July 6
1189: Henry II, King of England, passed away. Compared to those who followed him to the throne, Henry’s treatment of his Jewish subjects was comparatively benign. (The emphasis is on “comparatively.”) Henry levied two special taxes on the Jewish community designed to finance the next Crusade to the Holy Land. The tax of 1188 included 60,000 pounds on the Jews of London, one fourth the community’s wealth. All the Christians of England were required to cough up a mere 10,000 pounds. Much to the consternation of some Church leaders, Henry discouraged Jews from converting to Christianity. The wealth of dead Jews became the property of the crown. These Jewish estates could be of such value that when Aaron of Lincoln passed away, “Henry found it necessary to set up a special branch of his Exchequer, named the Scaccarium Aaronis, with no function other than processing his immense estate.”
1189: Richard the Lionheart becomes King of England following the death of his father. His coronation would not take place until September at which time a delegation of Jews bringing gifts for the monarch would be denied access and be beaten by English officials. Richard did take action to protect his Jewish subjects when they were threatened. Unfortunately, Richard spent only the equivalent of one year of his ten year reign in England. During his absence, the Jews would suffer at the hands of English leaders including Richard’s brother and successor Prince, and later King, John
1253: Mindaugas is crowned king of Lithuania, reportedly the first ruler to hold this title. There was a Jewish presence in Lithuania at this time, since small numbers of Jewish merchants probably began arriving in Lithuania during the 12th century. They were followed by others of their co-religionists who were fleeing persecution brought on by the Crusades and the Black Death. Large number of Jews would not begin arriving in Lithuania until the frist decades of the 13th centuries when they were invited to settle there by Gediminas.
1348: Pope Clement VI issued a Papal Bull protecting Jews during the Black Plague. “Clement VI reigned during the Black Death. This pandemic swept through Europe (as well as Asia and the Middle East) between 1347 and 1350. It is believed to have killed between a third and two thirds of Europe's population…Popular opinion blamed the Jews for the plague, and pogroms erupted throughout Europe. Clement issued two papal bulls in 1348 which condemned the violence and said those who blamed the plague on the Jews had been ‘seduced by that liar, the Devil.’ He urged clergy to take action to protect Jews, but the orders appeared to have little effect, and the destruction of whole Jewish communities continued until 1349.” These events are described in A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century by the Jewish historian Barbara Tuchman.
139l: In Valencia, the criers whom Prince Martin sent “sent around proclaiming that the Jews were under the crown’s protection” were “revoked” today, three days before the Jews of Valencia were attacked.
1476: Abraham ben Solomon Conat a Jewish printer, Talmudist, and physician, printed Tur Orah Hayyim by Jacob b. Asher at Mantua, Italy. Jacob ben Asher, also known as Ba'al ha-Turim, was born in Cologne, Germany around 1269 and probably died in Toledo, Spain in 1343. He was an influential Medieval rabbinic authority who is often referred to as the Baal ha-Turim' ("Master of the Rows"), after his main work in halachah the Arba'ah Turim ("Four Rows"). The work was divided into 4 sections, each called a "tur," alluding to the rows of jewels on the High Priest's breastplate. He was the third son of Asher ben Jehiel (known as the "Rosh"), a German-born Rabbi who moved to Spain.”
1609: Bohemia is granted freedom of religion in the same year as that in which Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel also known as the Maharal, one of the most famous Jewish scholars and educators from Prague passed away. “Rabbi Loew published more than 50 religious and philosophical books and became the center of legends, as the mystical miracle worker who created the Golem. The Golem is an artificial man made of clay that was brought to life through magic and acted as a guardian over the Jews. The Maharal had positive relations with Rudolph II and was even invited to his castle.
1625: Rabbi Yom-Tov Lipman Heller is placed in prison along with common criminals in a Vienna jail after having been wrongfully convicted of abusing his authority as Chief Rabbi of Prague.
1707(6thof Tammuz, 5467): Rabbi Samuel ben Alexander “a resident of Frankfort-on-the-Oder who wrote Peri Megadim passed away today.
1708: Abraham Haim de Lucena,, whose last name might indicate that his family had come from Lucena, the son of Abraham Lucena and the husband of Rachel Lucena who had supplied the American expedition during Queen Anne’s War became “a freeman” today in New York City.
1758: Clement XIII was elected Pope. During his reign, Clement “proclaimed that the Holy See had examined the grounds on which rested the belief in the use of human blood for the feast of Passover and murder of Christians by Jews, and the Jews must be condemned as criminals in respect of the charge, but that in the case of such occurrences legal forms of proof must be used.” (As reported by Graetz)
1777: Today, in New York, Haym Salomon married fifteen year old Rachel Franks the mother of Ezekiel Salomon, Sallie (Salomon) Andrews, Deborah (Salomon) Cohen and Haym Moses Salomon.”
1780: “The Royal Proclomation published in the Georgia Gazette” today described Savannah born Mordecai Sheftall, the long-time supporter of liberty from England “as a ‘Great Rebel.’”
1794: In Berlin Stadt, Brandenburg, Preussen, Amalie and Jacob (Yehuda) Herz Beer gave birth to Heinrich (Henoch) Hans Beer.
1795(19th of Tammuz, 5555): Judith Gompertz, the daughter of Barent Gompertz and Rachel Benjamin Isaac passed away after which she was buried in the Lauriston Road Jewish Cemetery.
1796: Birthdate of Nicholas I, Czar of Russia from 1825 until his death in 1855. In the case of the Nicholas there was consistency in his behavior as Czar and his treatment of the Jews. In both instances he was a narrow-minded, reactionary, despot who was so incompetent that he led Russia to disaster in the Crimean War. As a totalitarian dictator, Nicholas was fully responsible for all of his action aimed at his Jewish subjects. These included but were not limited to expulsion from a variety of cities including Kiev; the drafting of under-age Jewish boys for twenty-five years of military service; the banning of beards and a sidelocks for men and banning of women shaving their heads at the time of marriage; the banning of Yiddish; censorship and destruction of Jewish books. And this list does not include the mistreatment of the general populace with such measures as the establishment of a secret police system designed to stamp out any manifestation of democracy or Western values.
1797(12thof Tammuz, 5557): Sixty-one year old Colonel Mordecai Sheftall the Savannah born son of Benjamin and Perla Sheftall whose family founded Congregation Mickve Israel and who was both an observant Jew, ardent patriot and the highest ranking Jewish officer in the Continental Army who raised five children – Shetall, Benjamin, Moses, Perla and Esther – with his wife Frances passed away today.
https://nmajmh.org/education/individual-profiles/mordecai-sheftall/
1798: As the French Army moved to supplant the English in the eastern Mediterranean in fighting that would take them to Biblical cites in Palestine, General Desaix marched his division to within fifteen miles of Alexandria while Bonaparte left the city heading for Cairo.
1797(12th of Tammuz, 5557): Sixty-one year old Mordecai Sheftall the husband of Frances Hart whom he married in Charleston, SC, passed away today after which he was buried in the Savannah (GA) Jewish Cemetery.
1806: The Assembly of Jewish Leaders was scheduled to meet in Paris.
1821: Birthdate of Leone Levi, the Italian born British barrister and author whose works included Work and Pay; Wages and Earnings of the Working Classes; and International Law, with Materials for a Code
1832: David Lopez began serving as “a Lieutenant of Artillery” in the United States Army.
1839: Birthdate of Bavaria native Leopold Henry Levy, who came to New Orleans at the age of 10, married Reinga F. Lengsfield in 1870 and eventually moved to St. Louis where he was vice president of The Hub Furniture Company, a member of the United Jewish Charities Association and the father of three children – Charles, Lucille and Nellie.
1840: Jesse Seligman was one of the steerage passages who arrived at Castle Garden today.
1846: Lord Palmerston began his term of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs during which the British blockaded the port of Piraeus as part of the response to Greece’s abuse of David Pacifico, whom Palmerston defended as this “man of Jewish persuasion” and on whose be he “made a celebrated speech which concluded that all British subjects ought to be able to say, as did citizens of ancient Rome, "Civis Romanus sum" ("I am a citizen of Rome"), and thereby receive protection from the British government.”
1841: In Canterbury, England, Nathan Jacobs and Hannah Barnard gave birth to Sophia Jacobs today.
1846: Birthdate of Baden-Württemberg, Germany native Albert Cahn, a graduate of West Chester College the commander of Company H of the 135th Indiana Volunteers during the Civil War and the husband of Ella Katzenberg Cahn who moved to St. Louis where he was “a senior of member of the Cahn, Brothers,” one of the leading clothing establishments in the United States.
1847(22nd of Tammuz, 5607: Baltimore community leader David Israel Cohen passed away at the age of 48.
1849: Birthdate of Julius Sachs, the native of Baltimore who founded Sachs Collegiate Institute in 1872 (now the Dwight School) which he served until 1902 when he became a Professor of Education at Columbia University’s Teachers College and the husband of Rosa Goldman, the daughter of Marcus Goldman of “Goldman-Sachs” with whom he had one son, Ernest Sachs.
1851: Two days after he passed away, 20 year old Morris Joseph was buried today at the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.
1853: Bertha Phillips, a 20 year old German Jewess was tried on charges of having stolen two $20 gold pieces from Mrs. Schufeldt, a co-religionist with whom she had been living before the the theft. An additional testimony as to the defendant’s guilt was provided by another Jew. Before the case went to the jury, one of the jurors who was Jewish asked if both of the witnesses were Jewish. At first the judge refused to provide the information since he said that the court had no right to pry into their creed or beliefs. At which point another juror, who was also Jewish, said that he would not believe a word the Jewish witnesses had to say unless they were sworn in again using a copy the Hebrew Bible. The judge accepted the request; rewswore the witnesses who testified again. The jury found the defendant of guilty of grand larceny without even having to leave the jury box. Miss Phillips was senteneced to two years in the state penitentiary and was led away in tears.
1853: In Franfurt am Main, Jakob Gustav Adam Flesch and Florentine Flesch gave birth to Karl Flesch.
1853 Moss Defries married Flora Lyons today.
1854: The Republican Party is officially created in Jackson, Michigan. Several Jews would play an active an active part in the early days of the Republican Party, including the uncle of Supreme Court Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis, who placed Lincoln’s name in nomination for President in 1860. By July of 2009, thanks to the defeat of Senator Norm Coleman and the party switch of Senator Arlen Spector, there are no Jewish Republican U.S. Senators.
1857: The New York Times reported that The House of Commons voted to amend the Oaths Bill so as to prevent from holding any office belonging to the Ecclesiastical Courts or any other office that “wield influence in the affairs of the church.”
1859: In Warsaw, “Benjamin Jacob and Rica (Cantor) Planko” gave birth to Mendel Planko, the husband of Sarah Ravich who came to the United States in 1880, “settling in Chicago” where he worked in the leather trade eventually becoming “Superintendent of Neilson Brothers, manufacturers of fancy leather.”
1859: In Bavaria, Seligman Sonn and Bella Heineman gave birth to R.A. Sonn, the husband of Dora Fried and author of a Hebrew primer, Or Chodesh who settled in Atlanta, GA.
1860: Michael Samuel Schlesinger, who with his wife Annie had seven children was buried today at the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.
1861: English archivist and historian Sir Francis Palgrave, the son Jewish stockbroker Meyer Cohen and his wife Rachel Levien Cohen who changed his name from Francis Ephraim and became an Anglican, apparently as a condition of his marriage to Elizabeth Turner in 1823 passed away today.
1861: In response to an order issued today by the U.S. Secretary of War, Colonel Max Friedman organized the 65th Regiment of the Fifth Cavalry, known as “Cameron Dragoons made up of ten companies from Philadelphia and two companies from Pittsburgh which included a large number of Jewish volunteers.
1862: In Portland, Oregon, “the first Hebrew benevolent association” which had been organized by the leaders of Congregation Beth Israel was reorganized today.
1863: In issuing orders about the status of the recently conquered city of Vicksburg, General Logan states that the city will be a military outpost and not a trading center. He complained that when Memphis had been captured and turned into a trading center “the Jews and the rebel citizens of that pestilent city” had turned into “a grand depot of smugglers.” [Editor’s note – This is not the first or the last derogatory comment that Union generals serving in the West made about Jews. This is strange when one consider the number of Jews who were there comrades in arm including Major General Frederick Knefler and General Edward S. Salomon whom Sherman called “one of the most deserving officers.”
1864(2ndof Tammuz, 5624): Forty-three year old Viennese chemist Theodor Wertheim who “was the father of gynecologist Ernst Wertheim passed away today.
1865: Eleven-year-old Thomas Burns who “was shot in the hand with a pistol” was “taken to the Jew’s Hospital” which was founded in 1852 by Sampson Simpson in response to the discrimination against Jews by other hospitals, but broaden its patient base during the Civil War when it became a major place of treatment for Union soldiers, and which is now known as Mt. Sinai Hospital
1866: Benjamin Disraeli begins his third term as Chancellor of the Exchequer replacing his nemesis, William Gladstone.
1870: Simon Henry Russell married Catherine Levy in London today.
1871: In London, Abraham Israel Mendoza, the London born son of Bilha and Israel Mendoza and His wife Maria Mendoza, gave birth to Mordecai Mendoza who Anglicized his name to Mark
1872(30thof Sivan, 5632): Sixty-six year old Ludwig F. Frankel the native of Berlin who became a physician in 1830 and who served as chief physician of the water-cure hospital in Berlin from 1848 until he resigned in 1867 to devote himself to his private practice passed away today.
1872: Clothing store owner Levi Mastbaum and Franny Mastbaum gave birth to Wharton graduate Jules Ephraim Mastbaum.
1873: Two days after he passed away, 32 year old Amsterdam native James de Jongh was buried today at the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.
1875: Sir Julius Vogel, the first Jewish Prime Minister of New Zealand completed his first term in office.
1875: In Washington, DC, Phillip and Natalie Peyeser gave birth to Julius I. Peyeser, a graduate of Georgetown University a WW I veteran who was a successful lawyer, banker, an active member of the Jewish Community and the husband of Miriam Prince.
1876: Birthdate of investment banker Robert C. Schaffner, “the chairman of the board of A.G. Becker and Co. who had one daughter, Katherine, with his wife Frances and who a supporter of Chicago’s Art Institute
1877: James Grady and William Henry were tried today at the Tombs Police Court today on charges that they had assaulted “Jacob Herman, a German Jew who a runs a peanut and fruit stand.” The two were members of the Battle Alley Gang and Herman had testified against them in a case heard three days ago. When the two attacked Herman, they referred to him as that swearing Jew. At the end of the trial, Henry was sentenced to a month in the County Prison while Henry was “acquitted for lack of evidence.”
1879: It was reported today that the Jews of Romania had petitioned the Romanian government for a revision to the Constitution that would guarantee them their rights as citizens on the same footing as all other Romanians.
1882: The first 14 members of BILU arrived from Russia at the port of Yaffa in what is now the land of Israel. The letters BILU are the initials for the Hebrew expression, "House of Jacob Let Us Rise and Go." BILU was formed by Russian students at the University of Khrakov who called for the active colonization of the land. The students hired themselves out as agricultural laborers at Mikve Yisrael. They believed it was possible to start a worldwide movement to encourage settlement in Eretz Israel.
1882: Several Russian Jews who arrived at Castle Garden aboard the SS Newnham today will apparently not be staying in New York since they have tickets for destinations in the American West.
1882: “Outrages On Jews In Manitoba” published today reported that a group of Jews who had gone to work at Whitemouth were ferociously beaten by a band of men who previously been doing the work.
1883(1stof Tammuz, 5643): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1893: The future King George V who had visited Jerusalem in 1882 and wrote in his diary “Its children (of the land of Israel) will come here from all over the world and a new Jewish Nation will be resurrected in the Holy Land” and during whose reign the Balfour Declaration was issued was joined in matrimony to “Mary of Teck” today.
1883: “Murder of a Hebrew Merchant” published today reported that a reward of $1,500 has been offered for the man who killed H. Mias, a Jewish merchant living in Benivides.
1884: It was reported today that the police in Vienna had difficulty restoring after a fight broke out between the Social Democrats and a party of anti-Semites.
1884: It was reported today that the anti-Semitic rioters who were arrested at Nijni Novgorod will have to be tried by court-martial because the civil courts refused to convict due to the anti-Semitic feelings prevalent among the Russian peasants.
1885: In Louisville, KY, Alfred S. Brandeis, the son of Adolph and Fredericka Brandeis gave birth to Adele Brandeis, the niece of Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis.
1886: In Lyons, France, Gustave Bloch and his wife gave fame to Marc Bloch who gained fame as an historian and educator. He held chairs at both Strasbourg University and the Sorbonne. His works on French rural and feudal society became classics. In 1939, despite the fact that he was “overage” he enlisted in the French Army and fought the invading Germans. After the French surrendered to the Germans, he joined the Resistance where his specialty was in working with secret codes. He was captured by the Nazis and tortured before being shot on June 16, 1944.
1887: The funeral of Jonas Heller, a Trustee of the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews is scheduled to be held today.
1887: Albert Weinschenk a young German who his Christian wife had defied her family by marrying him appears to have shot himself this evening after his mother-in-law had accused him of being a bigamist.
1887: In New York City, “Jacob and Mary “Bieber) Greenwald gave birth Columbia University trained bio-chemist and Professor of Chemistry at NYU School of Medicine Isidor Greenwald, the husband of Alma Greenwald and the father of David Greenwald.
1888: A reception committee met at Meyer’s Hotel in Hoboken, NJ, in anticipation of the arrival of Rabbi Jacob Charif whose ship was due to dock on Saturday morning. Charif has been brought from Wilna by members of the United Society to provide leadership based on halachah for the ever growing population of immigrant Jews populating the Lower East Side.
1889: Birthdate of George Berthold Samuelson, the native of Southport, England who was on the early creators of the British movie industry who created G.B. Samuelson Productions.
1890: “An Empire’s Young Chief” published today provided a snapshot of conditions in Germany under the new Kaiser, Wilhelm II with a special emphasis on the role of the Jews who “in the New Berlin…occupy a more commanding and dominant position than they ever have had in any other important city the fall of a Jerusalem” – a situation that has given an excuse for the anti-Semites to preach their increasingly popular doctrine.
1891: The fifty doctors assigned by the Board Health “to visit the tenement houses and look after the sick children during the hot weather” met today Sanitary Headquarters where they were given pamphlets written in several languages including Hebrew as tickets “for the free excursions” sponsored by the Sanitarium for Hebrew Children.
1891: It was reported today that “a sizable tract of land” In Marlborough, Connecticut has been purchased by the Baron de Hirsch Fund. Baron de Hirsch “has established…a very large fund that is to be used…for poor Jews who are being driven out of …Europe.”
1891: “The Jewish Immigrants” published today described the organization of efforts to provide a civic education for the Russians arriving in St. Louis. The effort drew support from non-Jews as well as Jews as can be seen by the fact that Dr. Ingraham of the spiritual leader of Grace Episcopal Church was among those who attended the meeting and contributed the three dollars which the annual dues of the nascent organization.
1892: “The opening session of the third annual Central Conference of American Rabbis was held” tonight at Temple Beth-El in New York City.
1892: During the Homestead Strike, which would lead to an assassination attempt by Alexander Berkman “a fight broke out between 300 Pinkerton guards and a crowd of armed union workers” during which seven guards and nine strikers were killed.”
1892: Birthdate of Polish native Jacob Selig Yellen who was raised in Buffalo NY and gained fame as lyricist and screenwriter Jack Yellen who wrote “Happy Days Are Here Again,” the 1920’s ditty that became the snappy theme song for FDR’s presidential campaigns during the depth of the Great Depression.
1893: Birthdate of John Charles Walker the agricultural scientist who won the Wolf Foundation Prize in Agriculture in 1978.
1893: Clothing contractors Solomon Wallach and Jacob Seidman were accused of today of trying to break the United Garment Workers of American by firing union members and replaced them with apprentices from the United Hebrew Charities.
1894: Birthdate of German native Siegfried Ullman, who came to the United States in 1923 where he became a successful businessman and philanthropist who was of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and the Weizmann Institute In Israel
1894: Two days after he passed away, 74 year old Jacob Lazarus was buried today at the West Ham Jewish Cemetery.
1895: In New York, on Shabbat, The Empire Life Insurance company obtained an order from Justice Stover directing the officials of Washington Cemetery to permit the exhumation” of the body Annie Silverman, the widow of Wolf Silverman, as part of their legal campaign to avoid paying the death benefit to the beneficiary.
1895: Theodor Herzl wrote in his diary the following entry describing his conversation with Max Nordeau who would become one of the leaders of the Zionist movement. “Yesterday with Nordau, over a glass of beer. Also discussed the Jewish question, of course. Never before I had been in such perfect tune with Nordau. Each took the words right out of the other's mouth. I never had such a strong feeling that we belonged together. This has nothing to do with religion. He even said that there was no such thing as a Jewish dogma. But we are of one race. ...
Nordau said: "What is the tragedy of Jewry?" That this most conservative of peoples, which yearns to be rooted in some soil, has had no home for the last two thousand years.
We agreed on every point, so that I already thought that the same ideas had led him to the same plan. But he comes to a different conclusion: "The Jews", he says, "will be compelled by antisemitism to destroy among all peoples the idea of a fatherland." Or, I secretly thought to myself, to create a fatherland of their own.”
1896: In a speech at "The Maccabaeans," Herzl formulates the program of the "Society of Jews": According to Herzl, “The task of the Society of Jews is the acquisition according to international law of a territory for those Jews who cannot assimilate."
1896: Twenty-year-old editor and publisher Carl Florian Zittel, the Patterson, NJ born son of Gustav and Bertha (Morgenthau) Zittel and nephew of Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, who for nineteen yeaers was the drama editor of the New York Evening Journal “and confidant of William Randolph Hurst” married Martha Beatrice Bernstein today in Buffalo, NY.
1896: The funeral of Jules s. Abecasis will begin at 11 o’clock at Shearith Israel in New York.
1897: After it was confirmed that Theodor Herzl wanted to hold a Zionist Congress in Munich, the Board of the Munich Jewish Community wrote to the General Rabbinical Association protesting against the Zionist movement.
1898: It was reported today that Dr. Richard J.H. Gottheil, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Dr. William Cowen, K.H. Sarsohn, Leon Zolollkoff and Dr. I.J. Bluestone have been named to serve as delegates at the upcoming Zionist Congress in Basel.
1898: In Leipzig, Professor of Philosophy Rudolf Eister who was Jewish and his wife Marie Ida Eisler (née Fischer) who was gave birth to composer Hanns Eisler. Eisler moved to Berlin after World War I where his art flourished as did his involvement in left-wing politics. He left Germany for the United States in 1933 where he became a leader of anti-Nazi artists and where he pursued his composing career which included two Oscar nominations. After World War II he was placed on the Black List and ended up returning to East Germany. Eisler fell afoul of the commissars in Germany. Five year after being deported from the United States because of his leftist political views, he was hauled before a German Communist tribunal where he was accused of not being loyal to Socialism, a charge from which his career and health did not recover.
1898(16thof Tammuz, 5658): Fifty-two year old Cornelius Herz who was involved in the infamous Panama Scandal passed away today.
1898: With the completion of the mustering of the 3rd Regiment Connecticut Volunteer Infantry into U.S. Service, Corporal Charles Lowenthal and Private Frederick Edward Cahn, both of New Haven were part of the Army that was fighting Spain.
1899(28th of Tammuz, 5659): Forty-seven year old Moravian born Rabbi David Kaufman passed away today while serving as the chair “of history, philosophy of religion, and homiletics at the newly founded rabbinical school at Budapest.”
1899: Benjamin Kossman completed three years of serving with the 6th Cavalry of the United States Army.
1899: As the dispute grew over how to honor the French officer who had been a cruel victim of anti-Semitism, a group of Jews sent a cable to Emile Zola looking for advice: “American Jewish wish to present Captain Drefyus with a golden sword. [Send] answer [to[ Jewish Forward whether it will not help anti-Semitism.”
1899: Benjamin Blumental, the President of Rodoph Sholem and the father of Assistant District Attodrney Maruice B. Blumental was sworn in today as a school inspector in the 24th District after having served as School Inspector in the Fourth District for fifteen years.
1899(28th of Tammuz, 5659): David Kaufmann a Jewish-Austrian scholar born at Kojetín, Moravia (now in the Czech Republic) in 1852 passed away. A university professor and librarian, he was a prolific author whose works included studies in Jewish history, studies of synagogue art and polemics in defense of Judaism.
1900(9th of Tammuz, 5660): Gustav Born, the father of Max Born passed away today.
1901: The annual Conference of American Rabbis was scheduled to end today in Philadelphia. Rabbi Harry H. Mayer had presented a paper to the meeting on “Sabbath School Problem.” The conference will reconvene at New Orleans in April of 1902
1902: It was reported today that “all the Jews engaged in the iron ore and coal mining industries in the Government of Ekaterinoslaf, Russia are, pursuant to a gubernatorial edict, and during the course of the current month to be expelled from their employment” which will have an “affect” on between 40,000 and 50,000 Jews.
1903: It was reported today that Dr. Joseph Seffs has been chosen temporary head of the newly formed “central organization, called the United Zionists of Greater New York’ which was created by “representatives from sixty-five Zionists in New York City.”
1904: Samuel Untermeyer was among the delegates attending the Democratic Party National Convention which opened today in St. Louis, MO.
1905: Alfred Deakin becomes Prime Minister of Australia for the second time. As can be seen from his relationship with the Sir Isaac Alfred Isaacs Deakin had no problem with working with Jews
1905: In Australia, Sir Isaac Alfred Isaacs was appointed attorney-general. The son of Russian-Polish immigrants, Isaacs’ successful political and legal career would eventually lead to him being named Governor-General.
1905: Birthdate of Brussels native Augstine Lorge who married dramatist Claude Spaak and became Suzanne Spaak, the lady of luxury who joined the joined Leopold Trepper’s “Red Orchestra and saved 163 Jewish children from sent to the death camps before being captured, tortured and murdered by the Nazis – actions for which she recognized by Yad Vashem as a Righteous Among the Nations.
1905: Simon Wolf, the Chairman of the Board of Delegates on Civil and Religious Rights of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations sent a communication to President Roosevelt expressing the members sorrow “at the death of the late Secretary of State John Hay.”
1906: It was reported today that Rabbi Morris Goldberg has been chosen to head the Brothers of Israel Congregation replaced Rabbi Elitzer who is moving to Troy, NY.
1907: Birthdate of Mexican painter, feminist and social rebel, Frida Kahlo.
1907: At the 18th annual convention of the Central Conference of American Rabbis services were led by Rabbis Leo Mannheimer and Mayer Messing, with a sermon delivered by Rabbi Marcus Salzman followed by the Rabbi Martin Zielonka’s closing prayer and benediction.
1907: This evening, at the 18th annual convention of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, Rabbi Samuel Schulman led a Round Table Discussion on “Our Attitude Toward Liberal Independent and Other Modern Religious Movements” and Rabbi Abram Simon led a Round Table Discussion on “The Most Suggestive Book Read During the Year.”
1908: “Rabbi Criticizes Hospital” published today described the complaints Dr. H. Pereira Mendes the Rabbi at Sherith Israel Synagogue and President of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of the United States of America had about Mt. Sinai Hospital and “several institutions which hare supported and controlled by Jews” which are not being operated in a manner that the “observant Hebrews who aid in their support would have them” as can be seen by their failure to server Kosher meat to their patients and residents.
1908: O. Raymond Brown received $136.80 from the National Conference of Jewish Charities today.
1908: Birthdate of New York City native Rayle Schupper, “the head of the Women’s Division of the American Jewish Committee, who, as a member of Committee’s foreign affairs department attended “the founding meeting of the United Nations at San Francisco in 1945” after which she “helped to establish the European Office of the American Jewish Committee in Paris.”
1908: The Kremo Family, a famous troupe of European acrobats are scheduled to open tonight at Hammerstein’s Roof Garden, where patrons have been previously by “an automatic butter churn operated by a treadmill run by a collie.”
1909(17th of Tammuz, 5669): Tzom Tammuz
1909: The Trenton Evening Times reported that Rabbi Morris Goldberg of Camden New Jersey was chosen to succeed Rabbi Elitzer as head of the Brothers of Israel Congregation.
1910: Nineteen-year-old Isaac Isidore, the second born son of Sarah and Solomon LIfshitz who was “traveling un the name Fzko Lifschitz” arrived in New York today about the SS Litunania
1910: As of today, the officers of the Central Conference of American Rabbis are “Honorary President, Kaufman Kohler; President Max Heller; Vice President Samuel Schulman; Treasurer Moses J. Gries; Recording Secretary Julian Morganstern; and Corresponding Secretary Ephraim Frisch.
1911: Birthdate of Berlin native Rudolf “Rudi” Fehr whose film editing credits included at least two Hollywood classic – “Key Largo” and “Dial M For Murder.
1912: Birthdate of “American movie producer and screenwriter Milton Speriling.”
1913(1stof Tammuz, 5673): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1913: On Chicago’s south side, Congregation Beth Jacob is scheduled to dedicate their new Temple “at the corner of 44th Street and St Lawrence Avenue.”
1913: After attending services at Beth Israel Temple which were led by Rabbi William Lowenburg as part of yesterday’s observance of Shabbat, the Conference of American Rabbis was scheduled to resume its regular meetings this morning at Atlantic City, NJ.
1914: Dr. Isaac Husik of Philadelphia is in charge of the courses being offered in Jewish history and literature for the first time “at the summer session of Columbia University which opened this morning.
1914: It was reported today that Rabbi Milton M. Markowitz “of the Jewish Theological Seminary has been chosen” to fill the pulpit at “Congregation Keneseth Israel” one of several new congregations that have been formed in the last few years in Washington Heights.
1915: “Alfred A Wilson, an American engineer who arrived in” New York City today “from Egypt and Palestine sad that…the Turkish Governor of Jerusalem had treated the Jews very harshly” and that “they had either to become Turkish subjects or leave the country” while “Americans and other foreigners in Jerusalem…were not bothered in any way by the German or Turkish officials.”
1915: In London, Madge (Mitchell) and Bertie Joseph gave birth to Yvonne Frances Joseph, who gained fame as actress Yvonne Mitchell who also had a career as a playwright whose most famous work was “The Same Sky.”
1916: The list of the newly elected officers of the Federation of American Zionists published today included “Dr. Harry F. Friendenwald, Baltimore, President; Louis Lipsky, New York, Chairman of the Executive Committee; Louis Robinson, New York, Treasurer; and Bernard A. Rosenblatt, New York, Honorary Secretary.”
1916: Birthdate of Dr. Albert Dorfman, the holder of a PhD in Chemistry and an MD from the University of Chicago and a WW II Army Veteran who “discovered the cause of Hurler’s Syndrome and who was the husband of the former Ethel Steinman and the father of Abby and Julie Dorfman.
1917(17thof Tammuz, 5677): Parshat Balak; Tzom Tammuz not observed because of Shabbat
1917(17thof Tammuz, 5677): Forty-two year old Ben S. Sandfelder, the son of Hannah Sandler of St. Louis passed away “suddenly” today.
1917(17thof Tammuz, 5677): Rabbi Samuel Margolies, who had been injured in an automobile accident along with his eleven year old son, passed away today after developing pneumonia while being treated from the effects of two broken ribs.
1917: Birthdate of Albert Abramson, the Bronx born Washingtonian who became a successful real estate promoter and “a principal force in the creation of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.” (As reported by Douglas Martin)
1917: At Onezki, near Kiev, “a conspiracy by the Black Hundreds to fabricate accusations of ritual murder” were exposed.
1917: In Russia, at Homel, the militia discovered lists of those “marked for immediate attack” in the houses of members of the Black Hundreds.
1918: Thirty-eight year old John P. Mitchell passed away today. At age 34, the Roman Catholic Mitchell who courted the Jewish vote and attended numerous Jewish functions was elected Mayor of New York. He was part of a Fusion Ticket made up of reformers fighting the Tammany Machine. The reformers were an amalgam of Protestants, Republicans and uptown Republicans.
1918: “A drive for recruits for the Jewish legion that is to garrison Palestine” under the leadership of Dr. Hyman Morrison “was started in New England today as part of the national campaign conducted under the direction of the Jewish Palestine Legion Committee.”
1919: “Mme L.C. de Gozdawa-Turezynowicz, the National Commissioner of Charities for Lithuania arrived in New York aboard the SS Baltic today and said that “Lithuania has truly a democratic cabinet including a Catholic, a free thinker, a Socialist and a Jew” which indicates that conditions for Jews in the newly independent country was an improvement over their status when Lithuania was a province of the Russian Empire.
1920: In the UK, dedication of the London Jewish Hospital
1920: The meeting of the Central Conference of American Rabbis which began on June 28 at Rochester, NY, is scheduled to come to an end today.
1920: The London County Council adopted a policy of not employing aliens, which was aimed, in part at Jews who had immigrated from Russia by a vote of 50 to 38 with four of the positive votes coming “Jewish Municipal Reformers – David Davis, Major H.B. Lewis-Barned, Percy Simmons and Oscar Warburg.
1920: “Under Crimson Skies,” a silent movie filmed by cinematographer Phil Rosen was released today in the United States.
1921(30th of Sivan, 5681): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1921(30thof Sivan, 5681): Professor Morse Ascoli passed away today in Rome.
1921: Dr. Joseph H. Hertz, the Chief Rabbi of the British Empire arrived in Vancouver where he would have visited Schara Tzedeck and the Hadassah chapter founded in 1920.
1923: Grigori Yakovlovich Sokolnikov ended his terms as People’s Commissar for Finance of the RSFSR and began serving as People’s Commissar for Finance of the USSR.
1924: It was reported today, that according to Samuel A. Goldsmith, Director of the Bureau of Jewish Social Research, the “Jews of America” spent “about $25,000,000 last year for “philanthropic and charitable endeavors” and of his total “12,250,000 was raised for local charitable organizations.
1924: “Europe Is Now Finding Work To Keep The Jews at Home” published today described efforts to provided training and job opportunities for Jews in Central and Eastern Europe led by ORT which is becoming increasingly crucial given the closing of the immigration door in the United States.
1925: Werner “Heisenberg gave Max Born a paper entitled Über quantentheoretische Umdeutung kinematischer und mechanischer Beziehungen ("Quantum-Theoretical Re-interpretation of Kinematic and Mechanical Relations") to review, and submit for publication. In the paper, Heisenberg formulated quantum theory, avoiding the concrete, but unobservable, representations of electron orbits by using parameters such as transition probabilities for quantum jumps, which necessitated using two indexes corresponding to the initial and final states´ (I have no idea what this means)
1926: “The Zionist Organization of America made a sharp rejoinder today to the attack made upon its leaders and members by the Joint Distribution Committee which charged the Zionists with deliberately attempting to wreck the $25,000,000 United Jewish Campaign conducted by the Joint Distribution Committee and affiliated relief organizations.”
1927: At Asbury Park, NJ, those attending the 27th annual convention of the Rabbinical Assembly of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America are scheduled to discuss “the function and scope of the proposed Rabbinical Assembly Committee on Jewish Law…in an executive session.”
1928: “Kosher Plant to Receiver” published today described the impact of the “petition in bankruptcy” which has been filed against The Hebrew National Kosher Sausage Factory by Alter M. Brody and Isidor Zimmerman.
1929: Franz Werfel, the Prague born author marred Alma Mahler, the widow of Gustav Mahler, today.
1930: William Weintraub announced today that the nine Jewish parochial schools which have a deficit of $500,000 have combined their money-raising efforts of the United Yeshiva Chest.
1931(21stof Tammuz, 5691): Eighty-two-year-old German born Julius Feiss the former president of Cleveland Federation of Jewish Charities and chairman of the board of Joseph and Feiss and Company where ge was “a pioneer in the men’s clothing industry in Cleveland passed away today.
https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/653
https://case.edu/ech/articles/j/joseph-feiss-co
1932: At their meeting in Vienna today, “the world executive of the Agudath Israel declined to accept the invitation of the American Jewish Congress to participate in a conference in Geneva to discuss the feasibility of constituting a world Jewish congress.
1933(12thof Tammuz, 5693): Fifty-five year old Elizabeth “Lizzie” Rosenthal Feinberg, the Polish born daughter of Louis and Rebecca Goldstein Rosenthal and the wife of Moses Feinberg who buried in the Montefiore Cemetery after she passed away today in New York.
1934: The Turkish government stated the expulsion of the Jews from the Dardanelles had been due to a misinterpretation of a law. The government declared it would punish the officials found to be responsible, and that the Jews would be given redress.
1935:U.S. premiere of “Escapade” a romantic comedy co-starring Luise Rainer with a script by Herman J. Mankiewicz.
1936: In Switzerland, in the Jewish cemetery at Veyrier, the President of the International Association of Journalists accredited to the League of Nations spoke at the funeral of “Stephen Lux, the Czech journalist who killed himself in the League of Nations Assembly to call attention to the misery of Jews.”
1936: It was reported today that “for the duration of the Olympic Games, the German people” are ordered by the Nazis to adopt “a special regimen” including giving “up reading Herr Streicher’s newspaper stories about how Jews kill little children for Passover…”
1936: Major Henry A. Proctor, a Member of Parliament, told delegates attending the meeting of Zionist Organization of America in Providence, RI that “the great danger to Zionism…was not in Britain’s possible stand in the Arab difficulty” because “the Arabs will not succeed in London or in Palestine but there is a danger that they will succeed in weakening the morale of American Zonists.”
1936: “Dr. Stephen S. Wise expressed gratification tonight at his election to the presidency of the Zionist Organization of America” saying “he viewed ‘the unanimity of the summons as a promise of genuine support by all groups with the Zionist movement’”
1936: The Palestine Post reported that there were 314 cases of ptomaine poisoning in numerous bomb-throwing and shooting incidents throughout the country. Three Jewish laborers were wounded near Nablus, and a watchman was hurt near Kiryat Anavim. An Arab was killed and three wounded in an encounter with British troops in Hebron.
1937: In Gorky, Jewish pianist and composer David Ashkenazi and his non-Jewish wife gave birth to pianist and conductor Vladimir Ashkenazy.
1937: In an interview given today on the day before his 77th birthday, Abraham Cahan “talked of how the world looks to him fifty-five years after he came” to the United States “and concluded that England, France and the United States were rapidly putting into operation today the very measures he advocated as a socialist a long time ago.”
1938: President Roosevelt called for an international conference to consider the "displaced persons" problem. The negligible results highlight the passive role the Western world in the face of the Nazis. . Roosevelt's aims, some say, are to deflect American Jewish appeals to help the German Jews. Aside from Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic, which want enormous sums of money to allow a small number of Jews to immigrate, the 32 nations attending the conference decide that they will not permit large numbers of Jews to enter their countries.
1938(7thof Tammuz, 5698): Austrian born German producer Heinrich Nebenzahl, the father of Seymour Neenzahl and founder of Nero Film production company who fled to Paris after the Nazis came to power passed away in France today.
1938(7th of Tammuz, 5698): Tuvia Dounia, the brother-in-law of Chaim Weizmann is one of the victims of today’s outbreak of Arab violence in Haifa. Police found him slumped over the wheel of the car he was driving with a bullet through his heart. Of the four passengers in the vehicle three escaped harm but one was seriously wounded.
1938: “Bombs riots, and police action in various parts of Palestine today resulted in at least twenty-three deaths and nearly a hundred less serious casualties.
1938: “The immediate problem of the great intergovernmental conference which opened” today “at Evian…is to find asylum for the political refugees forced out Germany and Austria by the policies of the National Socialist regime”
1939: The last remaining Jewish enterprises in Germany were closed.
1940: Today, in Rumania, “Iron Guard leader Horia Sima, Minister of Culture…forbade Jewish actors and musicians to perform in public and prohibited the playing of Jewish songs and music.”
1941(11th of Tammuz, 5701): Seventy-one year old German born oncologist Ferdinand Blumenthal died in an air raid. After fleeing Nazi Germany in 1933 Blumenthal went from Austria to Yugoslavia to a variety of other locations before ending up in the Soviet Union where he taught before be interred by the Communists.
1941: Today, Rabbi Samuel H. Goldenson of Temple Emanu-El is scheduled to officiate at the funeral for 69 year-old theatrical producer Sam H. Harris which will be attended by “representatives of the theatrical, political and sports world.”
1941(11th of Tammuz, 5701): Lithuanian militiamen murdered 2,514 Jews in Kovno.
1941(11thof Tammuz, 5701): Forty-eight year old Sol Ullman, the son of Samuel and Kate Ulman and NYU Law School graduate and husband of “the former Esther Blau” with whom he had two sons who served as a State Assemblyman and New York State Assistant Attorney General passed away today.
1941: In Liepāja, Latvia, which had been conquered by the Nazis and where Jews were already being massacred, “Werner Hartman, a German war correspondent, saw the Women's Prison crammed so full of prisoners that there was no room for them to lie down.”
1941(11th of Tammuz, 5701): Elchonon Wasserman “a prominent rabbi and rosh yeshiva in pre-World War II Europe was murdered today by Lithuanians who were collaborators of the Nazis. Born in 1874, he was one of the Chofetz Chaim's closest disciples and a noted Torah scholar. “Before he was taken” by his Lithuanian killers, “he gave this statement: ‘In Heaven it appears that they deem us to be righteous because our bodies have been chosen to atone for the Jewish people. Therefore, we must repent now, immediately. There is not much time. We must keep in mind that we will be better offerings if we repent. In this way we will save the lives of our brethren overseas. Let no thought enter our minds, God forbid, which is abominable and which renders an offering unfit. We are now fulfilling the greatest mitzvah. With fire she (Jerusalem) was destroyed and with fire she will be rebuilt. The very fire which consumes our bodies will one day rebuild the Jewish people.’”
1942: The first issue of Eynikeyt (Unity), a Yiddish-language journal of the Soviet Jewish Antifascist Committee, is published.
1942(21stof Tammuz, 5702): Seventy year old Gerson Rothschild, the son of Sophie and Nathan Baruch Rothschild, the husband of Frances Rothschild and he tfather of Bessie, Myron and Sofia Rothschild passed away today after which he was buried in the Riverdale Cemetery in Columbus, GA.
1942: One day after her sister Margot received her orders to report to a labor camp, Anne Frank and her families go into hiding in Amsterdam
1942: Bendin (Poland) ghetto uprising. "The warning cry issued from Jews in Vilna spurred initial thoughts of ghetto revolts for thousands of young Jews, particularly members of the clandestine Zionist-pioneer youth movements. In ghettos such as Bialystok, Krakow, Bendin, Czestochowa, and Tarnow, rebellions and confrontations broke out during the final deportations. These desperate acts of resistance testified to the triumph of the Jewish and human spirit and constituted both a cry for life and a banner of hope for future generations."
1942: In New York, “Jewish American real estate developer Aaron Gural and Harriet Feil” gave birth Rensselaer Polytechnic alum and “New York real estate developer” Jeffrey Gural, the brother of Jane and Barbara Gural and husband of “geologist Paula Gurel” with whom had three children
1942: Today, Jews in Sevastopol “were ordered to wear “white Stars of David.”
1943: “Nazis Said to Curb Catholic Prelates” published today described “a protest signed by all Cahtolic Bishops in the Reich against a Nazi party plan to extend the wearing of the Star of David to ‘mischlings,’ a Nazi terminology for the offspring of a Jewish father and an ‘Aryan’ mother, or vice versa as well as to persons married to Jews.”
1944: In the Ural Mountains, Czarna (née Zielinski) and Reuven “Ruwek” (Lewin) Levy gave birth to their son Moshe with whom “they returned to Poznan, in Poland” before moving to Lodz in 1948.
1944: Twenty-four year old Andrée Borrel a member of the French Resistance who later fought the Nazis as a member of the British SOE and her three compatriots were given lethal injections at the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp in the Vosges Mountains of Alsace and then were burned alive in the camp’s incinerator.
1944: Birthdate of songwriter Claude-Michel Schönberg, the native of Vannes, who created the music for the hit Broadway shows “Les Misérables” and “Miss Saigon.”
1945: Adolf Cardinal Bertram, the archbishop of Breslau whose refusal to speak out against the Nazi boycott of Jewish businesses, whose issuance of statement calling the war with Poland “a holy war and whose sending of birthday greetings to Adolf Hitler while the Germans were winning hardly squares with Time magazine’s description of him as an anti-Nazi, passed away today.
1946: U.S. premiere of “A Stolen Life” an American remake of an English film directed by Curtis Bernhardt with music by Max Steiner.
1946: Jews fled Kiecle, Poland after being the victim of a pogrom
http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/this_month/july/15.asp
1947: Tonight, while addressing the closing session of the 50th annual convention of the ZOA Republican Senator Owen Brewster of Maine and Democrat Senator James E. Murray “charged tonight that the State Departments has failed to act definitely and constructively in regard to Palestine.”
1948: A convoy arrives at Zion Square in Jerusalem carrying food for the starving city. The arrival seems to validate reports that a new road has been completed by the Jews fighting there from the coastal plain to the Judean hills.
1948(29thof Sivan, 5708): Fifty-five year old Bernard D. Rubin, the man behind the Tootsie Roll who was also active in raising money for Jewish causes passed away today.
1948: “The UN observers had their first casualty with the death of the French Observer Commandant Rene Labarriere, who had been wounded near the Afula area and later died in the Jewish Hospital at Afula.
1948: Lucy Mandelstam, who had been born in Vienna in 1926 and survived Theresienstadt and Auschwitz, makes Aliyah arriving in Haifa.
1949: Plans are about to announced for the leaders of Jordan, Iraq and Cyrenaica to come to London and meet with the Foreign Secretary at the same time that “all of Britain’s ambassadors to countries of the Middle East” will be in the UK’s capital city.
1949: Emil Salomon, the executive director of the Tulsa Jewish Federation” wrote to Mr. Edwin Rosenberg, the President of the USNA that the Tulsa Jewish community “dare not increase its DP Unit quota beyond the 24 units” already agreed upon” because there were not jobs for additional “DP units.”
1950: Just after the North attacked the South, Yaacov Shimoni, deputy director of Far Eastern affairs in the Foreign Ministry, wrote a letter to Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett asserting that the South Korean government was corrupt and oppressive whereas the North Korean one seemed cleaner and was more efficient and popular.7 In August 1960, however, the Foreign Ministry decided to make every effort to establish full diplomatic ties with South Korea. This was after the fall of the dictatorial regime of Syngman Rhee, who resigned his post and went into exile in April 1961.
1950: In Israel, hospital nurses went on strike demanding a 42-hour work week during the summer months at government run hospitals. Private hospitals and those administered by trade unions have already agreed to the demand and are not affected by the strike. Skeleton staffs had been left on duty to ensure the health of patients
1951: The Jerusalem Post reported that after all final registration demands were met, 16 political parties became entitled to compete in the Second Knesset elections. Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion was cheered wildly on his pre-election tour by more than 5,000 Migdal Ashkelon residents. He advised all persons between 20 and 40 years of age to learn to bear arms and assured the gathered crowds that their town would become the second port city in the south of the country, after Eilat. Following the discovery of major irregularities in the shoe industry, the authorities froze all stocks held by shoe manufacturers and ordered a strict shoe sales control throughout the country. Three persons were wounded in the Musrara Quarter of Jerusalem by Arab snipers, aiming at Israeli passersby from the walls of the Old City.
1955: Sandy Koufax gave up eight walks and lasted “only 4 and 2⁄3 innings” in his first start as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
1957: Birthdate of Detroit native Dr. Charlie Pruchno,
1958: Birthdate of Lena Gilbert, the go-to gal when you want something done professionally or in the Jewish Community at Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
1959(30thof Sivan, 5719): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1962: Eugene Ferkauf, the founder of the E. J. Korvette chain of discount department stores appeared on the cover of Time magazine.
http://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19620706,00.html
1962(4thof Tammuz, 5772): Eighty-eight year Mrs. Bessie Thomashefsky, the “Queen of the Yiddish Theatre and estranged wife of Boris Thomashefsky with whom she had two sons, Harry and Ted, passed away today in Los Angeles.
https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/thomashefsky-bessie
https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1962/07/08/91173965.pdf
1962: Orville Prescott’s review of The Slave by Isaac Bashevis Singer was published today.
http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/01/25/home/singer-slave.html
1963(14thof Tammuz, 5723): Parashat Balak
1963: It was reported today that Moshe Bartur, Israel’s permanent delegate to the United Nations has told the Social Committee of the United Nations Econcomicc and Social Council meeting in Geneva that “virulent anti-Semitism was be being promoted in the Soviet Union by Moscow’s denial of human rights to the three million Jews” living in that country.
1964: “The Killers” a film based on the novel of the same name directed and produced by Don Siegel and featuring Norm Fell was released in the United States today.
1965(6thof Tammuz, 5725): Eighty-six year old philanthropist and mother of eight Mrs. Sadie Freedman Annenberg, the widow of “millionaire publisher Moses L. Annenberg” whom she married in 1899 passed away today.
1966: Birthdate of Jacques Berlinerblau, the native of Portland, Maine, NYU alum and author of scholarly work on “Jewish-American literature and biblical literature” who became “Professor and Director of the Program for Jewish Civilization at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University.”
1967(28thof Sivan 5727): Seventy-sic year old St. Lawrence University trained attorney and WW I U.S. Navy veteran Captain Jerome A. Liederman the son of Samuel and Minnie Lederman and the brother Jeanette Lederman Arons, who served with the Office Naval Intelligence during WW II and “served at the war crime trials in Yokohama” while raising two children – Maxine and Jay – with his wife Mabel, passed way today.
1969: “The Rabbinical Seminary of America” on 69th Avenue in Forest Hills, “announced the establishment of a permanent branch in Israel” which is located on “a five-acre site in the Sanhedrin area of Jerusalem” where “seminarian will be offered two years of a six-program of studies leading to an Orthodox rabbinic degree.”
1969: In Tel Aviv, Dr. John D. Glover a professor at the Harvard Business School “suggested today that Israeli leaders look beyond their desired science industrial to the people who will be need to run them” since the development of human resources represented the bottleneck here, not the industrial plants.”
1969: Pitcher Dave Roberts, whose father is Jewish, made his major league debut with the San Diego Padres.
1971: Dr. Tadeusz Kosibowicz, director of the state hospital in Będzin, who sent to Dachau for his work at rescuing Jews and was awarded the title of “Righteous,” passed away today.
https://sprawiedliwi.org.pl/en/stories-of-rescue/story-rescue-kosibowicz-tadeusz
1973(6th of Tammuz, 5733): Conductor and composer Otto Klemperer passed away
http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Klemperer-Otto.htm
1973: “Live and Let Die,” the eighth spy film in the James Bond series co-produced by Harry Saltzman, with a screenplay by Tom Mankiewicz and co-starring Yaphet Kotto was released today in the United Kingdom two weeks after having been released in the United States.
1976: The Jerusalem Post reported that under a new bill presented to the Knesset by Transport Minister Gad Ya'acobi Israel could take "unspecified sanctions" against any airline found negligent in security precautions which could endanger its citizens. The Ministry of Labor announced that universal sick-pay benefits for every worker in Israel would become the law of the land on October 1, 1976.
1976: In Israel, the President, Prime Minister, and most of the cabinet ministers were among the thousands of mourners who attended the funeral of Lt. Col. Yoni Natanyahu, the 30 year old military officer who gave his life to insure the successful rescue at Entebbe.
1976: By order of President Idi Amin, Uganda today marks the first of two days of mourning for the seven Palestinian terrorists killed during the Israeli raid on Entebbe as well the Ugandan soldiers reported to have lost their lives.
1976: U.S. premiere of “Shivers,” the Canadian horror film produced by Ivan Reitman and directed by David Cronenberg who also wrote the script.
1976: Final broadcast of a syndicated version of “I’ve Got a Secret” – a game show produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman, created by Allan Sherman
1976: While French President Valery Giscard d’Estaing and Prime Minister Jacques Chirac have not made any comment on the raid on Entebbe, Mordechai Ghazith, Israel’s ambassador to France congratulated the French for their “role in the ordeal.”
1976: “Michael Cojot gave a written account of his experience at Entebbe to a young French official who was collecting testimonies ‘for the sole benefit of the archives’” While IDF Motta Gur said that “had it not been for the information that Cojot” supplied “many more hostages and soldiers would have died” the French never acknowledged his role.
1977(20th of Tammuz, 5737): One person was killed and twenty-two were wounded when terrorists bombed a market in Petah Tikvah.
1978(1stof Tammuz, 5738): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1978: Funeral services are scheduled today for Jack Tiger, husband of Bella Tiger and father of Fern and Steven Tiger flowed by “internment at the Baron Hirsch Cemetery.”
1979: Birthdate of Mark Moshe Kasher, the New York born, Los Anageles trained “stand-up comedian, author and actor known professionally as Moshe Kasher.
1979: Three French citizens were injured by a terrorist bomb near the UN offices in east Jerusalem.
1978: The U.S. Maccabiah Basketball Team is scheduled to compete in the 11thMaccabiah that begins in Israel today.
1980:Amy Alcott won the Mayflower classic today
1984(6thof Tammuz, 5775): Eighty-five year old Ukraine native and alum of the University of Georgia and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Max Cutler, a “pioneer in the fight against cancer” and the husband of “the former Bertie Berger” passed away today in California.
1985(17thof Tammuz, 5745): Parashat Balak
1985(17thof Tammuz. 5745): Eighty-eight year old Joseph Willen, who served as executive vice president of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York from 1941 to 1967 passed away today.
1986: Eighty-seven year old Lotah Kreyssig, whose efforts to stop the Nazi euthanasia program almost earned him a trip to the concentration camps but did cost him his job, passed away today.
1987: 'World of Yesterday: Jews in England 1870-1920'' which opens today at St. Paul's Cathedral Crypt, is among the many exhibitions included in this summer's Jewish East End Celebration.
1988(21st of Tammuz, 5748): In Israel 14 bus passengers were killed as an Arab terrorist assaulted the bus driver as the bus was driving by the edge of a cliff.
1988(21st of Tammuz, 5748): Ninety-three year old David Theodore Wilentz, the Attorney General of the state of New Jersey from 1934 to 1944 who prosecuted Bruno Hauptmann for kidnapping the Lindbergh Baby passed away today.
1989(3rd of Tammuz, 5749: A terrorist seized a bus traveling between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. He forced the bus to crash into a ravine where it burst into flames killing sixteen passengers many of whom burned in their seats. The attack took place at Telshe Stone, the place where Mickey Marcus was shot during the War for Independence.
1989: At a concert in Jerusalem, the conductor Zubin Metah asked the audience to stand for two minutes of silence in memory of those killed that day in Telshe Stone. Metah also asked the audience to refrain from any applause.
1993(17thof Tammuz, 5753): Tzom Tammuz
1993: One person was wounded in a stabbing attack in west Jerusalem.
1994: After having premiered in Los Angeles, “Forest Gump” produced by Wendy Finerman and Steve Tisch and a screenplay by Eric Roth was released in the rest of the United States today.
1995: Pitcher Brian Bark made his major league debut with the Boston Red Sox.
1997(1st of Tammuz, 5757): Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
1997: (1stof Tammuz, 5757) At the age of 101 Gerda Lissner, the Stettin Germany born daughter of Clara and Simon Karger, the wife of Herman Lissner and the sister of Irma Karger passed away today in NYC.
1997: The New York Times book section features a review of Passion and Reason Edited by E. Joshua Rosenkranz, a former honoree of the Cornell University Jewish Life Fund and Bernard Schwartz and Ben-Gurion and the Holocaustby Shabtai Teveth in which the historian contradicts contentions that Ben-Gurion was insensitive to the plight of the Jews of Europe and/or that he uncaringly exploited their situation for the benefit of the Yishuv
1999(22ndof Tammuz, 5959): Seventy-seven year old British businessman Joe Hyman who made and lost a fortune passed away today.
https://www.theguardian.com/news/1999/jul/12/guardianobituaries1
1999(22ndof Tammuz, 5959): Ninety-three year old singer and composer Benny Bell passed away today.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/165717#.UdYOi50o6po
1999: Natan Sharansky succeeds Eli Suissa as Minister of Internal Affairs.
1999: Ehud Barak succeeds Silvan Shaom as Minister of Science, Culture and Sport
1999: Shlomo Ben-Ami succeeds Avigdor Kahalani was Minister of Public Security.
1999: Eli Suissa succeeds Ariel Sharon as Minister of National Infrastructure.
1999: David Levy succeeds Ariel Sharon as Israel’s Foreign Minister
1999: Binyamin Ben-Eliezer succeeds Limor Livant as Minister of Communications.
1999: Ehud Barak began serving as the 10th Prime Minister of Israel
2000: “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” a film nominated for 10 Oscars with a script co-authored by James Schamus was released today in Hong Kong.
2000(3rd of Tammuz, 5760):Eighty-eight year old Władysław "Wladek" Szpilman a pianist and classical composer, who is widely known as the protagonist of the 2002 Roman Polanski film The Pianist, which is based on the book "The Pianist" recounting his survival of the German occupation of Warsaw and the Holocaust passed away today.
http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Szpilman-Wladyslaw.htm
http://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/online-features/special-focus/szpilman-warsaw-pianist
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/nov/01/wladyslaw-szpilman-pianist-collaboration-claims
2001: U.S. premiere of “Black River” a FOX made for television movie starring Lisa Edelstein as “Laura Crosby.”
2001: “Kosher À La Cart” published today described the uniquely patented cart that is being used to sell kosher food at the World Trade Center
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/06/nyregion/metro-business-briefing-kosher-a-la-cart.html
2002(26th of Tammuz, 5762): Kenneth Koch, Ameircan poet and winner of the 1994 Bollingen Prize, passed away at the age of 77.
2003(6th of Tammuz, 5763): Spc. Jeffrey M. Wershow was killed today when he was shot in Baghdad during military operations. He was 22 years old. “Attending law school and running for president of the United States were Jeffrey Wershow’s plans after finishing his time in the National Guard. He consumed history books, particularly those about the Vietnam War, and developed an interest in politics, even working in the election offices of local politicians in Gainesville, Fla. After spending three years in the Army Reserve, Wershow attended Santa Fe Community College, in New Mexico, prior to enlisting in the National Guard. His father, Jonathan Wershow, said that before being deployed to Iraq, his son attended Sabbath services near Fort Stewart in Georgia and would later celebrate Passover in the desert in Iraq. His father maintains that “the military was very good for Jeffrey. He really grew up; [the military] really helped him a lot. If my son had to die, he felt that he was giving his life for a cause worth dying for.” (As reported by The Forwards)
2003: The New York Times features reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including Benjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter Isaacson, After Jihad by Noah Feldman and the recently released paperback edition of Beyond the Last Village: A Journey of Discovery in Asia's Forbidden Wilderness by Alan Rabinowitz
2004(17th of Tammuz, 5764): Tzom Tammuz
2004(17th of Tammuz, 5764): Captain Moran Vardi, 25, was killed by terrorists in Israel.
2005: The group claiming that it carried out the kidnapping of Ihab al-Sharif, Egypt’s top diplomat in Iraq, said in an Internet posting today that a religious court had convicted him of crimes that are punishable by death because he “was guilty apostasy because Egypt had allied itself to the Jews and Christians.”
2005: “Lion of Hollywood The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer” published today provided a detailed review of the “wonderfully readable biography Lion of Hollywood” by Scott Eyman.
2006(10th of Tammuz, 5766): First Lieutenant Yehuda Bassel, 21, was killed this afternoon during an IDF operation in the northern Gaza Strip designed to destroy the launching sites for Kassam missiles. The 21 year old from Moshav Yinon was scheduled to be laid to rest tomorrow afternoon in the Kfar Warburg military cemetery in southern Israel.
2006: Judith Kaye, the Chief Judge of the New York Court of appeals “authored a dissent in an omnibus appeal of four same-sex marriage disputes (including Hernandez v. Robles) in which the majority ruled that the state constitution "does not compel recognition of marriages between members of the same sex". Kaye's dissent admonished that while New York State has a tradition of upholding equal rights, "the court today retreats from that proud tradition".
2007: “When Nietzsche Wept” based on the novel of the same name by Irvin D. Yalom co-starring Michal Yannai and Jamie Elman was released today.
2007: In Jerusalem, "Performances in Nature" presents famous Israeli singer, David Broza, in an acoustic performance at Ein Chemed.
2007(20th of Tammuz, 5767): Advertising executive, author and columnist Lois Wayse, who coined the memorable catchphrase “With a name like Smucker’s it has to be good” passed away at the age of 80.
2007: The Israeli premiere of "We Are Together" (Thina Simunye) is scheduled to take place at the Jerusalem Film Festival at 10:15 P.M.
2008: An international conference on Dead Sea Scrolls research opens in Israel.
2008 (3 Tammuz, 5768): On the Hebrew calendar, the fourteenth anniversary of the passing of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory.
2008: The New York Times features reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including America America by Ethan Canin and City of Thieves by David Benioff, a novel “which follows a character named Lev Beniov, the son of a revered Soviet Jewish poet who was “disappeared” in the Stalinist purges, as Lev and an accomplice carry out an impossible assignment during the Nazi blockade of Leningrad.”
2008: The Washington Post features reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including A Choice of Enemies: America Confronts the Middle East by Lawrence Freedman
2008: The San Francisco Giants shipped Brian Horowitz down to Fresno for more playing time.
2008: The chief Nazi hunter of the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, Dr. Efraim Zuroff, headed to South America in a final public campaign to locate the most wanted Nazi in,the world and bring him to justice. The search for Dr. Aribert Heim, 94, the former Austrian doctor also known as "Dr. Death" who tops the Wiesenthal Center's list of "most wanted Nazis," has spanned nearly half a century since his 1962 disappearance in Germany ahead of a planned prosecution for his war crimes.
2009:A newly formed Iranian Jewish Federation made up of emigrants from the Iranian city of Mashad is scheduled to meet today in Jerusalem in an effort to promote and preserve their heritage.
2009: Rabbi Levi Yitzchok Horowitz was hospitalized in the Sharei Tzedek hospital in Jerusalem after suffering a cardiac arrest.
2009: Capt. Ben Sklaver shipped out for Afghanistan after setting a wedding date with his fiancée Beth Segaloff
2009: Ben Horowitz and his partner launched Andreessen Horowitz, “to invest in and advise both early-stage startups and more established growth companies in high technology.”
2010: The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum is scheduled to present “First Person With Al Moritz” which is part of the First Person program which is designed provide the general public to hold conversations with Holocaust survivors.
2010:Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US President Barack Obama met in the White House today and discussed direct talks, Gaza, Iran and other issues
2010: Simon Wolfson, who was created Baron Wolfson of Aspley Guise, of Aspley Guise in the County of Bedfordshire was introduced in the House of Lords today. Wolfson is the founder of the £250,000 Wolfson Economic Prize.
2010: Sir Malcolm Rifkind became Chairman of the Intelligence and Security Committee.
2011(4thof Tammuz): Yahrzeit of Rabbi Yaakov ben Meir of Romereau known as "Rabbeinu Tam
2011: “Israeli Culture through Hebrew Conversation” an eight week course offered at the Historic 6th& I Synagogue is scheduled to have its opening session this evening.
2011: Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu met with his Romanian counterpart Emil Boc in Bucharest, who said that he opposes a Palestinian unilateral declaration of statehood.
2011: President Shimon Peres and Sephardi Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar have issued a call to the public to desist from all forms of extremism and incitement.
2011: The Schalit family traversed the Knesset's hallways today to request that MKs sign a letter calling on the government to release Hamas terrorists in exchange for captive soldier Gilad Schalit.
2011: Oscar Goodman completed his services as the 21st Mayor of Las Vegas.
2011: “The Judy Gold Show: My Life as a Sitcom” which the New York Times called “highly entertaining” officially opened today in NYC.
2011: Carolyn Goldmark Goodman, the wife of former Mayor Oscar Goodman became the 22ndMayor of Las Vegas after having received 60 per cent of the vote.
2011: As a sign of social and cultural change in Israel Ethan Bronner describes the debate in Israel over a two day weekend.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/07/world/middleeast/07israel.html?_r=1&
2012: “Israel: A Home Movie” is scheduled to be shown today the Jerusalem Film Festival
2012: Indonesia is to open a consulate in Ramallah, headed by a diplomat with the rank of ambassador, who will also unofficially serve as his country’s point man for contacts with Israel, The Times of Israel learned on today.
2012:U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told Palestinian President Mahmoud toiday that the Israel-Palestinian conflict should not be forgotten amid wider upheaval in the Middle East.
2012:Israel reiterated today that it would refuse cooperation with a a UN Human Rights Council fact finding mission to probe Israeli West Bank settlement activity and Jewish building in east Jerusalem. The Geneva-based council appointed three international jurists to the mission today, eliciting a rebuke from Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor
2013: Due to lack of a repayment, there will be no “free” bus from the Kotel on Motzei Shabbat; a service that Egged has been operating on the honor system to accommodate the needs of “observant” riders.
2013: In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the traditional minyan celebrates Independence Shabbat, honoring Jewish American heroes of the revolution, followed by a beat the summer heat Kiddush featuring Sundaes on Saturday.
2013: “Caught In The Web” is among the films scheduled to be screened at the 30thInternational Jerusalem Film Festival.
2013(28thof Tammuz, 5773): Ninety-three year old publisher Arthur Rosenthal passed away toay. (As reported by Paul Vitello)
2013(28thof Tammuz, 5773): Eighty-nine year old Nixon adviser Leonard Garment passed away today.(As reported by Eric Lichtblau)
2013: US Secretary of State John Kerry’s plan to resume peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority calls for a cessation of settlement construction outside settlement blocs in the West Bank and the release of 103 Palestinian prisoners, the London-based Al-Hayat newspaper reported today (As reported by Khaled Abu Tomeh and Tovah Lazaroff)
2013: Omri Casspi, the only Israeli hoopster to ever play in the NBA, will sign a two-year, $2 million (NIS 7.3 million) deal with the Houston Rockets, Yahoo! Sports reported today (As reported by Raphael Gellar)
2014: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors -- A Most Imperfect Union: A Contrarian History of the United States by Ilan Stavans -- and of special interest to Jewish readers – The Arsenal of Democracy: FDR, Detroit and an Epic Quest to Arm an America at War by A.J. Baime which tells of the role played by infamous ant-Semite Henry Ford in the creation of the Arsenal of Democracy that defeated the Nazis.
2014: A tour of Jewish Poland led by Gratz College scholar Dr. Michael Steinlauf is scheduled to come to an end.
2014: Jerusalem-born conductor Asher Fisch is scheduled to lead “a Romantic program fitting for a mid-summer Berkshires' evening.”
2014: The Shin Bet Security announced that “several Jewish suspects have been arrested in connection with murder of a Palestinian teen” on July 2. (JTA)
2014: Lynn Chaney, the wife of the former Vice President tells the New York Timesthat “the last book to make her cry was Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree(“I have to steel myself before I read it to my grandchildren.”)
2014: After 25 rockets were fired into Israel from Gaza today, the IAD killed two members of the Islamic Jihad this evening.
2014: “Israel Police said today that 19-year-old Shelley Dadon, whose body was found in a car park in Migdal Ha'emek in early May, was murdered by her taxi driver, 34-year-old Hussein Yousef Khalifa, who confessed and reenacted her killing.” (As reported by Ahiya Raved and Yoav Zitun)
2014: Palestinian security forces used tear gas to prevent rioters from burning Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus tonight.
2015: In Tel Aviv, the first annual Blues Festival is scheduled to come to an end.
2015: In Leeds, UK, Frank Virgon is scheduled to lecture on “Isaac Bashevis Singer: How his Works have been Lost in Translation in the US.”
2015(19th of Tammuz, 5775): Seventy-seven year old Jerry Weintraub who combined the worlds of Hollywood and politics passed away today.
2015(19th of Tammuz, 5775): Ninety-three year old Vilnus native Rachel Margolis, the WW II partisan, turned biology professor and Holocaust preservationist passed away today.
http://sites.keene.edu/cohencenter/rachel-margolis-lithuanian-partisan-and-survivor/
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/women-of-courage-rachel-margolis-2236081.html
2016: David J. Shulkin began serving as Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Health.
2016: The Mission to Israel sponsored by the Jewish Federation of North America is scheduled to begin today.
2016: Three months after Israel’s Chief Rabbnate reject the author of Rabbi Haskel Lookstein to perform conversions, Natan Sharansky today “spoke at a 200-person protest on Lookstein’s behalf in front of the Chief Rabbinical Court in Jerusalem.” (As reported by Ben Sales)
2016: Judy Margles, the executive director of the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education and board chair Elaine Coughlin “announced today the purchase of a $5 million space in Oldtown to serve as the institution’s permanent home.
2016: Dr. Suzanne Schneider of the Brooklyn Institute for Jewish Research is scheduled to teach the first session of “Primo Levi: Memory, Meaning and the Holocaust.”
2016: The Consulate General of Israel is scheduled to host a luncheon where “Israeli Hi-Tech entrepreneur and philanthropist, Rony Zarom and Batsheva Moshe, CEO of Unistream talk about the impact of economic gaps on Israeli society and their efforts to empower Jewish and Arab youth from Israel's disadvantaged localities through entrepreneurship.”
2016: The Jerusalem Film Festival is scheduled to open with its celebratory first evening tongiht in Sultan’s Pool with a screening of Pedro Almodovar’s latest film, “Julieta,” based loosely on three short stories in Alice Munro’s book “Runaway.” Emma Suarez, who stars in Almodovar’s latest film (see trailer at top of story), will also attend the festival’s opening night festivities. (As reported by Jessica Steinberg)
2017: The International Festival of Light exhibition in Jerusalem is scheduled to come to an end today.
2017: This evening “30,000 Jews from all across the globe are scheduled to join together at the Teddy stadium in Jerusalem to bring in the 20th Maccabiah Games.”
2017: Daniel Polisar is scheduled to present the second session “The Zionist Vision: A New Look at Theodor Herzl.”
2018: “Anne Frank’s Family Was Thwarted by U.S. Immigration Rules, Research Shows” published today described the failed attempts by Otto Frank, the father of Anne Franks to save his family from the Nazis.
2018: As a reminder of the vitality of “small town Judaism” Lily Zukin is scheduled to begin her Bat Mitzvah weekend tonight at Agudas Achim in Coralville, IA.
2018: “As the Syrian army continues its offensive on rebel-held areas near the Golan border,” Israel has signaled its expectation that the Assad government honor the “1974 Separation of Forces Agreement.
2018: As Israelis respond to public relations blitz by the Polish government touting the “the joint declaration signed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that effectively approved “a Polish law that criminalized accusing Poles of complicity in the extermination of Jews during World War II” nobody has made any reference to the rabid anti-Semitism that gripped pre-war Poland.
2019: In Cedar Rapids, a double simcha – Shabbat and the natal day of Lena Gilbert, the go to gal in the Jewish community.
2019(3rd of Tammuz, 5779): Parashat Korach;
2019(3rd of Tammuz, 5779): Yahrzeit of The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson OBM
2019: In Jerusalem, the Nocturno Café is scheduled to host an evening with singer/songwriter Yahli Sobol, “the leader singer of mythological band Monica Sex.”
http://www.ithl.org.il/page_14713
2020: Ilana Kaufman, the Director of the Jews of Color Initiative is scheduled to talk online “about her experiences growing up Black and Jewish, feeling isolated, racism in the Jewish community and the work needed to address racism.”
2020: The Open Circle Jewish Learning is scheduled to present online, “Witness as Activist: The Lessons of Elie Wiesel.”
2020: As part of its virtual learning program, B’nai Jershurun Congregation is scheduled to host “What’s NU?” with Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria applying “topical text study and discussion to the most relevant Jewish topics of the day.”
2020: The Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center is scheduled to host a virtual presentation by Doris Kearns as she talks about “Leadership in the Time of COVID.”
2020: Rules previously approved by the Knesset “which will see synagogues, bars, nightclubs and event venues capped at 50 people” are scheduled to go into effect today.
2021: The American Sephardi Association is scheduled to present Rabbi Elie Abadie, the Lebanese born physician as he talks about “Jewish Life in the Arab World: A New Chapter?”
2021: In Israel, “the high-level coronavirus cabinet is scheduled to meet today to discuss the resurgence of the virus in the country due to the fast-spreading Delta variant.”
2021: According to a memo “JP Morgan Chase’s chief executive Jamie Dimon has sent to employees” all “the employees should return the office” as of today.
2021: The Streicker Center is scheduled to host Benny “Briga and cookbook author Adeena Sussman who will get you whipping up Cafe Levinsky’s creations without flying to Israel with their new cookbook, Gazoz: The Art of Making Magical, Seasonal Sparkling Drinks.
2022: Lockdown University is scheduled to host a webinar with Rabbi Jeremy Rosen lecturing on “Study the Bible. Know What is in it and What is Not.”
2022: In Cedar Rapids, the Hadassah Book Club is scheduled to discuss Good Riddance, a novel by Elinor Lipman.
2022: Based on previously published reports the Highland Park Parade Mass Shooting took on a Jewish flavor as one of the victims was identified as Jacki Sundheim a member of North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe ”who was the Reform synagogue’s events and b’nei mitzvah coordinator” and that the shooter had been asked to leave the Chabad House during Pesach by Rabbi Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz
2022: JHMOMC is scheduled to Executive Director, Jessica Solomon, lecturing on “The Golden Medinah: The 19th and 20th Century Monmouth County, New Jersey Eastern European Jewry Immigration.”
2022: The American Sephardi Federation is scheduled to present Joyce Yarrow is scheduled to lecture on “Zahara and the Lost Book of Light” as part of New Works Wednesdays.
2022: The Jewish Museum of London is scheduled to host a “Virtual Teachers CPD that explores what it really means to be Jewish and how best to teach an authentic and inclusive Judaism in your classrooms.”
2022: YIVO, Center for Jewish History and the Yiddish Book Center are scheduled to present Anita Norich lecturing on “Fear and Other Stories by Chana Blankshteyn.”