March 27
347: Traditional birthdate for Jerome, the priest and theologian best known for the creation of the Vulgate Bible, the Latin translation of the text and the author of correspondence with Augustine of Hippo that frequently mentioned the Jews living in Africa.
538 BCE: Cyrus was crowned “King of Babylonia and King of All Lands.” Cyrus was the King who made it possible for the Jews to return to Judea marking the end of the Babylonian exile.
196 BCE: Ptolemy V ascends to the throne of Egypt. Ptolemy was one of the Greco-Egyptian rulers who fought with Antiochus for the control of Judea.
972: In Orleans, “Hugh Capet and Adelaide of Aquitaine” gave birth to Robert II who “conspired with his vassals to destroy all of the Jews who would not accept baptism” and who “inspired mob violence against the Jews including the learned Rabbi Senor.
1188: Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, who was comparatively protective of his Jewish subject “took up the Cross” and joined what would become the Third Crusade.
1191: Pope Clement III who was one of the Popes locked in a power struggle with the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry IV in which the Jews were mere pawns, passed away today. Henry considered the Jews to be his subjects and beyond the control of the Church. During the First Crusade, the hordes going through Germany killed and robbed the Jews. At the same time, many Jews were forced to convert. Henry was in Italy and much to the dismay of the Pope, when he heard what was going on in Germany, the Emperor set about punishing those of the perpetrators who were still around including at least one archbishop. He also ordered that any Jew who had converted under duress should be allowed to return to the faith of their fathers. Clement over-ruled the Emperor on this one. He did not how people were brought to Jesus, but once they were there, there was no going back.
1309: Pope Clement V, who in 1305 became the first pope to threaten Jews with an economic boycott in an attempt to force them to stop charging Christians interest on loans, excommunicated Venice and all its population.
1378: Gregory XI, the last of the Avignon Popes, passed away. In 1375 Gregory had issued an order “to compel” Jews to hear sermons. The order would later be vacated and replaced by the older formula allowing one to “exhort” the Jews to listen. (For more see Popes, Church and Jews in the Middle Ages by Kenneth Stow)
1625(OS): The reign of King James I of England, Ireland and Kings James VI of Scotland who had Henry Finch arrested because a work he had published “predicted in the near future, the restoration of the temporal dominion to the Jews” and who was responsible for the King James Bible came to an end today.
1639: In Rome, a child is forcibly baptized after his father jokingly remarked that he would not mind it, on the condition that the Pope acted as godfather. The Jews rioted and were violently crushed. As a result, two of his children were taken, one a baby, and were carried in a ceremony by the Pope.
1753: In London, “Elizabeth Crowcher, daughter of a wealthy merchant from Wapping” and Ralph Schomberg, the physician and Anglican convert who was the son of German Jewish physician Meyer Low Schomberg, gave birth to controversial British naval officer and historian Isaac Schomberg.
1775(25th of Adar): Rabbi Chaim Ben David Abulafia, author of Nishmat Chaim passed away.
1775: Elizabeth Ezekiel married Samuel Judah today in London.
1786(27th of Adar, 5546): Based on tombstone found in the original Jewish cemetery in Ghent, date on which an unnamed Jew passed away. This unknown Jew or Jewess was the first Israelite to be legally buried in the city under the reign of Joseph II.
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/6652-ghent
1791: In Savannah, GA, Shankey Hartand Abraham Jacobs gave birth to Georgianna (Judith) Jacobs.
1793: In Grove Germany, Rivka Mosheim and Itzig Behr gave birth to Bernhard Benrend, the husband of Eliese Heine with whom had fourteen children.
1797: In Essingen, Germany, Bunle Babette Isaac and Emanuel Natahn Scharff gave birth to Aaron Emanuel Scharff, who married Magdelanna Roos with whom he had seven children after having first been married to Apollonia Nathan.
1798: Today, “Moses Myers, the consignee of four and half hogsheads of brandy lost his case in” United States District Court after which “permission was granted to him to petition the Secretary of Treasury for a reversal of the decision” as long as Myers paid the costs.
1800(1stof Nisan, 5560): Rosh Chodesh Nisan
1800: On the same day that the Jews were uttering additional prayers for the celebration of the New Moon, the United States Senate was citing editor William Duane Contempt in their fight to muzzle a journalist who was critical of the Federalist Party.
1802: Raphael Nathan Bischoffsheim and his wife Helene, the daughter of Herz Moses Cassel, gave birth to their daughter Amalie who married was married in August 1818 at Mayence.
1812(14thof Nisan, 5572): Ta’anit Bechorot; Erev Pesach observed for the last time before the outbreak of war between the United States and Great Britain, known as the War of 1812.
1816: Gabriel Gabriel married Rebecca Marks today at the Great Synagogue.
1820: In Baghdad, David Sassoon and Hannah Joseph gave birth to businessman Elias David Sassoon.
1820: Woolf Davis married Rachel Meyer at the Seel Street Synagogue in Liverpool, England.
1827(28th of Adar): Rabbi Samuel ben Nathan Ha-Levi author of Mahat-zit ha Shekel passed away
1827: Birthdate of Wolf Frankenburger, the native of Obbach who became a successful lawyer and represented the Constituency of Middle Franconia in the Reichstag.
1830(3rdof Nisan, 5590): Parashat Vayikra.
1835: Birthdate of Alton, Germany native Bernhard Cohen who settled in England where he was bured at the Scholemoor Jewish Cemetery.
1836: In Kecskemét, Hungary, Maria (nee Hacker) and Samuel Goldstein gave birth to cantor and composer Josef Goldstein who “was chief cantor at the Leopoldstädter Tempel in Vienna, Austria from
1857 until his death” in 1899.
1847: Birthdate of Nanette Adeline Kilian, the wife of German born Max Tutuer and mother of Walter and Josephine Tuteur both of whom were born in London.
1836: During the Texas Revolution, an untold number of Jews died when Antonio López de Santa Anna ordered the Mexican army to kill about 400 Texas POW's who had fought under James Fannin at Goliad, Texas.
1839 (12th of Nisan, 5569): 32 Jews living in Meshed, Persia were massacred, and the remaining 100 families were forced to convert to Islam.
1839(12thof Nisan): The Jews were forced to convert in Meshed, Iran. Influenced by other anti-Jewish riots under the Kajar Dynasty in Iran, the local community attacked the Jewish quarter. The Synagogue was destroyed, over 30 Jews killed, and the rest of the community threatened with annihilation. Moslem leaders offered to prevent further riots on condition that the Jews convert, which they did. The Jews became known as Jadid al-Islam or New Moslems thus ending the presence of the Jewish community. They continued to practice their Judaism in secret and fled the city with their families whenever an opportunity for escape presented itself.
1847: Birthdate of German born chemist Otto Wallach. In 1910, he won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
1848: In Meseritz, Prussia, Neuman and Johanna Arnfeld Tuholske gave birth to Herman Tuholske, the Missouri Medical College trained physician, surgeon and medical school professor who co-founded he St. Louis Post-Graduate School of Medicine in 1882 and established the St. Louis Surgical and Gynecological Hospital in 1890 and had three children with his wife Sophie Epstein Tuholske.
https://beckerarchives.wustl.edu/FC059
1850(14thof Nisan, 5610): Ta’anit Bechorot; Erev Pesach
1850: In Rotterdam, Dunkirk, France native Sara Wolf and Hampshire born Benjamin Pinheas Moses gave birth to Henry Moses Spier who died before he had reached the second month of his life.
1850(14thof Nisan, 5610): Fifty three year old banker and astronomer Wilhelm Wolff Beer for whom the crater Beers on Mars is named and who is the brother of Giacomo Meybeer passed away.
1860: Birthdate of Eugene C. Kahn, one of the first, if not the first, Jewish child to be born in Morgan City, a port city on the Atchafalaya.
1861(16thof Nisan, 5621): Second Day of Pesach; First Day of the Omer
1861: The New York Times reports a drop in the sale of livestock this week due to Lent and the observance of Passover.
1861: Charles August Lauff, the German native and California businessman, and his wife, Maris J. Sebran, the daughter of Gregorio and Ramono Briones, gave birth to Charles A. Lauff.
1862: Captain Nathan Davis Menken, a merchant from Cincinnati who was serving with Company A, 1st Ohio Cavalry in the Union Army served with distinction today at the Battle of Kernstown in Virginia.
1863: In response to the “recommendation by the President of the Confederacy” that this be a Day of Prayer, Rabbi M. J. Michelbacher, of the German synagogue Bayth Ahabah in Richmond, Virginia, preached a sermon, "to which he added a prayer for the Confederate States of America "to crown our independence with lasting honor and prosperity," and for its president, Jefferson Davis, "grant speedy success to his endeavors to free our country from the presence of its foes." [On a personal note, it never ceases to amaze me that Jews could support slavery. How does one go to a Seder after reciting such a prayer?]
1868: Lazar Schorstein, the Vienna born son of Yithak Schorstein, and his wife Clara Schorstein gave brith to Bertha Victoria Shostein (who may have changed her last name to Shorstone who lived in the United Kingdom with her siblings, Gustave Isidore Schrstein and Therese Alice Schorstein, the wife of Claude Joseph Goldsmid Montefiore.
1869: The New York Times reported that “At sundown last evening the Jewish Feast of Passover commenced. It was instituted in commemoration of the deliverance of God's chosen people from Egypt, in bondage, and the passing over by the destroying angel of those families the doors of whose dwellings were marked with the blood of the Paschal Lamb.”
1869(15th of Nisan, 5629): First Day of Pesach; in the evening count the Omer for the first time.
1869(15th of Nisan, 5629): In New York Temple Emanuel and the Nineteenth-street synagogue were among the Jewish houses of worship holding services on the first day of Passover.
1876: The Young Men’s Hebrew Association moved from its temporary quarters to the Harvard Rooms at Forty-Second Street and Sixth Avenue in New York City.
1877: In New York City, “Sigmund and Pauline Ullman gave birth award winning impressionist painter Eugene Paul Ullman whose son Paul was shot and killed by the Gestapo while secretly working for the Allies in WW II and for which Eugene “accepted France’s Corix de Guerre on Paul’s behalf.
https://library.newschool.edu/archives/findingaids/KA0042.html
1877: In New York City, Justice Murray dismissed charges filed against Henry Sollinger for having obtained money under false pretense from Mrs. Jane Ferguson. Sollinger was born Jewish but claimed to have converted to Christianity at which time he began using the alias Frederick E. Hall.
1878: In Cleveland Ohio, Falk Vidaver, the son of Nathan Vidaver and his wife Anna gave birth to Ruth Vidaver who became Ruth Dodge when she married Dr. Henry Washington Dodge, Sr.
1879: It was reported today that the Hebrew Free School Association has received $10, 840.60. The money was raised by the Purim Association at its dress ball that had been held on March 6th.
1880(15th of Nisan, 5640): First Day of Pesach
1880: It was reported today that Baron James de Rothschild is President of the newly formed society established in Paris to promote Jewish studies.
1881: In Albany, NY, Joseph and Matilda Anker gave birth to Edward R. Anker, the long-time newspaper editor and husband of Frances Freund Anker
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1950/12/08/113173280.pd
1882: In New York, Benjamin Arnheim, the son of Walter and Sophia Arnheim and his wife Henrietta Arnheim gave birth to Walter B. Arnheim
1883: In Teplitz, Rabbi Adolf Aharon Rosenzweig and his wife gave birth to Rabbi Arthur Rosenzweig who passed in Prague in 1935.
1884(1st of Nisan, 5644): Rosh Chodesh Nisan observed for the last time during the Presidency of Chester Alan Arthur.
1887: “The first organized effort on the part of” Jews in Brooklyn “to tender a public tribute to the late Henry Ward Beecher too place” today” at the Kane Street Temple where…a large number of prominent Israelites met ‘in order to co-operate with other creeds and societies in raising a fund for a statue and free library to perpetuate the memory of the great friend of humanity and champion of religious liberty --- Henry Ward Beecher.’”
1888(15thof Nisan, 5648): Pesach observed for what was thought to be at the time, the last time the Presidency of Grover Cleveland.
1889: In Rheinhessen, Germany, Abraham Beckhardt and his wife gave birth WW I ace Fritz Beckhardt who scored 17 kills while flying for the “Fatherland” which later attempted to erase his record when the Nazis came to power.
1890(6thof Nisan, 5650): Emanuel Berhnheimer a native of Germany who came to the United States in 1844 and formed a partnership with August Schmid that led to formation of Lion Brewery, passed away today.
1891: Birthdate of Russian native and Columbia trained “neurologist and psychiatrist” Dr. Irving J. Sands, the author and leading medical educator who was the husband New York City Board of Education member Cecile Ruth Humbert Sands and the father of Drs. William L and Richard H Sands.
1891: The Citation for First Sergeant Jacob Trautman Medal of Honor was issued today.
1892: The Biennial Convention of the Jewish Theological Seminary Association was held at the Young Men’s Hebrew Association.
1893: The Bowery Amphitheater “reopened as a Hebrew theatre under the management of Sigmund Magulesko, Isidore Lindeman and Joseph Levy.
1893: Birthdate of sociologist Karl Mannheim, author of "Ideology and Utopia." Born in Hungary, he passed away in London in 1947.
1893(10th of Nisan, 5653): Solomon Beyfus, the son of Hamburg born language professor Gotz Philip Beyfus and Plymouth born Cippy Beyfus and the husband of Charlotte Abrahams, “the daughter of Esther and Henry Abrahams, a jeweler of Bevis Marks in the City of London” with whom he had ten children passed away today “leaving £81,326” and tribe of children who became successful in the law and theatre.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Beyfus_(1820-1893)#/media/File:Solomon_Beyfus_A_Ready_Lender.JPG
1893: “Jews and Intermarriage” published today contains a refutation by Rabbi Mendes of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue of previously published sermons that Jewish law does not prohibit intermarriage between a Jew and his earnest request that further discussion of this topic be limited to the Jewish press.
1894: Birthday of Israel B. Padway, the native of Leeds, England who came to the United States in 1906 where he graduated from Marquette Law School and began practicing law as well as serving as President of the Board of Jewish Education.
1895: Professor Felix Adler delivered a lecture tonight at the Hebrew Institute on “The Influences of Organized Labor.”
1898: The Excelsior Club which meets every Sunday and whose members include William Weinbeck, Ben Harvey, Frank Eggelton, Harry Hartman, Edgar Rosenthal and Jack Lipschutz was founded today in Philadlelpia.
1898: “In Algeria the sixth paper devoted to anti-Semitism, L'Anti-Juif Algérien, appeared, with an illustrated supplement”
1898: “Austro-Hungarian Polity” published today described the some of the cause of that have led to unrest in certain agrarian districts including “a marked contempt and dislike for commerce and trade” among Hungarians, “so that the industry of this country is to a large extent, in the hands of the Jews.”
1899: New York Mayor Van Wyck met with six boys from the Hebrew Institute at Jefferson and East Broadway.
1899: Birthdate of Polish born physician Hyman Edward Canter, who moved to Pittsburg in 1913 where he practiced obstetrics.
1900: Herzl had a meeting with Prime Minister Ernest von Koerber about sanctioning the Viennese electoral reform. He requests that the “Neue Freie Presse” should not oppose the reform too massively.
1901: Anti-Jewish riots began in Smyrna, Turkey. The riots were triggered by the reports of the disappearance of a child who was said to have been slaughtered by the Jews for 'ritual murder.' Though the riots continued for four days, the child was eventually found and paraded through the streets to show he was indeed alive.
1901(7thof Nisan, 5661): Seventy-seven-year-old “German manufacturer and philanthropist” Heinrich Blumenthal was “for a quarter of a century Blumenthal was a member of the city council, and for more than two decades the president of the Jewish community of Darmstadt” passed away today.
1902: Birthdate of screenwriter Sidney Robert Buchman, the native of Duluth, Minnesota and Columbia University graduate who served as President of the Screen Writers Guild of America who ended up on the infamous Hollywood Blacklist.
http://zenithcity.com/thisday/august-23-1975-death-of-duluth-screenwriter-sidney-buchman/
1902: It was reported today that President Theodore Roosevelt had sent a letter of regret expressing his disappointment at not being able to attend the dedication of the Lucas A. Steinam School of Metal Working which is new addition to the Hebrew Technical Institute in New York.
1903: The Zionist Commission met Herzl in Cairo.
1904(11thof Nisan, 5664): Colonel Albert Edward Goldsmid the distinguished British officer who founded the Jewish Lads’ Brigade and the Maccabaeans passed away.
1905: The Pall Mall Gazette published “The Truth About the East End” by Meyer Jack (MJ) Landa the native of Leeds who worked as journalist in London where he also wrote plays including “The Shylock Myth.”
1905: Birthdate of Rudolf Christoph Freiherr von Gersdorff a German military officer who played a role in two unsuccessful attempts to assassinate Hitler, and who, thanks to the bravery of his tortured comrades remained undiscovered and thus survived the war.
1906: At the insistence of the Chief Rabbi of Bulgaria, the Minister of the Interior of Bulgaria issues a circular to his governors to take every form of precaution against anti-Semitism over Easter.
1906: Oscar S. Straus and former state Supreme Court Justice William N. Cohen, who spoke on “The Function of the Synagogue in America” were among those who addressed the first meeting of the Temple Beth-El Club which was held at the sanctuary on 5thAvenue and 76th Street.
1906(1st of Nisan): First publication of Der Yiddisher Kemfer, a publication American Labor Zionism
1907: It was reported today that the Rumanian Central Relief Committee in New York is sending $5,000 to Rumania for the relief of the Jews, including the four hundred destitute families who had escaped from the attacks in Bucowina as well Jews living at Gabatz and Jassy.
1908: According to a letter today by Joel Benton what was described as “The Easter Lily” “was really a large and glorified anemone, which grows in great profusion in Palestine” and which has “very rich velvet-colored petals.”
1909: In Munich, author Thomas Mann and his Jewish wife Katia gave birth to their third child, Angelus Gottfried Thomas Mann who gained fame as historian Golo Mann.
1910(16thof Adar II, 5670): Shushan Purim
1910: “The Executive Committee of the Jewish community, which represents 690 organizations” in New York City “has appointed a Conciliation Committee to act as a sort of arbitration body to adjust amicably differences arsing in Jews congregations, societies lodges of New York.
1911: Hundreds of organizations, as well as “wealthy men and well-to-do businessmen sent checks” and “liberal contributions” as well as “notes of sympathy” to offices of the Mayor and Jacob H. Schiff, the Treasurer of the National Red Cross Relief Committee to help the victims and the families of those who died or were injured in what we now call the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire”
1912: In Lisbon, the Colonial Committee is considering a scheme to encourage Jews “of all nationalities” to settle in Angola.
1912: A Jew, for the first time, receives an appointment as an officer in the Ottoman Turkish Army upon graduation from the Imperial Military Academy.
1913: This evening Dr. Dave de Sola Pola Pool of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagoge is scheduled to deliver a lecture on the “The Jews Of England” at Clinton Hall sponsored by Young Israel
1913: Birthdate of SS Captain Theodore Dannecker, one of Eichman’s underlings who was a “ruthless” participate in the Final Solution.
1914: In New York City B.P. Schulberg and Adeline (née Jaffe) Schulberg, who founded a talent agency taken over by her brother, agent/film producer Sam Jaffe gave birth to Seymour Wilson Schulberg who gained fame as Budd Schulberg, the novelist and screenwriter whose credits include “What Makes Sammy Run” and “On the Waterfront.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/06/movies/06schulberg.html
1915: Starting today, Dr. Nathan Blaustein will accept applications at his office from 3 to 6 pm for those who wish to adopt the three-month-old daughter of Sadie Mager who died while giving birth to the child.
1915: Rabbi Joseph Silverman delivered a sermon at Temple Emanu-El this morning “choosing as his text ‘And Abraham bowed down to the people of the land’” in preparation of the celebration of the centenary of the birth of Dr. Isaac Meyer Wise, the found of Hebrew Union College and the driving force behind the Reform Movement in America.
1915: As the celebration of Passover approaches, the American Jewish Relief Committee for the Suffers from the European War sent out a special appeal to American Jews.
1916: In Philadelphia, at the Hotel Walton, the conference that is making plans for the convening of the first American Jewish Congress, which is being attended by more than 400 delegates from the United States entered its second day
1916: Approximately 15,000 people attended the third day of the bazaar sponsored by the People’s Relief Committee for the Relief of the Jewish War Suffers at the Grand Central Palace which was capped off by Russian Night and resulted in an additional $20,000 being added to the fund which now totaled $75,000.
1916: Three hundred people including New York Governor Whitman attended a dinner tonight at the Savoy Hotel “where nearly $75,000 was collected for a home for aged, blind and crippled Jews” which is to be erected by the Daughters of Jacob in the Bronx.
1917(4th of Nisan, 5677): Seventy-two-year-old Civil War veteran and sculpture Moses Jacob Ezekiel passed away in Rome, Italy
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/ezekiel.htm
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/mezekiel.html
1917: Now that all “absolute equality” has been granted to the Jews in Russia, it was reported that “there will be no further restrictions upon the issue of passports to Russian or American Jews who desire to visit Russia than those common to other persons.”
1917: According to telegrams received in Copenhagen today Maxim Vinaver and Oscar Gruzenberg have been appointed to the Russian Senate and Supreme Court making them the first Jews “who ever obtained a seat in a Russian tribunal.”
1917: The Army and Navy Bulletin of the Young Men’s Hebrew and Kindred Associations stated that during the upcoming Passover festival “Jewish soldiers will be able to participate in Seder and synagogue services” and that plans are being made for all those serving on “every one of the big vessels” in the Navy including the battleships Missouri and New York to have the same opportunity.
1917: “Leo Motzkin of Kiev, one of the leading Zionist publicists and the head of the international press bureau which had much to do with the acquittal of Mendel Bellis of the charge of ritual murder” said in New York today “that he was confident that the Russian revolution would mean the ultimate liberation of the Jews and unprecedented progress for the Zionist movement.”
1917: The editors and publishers reported today to have attended the recent meeting at the home of Samuel Untermeyer where it was decided to form the Jewish League of American Patriots which would “enlist the moral and physical support of every loyal American Jew in the event of war” included Israel Friedlkin publisher and Peter Wiernick, editor the Jewish Morning Journal; Morris Weinberg publisher and William Edlin, editor of The Day; Herman Paley, publisher and Isidore Conikman, editor of the Warheit; Leon Kamaliki publisher and Odalia Bublick, editor of the Jewish Daily News and Judge Aaron J. Levy also of the Warheit
1918: Henry Adams passed away. To many he was part of the last generation of the distinguished Adams family. For Jews he was that and a little more or should I say a little less. In 1894, Henry Adams organized the Immigration Restriction League to limit the admission to America of "unhealthy elements" -- Jews being first among these. In his famous book, The Education of Henry Adams, he wrote about those he was trying to keep out of America: "Not a Polish Jew fresh from Warsaw or Cracow - not a furtive Jacob or Isaac still reeking of the Ghetto, snarling a weird Yiddish to the officers of the customs..." He found many supporters for his cause, but he did not win
1918(14th of Nisan, 5678): Ta’anit Bechorot; erev Pesach
1918: Based on information supplied by the Jewish Welfare Board, “Jewish families in the vicinity of army and navy cantonments” are scheduled to act as hosts for Jewish soldiers and sailors” who will have leaves so they may observe Passover.
1918: “Jewish Soldiers in the British army held a Seder at” Beit Yehudayoff, known as the ‘palace’
1918: Rabbi Barnet Siegel and John L. Bernstein presided over the Seder sponsored by the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Society which was attended by 1,000 people.
1918: For what may have been the first time in history a Seder was conducted at Yokohama, Japan for Jewish immigrants most of whom were women and children.
1918: Having secured the territory around Jerusalem, the British moved across the Jordan and began what was the opening of the First Battle of Aman.
1919: It was announced today the Continental Headquarters in Paris that “the approximately 60,000 Jewish soldiers in the American Expeditionary Force will receive an average of five to six pounds of Matzos from the Jewish Welfare Board so they can observe Passover.
1920(8thof Nisan, 5680): Parashat Tzav; Shabbat HaGadol
1921: During his fact finding visit to Palestine, Winston Churchill went to the British Military Cemetery on the Mount of Olives to attend a service of dedication honoring the sacrifice of Allied soldiers who had fought against the Turks.
1922: In San Francisco, Joseph and Lillian Kurzman gave birth to military historian Daniel Halperin Kurzman whose works included include Ben-Gurion: Prophet of Fire. (As reported by Daniel Slontnik)
1923: Birthdate of British impresario Victor Hochhauser who, along with his wife, promoted numerous events including those for the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra.
1923: Lord Grey, who “had been the foreign secretary during the McMahon-Hussein negotiations”, addressed the House of Lords today. During his speech, “he made it clear that he entertained serious doubts as to the validity of the British government's interpretation of the pledges which he, as foreign secretary, had caused to be given to Hussein in 1915.
1923(10thof Nisan, 5683): Sixty-seven-year-old Felix Daus, “the inventor of the Daus duplicator and hectograph” died suddenly this afternoon while visiting his lawyer Herman Brasch and was buried later at the Mt. Zion Cemetery in Queens.
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1923/03/28/105105033.pdf
1923: Sidney and Helen Livingston Weinberg gave birth to Sidney J. Weinberg, Jr. who would become a senior director at Goldman-Sachs.
1923: Birthdate of Prof. Nahum M. Sarna, z"l the father of Jonathan Sarna and a noted scholar in his own right
https://www2.bc.edu/~langerr/NMSarna/
1924(27thof Adar II, 5684): Ninety-one-year-old Abraham Berliner, the son of Franziska and Baruch Benjamin Berliner, the husband of Henriette Berliner and father of Flora, Selma, Max and Paul Berliner, who should not be confused with the German-Jewish historian of the same name, passed away today in Berlin.
1926: “For Jewish Students in the City” published today described plans by the Women’s Branch of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations to provide home hospitality for during Passover for Jewish students attending colleges in New York which “is not charity or philanthropy” but is an expression of a “deeper love” that come when opens their doors.
1927: Banker and philanthropist Nathan Jonas was the guest of honor at a banquet tonight at the Hotel Biltmore where 1,000 guests gathered to “mark the completion of his three decades of service in behalf of Brooklyn Jewish Charities.
1927: In New York City, Kassel Lewis and Sylvia Surut gave birth to New York Times correspondent Anthony Lewis, the author of Gideon’s Triumph
1927: “Out of the Mist” a silent film produced by Karl Fruend was released in Germany Deutsche Fox, the German subsidiary of the William Fox’s film company
1927: “Mr. Antin Write a Stark Book on State Politics published today provides a review of The Gentlemen From The Twenty-Second: An Autobiography by Benjamin Antin which is described as “an autobiography you could waltz to.”
1928: It was reported today that Cellist Gdal Saleski, the author of Famous Musicians of Jewish Origins has performed a concert at Steinway Hall that included Joseph “Achron’s ‘Fragment Mystique’ which “is based on a Hebrew theme.”
1928(6th of Nisan): Rabbi Meir Dan Plotzki, son of Rabbi Chaim Yitzchak Ber Plotzker of Kutno, the President of Kollel Polen and a prolific author whose works included Chemdas Yisrael on Sefer ha-Mitzvot passed away today. When Rabbi Meir Dan Plotzki visited America, he “pronounced Manischewtiz matzah to be thoroughly reliable – ‘there is none more faithful to be found’ – citing “constant supervision of one of the sages of Jerusalem,” Rabbi Mendel M. Hochstein.
1930: Birthdate of actor David Janssen. Born David Meyer, Jansen gained fame playing the lead in the long running TV drama, “The Fugitive.”
1930: Flyweight Moe Mizler fought his 39th bout at Whitechapel, London, UK
1930: “The meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Jewish Agency ended this morning after a short session with Felix M. Warburg, chairman, and Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the Agency, expressing their satisfaction with the work that had been accomplished. There was a general feeling among the participants that the meeting had been fruitful of practical results for Palestine, and there was particular gratification that the complete budget of three and a half million dollars was confirmed.” (As reported by JTA)
1931: English novelist Arnold Bennett, the confidant and advisor of Anglo-Jewish pianist and advocate for refugees from Nazi Germany Harriet Cohen whom she described as my “dear friend and mentor of my youth” passed away today.
1931: Charlie Chaplin received France's distinguished Legion of Honor
1932: It was reported today that Chief Judge Cuthbert W. Pound of the New York Court of Appeals will preside at the regional finals of the National Oratorical Contest, replacing Benjamin Cardozo, the Associate Justice of the Supreme Court who was his predecessor as the Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals.
1933: A gigantic anti-Nazi protest rally, organized by the American Jewish Congress, was held in New York City. 55,000 people attended and threatened to boycott German goods if the Germans carried out their planned permanent boycott of Jewish-owned stores and businesses.
1933: Rabbi M.S. Margolis, the President of the of the Orthodox Jewish Congregations delivered a speech “at a mass demonstration in Madison Square to protest again the Nazi persecution of German Jews.
1933: In “Germany: Scared To Death,” Time reported that “To say that most German statesmen and politicians outside the Government's charmed circle were scared to death last week, would be understatement. Panic made cowards of the bravest of brave German Socialists and Communists. Even Catholics trembled—except Dr. Hans Luther. It was accurately said that in less than two weeks Chancellor Hitler has reduced his opponents to a lower level of groveling fear than did Premier Mussolini in the two years after the March on Rome, Oct. 30, 1922.”
1934: In Brooklyn, NY, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Adler gave birth to Dr. Joel B. Adler, the graduate of Yale and the University of Downstate Medical State Center and husband of Flora Adler with whom he had two children, Douglas and Allison.
1935(22ndof Adar II, 5695): Sixty-one-year-old Croatian architect Rudolf Lubiniski who designed the Croatian State Archives, passed away today in Zagreb.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Lubinski#/media/File:Sove_HDA_2_1009.jpg
1936: From Windsor, Ontario, novelist and critic Dr. Ludwig Lewisohn named “the ten greatest living Jews” who are Professor Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, French philosopher Henri Bergson, Martin Buber, Chaim Wiesmann, gynecologist Dr. Bernard Zondek, author Scholom Asch, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Justice Louis D. Brandeis and composer Arnold Schoenberg.
1936: It was reported today that Eddie Cantor warned, that based on “information he had received recently, ‘a pogrom will follow the Olympic Games in Germany’” and that “he and members of his family had been threatened” which led to his belief that it is “necessary for Jews to have some form of unity.
1937(15th of Nisan, 5697): First Day of Pesach.
1937: In New York, at Shaarey Tefilah “two fires occurred simultaneously in the basement of the synagogue and caused minor damage. Later that same morning, at 10 o'clock, 700 persons assembled to celebrate the second Seder of the Passover. A few hours after the congregation had gone, a third fire was reported at 3:15 o'clock. This fire damaged the Ark of the Covenant and destroyed 18 hand-illuminated Torah kept in the Tabernacle. The $25,000 pipe organ was badly damaged and the entire south end of the synagogue was wrecked by flames, smoke and the axes of the firemen. After investigations by the Fire Marshall, it was discovered that the incendiary fires had been set by the synagogue's caretaker. The synagogue was reconstructed and remodeled to designs of S. Brian Baylinson, and a four-story synagogue house was added.
1937: The Joint Distribution Committee announced today that France, Belgium, England Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland had ratified the Geneva agreement granting German citizens (including Jewish refugees from the Nazis) who were in foreign countries prior to July 4, 1936 refugee certificates “good for one year” which meant they had “the right of residence.”
1938 After meeting him while performing with the Phil Harris orchestra, Leah Ray married MCA executive and future Jets owner Sonny Werblin with whom she had three sons during their fifty year marriage.
1938(24thof Adar II, 5698): Sixty-six-year-old William Louis Stern, the Berlin born son of Joseph Stern and “husband of Clara Joseephy” who fled the Nazis and continued his work in the field of psychology at Duke University passed away today.
https://web.archive.org/web/20060319004052/http://www.bh.org.il/Names/POW/Stern.asp
1938: Miss Henrietta Szold, 77-year-old founder of Hadassah, the Woman's Zionist Organization of America sent a cable from Jerusalem to Hadassah headquarters in New York describing her efforts to arrange for the transfer of Jewish children from Austria to Palestine. “The change is described as vital and as being the only hope for the youngsters to ever lead normal lives.”
1939: Dr. Max Danzis, the chief of medical staff, appealed to Newark Beth Israel’s board a their meeting today “to exerts all possible influence on behalf of “refugee physicians fleeing Nazi Germany.
1940: Himmler ordered the building of Auschwitz concentration Camp in southern Poland
1941(28thof Adar, 5701): Forty-five-year-old Russian born David Alper who married Minnie “Manya” Isiomin after he had been married to Frieda Alper passed away today after which he was buried at Mount Hebron Cemetery in Flushing, Queens, NY.
1941: A Yugoslav government that was sympathetic to the Nazis “was toppled by an anti-German military coup” which lead to a Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece in April. This would prove to be disastrous for the Jews of the Balkans since it would bring them into the grasp of the Final Solution. Ironically, the long term effect of this would lead to the ultimate defeat of the Germans in WW II. The invasion of the Balkans delayed the German invasion of Russia. That delay meant the German army would be mired in the Russian Winter, which was a major factor in handing the Nazi war machine its first defeats on the eastern front.
1942: On day after the start of the deportation of Slovokian Jews, Slovakia’s Chief Rabbi Micahel Weissmand and the Slovokian Zionist leader Gisi Fleischann sent a message of SS Captain Dieter Wisliceny offering him a bribe stop the shipment of the Jews to the death camps.
1942: Goebbels described in his diary, Belzec and the cremation of the Jews, "The procedure is pretty barbaric, one not to be described here most definitely. Not much will remain of the Jews. . . fully deserved by them."
1943: “Blue Ribbon Town” featuring Jewish comedian Groucho Marx was heard for the first time on CBS Radio
1943: The CKC resistance movement including Jewish cellist Frieda Belinfante “organized and executed the bombing of the population registry in Amsterdam today, which destroyed thousands of files and hindered Nazi attempts to compare forged documents with documents in the registry.”
1944: Several of the leaders of the Yishuv including executives of the Jewish Agency and General Council of Palestine Jews, Tel Aviv Mayor Israel Rokach and the municipal councilors of Tel Aviv and Mayor Joseph Saphir of Petak Tikvah met in Jerusalem this morning to deal with the latest outbreak violence by “the small terrorist group whose sabotage activities have led to a new and grave situation.” Among those calling for action to end the violence were chief Rabbis Isaac Herzog and Bension Uziel.
1944: In A Children’s Aktion, the Nazis collected all of the Jewish children of Lovno.
1944(3rd of Nisan, 5704): Forty Jewish policemen were shot by the Gestapo in the Riga Ghetto.
1944(3rd of Nisan, 5704): Two thousand Jews were murdered in Kaunas Lithuania
1944: One thousand Jews left the Drancy Concentration Camp in France for Auschwitz Concentration Camp
1944(3rd of Nisan, 5704): Resistance fighter Abraham Geleman, born in Lodz was killed in Belgium.
1944: As the Red Army approached Riga, Kovno and Vilna, Germany picked up the pace with actions against the surviving inhabitants of the ghettos. Children everywhere were being seized and driven off to their death. "The Children's Action" in Kovno resulted in the death of thousands of children under the age of 17. Most of them were shot. In order to spare their children from such horrors, some parents poisoned them. In Lodz, a mother killed her severely handicapped boy with a lead pipe across the head instead of allowing him to meet his fate with the Germans.
1945: Task Force Baum, the unit under the command of Captain Abraham Baum that had been sent behind enemy lines to liberate camp OFLAG XIII-B, near Hammelburg whose POW’s included the son-in-law of General Patton broke through the bridgehead at Aschaffenburg and “arrived in sight of the camp” by the afternoon.
1945(13th of Nisan, 5705): Jacob S. Kahn, the president of the Refrigeration Maintenance Company passed away today at the age of 62. Kahn had been a builder during the 1920’s, who erected the Hyde Park Hotel.
1945(13thof Nisan, 5705): Seventeen-year-old Lily Freedman, the daughter of Ray and Simon Freeman, was “killed by enemy action” today.
1945(13th of Nisan, 5705): Sixty-five-year-old Moshe Avigdor Amiel, the Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv passed away today.
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~szwetch/Stamps.of.Israel/6.html
1946: USCGC Northland (WPG-49), a cruising class of gunboat especially designed for Arctic operations that served in World War II was decommissioned today by the U.S. Coast Guard which would lead to its eventual acquisition by a Jewish group who would renamed it Jewish State and use it to transport refugees to Palestine.
1946: Today “the steamer Tel Hai, carrying 736 passengers, was intercepted by the destroyer HMS Chequers 140 miles out at sea as it approached Palestine.”
1946: In Cleveland, Dr. and Mrs. Gittelson celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary today.
1947: A.H. Weaghorn, a British police sergeant who is an expert on Jewish political affairs was attacked by three men outside of Tel Aviv’s central police station. Two of the men opened fire and one threw a bomb. The sergeant, who was wounded, returned fire along with several of his comrades.
1948: Twenty-two-year-old Algerian Avraham Abarzel, the son of Albert and Diamantine Abarzel, who had survived the Nazi occupation of France arrived in Israel today and “immediately joined the IDF” which later transferred him “to the French Commando Company of the Palmach Hanegev’s 9th battalion.”
1949(26th of Adar): Russian born Hebrew poetess Elisheva Bikhowsky passed away
1949: The Scientific and Cultural Conference for World Peace, co-sponsored by Herbert Aptheker came to a close today.
1950(9th of Nisan, 5710): Sixty-four-year-old Harvard graduate and founder of Wertheim and Co., Maurice Wertheim, the son of Jacob and Hanna Wertheim and the husband of Cecile J. Seiberling passed away today.
1950: After having been "rebuffed" by Levi Eshkol, the Treasurer of the Jewish Agency, Shlomo Hillel, "one of the Israeli organizers of the Iraqi Jewish emigration""went to see Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gurion who was totally supportive of the mass emigration from Iraq.’Tell them to come quickly,' Ben-Gurion said to Hillel...'What if the Iraqis change their minds and rescind the law? go and bring them quickly.'" Hillel would return to Iraq and try to expedite matters but the Jewish Agency "held the purse strings" and insisted on slowing down the immigration movement to what it considered were more manageable numbers.
1950: Dr. Serge Koussevitzky, the 75 year old conduct emeritus conductor of the Boston Symphony is scheduled to leave for Europe today after having conducted 16 concerts in Israel.
1950: Anglo-Israeli financial negotiations on problems dating from the days of the mandate are scheduled to come to a successful conclusion today with the planned signing of an agreement in London.
1950: The New York Times publishes a picture of Charlotte Johnson, The American Red Cross representative in Israel, watching as Jewish children who have arrived in Tel Aviv from Europe receive clothes made from textiles donated by the Brooklyn Chapter of the American Red Cross.
1950: An adaptation of “The Man Who Came to Dinner” a comedy written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart was broadcast on the Lux Radio Theatre.
1951: “Odette,” a biopic about British agent who was not executed at Ravesnbruck filmed by cinematographer Mutz Greenbaum was released today in the United States.
1952(1st of Nisan, 5712: Rosh Chodesh Nisan
1952: The Jerusalem Post reported that the Jewish Agency decided to send 100 disgruntled immigrants from India, who had been squatting outside the agency's offices in Tel Aviv, back to where they came from, announcing that this should not serve as a future precedent insofar as other immigrants were concerned.
1952: The Jerusalem Post reported that The Ministry of Health had announced that every Israeli between the ages of four and 60 would be inoculated against typhoid.
1952: The Jerusalem Post reported that at The Hague the German delegation to the Reparations Conference expressed surprise at the extent of the Jewish request of the sum of $500 million, to be paid within five years. They expected a smaller sum but agreed to recognize all claims as "urgent" and had "shown willingness" to meet them. Jewish delegates pointed out that they didn’t want to wait until all the Nazi victims were dead but intended to help the living.
1952: The Jerusalem Post reported that the Israeli delegation in London held extensive talks on possible oil deliveries and economic cooperation.
1952: New York premiere of “Singin’ in the Rain,” a musical comedy directed by Stanley Doenen written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green
1955: Birthdate of Susan Neiman, the Atlanta, GA, high school dropout and Ph.D. recipient from Harvard whose memoir Slow Fire described “her life as a Jewish woman in Berlin” during the 1980’s.
1956: “Patterns” a film noire co-produced by Jed Harris (Jacob Hirsch Horowitz) was released in the United States today.
1957: Funeral services were held this afternoon for eighty-year-old English born Cleveland realtor David J. Cohen, the husband of Katie Fisher Cohen with whom he had three daughters --Eleanor, Dean and Miriam – after which he was interred at the Mayfield Cemetery.
1958: A less than laudatory review Edna Ferber’s Ice Palace published today described “her story as too repetitious and disorderly to win a prize in the world of literature” but then mockingly said it might provide immeasurable help in the campaign “to win statehood for Alaska.”
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=990DE0DB163DE53BBC4F51DFB5668383649EDE
1958: “Carl Foreman said today that he wrote the screenplay for “The Bridge Over the River Kwai” the day after Pierre Boulle was given an Oscar for writing the script.
1958: “Run Silent, Run Deep,” a WW II submarine thriller with music by Franz Waxman and featuring Don Rickles in a non-comedic role was released today in the United States.
1959: Twenty-seven-year-old "Elizabeth Taylor took the Hebrew name Elisheba Rachel and converted to Judaism."
1960: ABC broadcast “Fair Game,” an episode of “The Rebel” directed by Irvin Kershner.
1961(10th of Nisan, 5721): Eighty-seven-year-old Moshe Novomeysky the Siberian native and engineer who developed the Palestine Potash Company passed away today.
http://www.haaretz.com/jewish/this-day-in-jewish-history/.premium-1.711008
1965(23rdof Adar II, 5725): Parashat Shmini; Shabbat Parah
1965(23rdof Adar II, 5725): Sixty-year-old New Jersey born, Columbia Ph.D. “Israel E. Drabkin, chairman of the department of classical languages and Hebrew City College who married Miriam Frideman after his first wife Norma Lowenstein died passed away today.
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1965/03/28/97189720.pdf
1967(15thof Adar II, 5727): Shushan Purim
1970(19thof Adar II, 5730): Seventy-nine-year-old thrice married medium and author Viola Brothers Shore the eldest child of Abram and Minnie Epstein and one of the many called as witness by HUAC passed away today.
https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/Shore-Viola-Brothers
1974: “Mame” a cinematic version of Jerome Lawrence Broadway musical directed by Gene Sakes with music by Jerry Herman and co-starring Bea Arthur was released today in the United States.
1974: “Concrack,” a marvelous adaption of The Water is Wide directed by Martin Ritt and with a screenplay co-authored by Irving Ravetch was released today in the United States.
1975(15thof Nisan, 5735): Pesach1
977: In Allentown, PA, Donald and Melina Kohn gave birth to Sally Rebecca Kohn founder and chief education officer of the Movement Vision Lab, a contributor to Fox News and “a distinguished Vaid Fellow at the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy Institute.”
1977: The Jerusalem Post reported that the week-long port workers’ go-slow strike continued and ships were loaded at half the normal rate. Angry citrus farmers called on the government to allow them to load their fruit by themselves. The Bank Leumi strike ended and its 300 branches opened for business. The hospital doctors’ strike was called off at the last moment. But radio and TV broadcasts were halted for seven hours as the result of a strike by the Broadcasting Authority administrative staff.
1977: The Jerusalem Post reported that in New York US Secretary of State Cyrus Vance promised Jewish leaders that during his forthcoming visit to Moscow he would discuss the problems of Soviet Jewry at the Kremlin.
1979(28th of Adar, 5739): One person was killed and 14 were injured during a terrorist bombing in downtown Tel Aviv.
1980: The Louisville Free Public Library which had been co-designed by William G. Tachau who designed buildings for Congregation Mike Israel, Graz College and Dropsie College was placed on the National Register of Historic Places today.
1981: “Thief,” a crime film directed by Michael Mann who also produced and wrote the script, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and starring James Caan was released in the United States today.
1982: ABC broadcast the last episode of “Bosom Buddies” costarring Wendie Jo Sperber and featuring Billy Joel’s “My Life” as its opening theme.
1983: “The neo-Nazi National Democratic Party will not be able to use “a city-owned public hall” for its party congress which is scheduled to open today in Frankfurt thanks to a change announced by the mayor of the German city that came about because of protests that came from several groups include the Social Democratic Party.
1984: “Terrible Joe Moran” a made-for-television film co-starring Ellen Barkin and featuring New York political leader Edward I. Koch as “Moe” was released today.
1986: Birthdate of Vania Heymann, the native of Jerusalem who creates novel video including commercials for PepsiMax.
1990(1stof Nisan, 5750) Rosh Chodesh Nisan
1990(1stof Nisan, 5750): Ninety-two-year-old Morris Holman the captain of the 1918 CCNY basketball team and the brother of Nat Holman who coached CCNY in 1920 passed away today.
1990: “Rent Collection” a “genre piece” by David Monies was sold by Sotheby’s London today.
1991: Isaiah Berlin met with author Lewis M. Dabney, a professor of English at the University of Wyoming in London at the Athenaeum Club. Dabney was editing Edmund Wilson's last journal, ''The Sixties,'' and had begun a biography. Dabney wanted Berlin to fill out the account of Wilson he had begun in a short memoir published a few years earlier. In the course of their conversation, Berlin told Dabney two “funny stories” about Wilson’s visit to Israel. Wilson “went to Jordan and when he came back he had to pass through the Mandelbaum Gate. The Israeli passport officer looked at his passport, noticed it was Edmund Wilson, then said: ''I think your dating of the Dead Sea Scrolls is not quite right. I think it should have been 50 years before.'' And Edmund answered, and the chief officer said: ''Stamp Mr. Wilson's passport. You can't discuss the scrolls here, not on the Government's time.'' He talked to me about that afterward, saying, 'Only in Israel would I find a passport officer who wished to question the date of the scrolls.'’ That amused him. It pleased him. Then he went to see the man he most admired in Israel, who was a scholar called Flusser (David Flusser) in Jerusalem, who talked to him about the Bible and the scrolls. Edmund asked him what he thought of Israel. Flusser said: 'Israel est un tres petit pays. Et je ne suis pas patriote.’ He was delighted with that. Anybody who said he wasn't a patriot went straight to his heart.”
1994(15th of Nisan, 5754): First Day of Pesach
1996: The New York Times featured a review of Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
1996: Final broadcast of “Dream On,” the HBO sitcom created by Marta Kaufmann and David Crane.
1998: After meeting with Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai in the U.S. today U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen indicated that Washington has agreed to expand the joint Arrow anti-missile project and provide $45 million in funding for a third battery of missiles for Israel.
1998: The Times of London included a review of John Murray’s biography of Edmund de Rothschild entitled "A Gilt-Edged Life."
1999(10thof Nisan, 5759): Parashat Tav; Shabbat HaGadol observed for the last time in the 20th century
2000: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak urges Israel to return the annexed Golan Heights to Syria.
2000: U.S. premiere of “The Audrey Hepburn Story?” in which “Emmy Rossum appears during early scenes of the film playing Hepburn in her early teens.”
2000: Jack Lang began serving as Education Minister of France for a second time today.
2001: Islamic Jihad took credit for a bombing in the Talipot industrial zone in which 7 people were injured.
2001: Hamas took credit for the bombing an Egged bus at French Hill in which 28 were injured in Jerusalem.
2002 (14th of Nisan, 5762): A suicide bomber killed 29 Israelis during a Passover Seder in Netanya, Israel. The stark statement speaks for itself.
2002 (14th of Nisan, 5762): Milton Berle passed away. Born Mendel Berlinger on July 12, 1908, Berle's career began at the age of five when he modeled as Buster Brown. He starred in a variety of entertainment mediums. But he gained his greatest fame as Uncle Miltie, star of the Texaco Milton Berle Show. The show began airing in 1948. It was the first national television hit and became a must see every Tuesday night. Berle was also one of the first to learn that television was a devouring medium that used you up and spit you out. Although his career would last for another half century, he would never know the success he gained with his Tuesday night television triumph. Berle died at the age of 93, smoking cigars and stealing other people's material almost to his last day.
2002(14th of Nisan, 5762): Director Billy Wilder passed away.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/29/us/billy-wilder-master-of-caustic-films-dies-at-95.html
http://www.theguardian.com/news/2002/mar/30/guardianobituaries
2003: In Memoirs of a Queen, Middle East Perspective” published today Jane Maslin provides a review of Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life by Queen Noor, who considers “1948, the year the State of Israel was founded, as the ''year of the catastrophe,'' and who “assails Zionism, the building of Israeli settlements and the perceived power of American Jews in influencing these matters” while having come to “the realization that many studio executives were Jewish, ''deeply loyal to Israel and Israeli politics, right or wrong.''
2004: Eighty-one-year-old Dr. Sabina Zimering sat in the audience at the Great American History Theatre in Saint Paul, MN and watched the remarkable story of her own survival in Nazi Europe unfold on stage.
http://jwa.org/thisweek/mar/27/2004/sabina-zimering
2005: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of topics of special interest to Jewish readers including "Whose Bible Is It? A History of the Scriptures Through the Ages" by Jaroslav Pelikan and the recently released paperback edition of "Someone to Run With" by Israeli novelist David Grossman; translated by Vered Almog and Maya Gurantz.
2006(27th of Adar, 5766): Eighty-one year old Rudolf Vrba, who as a young man escaped from Auschwitz and provided the first eyewitness evidence not only of the magnitude of the tragedy unfolding at the death camp but also of the exact mechanics of Nazi mass extermination passed away at a hospital in Vancouver, British Columbia today. (As reported by Douglas Martin)
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/07/world/europe/07vrba.html
2006: Ehud “Banai sang a duet with David D'Or on D'Or's CD, Kmo HaRuach ("Like the Wind"), which was released” today.
2006: The New Yorker published “Allice Off the Page” an essay in which Calvin Trillin “discusses his late wife.”
2007(8th of Nisan, 5767): Ninety-nine year old Berlin native Axel Gerhardt Rosin, the long-time president of the Book-of the-Month club, note philanthropist and husband Katherine Scherman passed away today. (As reported by Dennis Hevesi)
https://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/28/obituaries/28rosin.html
2008: “The Lemon Tree,” an Israeli film directed, produced and written by Eran Riklis was released today in Israel.
2008: Sammy Ofer donated £20 million to London's National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, as part of a £35 million program of expansion.
2008: The 92nd Street Y presents a lecture by Professor Robert Seltzer a professor of history at Hunter College and Director of the Hunter Interdisciplinary Program in Jewish Studies who answers the questions “Why was the State of Israel needed? What were the reasons behind its establishment by the Jewish Diaspora?”
2008: Haaretz reported that two of its writers Shmuel Rosner and Or Kashti were recently named winners of the B'nai B'rith World Center Award for Journalism for 2007 on the basis of their work for the paper.
2008: As President Georgi Parvanov of Bulgaria’s visit to Israel came to an end, Bulgaria accepted responsibility for the genocide of more than 11,000 Jews in its jurisdiction during World War II.
2009: In Baltimore, Maryland B’nai Israel Synagogue presented a Friday night event featuring Philip J. Tulkoff, President, Tulkoff Food Products who delivered a talk entitled “Memories of Horseradish Lane and the Growth of Tulkoff Foods” in which he reminisced about “the good old days.” Thanks to the efforts of Lena and Harry Tulkoff that began in the 1920’s Tulkoff Horseradish Products Company became one of the nation's largest manufacturers of prepared horseradish products.
2009(2 Nisan, 5769): Eighty-six-year-old Irving R. Levine whose ever-present bow tie was his unique visual signature while he covered business and the economy for NBC News passed away. Unlike the blowhards and blow-dried talking heads who read this news beat today, Levine understood the subject matter and conveyed it a low keyed professional manner. (As reported by Bruce Weber)
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/28/business/28levine.html
2010: Shabbat HaGadol
2010: Sidney Ferris Rosenberg, the radio personality who is the cousin of former Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman “returned to WFAN hosting a show in Port St. Lucie before the New York Mets faced the Washington Nationals.”
2010: the Jewish Ensemble Theatre is scheduled to present Wendy Kesselman’s newly adapted version of The Diary of Anne Frank by Frances Goodrich & Albert Hackett at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center in Dearborn, MI
2010: Opening of the “Legacy of the Shoah Film Festival” at John Jay College in New York City. The opening night features Forgotten Transports: Women’s Stories – Estonia, Children of the Night by Marion Wiesel and a discussion with the award-winning director Lukas Pribyl.
2011 Dr. Jane Katz “was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in Commack, New York for her pioneering athletic contributions to the field of aquatics”
2011: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest including “Great Soul Mahatma Gandhi and His Struggle With India” by Joseph Lelyveld and the recently released paperback edition of” Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough” by Lori Gottlieb
2011: YU Center for Israel Studies, Yeshiva University Museum, YU Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies presented Talmuda de-Eretz Israel: Archaeology and the Rabbis in Late Antique Palestine.
2011: “Norman Gorbaty: To Honor My People,” exhibition at the Walsh Art Gallery is scheduled to come to a close at Fairfield University, Fairfield, Conn.
2011: “The Chosen” is scheduled to be performed at the Arena Stage in Washington, DC under the sponsorship of Theatre J.
2011: The Harry Houdini Exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York is scheduled to come to an end.
2011: The second annual Limmud Conference is scheduled to take place in Chicago, Illinois.
2011: The Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington is scheduled to sponsor A Walking Tour of Old Jewish Alexandria.
2011: Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story and God & Co.are two of the films scheduled to be shown at the Hartford Jewish Film Festival.
2011: “The Infidel” and “The Human Resources Manager” are scheduled to be shown at the Westchester Jewish Film Festival.
2011: “The Whipping Man,” featuring a Seder on the first night of Pesach as its dramatic hook, is scheduled to have its last performance at the City Center State in New York.2011: Six gunmen in Sinai targeted the pipeline that carries natural gas from Egypt to Israel and Jordan today, overpowering a guard and planting an explosive device before fleeing, The Associated Press reported.
2011: Bank Leumi and Hashava – The Company for Location and Restitution of Holocaust Victims’ Assets ended months of arbitration by signing an agreement in which the bank will pay the company NIS 130.8 million, the two sides announced today. The money will go to heirs of Holocaust victims and toward projects that help Israeli Holocaust survivors – more than a quarter of whom live under the poverty line, according to government estimates.
2011(21st of Adar II, 5771): Ninety-five-year-old Bernard B. Roth; founder of South Gate-based World Oil Corporation passed away today. (As reported by Shan Li)
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/31/local/la-me-bernard-roth-20110331
2012: The 16th Annual Hartford Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to come to an end with a reception and a tango party.
2012: The Andy Statman Trio is scheduled to perform klezmer music at the Charles Street Synagogue.
2012(4thof Nisan, 5772): Eighty-two-year-old Baltimore born poet Adrienne Rich, whose father was a Jewish doctor passed away today (As reported by Margalit Fox)
2012: PeterGuber became a minority owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers through his affiliation with Guggenheim Baseball Management LLC
2013(16thof Nisan): Second Day of Pesach
2013(16thof Nisan, 5773): Ninety-five-year-old screenwriter Fay Kanin, the partner and wife of Michael Kanin, both of whom were blacklisted, passed away today.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/29/arts/fay-kanin-95-writer-for-movies-and-tv.html?_r=0
http://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/mar/31/fay-kanin
2013: “Jews of Egypt” a “controversial documentary on Egypt’s expulsion of its long-resident Jewish population opened” to at three movie theatres in Cairo and Alexandria “despite an initial effort by the Egyptian government to block its release.”
2013: The 23rdannual Haifa International Children’s Theatre Festival is scheduled to open at the Haifa Municipal Festival Theatre Complex.
2013: Bulgaria will provide more evidence that Hezbollah planned the airport bus bombing that killed five Israelis in Burgas last year, and to use that proof to pressure the European Union to formally label the Iran-backed Islamist group a terrorist organization, Reuters reported today
2013: Some of Israel’s most sensitive computer information is stored on servers in a building above ground in the south of the country, acutely vulnerable to attack or natural disaster, a TV investigative report said today.
2014: “Aftermath” is scheduled to be shown at the Northern Virginia Jewish Film Festival.
2014: In Boston, attendees of the Keshet Cabaret are scheduled to have the opportunity to bid on a personal voicemail from Sarah Silverman.
2014: “For the first time since 1993, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra is scheduled to perform at Jones Hall in Houston.”
2014: “Malmö police arrest two teenagers, out of a gang of five, who attempted to break into the local Jewish community center. When they were stopped by security at the gate, they voiced anti-Semitic slurs, according to the police. They were also seen filming and taking pictures of the building before their arrest.” (As reported by Yair Rosenberg)
2014: Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College and the music director and principal conductor of the American Symphony Orchestra for whom he is scheduled to conduct Max Bruch’s ‘Moses’ at Carnegie Hall
2014: Pears Institute for the study of Antisemitism in partnership with the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck, University of London and The Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide is scheduled to host “No Stab in the Back!” Race, Labour and the National Socialist Regime under the Bombs, 1940-45”
2014: “The Israel Anti-Fraud Unit said today that it is investigating former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who is suspected of obstructing justice and witness tampering.”
2014: The IDF Northern Command announced today that it was changing its orders regarding opening fire in areas along the Golan border fence. Anyone from the Syrian side who comes near the fence should expect to be shot, the IDF said.
2014: Pears Institute for the study of Anti-Semitism in partnership with the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck, University of London and The Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide is scheduled to host the opening session of “Labour and Race in Modern German History”
2014: In commemoration of “the 70th anniversary of the beginning of the nationwide mass deportations in Hungary, the Center for Jewish History is scheduled to host a screen of “Free Fall” a documentary that “explores the unique circumstances of the Holocaust in southern Hungary.”
2015: “The Outrageous Sophie Tucker” is scheduled to be shown at the Northern Virginia Jewish Film Festival.
2015: “Cupcakes” a film “set in contemporary Tel Aviv” is scheduled to open at the Quad Cinema in NYC.
2015: Lewis Black is scheduled to appear in Westhampton Beach, NY.
2015: “The European Union kept Hamas on its terrorism blacklist today despite a controversial court decision ordering Brussels to remove the Palestinian Islamist group from the register.”
2015(7thof Nisan, 5775): Ninety-two-year-old George Spitz who made the New York Marathon what it is today passed away today.
2016: The American Sephardi Federation is scheduled to host “New World Haggadah: A Passover Story for a Diverse America” featuring Ilan Stavans “one of today’s foremost interpreters of Jewish and Ladino cultures.”
2016: “A Tale of Love and Darkness” a cinematic adaptation of Amos Oz’s autobiographical novel is scheduled to be shown at the 20th annual Israeli Film Festival in Philadelphia, PA.
2016: Tal Nitzán, “an Israeli award-winning poet, writer, editor and a major translator of Hispanic literature” and “author of six poetry books, one novel and four children's book, and editor of three poetry anthologies, among them the ground-breaking anthology With an Iron pen": Hebrew Protest Poetry” is scheduled to appear at a bilingual poetry reading at the Cornelia Street Café.
2016: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The Best Place on Earth: Stories by Ayelet Tsabari, Rightful Heritage: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Land of America by Douglas Brinkley and Girls and Sex: Navigating the Complicated New Landscape by Peggy Orenstein.
2017: JTS is scheduled to host “Wondering Jews: Abigail Pogrebin and Joseph Telushkin in Conversation.”
2017: “Almost a decade after losing billions of his clients’ money in Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, hedge fund financier Charles Murphy leaped to his death today from the twentieth floor of Midtown Manhattan’s luxury Sofitel Hotel, in what is being described as a suicide” proving that the evil of this ultimate con man never seems to end. (As reported by Daniel J. Solomon)
2017: The Seattle Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to host a screening of “Shalom Italia” a film about “Italians brothers who reunite in the Tuscan mountains searching for the cave that save their lives.”
2017: In New York, “Re’ut Ben-Ze’ev, mezzo soprano, and the Beatrice Diener Ensemble-in-Residence at Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University are scheduled to perform the work of Jewish composers with music by Martin Boykan, Edward Jacobs and the world premiere of Concertino No. 1 for Guitar and Chamber Ensemble by YU faculty composer David Glaser.”
2017: The American Jewish Historical Society is scheduled to present for talk by “Efrat Yerday on the contemporary parallel struggles of Ethiopian Jews in Israel/Palestine and Black Lives Matter in the US and on the struggles of black people against racism from a transnational perspective” entitled “Between Yosef Slamsa and Martin Luther King” The Ethiopian Jewish Struggle in Comparative Perspective.”
2018: Columbia Professor Todd Gitlin is scheduled to present “A 50-Year Perspective on the American Left” as part of the History Matters lecture series at the Center for Jewish History.
2018: “Bye Bye Germany” and “1945” are scheduled to be shown at the Jacob Burns Film Center as part of the Westchester Jewish Film Festival.
2018: A spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the leader was taken to hospital on Tuesday for tests following an illness.
2018: The Streicker Center is scheduled host a presentation by Rabbi Jerome K. Davidson and Rabbi Joshua M. Davidson on “All In The Family” which examines the relationship between Abraham and Isaac.
2018: From Israel to Iowa friends and family of Giora Neta celebrate the birthday of this staunch Zionist and a person of uncompromising beliefs.
http://crgazette.mycapture.com/mycapture/folder.asp?event=1550467&CategoryID=52778
2019: The Yeshiva University Museum is scheduled to present curator Jacob Wisse as he leads “a tour of ‘Lost and Found,’” which explores “the remarkable story of a pre-war family photo album that was owned by a woman who was deported from the Kovno Ghetto in 1943.”
2019: The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research is scheduled to “a book launch of Avrom Goldfaden and the Rise of the Modern Yiddish Theatre” featuring a talk by author Alyssa Quint.
https://yivo.org/Avrom-Goldfaden
2019: Robert Kraft and his attorney are scheduled to make a court appearance today in connections with charges with two charges of solicitation that allegedly took place in a Florida massage parlor.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/04/sports/robert-kraft.html?action=click&module=News&pgtype=Homepage
2019: Following yesterday’s assault of incendiary balloons, Israelis are preparing to face another day of what is now a two-pronged threat of violence from Gaza.
2020: In Boston, Havurah on the Hill is scheduled to host a Virtual Shabbat Dinner starting with “a community Shabbat candle-lighting.”
2020: The Streicker Center is scheduled to offer a virtual presentation by Rabbi Amy Ehrlich on “Forging Ahead – Bruria as a Model of Resilience.”
2020: Rabbi Heath Watenmaker of Beth Am in Los Altos are scheduled to offer stories, a bedtime Shema and Shabbat blessings for kids on Zoom or by phone
2020: This afternoon, the Vilna Shul, Boston’s Center for Jewish Culture is scheduled to host a “Virtual Challah Bake.”
2020: Ninety-three-year-old U.C.L.A. graduate Harriet Glickman the Sioux City, IA born daughter of Russian Jewish grocery store owners Harry and Tone (Merlin) Ratner and wife of Richard Glickman who in 1968 persuaded Charles M. Schulz, the creator of “Peanuts,” to add an African-American character to his roster of Charlie Brown, Snoopy and the rest of the gang, passed away today. (As reported by Daniel Slotnik)
https://schulzmuseum.org/remembering-harriet-glickman/
2020: Rabbi Zac Kamenetz of the JCCSF is scheduled to lead a virtual Shabbat service on Facebook that includes his guitar and reflections on these times.
2021(14thof Nisan, 4781): Shabbat Hagadol; for more see https://downhomedavartorah.blogspot.com/
2021: Oshman Family JCC is scheduled to presents a socially distanced outdoor seder for adults and older children at the Freidenrich Community Park Palo Alto, CA.
2021(14thof Nisan, 5781): This evening, the Maccabeats will finish your seder.
https://www.kveller.com/the-maccabeats-new-passover-medley-will-help-you-finish-your-seder/
2021: JewBelong’s Virtual Passover seder “Burning Man-ischewitz” is scheduled to take place this evening.
2021: Congregation Shir Hadash is scheduled to present a virtual, intergenerational seder led by Rabbi Ted Riter, Cantor Devorah Felder-Levy and Rabbi PJ Schwartz.
2021: For the first time in history, the Jews of Bahrain are scheduled to celebrate Passover with the Jewish communities of the Gulf i.e., Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the U.A.R.