.
1940: “Castle on the Hudson” a movie set in Sing Sing Prison directed and produced by Anatole Litvak and starring John Garfield was released today in the United States.
1940: Birthdate of Dennis Gamsy a South African cricketer who played in two Tests in 1970.
1941(20thof Shevat, 5701): Sixty-eight-year-old Oscar J. Greenwald, the Philadelphia born son of Ben Greenwald and the former Julia Gimbel and the grandson of Adam Gimbel, the founder of Gimbel’s who was a vice presient and director of Gimbel Brothers department store as well as a director of the First Wisconsin National Bank was found dead in his bed today at his country home near Milwaukee, WI.
1942: It was reported from Quisling’s Norway “that religious circles were concerned by the increase of anti-Jewish agitation” and that “it was expected that when the new ‘social rationing system’ is introduced the Jews would be put into a special category and forbidden to buy certain foodstuffs.”
1943(10th of Adar II, 5703): Fifty-three-year-old Victor Atler, the Jewish socialist who was a leader of the Bund was executed today on charges of spying for Hitler. The execution was carried out with Stalin’s approval.
1943: Dutch churches protested against Seyss-Inquart’s persecution of Jews. The Austrian born Seyss-Inquartbecame Reich Commissioner of the Netherlands in May, 1940.The Dutch churches were protesting against "the forced sterilization of Jewish partners in mixed-marriages. For once, the Germans relented and ended this one form of inhumanity. At the end of the war Seyss-Inquart was arrested and charged with war crimes in Nuremberg. At his trial it was pointed out that of the 140,000 Dutch Jews, only 8,000 survived in hiding and only 5,450 came home from camps in Poland and Czechoslovakia. Seyss-Inquart was found guilty and hanged on October 16, 1946.
1944: Fifty-eight-year-old Franz Kaufman the German jurist who was baptized as a child but treated as Jew under Nazi racial laws and who worked with an underground group that aided Jews during the Holocaust was murdered at Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp.
1944: U.S. premiere of “Phantom Lady” a film noir directed by Robert Siodmak.
1945: U.S. premiere of “Objective Burma” a war movie set in the jungles of southeast Asia produced by Jerry Wald, with music by Franz Waxman, featuring George Tobias as “Cpl. Gabby Gordon)
1945: Nicholas George Winton, the Englishman who organized “the rescue of 669 mostly Jewish children from German-occupied Czechoslovakia on the eve of World War II in an operation later known as the Czech Kindertransport” “was promoted to war substantive flying officer” in the RAF. Winton, who was later knighted, was not Jewish. He was a decent human being who, unlike so many others, did the right thing during “the long, dark European Night.”
1946: Birthdate of Steve Grossman the Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts and the former President of Grossman Marketing Group, a family-owned marketing company based in Somerville, Massachusetts. From 1992 to 1997, he was the chair of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and from 1997 to 1999 he was the chair of the Democratic National Committee. Grossman received his Bachelor's from Princeton University, and his MBA from Harvard Business School, where he was a Baker Scholar. He is married to Barbara Wallace Grossman, a Professor of Theater at Tufts University, and they have three children.
1947: “Rabbi Philip S. Bernstein, the adviser on Jewish affairs to General Joseph T. McNarney in Germany and to General Mark Clark in Austria, said today that he had made a personal appeal to British officials to expedite the movement of Jewish displace persons to Palestine.
1947: “The deportation ship Empire Rival left Haifa this morning carrying 800 would-be Jewish immigrants to Palestine to internment camps in Cyprus which Jews in Palestine staged “a one-hour strike” in protest to this latest deportation.
1948: In the aftermath of today's coup in which the ruler of Yemen was assassinated, "the Jews were accused of murdering two young Muslim girls and throwing their bodies down a well." This Arab-world version of the blood libel led to the leaders of Yemen's Jewish community being beaten and imprisoned while a mob looted and robbed those living in the Jewish Quarter.
1949: Chaim Weizmann was sworn in as the first president of Israel. The election took place in Jerusalem, a city that had been under siege by the Arabs and almost lost to the invading enemy. The election of a President of the state of Israel was one of the first items of business for the Knesset which was holding its first meeting in Jerusalem. Weizmann was elected by a vote of 83 to 15. In Israel, the President is a figurehead. The Prime Minister holds the political power. The election of Weizmann was recognition for his long, untiring decades of service to the Zionist cause. One of his proudest accomplishments was getting the British Government of adopt the Balfour Declaration which gave international recognition and approval to the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The President of Israel is called "Nasi" a term which means ruler or prince. In the early centuries of the Diaspora it had been a honorific title applied to the heads of various Talmudic academies and Jewish communities. To give you some idea of the esteem in which Weitzman was held, he was the first person to be called a Nasi in almost 1500 years.
1949: “Caught” a “film noir” directed by Max Ophüls, with a screenplay by Arthur Laurents was released in the United States today.
1950: “When Willie Comes Marching Home” a comedy “based on the 1945 short story When Leo Comes Marching Home by Sy Gomberg” and with music by Alfred Newman was released in the United States today.
1951(11thof Adar I, 5711): Parashat Tetzaveh
1951(11thof Adar I, 5711): Sixty-five-year-old Pressburg born Austria-American movie producer Arnold Pressburger passed away today in Hamburg.
1951: “I'd Climb the Highest Mountain” a movie version of the novel with the same name with a score by Sol Kaplan was released in the United States today.
1952: Dolph Schayes took the floor tonight in the first of what would be a record 706 games played without a miss.
1953: The Jerusalem Post reported that in a statement read to the Knesset, Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion stressed that the recent bombing of the Soviet Legation in Tel Aviv was no justification for a rupture of diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union. The Soviet action was the culmination of "a campaign of defamatory propaganda against the State of Israel, the Zionist Movement and World Jewry which had been proceeding for a long time." Holland agreed to represent Israeli interests in Moscow.
1957: The Suez Canal re-opens marking the end of the Suez Crisis that had started in October of 1956.
1957(16thof Adar I, 5717): Eighty-one year old Edward Mose “Max” Baker, the Erie, PA born son of “Isaac and Bertha (Einhorn) Baker” and graduate of the University of Chicago who did not become a rabbi despite being the nephew of Rabbi Emil Hirsch, but instead took over his brother-in-law’s brokerage when he passed away in Cleveland where he served as vice president of the Stock Exchange, co-founded the Federation of Jewish Charities and a leader of the Republican Party.
https://case.edu/ech/articles/b/baker-edward-mose-max
1958: The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CNC) which was co-founded by Sydney Silverman held its “first public meeting at Methodist Central Hall, Westminster, UK.”
1958: Time published “Historical Notes: Diary of Anne Frank – The End”
The diary of 15-year-old Anne Frank ended abruptly when the Nazis broke into her family's hiding place in Amsterdam. What happened next? Of the last days of one of the world's best-known modern heroines, little was known except that she had died, like millions of other Jews, in a German concentration camp. To fill out the chronicle of her short life, West German Publisher S. Fischer last year assigned Author Ernst Schnabel to search the German and Dutch archives and interview survivors of the camps who might have known her. In Paris Le Figaro Littéraire printed excerpts from Schnabel's findings, to be published as a book in the U.S. this fall. Anne, her sister Margot, and her father and mother were first taken to Westerbork prison in The Netherlands, then shipped by cattle car to Auschwitz. Recalls a woman fellow prisoner: "The doors of the cars were opened violently, and the first thing we saw at Auschwitz was the garish light of the searchlights trained on the cars . . . The voice of a loudspeaker dominated all others; it bellowed: 'Women to the left, men to the right!' I saw them go away: Mr. Van Daan, Mr. Dussel, Peter, Mr. Frank." The men never saw the women again. The women were told that trucks were ready to take the small children and the sick to the prison. But those who fought their way into the trucks never reached the camp; they vanished from-the face of the earth. At Auschwitz, Anne's long hair was clipped and her eyes seemed to grow larger and larger as she grew thinner. Her gaiety disappeared but not her indomitable spirit. The women were divided into groups of five and, though the youngest of her group, Anne became its leader, partly because she was efficient at scrounging necessities. When during cold weather she and the others were reduced to sackcloth smocks, Anne found somewhere a supply of men's long underwear. She even magically produced a cup of coffee for an exhausted prisoner. Most of the adults tried to armor themselves against reality: "Who bothered to look at the flames billowing up from the crematory? When, suddenly, an order came to barricade the neighboring block, who was disturbed? We well knew that they were being readied for the gas chamber, but we were too well-trained to worry about it. We no longer heard anything, saw anything." But Anne Frank did, right up to the end. Said a survivor: "I can still see her standing by the door, watching a group of naked young gypsy girls being shoved along to the crematory. Anne watched them, weeping. And she also wept when we filed past Hungarian children waiting, twelve hours naked under the rain, for their turn to enter the gas chamber. Anne cried: 'Look at their eyes!' She wept when most of us had no tears left." On Oct. 30, 1944, there was a selection of the youngest and strongest to be sent to the concentration camp at Belsen. Single file, the undressed women were ordered into a hall where, seated behind the glare of a searchlight, a doctor chose this one for Belsen, that one for the gas chamber. "Anne's face remained unchanged, even in the cruel light of the projector. She took Margot's arm and they came forward. I can see them now, stripped naked. Anne turned her serene face toward us; then they were led away. It was impossible to see what happened behind the light, and Mrs. Frank cried: 'The children! My God! My God!'" In the hell of Belsen, Anne and Margot Frank lasted scarcely five months. They both became ill. Margot was in a coma for several days and was found, fallen from her bunk, dead. Anne was so sick that no one told her of Margot's fate. Says a fellow prisoner who watched: "Several days later she died peacefully, in the certitude that death was not a calamity.
1959: Birthdate of Arhey Deir, the Moroccan born Israeli political leader of Shas.1961: Premier in Italy of “Esther and the King” a Biblical epic film based on the Book of Esther, starring Joan Collins whose father was Jewish in the title role.
1962(13th of Adar I, 5722): Eighty-five-year-old Berlin born conductor Bruno Walter whose home has been America since 1939 “when the Metropolitan Opera, Carnegie Hall and a National Broadcasting Company studio became his workshops” passed away today.
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1962/02/18/113414871.pdf
1963: The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan which is credited with sparking the modern feminist movement was published today.
https://jwa.org/thisweek/feb/17/1963/betty-friedan
1965(15thof Adar I, 5725): Eighty-six New York native “Paul Joseph Sachs, the first associate director of the Fogg Museum and a Harvard professor” and husband of Meta Pollak with whom he had three daughters – “Elizabeth Pollock Weiss, Cecilia Robinson and Marjorie Pickhardt Wilson -- passed away today.
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~art00010
1965: Birthdate of actor Michael Benjamin Bay who “was raised Jewish” by his adoptive parents.
1966: “The instrumental of the first version of the “Good Vibrations” was recorded today by the Beach Boys, whose drummer was Hal Blaine, the son of Meyer Belsky and the former Rose Silverman.
1969(29th of Shevat, 5729): Levi Eshkol, third Prime Minister of Israel, died suddenly. In one of the great ironies of history, it was the mild-mannered Eshkol and not any of his more flamboyant contemporaries who led the Israeli government during the June, 1967 War that resulted in the re-unification of Jerusalem.https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/eshkol.html
http://research.haifa.ac.il/~eshkol/
1969: Golda Meir sworn in as Israel's 1st female prime minister. Goldie Mabovitch (who later Hebraized her name to Golda Meir) was a Russian immigrant living in Milwaukee. In 1918 she wanted to join the Jewish Legion, a British unit organized to fight the Turks in World War I. Mrs. Meir made Aliyah and eventually became a major political figure in the Zionist Community and later in the state of Israel. Her description of being in Moscow for Simchat Torah after the creation of the state of Israel is a moving story. She served as Foreign Minister and following the death of Levi Eshkol became Prime Minister. She led the country through the trying days of the Yom Kippur War and its aftermath. By the time Anwar Sadat made his memorable trip to Israel, Mrs. Meir was no longer in the government. When the two adversaries met she is reported to have said, "Long after we have forgiven you for killing our sons, we will be working to forgive you for turning our sons into killers." This modern Devorah took no pleasure in being involved in so many military adventures.
1970(11th of Adar I, 5730): Shmuel Yosef or S.Y. Agnon (Hebrew: שמואל יוסף עגנון; born Shmuel Yosef Czaczkes) passed away. Agnon was the first Hebrew author to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. He won the prize in 1966. Since this is beyond my area of expertise, included find this canned summary. “Shmuel Yosef Agnon was born in Galicia in 1888. He immigrated to Jaffa in 1908, but spent 1913 through 1924 in Germany. In 1924 he returned to Jerusalem, where he lived until his death in 1970. A prolific novelist and short-story writer from an early age, Agnon received numerous literary awards, including the Israel Prize on two occasions. Called "a man of unquestionable genius" and "one of the great storytellers of our time," S.Y. Agnon is among the most effusively praised and widely translated Hebrew authors. His unique style and language have influenced the writing of subsequent generations of Hebrew authors. Much of his writing attempts to recapture the lives and traditions of a former time, but his stories are never a simple act of preservation. Agnon's tales deal with the most important psychological and philosophical problems of his generation. "Via realistic and surrealistic modes," writes the New York Times, "Agnon has transmuted in his many words the tensions inherent in modern man's loss of innocence, and his spiritual turmoil when removed from home, homeland and faith." An observant Jew throughout most of his life, he was able to capture "the hopelessness and spiritual desolation" of a world standing on the threshold of a new age. Extolled for his "peculiar tenderness and beauty," for his "comic mastery" and for the "richness and depth" of his writing, it is S.Y. Agnon's contribution to the renewal of the language that has been seminal for all subsequent Hebrew writing.” Some of his works that have been translated into English includeA Book That Was Los : And Other Stories.; A dwelling place of my people : sixteen stories of the Chassidim; A Guest for the Night; Gollancz, A Simple Story; Agnon's Aleph Bet Poems; The Bridal Canopy;Days of Awe : A Treasury of Jewish Wisdom for Reflection, Repentance, and Renewal on the High Holy Days;In the Heart of the Seas : A Story of a Journey to the Land of Israel.; Present at Sinai : The Giving of the Law : Commentaries Selected by S.Y. Agnon; Shira; Twenty-one stories.
1970: One Jordanian and two Iraqis were arrested today when they tried to hijack an El Al plane at the Munich Airport.
1972: President Richard Nixon begins his historic trip to China. This major diplomatic breakthrough was orchestrated by White House advisor Henry Kissinger who would become the first Jewish Secretary of State.
1974: It was reported today that 35,000 Jews were permitted to emigrate to Israel in 1973 and 32,000 in 1972.
1976: The Second World Conference of Jewish Communities on Soviet Jewry opened today in Brussels despite protests from the Soviet Union to the Belgian Government.
1977: In “Imperial Germany’s Jewish Banker” published today A.J.P.Taylor reviewed Gold and Iron: Bismarck, Bleichröder, and the Building of the German Empire by Fritz Stern
1977: In New York City, the first Conference on Feminism and Orthodoxy comes to a close. The two day meeting led to the founding of the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance
1978(10thof Adar I, 5738): Eighty-four year old Sadye “Sadie” Feinberg Cohen, the daughter of Barnett and Dora Kriss Feinberg and the wife of Samuel Cohen passed away today after which she was buried in the Acacia Cemetery in Ozone Park.
1979(20thof Shevat, 5739): Seventy-two year old lyricist Al Stillman (born Albert Silverman) who wrote such hits as “Home for the Holidays” and “Chances Are” passed away today.
http://www.songwritershalloffame.org/exhibits/C282?exhibitId=282
1981: In “Yiddish Book Collection Grows in New England,” Michael Knight described the work of the Yiddish Book Exchange.
1981: In Los Angeles, Dennis Levitt, the news director for the Pacifica Radio and Jane Gordon gave birth to Joseph Gordon-Levitt an American actor best known for his role as Tommy Solomon on “3rd Rock from the Sun.”
1982(24th of Shevat, 5742): Lee [Israel] Strasberg, father of method acting passed away at the age of 80. Strasberg also enjoyed a career as an actor with one of his most roles coming at the end of his life when he played the “Meyer Lansky” figure in The Godfather Part II.
1983: “Local Hero” a British comedy with music by Mark Knopfler was released today in the United Kingdom.
1984: “The Right Stuff” the movie version of the book by the same name directed by Philip Kaufman who also wrote the screenplay and produced by Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff was released throughout the United States after a limited release three months earlier.
1984: In Holland, PA, Mark and Harriet Levin gave birth to Michael Levin who as a 22 year old member of the IDF’s Paratroopers Brigade “was killed in action in the Second Lebanon War, during the first round of fighting in the Lebanese town of Ayta ash-Shab.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/03/AR2006080301539.html
1985: Martin Eli Segal “served as the General Chairman of the “Night of 100 Stars II, the first AIDS benefit held by the Actors’ Fund of American.
1985: David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” was performed for the final time during its initial Broadway run.
1987: In “Warsaw Journal: An Album of the Doomed” published today, Michael T. Kaufman examined the “art of Auschwitz.”
1987: Aulcie Perry Jr., a former basketball player who had become an Israeli citizen and was hailed as a sports champion in Israel, went on trial today on charges of conspiracy to import heroin, importation of heroin and possession of heroin with intent to distribute. The 6-foot-10-inch Perry, who holds a dual citizenship, joined the Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball team in Israel in 1977 and helped bring it a European Cup championship that year and in 1979. He remained on the team until 1984. Perry's cousin, Kenneth Johnson, 29, who was charged with Perry, pleaded guilty earlier this month and is awaiting sentencing.
1988: The United States announced that it is planning to change ambassadors to Israel next summer. According to State Department officials, William A. Brown, currently ambassador to Thailand, will replace Thomas R. Pickering, who has served in Tel Aviv since 1985. Mr. Pickering is scheduled to return to Washington to become Under Secretary of State for management. The State Department also plans to replace Morris Draper, the Consul General in Jerusalem, with Philip C. Wilcox Jr., a Deputy Assistant Secretary of State who deals with Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt. The Consul General in Jerusalem has something approaching ambassadorial status. He reports directly to the State Department, not to the United States Embassy in Tel Aviv, a situation that reflects Washington's refusal to recognize Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem.
1988: A dozen Israeli playwrights, poets and other intellectuals made an urgent appeal to the Government tonight to ''talk peace with the Palestinians.'' Amos Oz, the Israeli novelist, started and ended his address to the group with the words, ''What was, will not be again.'' Seventy New York writers, artists and performers sent a telegram expressing their support to the Israeli Playwrights' Association, a gesture welcomed by Israelis here who feel support from abroad can put effective pressure on the Government. Among the signers were Erica Jong, Allen Ginsburg, Grace Paley, Gloria Steinem, E. L. Doctorow, Arthur Miller, Norman Mailer and Susan Sontag.
1988: The violence in the occupied territories continued today, as Israeli soldiers shot and killed one Palestinian and wounded at least three others while dispersing riots in the West Bank village of Shuyukh, near Hebron, an army spokesman said. ''The army was trying to clear a roadblock, when they were attacked with rocks, stones and bottles,'' the spokesman said. ''They were in a life-threatening situation, so the commander and one officer shot at the legs of the protesters.''
''Sometimes you don't get exactly where you aim,'' he said. ''They were aiming at the legs.''
1993: “Belushi Is No Stranger To a Bar Owner’s Role Despite the Movie Image” published today described how Judd Hirsch was replaced during the Broadway run of “Conversations With My Father,” a play that “presents the saga of a first generation of American Jews who came of age in the Depression and were assimilated at a high price during and after World War II.”
1994 (6th of Adar, 5754): Yuval Golan who was stabbed on December 29, 1993 by a terrorist near Adarim in the Hebron area he died of his wounds.
1996: In Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, world champion Garry Kasparov beats the Deep Blue supercomputer in a chess match. Kasparov’s mother is Armenian and his father is Jewish.
1998(21stof Shevat, 5758): Eighty-nine-year-old Pauline Endler Loeb passed away today after which she was interred at the Jewish Cemetery in Morgan City, LA.
1998(21st of Shevat, 5658): Seventy-eight year old Atlantic City, NJ and WW II Bob Merill the composer and lyricist who work includes “Hannah…1939” a musical about a Jewess “in Prague on the eve of WWII” passed away today.
https://web.archive.org/web/20121226090809/http://www.thebobmerrill.com/
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/obituary-bob-merrill-1145818.html
1999(1stof Adar, 5759): Rosh Chodesh Adar is observed for the last time in the 20thcentury.
1999(1stof Adar, 5759): Sixty-nine-year-old actress Shirley Stoler, the Brooklyn born daughter of “Russian Jewism immigrant owners of a used furniture store who appeared on Broadway, in films and on day-time soaps passed away today.
2000: “Daring single-handedly to alter a calendar that is as politically sensitive as everything else here, Interior Minister Natan Sharansky decreed today that ''summertime'' will be longer this year by 34 days.”
2001: At the Library of Congress of an exhibition entitled “Herblock’s History: Political Cartoons from the Crash to the Millennium” which presents works by cartoonist Herb Block, who chronicled the nation’s political history and caricatured twelve American presidents from Herbert Hoover to Bill Clinton comes to an end.
2002: “A suicide bomber detonated an explosive packed with shrapnel among the diners in the outdoor food court of a West Bank settlement tonight, killing himself and two Israelis and injuring 30 others, at least six of them seriously.”
2003(15th of Adar I, 5763): Seventy-eight-year-old art dealer Felix Landau passed away today (As reported by Eric Pace)
2004: Daniel Hendler, was named best actor at the 54th Berlin International Film Festival for his role in “Lost Embrace,” a film about a young Argentine Jew, directed by Daniel Burman.
2005: Today, in the wake of the bankruptcy of Sunbeam Products, Ron Perelman filed a lawsuit against Morgan Stanley, claiming that Morgan had defrauded him by knowingly misleading him about the financial condition of Sunbeam Products. The Sunbeam acquisition was only one in a long series of such deals in which this Jewish philanthropist and businessman had engaged in over the past four decades starting with the purchase of Esslinger Brewery in 1961. He and his father bought the company for “$800,000, then sold it three years later for a $1 million profit.”
2006: Thousands of mourners gathered at the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv this morning to pay their final respects to ShoshannaDamari, who lay in state on the stage until the memorial service began shortly before noon. During the memorial service President Moshe Katsav said "One can say of her that she was the voice of Israel," he said. "We have lost her, but not her songs
2006: Israel's hopes for an Olympic medal took a blow when ice dancer Galit Chait fell during the compulsory program of the Pairs Ice Dancing competition.
2006: In “Early Simon, Dressed by Mizrahi” published today Ben Brantley reviewed a “torturous new revival of Neil Simon’s ‘Barefoot in the Park.’”
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/17/theater/reviews/17park.html?_r=0
2007: Shabbat Shekalim – The Sabbath of the Shekel.
2007: Ninety-six year old Maurice Papon, the Vichy official convicted of “complicity in Nazi crimes against humanity” died today.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/18/world/europe/18papon.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
2007: Celebration of Fred Rodgers birthday: a brand plucked from the flames of the Holocaust and pillar of the Jewish community.
2008: Final performance of “Fabrik: The Legend of M. Rabinowitz” at the Urban Stages Theatre in Manhattan. This adult puppet show traces the life of Moritz Rabinowitz, a Polish Jew sent to Norway by his family to escape pre-World War II pogroms, who became a successful businessman before ending up at Sachsenhausen concentration camp near Berlin.
2008: The Sunday Los Angeles Times book section featured reviews of The Bad Wife Handbook by Jewish poet Rachel Zucker and The Life of the Skies by Jonathan Rosen
2008: An exhibition entitled “Sosúa: A Refuge for Jews in the Dominican Republic” opens at The Museum of Jewish Heritage.
2008: An exhibition entitled “To return to the land…” Paul Goldman’s Photographs of the Birth of Israel opens at The Museum of Jewish Heritage.Hungarian-born photojournalist Paul Goldman fled to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1940, where he chronicled the events leading up to the foundation of the State of Israel.
2009: In Manhattan’s East Village, the fourth and final part of a four part series The Comedy and Kabbalah of Relationships featuring Rabbi YY Jacobson
2009: At New York University, Professor Yoram Peri, head of the Chaim Herzog Institute for Media, Politics and Society at Tel Aviv University delivers a public lecture entitled "New Leadership in Israel and the Peace Process"
2010: The CJH is scheduled to co-sponsor “Music in the Age of the Wittgensteins,” featuring a performance by the Phoenix Chamber Ensemble.
2010: In Arkansas, Bella Levy, wife of Manford Levy, celebrates her 90thbirthday. Bella is an Ashes Chayel in the truest sense of the word. All who know are blessed by the experience.
2010:The heads of various medical associations held an emergency meeting today, and the president of the Israel Medical Association( IMA) Dr. Leonid Eidelman, said the organization would not hesitate to carry out its threat to strike if necessary, in its escalating battle with Deputy Health Minister Yaakov Litzman should its Scientific Council be transferred to the ministry.
2010:According to JTA, “lawyers for the estate Adrian Jacobs added J.K. Rowling's name to a lawsuit it filed in the High Court of England last June -- some 12 years after Jacobs died penniless in Nightingale House, a home for elderly Jews in south London. Adrian Jacobs, an art collector, lawyer and accountant who made millions on the stock market before going bust, wrote a children’s book in 1987 titled The Adventures of Willy the Wizard: No. 1 Livid Land.” The suit claims that Rowling plagiarized ideas for her fourth book, the best-selling “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2000), from "Willy the Wizard No. 1."
2011: A job fair, held in conjunction with the Orthodox Union Job Board, is scheduled to take place at Sasson v’ Simcha Hall located in Brooklyn.
2011:Gainsbourg, “the boldly imaginative and wildly entertaining biopic of Jewish French singer-songwriter Serge Gainsbourg, one of the most iconic and diversely talented music artists of the 20th Century” is scheduled to be shown at the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival.
2011: Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman attempted to dispel rumors that relations between him and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had soured, saying on today that "our relations are intact.""I spoke to the prime minister," after vetoing Uzi Arad, Netanyahu's choice for ambassador to London, Lieberman said. "We'll keep working together."
2011: A Lebanese military court convicted a man of spying for Israel and sentenced him to death late today. Amin al-Baba was found guilty of giving Israeli intelligence agents information in return for money. He was also found guilty of entering an enemy state. Al-Baba, who was sentenced late today, had been spying for Israel from 1997 until his 2009 arrest. The new sentence brings the number of people sentenced to death for spying for Israel to nine.
2011: “A Night of Outrageous Comedy” with Julie Goldman is scheduled for tonight at the Washington DCJCC.
2011: Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman attempted to dispel rumors that relations between him and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had soured, saying on Thursday that "our relations are intact.""I spoke to the prime minister," after vetoing Uzi Arad, Netanyahu's choice for ambassador to London, Lieberman said. "We'll keep working together."
2011: Israel Defense Forces soldiers shot and killed three Palestinians near the Gaza Strip border zone today, said Palestinian medics who recovered the bodies. An IDF spokesperson confirmed that the troops had opened fire after observeing the Palestinians approaching the security fence between Israel and the Gaza Strip attempting to plant explosives. A spokesman for the armed wing of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine - a small group that only rarely carries out attacks - sent a text message to reporters identifying one of the men as a member of the group “killed during a mission carried out by our military wing."
2011: The Washington Post featured a review of Heart of the City: Nine Stories of Love and Serendipity on the Streets of New York by Ariel Sabar, the son Yona Sabar, a Kurdish Jewish scholar, linguist and researcher.
2011: Last Damage, the fifth crime novel by Sophie Hannah, the daughter of Norman and Adele Geras was published today.
2012(24thof Shevat, 5772): Seventy-seven year old “Peter Novick, a history professor at the University of Chicago who stirred controversy in 1999 with a book contending that the legacy of the Holocaust had come to unduly dominate American Jewish identity” passed away today (As reported by Dennis Hevesi)
2012: Rabbi Y.Y. Rubinstein is scheduled to deliver a Friday night talk entitled “True Love..How to Find It and Keep It” at the Magen David Sephardic Congregation in Rockville, MD.
2012: Following Carlebach Services and dinner, Dr. Jerry Muller, Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History,Catholic University of America, Washington DC is scheduled to deliver a lecture entitled “Capitalism and the Jews” as part of the Scholar-In-Residence Weekend at Tifereth Israel in Washington, DC.
2012: Opening session of LimmudLA
2012: Tali Yehoshua-Koren, the wife of the Defense Ministry's representative to India who was moderately injured in the attack on Israel’s embassy in New Delhi gave a testimony to police, which may change previously held assumptions about the attack and its perpetrator, the Times of India reported today. Yehoshua-Koren gave the testimony in hospital before returning to Israel in an air ambulance. She told police that the bomb exploded a full 30 to 40 seconds after it was attached to her car, and that the perpetrator was dressed in black, and riding a black motorcycle.
2012: Palestinian terrorists fired an RPG at IDF forces stationed near the Gaza border fence today, according to the IDF Spokesman's Office.
2013: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including Four New Messages by Joshua Cohen and the recently released paperback editions of In Our Prime: The Fascinating History and Promising Future of Middle Age by Patricia Cohen
2013: Professor Brian Horowitz is scheduled to deliver the opening remarks of two day conference at Tulane University – “Jewish Secular Utopias and Distopias in Central and Eastern Europe”2013: The Toronto Jewish Film Society is scheduled to present “The Barber of Stamford Hill” and “The 10th Man” at the Miles Nadel JCC.
2013: “Six Million and One” is among the movies scheduled to be shown at the final night of the 17th Denver Jewish Film Festival.
2013: In “Online Battle Over Sacred Scrolls, Real-World Consequences” published in print today, John Leland describes the efforts of Raphael Haim Gold”s less than honorable attempts “to advance his father’s views about the Dead Sea Scrolls.”
2013(7thof Adar, 5773): Seventy seven year old Israeli entertainer Shmuel "Shmulik" Kraus passed away.
http://www.timesofisrael.com/israeli-musician-shmulik-kraus-dies-at-77/
2013: A Knesset panel will launch an independent investigation into the jailing and suicide of Mossad agent Ben Zygier, following growing calls for an official accounting of the case, the committee said tonight.
2013: A delegation of Israeli security officials visited Cairo to discuss the security situation in the region with their Egyptian counterparts today, the second such trip in less than a week.
2014: The Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia Cultural Arts Department in Fairfax is scheduled to hold auditions for the one-act family theatre production of “Cinder-Rachella,” an original play with music that celebrates Israeli culture through the eyes of the iconic fairytale Princess
2014: “Broken Lines,” a film about “Jake, a working class Jewish boy…and his fiancée Zoe” is scheduled to be shown for the first time at as part of the UK Jewish Film Festival.
2014: Naftali Bennett reportedly told American Jewish leaders today that Israel wants more control over the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, a holy site that has long been a contentious point with the Muslim world.
2014: “The Knesset Law Committee voted to advance a bill today that would allow a much wider circle of state rabbis to conduct conversions.” (As reported by Haviv Rettig Gur)
2014: “A lawyer for the elderly art collector whose $1.4 billion-worth of works were seized by German police two years ago said he is in negotiations with six claimants who are seeking items stolen from them or their families by the Nazis.” (As reported by Amanda Borshel-Dan)
2015: The Center for Jewish History is scheduled to sponsor a lecture by Dr. Rakhmiel Peltz on “Planning for the Jewish Future: Standards for Yiddish in the 20thand 21st century.”
2015: Stuart Cohen of Bar-Ilan University is scheduled to deliver a lecture on “Generals Wearing Yarmulkes. Does the Israel Defense Force Face a Threat of Dual Authority?” at FIU.
2015: Beth Goldman is scheduled to start her new position at NYLAG, who replaced Yisroel Schulman who had “stepped down amid a federal investigation in his alleged accounting irregularities.”
2016: Eight days before he would pass away, ninety year old Alfred E. Mann “abruptly stepped down as chairman” of MannKind Corporation.
2016: Sayed Kashua is scheduled to discuss his new book Native: Dispatches from an Israeli-Palestinian Life at the 92nd Street Y.
2016: Bo’i Kalah: Here Comes the Bride an exhibition featuring “12 sensational bridal gowns reflecting Jewish cultural and family traditions from around the world” is scheduled to open at the Skirball Center.
2016: Bella Meyer is scheduled to speak on “Marc Chagall: Reflections of a Granddaughter” at the YIVO Institute for Jewish History.
2016: “Kurt Weill, the talented Jewish composer who was the most successful composer in Germany prior to his fleeing Nazi Germany, is scheduled to be the subject of a rare cabaret performance by singer Bremner Duthie and a jazz trio this evening at the Marigny Opera House in New Orleans, LA. (As reported by Alan Smason)
2017: At the University of Iowa, Hillel is scheduled to host its Shabbat Alumni Dinner for what some might call the Hebrew Hawkeyes.
2017: “The Women’s Balcony” and “Germans and Jews” are scheduled to be shown at the 27thAnnual San Diego Jewish Film Festival.
2017: Limmud NY is scheduled to open today with a noontime lunch followed by programs on “A Brief History of Contemporary Jewish A Cappella, Niggun and Transformation and Jewish Moral Frameworks in a Multi-Cultural World
2017(21st of Shevat, 5777: Eighty-five year old Tulane drop-out Theodore Lowi the Cornell University Professor and ground-breaking political scientist and historian passed away today.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/24/us/theodore-lowi-dead.html?_r=0
2018: In London, “Rothschild and Sons” is scheduled to take place this evening.
https://mailchi.mp/jewishnews/audiences-are-singing-the-praises-of-rothschild-sons?e=025a365fe8
2018: The Jackson Hole Jewish Community is scheduled to host “Havd’Challah” where attendees bid farewell to Shabbat with “hot toddies and challah.”
2018: While defending his country’s new law about the Holocaust at the Munich Security Conference “Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said today that alongside Poles, Jews were also responsible for perpetrating the Holocaust.” (As reported by Tamar Pileggi)
2018: “Israeli figure skaters Alexei Bychenko and Daniel Samohin made an impressive showing at the Olympic finals today with the veteran Bychenko racking up a rare top 10 finish in a strong field.”
2018(2nd of Adar, 5778): Parashat Terumah
2019: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including Wedding Guest by Jonathan Kellerman and the recently released paperback edition of Who We Are and How We Got Here” Ancient DNA and the New Science of the Human Past by David Reich and We Crossed A Bridge and It Trembled: Voices From Syriaby Wendy Pearlman.
2019: The Illinois Holocaust Museum is scheduled to host a screening of “The Zookeeper’s Wife” followed by a discussion “led by Dr. Elliot Lefkovitz, faculty member, Spertus Institute and History Professor Emeritus, Loyola University.”
2019: In Amherst, MA, the Yiddish Book Center is scheduled to host a screening of “Stefan Zweig,” a biopic about “the year of exile in the life of…one of the most read German-language writers.”
2019: In San Francisco, WinterFest 2019, the Jewish Film Institute's weekend-long showcase of Jewish films from around the world is scheduled to come to an end.
2019: In Berkley, CA, the Ashkenaz Music and Dance Community Center is scheduled to host the Levoná Ensemble, a “Bay Area Band” that “blends Jewish Arabic and flamenco music.”
2019: In Bethesda, MD, the Bethesda Jewish Congregation is scheduled to host “An Evening of Ladino Music with Susan Gaeta and Gina Sobel,” a “concert featuring the music of Spanish Jews expelled from their homeland during the Spanish Inquisition” with proceeds of the benefit going to support “the Cuba America Jewish Mission programs in Cuba.”
2020: In Scottsdale, AZ, Congregation Beth Tefillah in partnership with the Aleph Society, is scheduled to host the final day of the Soul Conference whose speakers includes Rabbis Simon Jacobson, Arthur Kurzwell and Pinchas Allouche.
2020: In Cincinnati, OH, the 2020 Jewish and Israeli Film Festival is scheduled to host a screening of “Family in Transition,” a documentary ”about how the lives of a family in small-town Israel change completely after their father announces that he's transitioning to become a woman.”
2020: The Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to host a screening of “The Rabbi from Hezbollah” which “explores the incredible story of a Lebanese Muslim member of Hezbollah who transformed into an ultra-Orthodox Jew, living in Israel, and one of the country’s top international agents and spies.”
2020: On President's Day, The Breman Museum is scheduled to be open from 10 – 5 at a time when staff and visitor are thinking of the welcome letter from George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation of the City of Savannah” which is part of the Mickve Israel Records at The Georgia Historical Society” and which contains the bold statement where he declares “I rejoice that a spirit of liberality and philanthropy is much more prevalent than it formerly was among the enlightened nations of the earth; and that your brethren will benefit thereby in proportion as it shall become still more extensive”
2020: Roni Gal-Ed, “one of the world’s finest oboe players” is scheduled to play “two concerts with Jupiter at the Good Shepherd Presbyterian Church.
2020: The full squad of Theo Epstein’s Chicago Cubs is scheduled to report for Spring training today.
2020:President’s Day, officially the third Monday of February, celebrates all U.S. presidents. For more about Jews and American Presidents see http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/US-Israel/presquote.html and http://www.jewishpost.com/archives/news/united-states-presidents-and-the-jews-from-george-washington-to-george-bush-1.html
2021: In Pepper Pike, OH, B’nai Jeshurun Congregation is scheduled to host the first session of “Purim Art with Marjorie Falk where attendees can learn about the art of “mask making.”
2021: The London School of Jewish Studies is scheduled to host Simon Goulden who will be continuing his exploration into the history of Anglo-Jewry as he looks at the period 1656-1870.
2021: The 21stannual Atlanta Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to begin today.
2021: The Streicker Center is scheduled host a presentation by multi-talented Tiffany Haddish, the author of the New York Times bestseller The Last Black Unicorn.
2021: The National Museum of American Jewish History for which Mitchell Levin is an “official content provider” is scheduled to Christopher Silver, the Segal Family Assistant Professor in Jewish History and Culture at McGill University as he “discusses the prominent role of Jewish musicians in North Africa.”
2021: Award-winning filmmaker Aviva Kempner is scheduled to talk about her documentaries that depict underknown American Jewish heroes including Gertrude Berg, Moe Berg, Hank Greenberg and Julius Rosenwald “who fought against anti-Semitism, fascism, sexism and racism from the baseball stadium to Sears, to television and the movie screens.
2021: The American Sephardi Federation is scheduled to present “The Persian Experience,” a disusion with Roya Hakakian, the author of Journey From the Land of No.
2021: The Combined Jewish Philanthropies and Temple Emanuel of Newton are scheduled to present online a discussion about President Joe Biden with Evan Osnos, the author of Joe Biden: The Life, the Rus and What Matters Now.
2021: Art/Break, a series of virtual studio visits organized by Asylum Arts and Meislin Projects is scheduled to host a visit with Israeli artist Eli Singalovski.
2021: The Jewish Community Library is scheduled to present Henry Michalski as he talks about his new book Torn Lilacs about his Polish parents’ tribulations during/after the Holocaust, subtitled “A True WWII Story of Love, Defiance and Hope.
2021: With almost 43% of its citizens having received at least one shot of the Pfizer vaccine, as of today Israel is still on target for relaxing some of the lockdown measures starting this Sunday.