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This Day, March 15, In Jewish History by Mitchell A and Deb Levin Z"L

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March 15

457 BCE (12th of Nisan, 3303): Ezra and his followers departed from the River Ahava on their way to Jerusalem.

44 BCE: Julius Caesar was assassinated in the Roman Senate. The Jews supported Caesar in his fight for power against Crassus and Pompey. Pompey had seized Jerusalem, violated the Holy of Holies and shipped thousands of Judeans off to the slave markets. Eight years later, Crassus came to Jerusalem and stole the Temple Treasury. As a reward for Jewish support, Caesar returned the port of Jaffa to Judean control. He instituted a more humane tax rate that took into account the Sabbatical Year. He allowed the walls of Jerusalem to be rebuilt and he allowed Jewish communities in the Italian peninsula, including Rome itself, to "organize and thrive."

351: Constantius II elevates his cousin Gallus to Caesar, and puts him in charge of the Eastern part of the Roman Empire. During his rule, Gallus had to deal with a Jewish rebellion in Judea/Palestine. The rebellion, possibly started before Gallus' elevation to Caesar, was crushed by Gallus' general, Ursicinus, who ordered all the rebels slain.

1317: Today Richard Swinefeld who had been named Archdeacon of London in 1280 and who in1286 “threatened to excommunicate several of his flock who wished to attend the wedding of the daughter of a leading Jew of Hereford” passed away.

1391: “A Jew hating monk” is responsible for starting anti-Jewish riots in Seville, Spain. These riots marked the start of a wave of violence throughout Spain and Portugal which claimed 50,000 lives within less than a year. Many Jews escaped death by converting to Christianity. This marked the emergence of Marranos who were said to number 200,000.

1513: Pope Leo X who relied on Bonet de Lates, a Jew from Provence, as his personal physician and unofficial advisor and whose leniency towards the Jews may have stemmed from an attitude summed up by his statement that “It is well known how useful this fable of Christ has been to us and ours!” was ordained today.

1545: Opening session of the Council of Trent. At the Council of Trent in the 16th century, the Roman Church stated as a theological principle that all men share the responsibility for the Passion—and that Christians bear a particular burden. "In this guilt [for the death of Jesus] are involved all those who fall frequently into sin..." read the catechism of the council.” This guilt seems more enormous in us than in the Jews since, if they had known it, they would never have crucified the Lord of glory; while we, on the contrary, professing to know him, yet denying him by our actions, seem in some sort to lay violent hands on him."

1594: Spanish born Hebraist Casiodoro de Reina, the author of one of the first books that opposed the Inquisition and the translator of a Spanish language bible that was a source for the creators of the King James Bible passed away today.

1672: Charles II of England issues the Royal Declaration of Indulgence. This declaration was part of the jockeying for power between Roman Catholics, Anglicans and non-Anglican Protestants. Religious rights for Jews were not a part of this measure. Oliver Cromwell, the Protestant civil ruler who temporarily replaced the Stuarts allowed the Jews to re-enter England. Charles II continued his policy and actually expanded the rights and protection for the growing Jewish population. Charles II’s, his successor King James II and the last Catholic King of England further expanded the royal protection of the Jews. Both monarchs appreciated the financial support they received from Jewish bankers. By the time William and Mary had replaced James on the English throne, Jews were too well established in England to ever again be candidates for expulsion and exile.

1697: In New York City, Rachel Simpson and Isaac Rodrigues Marques gave birth to Jacob Rodriguez, the wife of Esther Maduro and father of Isaac and Rachel Marques.

1698: New York ship owner and freeman Isaac Rodriguez, the Denmark born son of Rachel and Jacob Rodriguez and his wife Rachel Peixotto gave birth to Jacob Rodriquez Marques.

1764(11th of Adar II, 5524): Ta’anit Esther observed because the 13th of Adar fell on Shabbat.

1767(14th of Adar II, 5527): Purim observed on the same day “in the Waxhaws region of the Carolina, Elizabeth Hutchinson and Andrew Jackson gave birth to Andrew Jackson who as General Andrew Jackson counted Judah Touro as one of those commanded during the Battle of New Orleans and who as President Jackson appointed “Mordecai Noah to serve as overseer of the Port of New York.

1773: The South Carolina Gazette reported that Moses Lindo purchased a stone which he believed to be a topaz of immense size, and that he sent it to London by the Right Hon. Lord Charles Greville Montague to be presented to the Queen of England.” Lindo was a native of England who settled in South Carolina where he prospered in the trade of indigo.

1775(13th of Adar II,5535): Erev Purim celebrated for the last time before the firing of “the shot heard round the world.”

1776: South Carolina becomes the first American colony to declare its independence from Great Britain and set up its own government. The Jews played an active role in the political affairs of South Carolina from its earliest days. As early as 1702 they were voting in the colony’s general elections. Francis Salvador began serving in the Provincial Congress in the year before the Palmetto State declared her independence.

1778(16th of Adar, 5538): Purim Meshulash observed on the same day that British General William Howe wrote General George Washington about the possibility of an exchange of prisoners including General Charles Lee who was ignominiously captured by the British in 1776.

1792: Birthdate of Jacob Barrett, the husband of Hetty J. Ottolengui whom he married in Charleston, SC in 1834 and with whom he had twelve children.

1795: Birthdate of Samuel Moses Marx, the son of a Jewish doctor in Halle who, when baptized in 1819, changed his name to Adolf Bernhard Marx who gained fame as a German composer and critic.

1800(18th of Adar, 5560): Parashat Ki Tisa; Shabbat Parah

1800: Birthdate of Joseph Wetheimer, who joined his father’s business in 1821 and who was “the founder of Jewish Alliance in Vienna.

1801: In Wurttemberg, Germany, Moses Levi Frankfurter and Mirjam Landauer gave birth to Bernhard Frankfurter, the husband of Esther Frank.

1801: Birthdate of Joseph Levin Saalschütz, the native of Konigsberg who was the first Jew to earn a Ph.D. from the University of Konigsberg.

1805(14th of Adar II, 5565): Purim

1807: Easton, PA native Rachel Pettigrew and Jacob Phillips gave birth to Samuel Phillips.

1808: Judith Moses Myers the New York born daughter of Rachel and Michael Moses Hays and her husband Samuel Myers gave birth Ella C. Myers and Rachel Hays Mayers.

1809: Philip Lazarus married Amelia Barnes today at the Great Synagogue.

1810: In Maryland, Margaret and John Gettinger gave birth to future Ohio resident Daniel Gettinger the husband of Jane Elizabeth Gettinger.

1811: Don Judah Benoliel, the president of the Jewish community on Gibraltar and the consul for Morocco and Austria and son of Judith and Solomon Benoliel and his wife Esther Ben-Oliel gave birth to Gibraltar native Isaac Benoliel.

1813: Birthdate of German native Augusta Straus Bachrach, wife of Aaron Bachrach and the mother of four children including Henry Bachrach, the founder of Bachrach’s a department store chain that got its start in Decatur, Il and survived for over 125 years.

1816(15th of Adar, 5576): Shushan Purim

1817: Birthdate of Samuel Naumbourg, the native of Bavaria who served as Chazzan at Besancon and choir director at a Strasburg synagogue before becoming the leader “of synagogue of the Rue Notre-Dame de Nazareth at Paris, where he became professor of liturgical music at the Séminaire Israélite” in 1845.

1820: Just a year after Rebecca Gratz established the country's first Female Hebrew Benevolent Society in Philadelphia, Richa Levy led a group of women that established a Female Hebrew Benevolent Society at New York's Shearith Israel congregation. At that time, Shearith Israel was the only synagogue in New York City.

1820: The King of Saxony granted “Jewish tradesman” Joseph Friedländer permission to remain at Bautzen.

1820: Maine becomes the 23rd state to join the Union. Today Maine has a small but active Jewish population. There are ten congregations in the state. There are Hillel chapters at the University of Maine, Colby, Bates and Bowdoin. Statewide organizations include the Jewish Community Council of Bangor, Main, the Holocaust Human Rights Center of Main, The Jewish Community Alliance of Southern Maine and the Maine Jewish Film Festival. The mission of the Maine Jewish Film Festival is to “provide a forum for the presentation of films to enrich, educate and entertain a diverse community about the Jewish experience.” Since 1998, we have fulfilled this mission by presenting over 145 films about all facets of Jewish life and culture to nearly 17,500 people. Our annual Festival takes place over nine days in mid-March, and each year we bring a rich selection of films to Maine that otherwise wouldn’t get seen by audiences anywhere else in the state or even Northern New England. The Festival serves filmgoers of all ages and backgrounds, both Jews and non-Jews alike. Maine is one of the smallest cities in the United States to host an independent Jewish film festival and each successive year we attract increasing numbers of attendees (over 3,000 in 2006).

1824(15th of Adar II, 5584): Shushan Puri

1827: The University of Toronto is chartered. The first Jewish community did not develop in Toronto until the 1840’s. Today the Toronto University has 3,000 Jewish students among its 40,000 undergraduates and 500 Jewish students among its 10,000 graduate students. The University offers approximately 35 courses in Jewish Studies and a minor in Jewish studies. The Hillel chapter is located at the Wolfond Center for Jewish Life.

1830: Birthdate of Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse, the first Jew to win the Nobel Prize for Literature

1833: In Pennsylvania, David Davis and his wife Ann gave birth to Charllota “Charlotte” Davis Morningstar, the wife of Bernard Morningstar and the daughter-in-law of Ignatz “Isaac” Morningstar who as Ignatz Morgenstern passed his exams in the Austrian Empire to serve as a dentist and a surgeon.

1839: In Württemberg, Germany, Bernhard Frankfurter, the son of Moses Levi Frankfurter and Mirjam Landauer, and his wife Esther Frank gave birth to Henriette Emma Frankfurter

1840: Ephraim Alex married Catherine Jones today the Great Synagogue.

1843(13th of Adar II, 5603): Ta’anit Esther; Erev Purim

1848(10th of Adar II, 5608): Seventy-four-year-old Frances Isaac, the New York City born daughter of Moses Isaacs and the wife of Joseph Simson passed away today in Yonkers, NY.

1848: Birthdate of Ignace Ephrussi, the native of Odessa, who was a member of a family of famous Jewish bankers that included his brother Charles.  The family moved their operations from Odessa to Paris and Vienna.

1848: Birthdate of Toby Edward Rosenthal, the native of New Have CT, whose family moved to San Francisco in 1855 where he began his art studies which led him to pursue a career as painter whose worked include “Morning Prayers In Bach’s Family” which was purchased by the government of Saxony and hung at the museum in Leipzig.

1849: Birthdate of Emanuel Rich, who with his brother Morris, founded Rich’s Department Store.

1851: Birthdate of Hungarian attorney and Diet Member, Arthur Jellinek.

1852: In Szekszárd, Hungary,Jakab Friedmann and Jozefa Friedmann gave birth to Sandor Forgo (Fiedman, the husband of Nettiq Friedmann and the ex-husband of Jozefa Bettelheim.

1854(15th of Adar, 5614): Shushan Purim

1855: Birthdate of Bohemian native Eduard Glaser, a groundbreaking Arabist and archeologist.

https://www.wdl.org/en/item/16771/

http://dla.library.upenn.edu/dla/ead/ead.html?id=EAD_upenn_cajs_PUCJSARCMS36USUSUSPUCJS

1855: Pauline Koch and Hermann Einstein the parents of Albert Einstein gave birth to their youngest child Friederike, nicknamed “Rika.”

1855: Birthdate of Henry Wallenstein, the husband of Gisele Wallenstein, the father of Henry Wallenstein and a member of Temple Emanuel in Wichita, KS.

1856: Following the creation of the Company Ports of Marseille, Franco-Jewish financier Jules Mires formed a partnership with Talabot Paulin to rebuild the docks of this major French Mediterranean port.

1858: In Chicago, Rosine and Elias E. Greenebaum a co-founder of the Greenebaum Brothers Banking House gave birth to Moses Ernst Greenebaum, the husband of Julia Greenebaum.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/greenebaum

1859: Abramo Volterra, a cloth merchant, and Angelica Almagià, the parents of Italian mathematician and physicist, Vito Volterra were married today.

1860: Birthdate of Count Moïse de Camondo, a native of Constantinople whose Sephardic family owned one of the largest banks in the Ottoman Empire and who became a leading French banker and art collector.

1860: In Germany, “Feist H. and Caroline (Cagle) Siegel gave birth to Benjamin Siegel who in 1876 came to the United States where he worked in “general merchandise stores” in Selma and Prairie Bluff, AL before moving to Detroit in 1881 where “he organized B. Siegel Co” dealers in women’s clothing and married Sophie Siegel.

1860: Birthdate of bacteriologist Waldemar Mordecai Wolff Haffkine, the native of Odessa who refused to convert to further his career choosing instead to immigrate to France where he continued his work that led to vaccines against cholera and the bubonic plague.

1862: In Russia, Miriam Amsterdam and Mordecai Brainin gave birth to journalist and author Reuben Brainin the contributing editor for the Jewish Daily News and The Day  who  was the “author of two volumes of Yiddish short stories and the thirty volumes known collectively as “Brainin’s Collected Hebrew Works.”

1862(13th of Adar II, 5622): Shabbat Zachor; erev Purim

1862: “Treason in Embryo: A Remarkable Document” published today contained excerpts from correspondence written by David Yulee in January of 1861. At the time, Yulee was a United States Senator representing Florida. The correspondence described the meetings of U.S. Senators from several southern states and the role they would be playing the secession movement and the establishment of the Confederate States of America.

1864(O.S.) Birthdate of Sergei Zubatov, “the head of the Czarist Secret Police in Moscow” who “convinced” the imprisoned Manya Shochat to form “tame” workers “organizations that would work for reform rather than the overthrow of the government” which would supposedly “help achieve rights for Jews” – a supposition which the policeman knew was false and which the Jewish leader came to see as a “pipe dream.”

1865: The activities surrounding “the fourth annual masquerade ball of the Purim Association” which was held last night was described in an article published today entitled “The Purim Ball--Grand Masquerade at the Academy of Music.” According to the article “The Purim Ball is held to commemorate one of the great epochs of Jewish history -- the deliverance of the chosen people from the machinations of Haman, Prime Minister to King Ahasuerus, of Persia. “The Purim Association raised approximately $9,000 for its charitable activities through the sale of 900 tickets at $10 each. The society also published the Purim Gazette, a paper which is printed at each recurrence of the Purim ball.1867: The Amusements Column, in an item styled "Last of Shylock" reported that this evening marked the next to the last performance of “The Merchant of Venice” at the Winter Garden Theatre. There would be one more Saturday matinee and then "farewell to the Jew for the Season. “The Merchant of Venice” featuring Shylock reportedly was the first Shakespearean play to have been performed in United States; a performance that took place in colonial Virginia.

1867: In Russia, Jacob Baruch Abramowitz and his wife gave birth to Odessa trained cantor Jacob Abramowitz who in 1919 came to the United States where he served congregations in Chicago and Buffalo, NY before accepting a position with Congregation Sons of Halberstamm in Philadelphia.

1869: Prussia does away with the Oath More Judaico or Jewish Oath

1869: Basheva Pearlman Lazarus gave birth to Sara Lazarus who became Sarah Mickelson when she married David Mickelson with whom she had two daughters – Anne and Lena.

1872: Birthdate of Riga native Max Maisel, the founder, in 1892 of a bookshop at 424 Grand Street on the Lower East Side which was a gathering place for intellectuals and the setting for Christopher Morley’s novel The Haunted Bookshop who also translated  the works of Shakespeare, and Darwin into Yiddish.

1873: Birthdate of Vitsebsk native Leon Korbrin the Philadelphia shirt maker, cigar maker and baker who became a New York journalist, author and playwright.

https://yiddishkayt.org/view/kobrin/

https://www.nytimes.com/1946/04/01/archives/leon-kobrin-dead-dramatist-author-writer-of-30-plays-for-yiddish.html

1875: In Witosk, Russia, Yetta Friedman and Emanuel Ravitch  gave birth to American builder Joseph Ravitch, the husband of Elizabeth Chauser who at age 13 arrived in the United States where he went into the real estate business with Harry Fischel  and where he was a director of the Central Jewish Institute and Jewish Center on West 86th Street as well chairman of the Yeshivah Building Committee.

1875: In Vilna, Lithuanian, Leon and Elizabeth Gershonovitz gave birth to Moishe Gershnowitz who in 1890 came to Boston where he began the journey which would lead to him being the theatrical producer Morris Gest, the husband of the former Reina Belasco and the son-in-law of the famous producer David Belasco.

1876(13th of Adar, 5636): Forty-two-year-old Margaethe Meyer Schurz, the Hamburg, Germany born daughter of Heinrich Meyer and the wife U.S. Senator Carl Schurz who among other things is credited for creating the first kindergarten in the United States passed away today in child-birth.

https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/schurz-margarethe-meyer

 

1876: It was reported today that the Earl of Aylesford was in such dire financial straits that if he paid all of the money he owed to various English Jews, “he would have scarcely had a income to support himself.”

1877: Birthdate of Vilna native, the Pittsfield, MA realtor and member of both the ZOA and the United Palestine Appeal who passed away in 1958 after which he was buried in the Knesset Israel Cemetery.

1877(1st of Nisan, 5637): Rosh Chodesh Nisan

1877: In New York, Caroline and David L. Einstein gave birth to Columba educated American diplomate and author Lewis Einstein, the husband of Helen Ralli, a well-connected English lady who served in several posts in the Ottoman Empire as well as Ambassador to Czechoslovakia.

1877(1st of Nisan, 5637): Sixty-six-year-old Alexander Lewis, the Charleston, SC born son of David and Rachel Benjamin Lewis and the husband of Rebecca Lewis and Esther Lewish passed away today in St. Louis, MO.

1877(1st of Nisan, 5637): Sixty-two-year-old Albert Cohn, the Hungarian born French philanthropist and scholar who enjoyed a “lifelong connection with the Rothschild” and worked to improve the condition of Algerian Jewry passed away in Paris.

http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/4514-cohn-albert

1879: Birthdate of Warsaw native Yakov Ganetsky, “also known as Jakub Furstenberg” the Bolshevik Revolutionary who reportedly was one of those who negotiated with the German General Staff to send Lenin back to Russia so he could complete the revolution and take Russia out of the war so that the Kaiser would be able to defeat the Allies in the West and win World War I.

1879: In Kiev, Simon and Sarah (Rappaport) Spielberg gave birth to NYU trained attorney Harold Spielberg, the husband of Rebecca Fishman and a member of the Society for the Advancement of Judaism who was an “organizer, vice president and general counsel of the Equitable Surety Company of the State of New York.

1880: It was reported today that Wissenschaftliche Abhandlungen by Johann Karl Friedrich Zöllner “bristles with attacks on Jews.”

1881(14th of Adar II, 5641): Purim

1881: Birthdate of Russian native Harry Handler, the NYU Law School graduate who morphed into a Jewish educator who was the husband of “the former Esther Liskowsky.”

1881: The Purim Masquerade Ball will be held today at the Academy of Music in New York City.

1882(24th of Adar): Rabbi Eliezer Lipmann Silbermann founder of Ha Maggid, the first weekly Hebrew newspaper, passed away today.

1883: In Russia, Helen Newmark and Salmon Jaffee gave birth to Riga native and Riga Dental College trained dentist Charles D. Jafee, the husband of Katherine Weisbord who in 1905 came to the United States where he rose from being an office to being the treasurer of clothing manufacturer L.J. and C.D. Jaffee, Inc. and President of the New  York Clothing Manufacturer’s Exchange while serving a direction of the Brooklyn Jewish Hospital and a member of Temple Emanu-El and Union Temple in Brooklyn.

1883: In Lithuania, Alex and Agnes Salaway Vigransky gave birth to future Ohio resident Moses Vigransky

1884(18th of Adar, 5644): Shabbat Parah

1884(18th of Adar, 5644): Seventy-nine-year-old Mary Moss, the daughter of Solomon and Rebecca Eve Levy and wife of Eleazer (Eugene) Moss passed away today in Philadelphia.

1884: In Podolia, Hana and Boksir Dov Sharfshtein gave birth to author and linguist Zvi Scharfstein who came to the United States in WW I where he continued his work.

1886: In New York, formation of the Jewish Immigrants’ Protective Society

1886: Birthdate of Morris Schulman, the Russian native who gained famed as American actor Michael Mark who enjoyed a forty career in films

1886: Birthdate of Brest-Litovsk native Abraham Asen, the dentist who in 1903 came to the United States where he was member of the Executive Committee of the Farband-National Workers Alliance and pursued a career as Yiddish author and translator.

http://yleksikon.blogspot.com/2014/06/avrom-aysen-abraham-asen-march-15-1886.html

1886: Yeshiva Etz Chaim was founded in New York. It was the first American yeshiva to include the study of Talmud.

1887: Birthdate of Polish born “Yiddish scholar, novelist and poet J.J. Trunk, a protégé of I.L. Peretz who was in 1941 was brought to the United States where he joined the staff of The Jewish Day.

1887: In Valozhyn, Samuel Eliezer and Hanna Rogosin gave birth to American textile manufacturer Israel Rogosin who opened a plant in Israel at the request of the Israeli government and who was the father of documentary filmmaker Lionel Rogosin.

1889: Birthdate of “Nivki” native Moshe Bassin, who in 1907 came to the United States where he gained fame as Yiddish poet and anthologist Max Bassin the husband of Miriam Berman Bassin and the father of Milton and Eugene Bassin.

https://www.york.cuny.edu/library/about/bassin-collection

1889: Simon Cook was promoted from Ensign to Lt. Jr. Grade in the USN.

1889: Birthdate of Prague native and Prague University trained attorney Dr. Hugo Feigl, the veteran of the Austro-Hungarian Army and art critic and art gallery operator who in 1939 came to the United States where he found the Feigel Art Gallery while raising a daughter, Marion, with his wife Greta,

1889: Birthdate assigned to Melech Epstein by his parents. The native of Belarus moved to the United States where he wrote Labor in U.S.A. and The Jew and Communism 

1890: In Sutter, CA, Charles and Amanda Dannenberg gave birth to Otto Oscar Dannenberg, the husband of Iceophine Elsie Zimmerman.

1890: Birthdate of Kiev native Shmuel-Mortkhe Zamd, the Yiddish author whose penname was Shmuel Pesok, who settled in Chicago in 1909 and whose first articles was “Notes on Montreal”  and who “was an internal contributor and assistant editor the Shiager forverts (Chicago Forward.)

http://yleksikon.blogspot.com/2016/07/shmuel-mordkhe-zamd.html

1891: General H.B. Carrington delivered four lectures today a Syracuse University including one entitled “Hebrew History.”

1891: “New York University” published today described the upcoming free lectures that would be offered by The School of Pedagogy including Rabbi Leight on speaking on “Old Hebrew Education.”

1892: Birthdate of Jacob Bartfield, “an Austrian-born Jew nicknamed "Soldier" because he served in the American army after emigrating to the USA” who “boxed as a welterweight and middleweight in the 1910s and 1920s” and who passed away in September of 1970.

1892: “Sunday Not Recognized By Jews” published today described the grounds on which John Besher dismissed the charges that had been lodged against two Jewish grocers for doing business on Sunday. Bsher accepted their position that “Sunday being recognized by their race as an ordinary week day, they were entitled to keep their stores open for business” but only if they observe Saturdays as their Sabbath.

1892: As the business operations of J.E. Guenzburg crumbled today in St. Petersburg, it was announced that the Jewish bankers had liabilities totaling six million rubles. It had been thought that the assets of his firm which dates back to the Crimean War were closer to ten million rubles.

1892: In Paris, the Bourse closed down based on reports of the failure of J.E. Guenzburg’s banking interests in St. Petersburg.

1892: Birthdate of Lithuanian native Henrikas Rabinavicius, a graduate of the “Universities of Dorpat, Leningrad and London” who in 1927 was forced to resign as Counsel General of Lithuania in New York because Premier Waldemara wanted his country to be represented by “a Lithuanian, not a Jew.” (Editor’s note: this 1927 expression of anti-Semitism might help to explain the success of the Final Solution in the Baltic States.)

1892: Word of the failure of J.E. Guenzburg, a leading Russian banker had little effect on the financial markets in London

1892: In Berlin it is believed that the failure of Guenzburg was the result of governmental animosity. The Czar’s government objected to the power of a Jewish banker and his involvement with German bankers since Russia is now allying itself with France. Creditors have good reason to believe that Guenzburg will pay all of his creditors.

1893: Birthdate of Jules Salvador Moch, the French politician who was the grandson of Colonel Jules Moch and the son of Captain Gaston Moch who was born and died in the same year as Captain Alfred Dreyfus whose cause he supported.

1893: Arthur Reichow, a representative of the committee connected with the Baron Hirsch Fund, returned to New York City tonight after having spent the day investigating conditions at the Jewish colony at Chesterfield, eight miles from New London, CT. “Instead of starvation” Reichow said “he found a comparatively contented people with only six families of the thirty-two” at the colony were “really in need of assistance” and two of the families refused to accept any help unless it was in the form of loan.

1893: In Manhattan Henry and Barbetter Lashanska gave birth to operatic soprano Hulda Lashanska, who was also known as Hulda Rosenblum after she married Harold Rosenblum with whom she “had two daughters – Lenore and Peggy.”

1893: It was reported today that a Jewish peddler named Morantz has been fencing stolen goods for several gangs in the Kansas City area.  Morantz has a daughter named Mollie who takes the goods from the thieves when her father leaves the city “to sell the plunder.”

1893: Citing information that has appeared in German newspapers, “Andrew D. White, the United States Minister to Russia” has written to the State Department warning “that it is the intention of the promoters of the Baron Hirsch fund…to renew the immigration of Russian” Jews “to the Argentine Republic.”  “Only the better class of” Jews “will be sent to the South American republic and that those of an undesirable class will be sifted out and sent to the United States.”  White did not comment on the credibility of the reports saying only that U.S. immigration officials should be vigilant about the appearance of such undesirable immigrants.

1894: In New York City, Babette Born and Henry Lashanska gave birth to Hunter College graduate and lyric soprano Hulda Lashanska Rosenbaum a member of Temple Emanu-El in New York City and the wife of Harold A. Rosenbaum whom she married in 1913 after which made her debut concert at Detroit in 1916 and give her first New York recital in 1917.

1894: In Manhattan, Albert and Rose Guggenheim gave birth to Yale educated anthropologist Edwin Loeb and husband of Ella-Marie Karr Loeb with whom he had three children – Robert, Peter and Barbara – who served with OSS during WW II.

https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1525/aa.1967.69.2.02a00070

1895: In Kremenetz, Russia, Yetta Shilberg and Israel Pollen gave birth to future Englishman Zalman Solomon Pollen, the husband of Esther Violet Lipshitz and the father of Sheila and Andrew Pollen

1895: Alfred Dreyfus arrived at the Iles de Sault, “a small archipelago situated twenty-seven miles (43 km) off Cayenne, opposite the mouth of the River Kuru” best known for Devil’s Island where the disgraced officer was to be imprisoned.

1896: In Rochester, NY, founding of the Congregation of Tailors (Chevra Chayteem) whose members included Nathan Rubenstein and which held services three times a day, operated a daily religious school and used Mt. Hope Cemetery.

1896: Seventy-eight Jewish veterans of the Union Army met in New York City's Lexington Opera House to form the Hebrew Union Veterans, the precursor group to the Jewish War Veterans of the USA. The veterans gathered in an attempt to refute claims in Harper’s Weekly and the North American Review that Jews had not fought in the war. (As reported by Seymour “Sy” Brody) The same charge was also made by Mark Twain which would prove to be unusual on two counts. Twain’s brief flirtation with the war had come on the Rebel side and his daughter would end up marrying a Jews.

1896: In Knyszyn, Poland “Reb Eli Novodvorsky, a Jewish scholar, and Chaya Tserel Novodvorsky, a small goods store owner” gave birth to Shimeon Novodvorsky, better known as Jim Novy,  the Austin, TX businessman and leader of the Jewish community who worked to save Jews from the Holocaust and was close friend of Lyndon Johnson.

http://www.caa-austin.org/?q=historyofJimNovy

1896:” Russia and Religious Liberty” published today described the treatment of non-Orthodox treatment in the Czar’s empire including his five or six million Jewish subjects who are subject to “Jew baiting” in which the government has “appealed to what is worst in human nature.  “The harrying of the Jews is generally admitted being one of the cause of the growth of poverty” among the Russian people.  “After the expulsion of the Jews from Moscow, the rate of interest in private pawnshops rose from 25 to 200 per cent per annum. (So much for the myth of the avaricious Jewish moneylender)

1897: It was reported today that a performance of “My Uncle’s Will” by the students of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts was the main entertainment provided at an event hosted by the Hebrew Institute.

1897: Eighty-two-year-old English Mathematician James Joseph Sylvester, the son of Abraham Joseph who was awarded the Copley Award, the highest honor of the Royal Society passed away today.

1897: “Eulogies of Mr. Goodhart” published today described the speeches made by Dr. Emil G. Hirsch of Chicago, Dr. Stephen S. Wise, Dr. F. de Solo Mendes and Dr. Hermann Phillips the religious director at the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society all of which spoke movingly of the contribution of the late Morris Goodhart.

1897: The Hebrew Education Society of Philadelphia, whose “annual report showed that it had an income of $9,114 last year” celebrated its 49th anniversary today.

1897: “Ephraim Lederer” has volunteered to continue giving “weekly lectures on the Constitution of the United States and the requirements for the proper performance of the duties of a citizen” in Philadelphia.

1897: “Catholic Praises of Jewess” published today described the praise Reverend Sylvester Malone, State Regent and Pastor of the Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Brooklyn had for “Mrs. Nannette Marks, a Jewish lady who has become famous throughout Brooklyn for her benevolent acts, irrespective of creed and who walked to the altar rail and presented a bouquet of flowers” to Reverend Maurice Ryan, the Paulist missionary.

1898: Two days after he had passed away, 39 year old Abraham Rosenberg was buried today at the “Plashet Jewish Cemetery” in London.

1899: Today the General Conference of American Rabbis discussed a paper entitled “The National Idea in Judaism with Especial Reference to the Zionistic Movement” presented by Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch of Chicago, Illinois.

1899: In Riga, “Mr. and Mrs. Richard Taub” gave birth Harry Taub, the Columbia University trained pharmacist and professor of pharmacology at his alma mater Harry Taub, the president of Bayside Jewish Center and brother of Abraham Taub, a fellow faculty member of the Columbia College of Pharmacy who was the husband of Mildred Taub with whom they raised two children – Robert and Sylvia.

1899: Three hundred forty-five guests attended the celebration of the 80th birthday of Rabbi Isaac M. Wise which included a dinner at the Phoenix Club in Cincinnati, Ohio hosted by the General Conference of American Rabbis.

1899: It was reported today that the next musicale and tea sponsored by the Woman’s Committee of the Hebrew Technical Institute will take place next month at Sherry’s

1900(13th of Adar II, 5660): Fast of Esther; erev Purim

1900: Parts of the body of Ernst Winter, a student who had disappeared in Konitz, West Prussia were discovered in a nearby lake and an arm was found in a cemetery.

1900: Following the death of a student in Konitz, Poland, local Jews are faced with another “blood libel” episode. While Count Plucker promoted riots against the Jews, Wolf Israelski was accused and arrested. After Israelski was proven innocent, two other Jews, Moritz Lewy and Rosenthal, were arrested on the same charge. Rosenthal and Lewy were acquitted, yet Lewy was sentenced to four years for denying he knew the victim. All the evidence was based on the testimony of a petty thief named Masloff who later received only one year for perjury.

1900: In Hampstead, UK, barrister Herman Cohen and his wife gave birth to Eastbourne College graduate and WW I Royal Navyman Kenneth Herman Cohen who was the head of  Secret Intelligence’s Vichy branch during WW II where he organized disruptive activities behind enemy lines.

1901: Benjamin and Rose Ratner gave birth to Samuel Augie Ratner, the resident of Minneapolis who was the husband of Betty Ratner and the father Cornell College (Mt. Vernon, IA) graduate Rochel Rachel Kingman

1901: Birthdate of Starobin, Belarus, native Nathan Chenitz the CCNY grad and U of Pennsylvania trained dentist who began practicing in Newark, NJ in 1926.

1902(6th of Adar II, 5662): Parashat Pekudi

1902: Today Charles Scribner and Son published Letters from Egypt and Palestine by the late Maltbie D. Babcock, D.D.

1903(16th of Adar, 5663): Purim Meshulash

1903: In Washington, DC, Mary Sweitzer Strauss and Admiral Joseph Strauss gave birth to Rear Admiral Elliot B. Strauss who was awarded a Bronze Star with Combat “V” for his role in the Dieppe Raid of 1942 and the Normandy Invasion.

1903(16th of Adar, 5663): Sixty-four-year-old Adolph Loeb the native Bechtheim, Germany, the son of Jakob and Ester Loeb and the husband of Johanna Loeb passed away today in Chicago.

1904: Rabbi Schulman of Temple Beth-El opened the exercises marking the dedication and opening of Mount Sinai Hospitals ten buildings” that were attended by Governor Odell, Isaac Wallach, Edward Lauterbach and Rabbi De Sola Mendes who “delivered the invocation.”

1904: Rabbi Jacob Sonderling, the Silesia, Germany born son of Johanna Lebowitsch and Wilhelm Sonderling married Emma Klemann today after which he served as an Army Rabbi and a member of the staff of Field Marshal Von Hindenburg after which he moved to the United States where he served as the spiritual leader of the First Hungarian Congregation in Chicago and Temple Beth El in Manhattan Beach, NY.

1904: Rabbi Jacob Sonderling, the German born son of Wilhelm and Johanna Sonderling, who served on the staff of Field Marshall Von Hindenbrug during WW I, married Emma Klemann

1905: Birthdate of Nat Perrin, the lawyer turned gag writer whose career spanned Marx Brothers Movies to “The Addams Family” – a 1960’s sitcom.

1905(8th of Adar II, 5665): Seventy-seven-year-old Meyer Guggenheim, the native of Switzerland, who came to the United States in 1847 where he made his fortune in mining and smelting and became the patriarch of the Guggenheim clan consisting of his wife Barbara and ten children, passed away today.

1906: While delivering a speech at Chesham on the question of the excluding aliens from settling in the British Isles, The Honorable Lionel Walter Rothschild, Member of Parliament for the Aylesbury Division of Buckinghamshire, “referred to the number of poor Russian refugees excluded from Great Britain in the last few months.” Based on what he considered to be “irrefutable evidence,” Mr. Rothschild, the son of Lord Rothschild, reported that those Russians who were forced to return to their native land were shot at the border without being given any kind of trial.

1907: “Fanny "Faigel" (née Anczkowski) and Abraham Atlas (formerly Atlasowicz)” gave birth to

Sol G. Atlas, the recipient of the Man of the Year from Yeshiva University in 1969 and was the husband “of the former Edythe Samuel” with whom he had one daughter, Sandra.

1907: The Jewish Chronicle reported that, a departure from Jewish burial customs, “at the cemetery of the United London Synagogue” a minister officiated at the burial of ashes.

1908: Countess Muravieff, one of Russia most prominent actresses is scheduled to begin her tour of America with a performance of Ibsen’s “Nora” which will be followed at a later date by a performance of “The God of Revenge,” “Sholom Ash’s Jewish Play.

1908: With Passover a month away, the baking of Matzoth has become a full-time operation in New York with large moving vans having to be used to take the boxes of unleavened bread from the bakeries to the various distribution centers around town. A bakery on 33rd Street between Second and Third Avenues is actually having to work around the clock to keep up with the worldwide demand for Matzoth.

1909: It was reported today that while Dr. Charles A. Eaton, the pastor of the Madison Avenue Baptist Church was sermonizing on “the New American” that will grow out of the mingle of native Americans and immigrants he said, “The Jews have got your theatres and most of your banks.  They will soon hold you in the hollow of their hand.  Most have no religion at all.  What can we do with them? I say, let them come to the Madison Avenue Baptist Church.  There was one Jew would have received here – Jesus Christ.  There was another – Paul.”

1910: It was reported today that when he was in Europe Samuel Gompers “was styled as a socialist” but in the United States he is known as a “trade Unionist.”

1911(15th of Adar, 5671): Sushan Purim

1911: Following yesterday’s funeral for Albert J. Teller, a young man who rose from being a “ragged boy of the streets” to become a bookkeeper and an inspiration to his Jewish peers several “older men” in the community decided that he be remembered permanently by creating “a memorial prize for debating which will be offered by the Young Men’s Hebrew Association.”

1912: The Turkish Ministry of the Interior to the Governor of Jerusalem issued a decree permitting the Jews to place benches and light candles in front of the Western Wall.

1913: The Annual Conference on Child Labor to which Leon Schwarz of Mobile, Alabama had been appointed as a delegate continued for a third day Jacksonville, Florida.

1913: It was reported today that “the will of the late Moses Strauss, a Polk County, Iowa, pioneer and financier bequeathed $75,000 to charities in Des Moines, IA.

1914(17th of Adar, 5674): Eighty-year-old Prussian born Canadian artist; a founding member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts passed away today in Montreal.

http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio.php?id_nbr=7660

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Raphael#/media/File:Behind_Bonsecours_Market.png

1914: Birthdate of New York native, high school drop-out and singing water Joseph Roszawikz the USAA Corps veteran who gained fame as Joe E. Ross best known for his role in the ridiculous sitcom “Car 54.”

https://www.nytimes.com/1982/08/15/obituaries/joe-e-ross-dies-at-67-actor-in-tv-s-car-54.html

1915: Birthdate of Joe E. Ross, borscht belt comedian and star of such television sitcoms as “Car 54 Where Are You?”

1915:  In Vilkovishky, Lithuania, Rabbi Simon Eisenstein Barzilay and Taube (Rosenthal) Barilay gave birth to American historian and educator, Isaac Eisenstein, the husband of and father of Sharonah and Joshua Barzilay.

1915: Birthdate of Bronx native Theodore Wilentz “who with his brother, Eli, owned the Eighth Street Bookshop, a bustling bibliophilic beehive in the 1950's and 60's.” (As reported by Douglas Martin)

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/05/06/nyregion/theodore-wilentz-86-dies-a-bookman-extraordinaire.html

1915: The Austrian Hungarian Consul General in New York issued a dispatch today that had originated in the foreign office in Vienna

1915: Birthdate of broadcast journalist David Schoenbrun, the CBS broadcast bureau chief in Washington DC and Paris France who was one of the famous “Murrow boys.”

https://www.nytimes.com/1988/05/24/obituaries/david-schoenbrun-is-dead-at-73-veteran-journalist-for-cbs-news.html

1915: It was reported today that the “relief cargo” being carried by U.S. collier Vulcan, “represents an expenditure of $150,000 by the American Jewish Relief Committee” and the flour is the primary staple in the shipment.

1915: Birthdate of Dr. David Wilfred Abse, the native of Cardiff, Wales  and Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Virginia from 1962 until 2000 whose siblings included poet Dannie Abse and Welsh Labor Member of Parliament Leopold “Leo” Abse.

1915: It was reported today that L. H. Levine and E.W. L. Epstein of New York will direct the distribution of relief supplies once they arrive at Jaffa.

1915: It was reported today that the membership in the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society had grown from 15,357 in 1913 to 46,023 in 1914 and that the society had raised $112, 988 last year and spent $110,869.

1915: It was reported today that Jewish immigration had fallen form 130,237 in 1913 to 66,557 in 1914.

1916: It was reported today that in Philadelphia, the newly formed Maccabean Regiment has “unanimously elected Jacob D. Lit, one the owners of Lit Brothers department store which had been founded as dress and millinery shop by his sister Rachel, as Colonel” and “Isidore Stern, a prominent attorney as Chairman.”

1916: An expeditionary force under the command of General Pershing crossed into Mexico in an attempt to capture Pancho Villa – a military action that would include enough Jews that Rabbis were sent to the Mexican border by the Army and Navy Committee and the Central Conference of American Rabbis to conduct services for the High Holidays and Sukkoth.

1916: As part of the ceremonies marking the dedication of “the new Temple of Sinai Congregation of the Bronx” the Sinai Auxiliary Societies are scheduled to host a reception tonight complete with music and speakers.

1917: “Herman Bernstein, the editor of the American Hebrew…predicted” tonight “that equal rights for the Jews would be one the important results of the Reactionary Party.”

1917: Czar Nicholas II abdicated bringing an end to the Romanov dynasty which had caused so much suffering for the Jewish people.

1917(NS): Sergei Zubatov, “the head of the Czarist Secret Police in Moscow” who “convinced” the imprisoned Manya Shochat to form “tame” workers “organizations that would work for reform rather than the overthrow of the government” which would supposedly “help achieve rights for Jews” – a supposition which the policeman knew was false and which the Jewish leader came to see as a “pipe dream” committed suicide today.

1918: In Lemberg, the police searched the “headquarters of the Paolie-Zionists and Union Jewish Workmen and arrested several leaders.”

1918: In Frankfort, a “conference of Orthodox Jewish organizations resolved that the support of a Jewish settlement in Palestine is the religious duty of all Jewry and pledged itself to work for the emancipation of Jews everywhere.”

1919(13th of Adar II, 5697): Parashat Vayikra; Shabbat Zachor; Erev Purim

1919(13th of Adar II, 5679): Albert, (Avraham) Harkavy passed away. Born in Belarus in 1835, Harkavy led an unusual life for a Russian Jew. After getting a Yeshiva education he received two degrees from the University of St. Petersburg before gaining a doctorate while studying abroad. In a country wracked by anti-Semitism, he was appointed head of the Oriental Division in the Imperial Public Library, a position he held until his death.

1919: This evening, Drs. David Philipson of Cincinnati, Samuel Schulman, Joseph Silverman and Ambassador Abram I. Elkus were among the speakers at Temple Emanu-El where the campaign to raise funds for organizations created by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise as a way of “commemorating the centenary of his birth” was formally begun.

1919: In Connecticut, Michael and Rose Abitz gave birth to Irving Abitz, who served with Patton’s Third Army during WW II and who was the husband of Ruth Abitz.

1919: “Ex-Ambassador Henry Morgenthau” sailed for Europe today where “he will assist in Red Cross work…and help to arrange the international convention” of the Red Cross” which will be held in Geneva after the peace treaty ending the World War has “been promulgated.”

1919: The New York office of the Jewish Correspondence Bureau opened today as a New York Corporation with a total capitalization of $26, 650.

1920: Birthdate of Minneapolis, MN, native and sportswriter and broadcaster Sid Hartman who took time off from his journalistic career to serve as the acting general manager of the NBA Minneapolis Lakers.

1920: “The Blue Flame,” starring Theda Bara as “Ruth Gordon” premiered on Broadway at the Shubert Theatre.

1920(25th of Adar. 5680): Forty-seven-year-old Staten Island native and Columbia educated historian George Louis Beer, a member of the American delegation to the Paris Peace Conference and winner of the Loubat Prize who was the husband of Edith Hellman, the niece of Columbia trained academic Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman, the son of banker Joseph Seligman passed away today.

1921: Birthdate of John Patrick Kenneally, the illegitimate son of a wealthy Jewish textile manufacturer, who won the Victoria Cross for his bravery on April 29 and April 30, 1943, while fighting in Tunisia.

1922: After Egypt gains nominal independence from the United Kingdom, Fuad I becomes King of Egypt. This is the same King Faud I who declared in 1917, when he was the Guest of Honor at the opening of the Zionist Movement in Cairo and Alexandria that: "You Jews of Egypt, will always be protected by us, until you go back to your land, the Land of Israel."

1923: Birthdate of Rostam Bastuni, an Arab Christian who was the “the first Arab citizen of Israel to represent a Zionist party in the Knesset.”

1923: “Old Heidelberg” a silent film starring Eugen Burg and directed by Hans Behrendt who was murdered at Auschwitz in 1942.

1924: Birthdate of Michael Harsegor an Israeli historian and a professor for history at the Tel Aviv University who specialized in the history of Europe in the late Middle Ages.

1924: Birthdate of Richard Topus, who gained fame as pigeon trainer during World War II. Born in Brooklyn, Topus was the son of Russian Jewish immigrants. Growing up in Flatbush, he fell in love with the pigeons his neighbors kept on their rooftops in spacious coops known as lofts. His parents would not let him have a loft of his own — they feared it would interfere with schoolwork, Andrew Topus said — but he befriended several local men who taught him to handle their birds. Two of them had been pigeoneers in World War I, when the United States Army Pigeon Service was formally established.

“In January 1942, barely a month after Pearl Harbor, the United States War Department sounded a call to enlist. It wasn’t men they wanted — not this time. The Army was looking for pigeons. To the thousands of American men and boys who raced homing pigeons, a popular sport in the early 20th century and afterward, the government’s message was clear: Uncle Sam Wants Your Birds. Richard Topus was one of those boys. He had no birds of his own to give, but he had another, unassailable asset: he was from Brooklyn, where pigeon racing had long held the status of a secular religion. His already vast experience with pigeons — long, ardent hours spent tending and racing them after school and on weekends — qualified him, when he was still a teenager, to train American spies and other military personnel in the swift, silent use of the birds in wartime. World War II saw the last wide-scale use of pigeons as agents of combat intelligence. Mr. Topus, just 18 when he enlisted in the Army, was among the last of the several thousand pigeoneers, as military handlers of the birds were known, who served the United States in the war. Pigeons have been used as wartime messengers at least since antiquity. Before the advent of radio communications, the birds were routinely used as airborne couriers, carrying messages in tiny capsules strapped to their legs. A homing pigeon can find its way back to its loft from nearly a thousand miles away. Over short distances, it can fly a mile a minute. It can go where human couriers often cannot, flying over rough terrain and behind enemy lines. By the early 20th century, advances in communications technology seemed to herald the end of combat pigeoneering. In 1903, a headline in The New York Times confidently declared, “No Further Need of Army Pigeons: They Have Been Superseded by the Adoption of Wireless Telegraph Systems.” But technology, the Army discovered, has its drawbacks. Radio transmissions can be intercepted. Triangulated, they can reveal the sender’s location. In World War I, pigeons proved their continued usefulness in times of enforced radio silence. After the United States entered World War II, the Army put out the call for birds to racing clubs nationwide. Tens of thousands were donated. In all, more than 50,000 pigeons served the United States in the war. Many were shot down. Others were set upon by falcons released by the Nazis to intercept them. (The British countered by releasing their own falcons to pursue German messenger pigeons. But since falcons found Allied and Axis birds equally delicious, their deployment as defensive weapons was soon abandoned by both sides.) But many American pigeons did reach their destinations safely, relaying vital messages from soldiers in the field to Allied commanders. The information they carried — including reports on troop movements and tiny hand-sketched maps — has been widely credited with saving thousands of lives during the war. Mr. Topus enlisted in early 1942 and was assigned to the Army Signal Corps, which included the Pigeon Service. He was eventually stationed at Camp Ritchie in Maryland, one of several installations around the country at which Army pigeons were raised and trained. There, he joined a small group of pigeoneers, not much bigger than a dozen men. Camp Ritchie specialized in intelligence training, and Mr. Topus and his colleagues schooled men and birds in the art of war. They taught the men to feed and care for the birds; to fasten on the tiny capsules containing messages written on lightweight paper; to drop pigeons from airplanes; and to jump out of airplanes themselves, with pigeons tucked against their chests. The Army had the Maidenform Brassiere Company make paratroopers’ vests with special pigeon pockets. The birds, for their part, were trained to fly back to lofts whose locations were changed constantly. This skill was crucial: once the pigeons were released by troops in Europe, the Pacific or another theater, they would need to fly back to mobile combat lofts in those places rather than light out for the United States. Mr. Topus and his colleagues also bred pigeons, seeking optimal combinations of speed and endurance. After the war, Mr. Topus earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in business from Hofstra University. While he was a student, he earned money selling eggs — chicken eggs — door to door and afterward started a wholesale egg business. In the late 1950s, Mr. Topus became the first salesman at Friendship Food Products, a dairy company then based in Maspeth, Queens; he retired as executive vice president for sales and marketing. (The company, today based in Jericho, N.Y. and a subsidiary of Dean Foods, is now known as Friendship Dairies.) In the 1960s and early ’70s, Mr. Topus taught marketing at Hofstra; the C. W. Post campus of Long Island University; and the State University of New York, Farmingdale, where he started a management-training program for supermarket professionals. In later years, after retiring to Scottsdale, he taught at Arizona State University and was also a securities arbitrator, hearing disputes between stockbrokers and their clients. Though the Army phased out pigeons in the late 1950s, Mr. Topus raced them avidly till nearly the end of his life. He left a covert, enduring legacy of his hobby at Friendship, for which he oversaw the design of the highly recognizable company logo, a graceful bird in flight, in the early 1960s. From that day to this, the bird has adorned cartons of the company’s cottage cheese, sour cream, buttermilk and other products. To legions of unsuspecting consumers, Andrew Topus said last week, the bird looks like a dove. But to anyone who really knew his father, it is a pigeon, plain as day. Mr. Topus passed away in December of 2008.

1925(19th of Adar, 5685): Mordecai Spector passed away.

1925(19th of Adar, 5686): Forty-six-year-old Ukrainian native Samuel Dreben, known as the “fighting Jew” because of the many decorations received while serving in the United States Army passed away today “when a nurse accidentally injected him with the wrong substance.”

http://www.theoccident.com/wildwest/dreben.html

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/sam-dreben

https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/dreben-samuel

1926: James N. Rosenberg of New York, the Vice Chairman of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee conferred today in Washington with Secretary Herbert Hoover who “expressed great interest in the plans” of the committee to provide relief for the Jews in Russia and said “he would assist the committee as far as circumstances permitted.”

1926: Birthdate of Sheldon Jerome Segal, “who led the scientific team that developed Norplant, the first significant advance in birth control since the pill, and who also developed other long-acting contraceptives…”

1926: David A. Brown, the national chairman of the national campaign to raise fifteen million dollars for the relief of Jews in “Russia, Poland, Palestine, Eastern and Southeastern Europe” is scheduled to address the first meeting of the Women’s Division of the New York campaign chaired by Mrs. Abram I. Elkus, the wife of the former ambassador and supported by Mrs. Jacob Schiff, the honorary chairman.

1927: In Vienna, violinist Max Rostal and his wife gave birth to psychologist Sybil Bianca Giuliett Eysenck the psychologist and editor of “Personality and Individual Differences” whose husband Hans was raised by a grandmother who, although a devout Lutheran, died in a concentration camp because “she ‘apparently’ was from a Jewish family.”

1927: “The Csarda Princess” a romance film directed by Hanns Schwarz and with music by Artur Guttman was released today in Germany and Hungary.

1927: The libel suit that Aaron Sapiro brought against Henry Ford’s newspaper, the laughably named Dearborn Independent (it was published in Dearborn, but hardly independent since nothing was published in it that did not reflect the views of Ford) began today.

1928(23rd of Adar, 5688): Sixty-four-year-old Charles Alexander Loeser, the Harvard graduate and husband of pianist Olga Lebert Kaufman who created one of the great collection of “early Renaissance art furniture” while living in Florence.

http://museicivicifiorentini.comune.fi.it/en/palazzovecchio/donazione_loeser02.htm

https://izi.travel/en/ce5e-biography-of-charles-loeser/en

1929: Birthdate of Betty Asher, who as Betty (Mrs. Jacob) Levin would grow up to be a marvelous person, who raised four fine children, taught school, opened her heart and home to one and all and was a life-long partner to her husband of blessed memory.

1930(15th of Adar, 5690): Parashat Tetzaveh

1930: Dedicatory exercises for the Temple Rodeph Sholom’s new home in Manhattan continued for a second day.

1931: In Waco, TX, during the Great Depression, Sanger Brothers the department store founded by Sam and Isaac Sanger closed its doors today.

https://wacohistory.org/items/show/85

1931: In what was “the first split in the US Troytskyist movement” Albert “Weisbord and his wife launched an independent Marxist group, the Communist League of Struggle, which existed until 1937.”  (Editor’s note – this intermural fight seemed so important at the time, but in the great scheme of things have proven meaningless like so much else.)

1932: Today at Macy’s Department Store shoppers can buy “Cultured Pearl Necklaces” from “a new shipment straight from the Japanese fisheries for $39,50 and “commodes” that are “fine collector pieces” for as little as $69.50.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1932/03/15/105790029.html?pageNumber=7

1932: In an article datelined London, the Associate Press describes “the Jewish Olympiad at Tel Aviv, Palestine” as one the “four great athletic competitions of 1932” putting it in the same category as the world’s Tenth Olympic Games to be held in Los Angeles. “More than mere physical contests, the Jewish games serve both body and soul. They recall the protest of ancient Maccabees against the Greek Olympiads which glorified Athenian physique.”

1933: In Brooklyn, Nathan and Celia (née Amster) Bader gave birth to their second daughter, Ruth Joan Bader who gained fame as Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

http://www.fjc.gov/servlet/nGetInfo?jid=865

1933: Three Jews were arrested by Storm troopers in Breslau were beaten and bloodied.

1934: “New Faces of 1934” with lyrics by Viola Brothers Shore opened on Broadway today at the Fulton Theatre on 46th Street.

1934: “Romance of Ida” a film based on a book by the same name directed by Steve Sekely was released in Hungary today.

1935: “The People’s Enemy,” co-starring Melvyn Douglas, featuring Sheldon Leonard, with a screenplay by Gordon Kahn and filmed by cinematographer Joseph Ruttenberg was released today in the United States.

1935: Bernard S. Deutsch, New York’s President of the Board of Alderman, met with the team of Jewish athletes that will be representing the United States at the World Maccabiah Games

1935: According to a statement issued today by Dr. E.L. Sukenik, Professor of Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, twelve pieces of broken pottery found on the site of ancient Lachish destroy the very foundations of biblical "higher criticism."

1935: Birthdate of actor Judd Hirsch best known for his role in the hit sitcom, “Taxi.”

1936: The Joint Distribution held a memorial meeting at the Commodore Hotel where tribute was paid “to the memory of Paul Sandor, statesmen, member of the Hungarian Parliament and leader in the organization and legislation to preserve Hungarian Judaism.”

1936: In Tel Aviv, shops were closed “as a sign of grief for the plight of the Jews of Poland said to be the victims of renewed pogroms.” The economic protests “coincided with a mass meeting called by the Jewish National Council of Palestine.” According to published reports, Polish Jewry is facing a threatened prohibition of kosher slaughtering in the Polish republic.

1936: “The Ages-Old Battleground of Conflicting Faiths” published today provides a detailed review of The Battleground: Syria and Palestine by Hilaire Belloc. (Eighty years later to the day, sounds like this book was published to match today’s headlines.)

1936: Two days after he had passed away, funeral services are scheduled to be held at Temple Emanu-El for seventy-six-year-old attorney Henry Wollman which will be led by Rabbi Samuel H. Goldman and will be attended by Julian Mack and Albert Ottinger.

1936: In London, Doctor Chaim Weizmann is scheduled to address a meeting that will mark the start of an appeal “to British Jewry to raise one million English pounds for the expatriation of Jews from Germany.”

1936: “Mass Lesson In Charity” published today described plans for the upcoming pageant at the Roxy Theatre that “will portray historical episodes illustrating the evolution of the tradition of Jewish charity from Old Testament times to the present.”

1936: Birthdate of Howard “Howie” Greenfield, the Brooklyn native who formed a successful songwriting partnership with Neil Sedaka with whom he co-wrote four songs performed his Sephardic Jewish friend that reached first place on Billbaord.

1937: The Palestine Post reported that after Shlomo Gafni and Hanoch Metz were murdered and robbed near Nazareth, Gedaliah Geller, 36, Moshe Zalman Ben-Sasson, 33, and Yehuda Eliovitz, 28, of Yavne¹el were murdered nearby. Police dogs followed the tracks to Tiberias. Ammunition disappeared from a sealed government armory at Kfar Tavor and there was sporadic shooting all over Galilee. Dr. Chaim Weizmann accepted a donation of £5,000 for the Yishuv¹s security and development from the British Synagogues Federation.

1937: Dr. James Bryant Conant the President of Harvard is scheduled to deliver a lecture on “the ideals of scholarship and academic freedom” which is the third in a series of lectures sponsored by the Semi-Centennial Committee of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America.

1937: Based on a cablegram from Gordon Loud, who was leading the Megiddo Expedition sponsored by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, to Dr. John A. Wilson, Director of the Institute, an announcement was made that gold, gems and vessels hidden at Megiddo dating back to 1400 BCE had been discovered. It is speculated that the treasure was hidden there by some hitherto unnamed “Prince of Megiddo.”

1938(12th of Adar II, 5698): Morris Tankus, a member of the Workmen’s Circle, passed away today in Chicago.

1938: As the Nazis took over Prague Martha and Waitstill Sharp who were running one of the most successful refugee rescue operations in Europe finished burning their notes to keep any information from failing into the hands of the SS.

1938: Today, “all over Austria,” as “excited crowds are cheering the union” with Germany, “the Jews of Austria” who have been “loyal citizens” “now find themselves disfranchised, barred from public office, deprived of their citizenship, harried and beaten in the streets.”

1939: Felix Weltsch left Prague with Max Brod and his family on the last train out of Czechoslovakia. In Palestine, Weltsch worked as a librarian in Jerusalem until his death in 1964.

1939: Following today’s occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Germans, Czech diplomate  Egon Hostovský left Brussels, “emigrated to Paris” then moved on to Portugal before finally arriving in New York in 1941.

1939: German troops marched into Prague in what was the last act of German aggression before the start of World War II. It also brought the Jews of Czechoslovakia under the control of the Nazis

1939: In Slovakia, Alexander Mach became commander of the Hlinka Guards, the Slovak Nazis who helped deport the Jews to Auschwitz.

1939: Today, one day after “Slovakia seceded from Czechoslovakia and became a separate pro-Nazi state” “Carpathian Ruthenia proclaimed its independence” three days before it would be swallowed up by Hungary.  (The unraveling of central Europe just before WW II was more than just a case of Hitler on the march.)

1939: The family of historian Dr. Yehuda Bauer left Czechoslovakia for Palestine. Bauer’s life reads like some character out of one of those historic fiction novels that Leon Uris would write. It spans everything from membership in the Palmach to a distinguished academic career.

1940: In the Bronx, Benjamin Faerstein, a dentist, and “the former Rose Rosenberg,” “Jewish immigrants from what is now the Ukraine” gave birth to Florence Ina Faestein who gained fame as poet and translator Chana Bloch. (As reported by William Grimes)

1940: “Young Tom Edison,” a biopic directed by Norman Taurog with a script co-authored by Dore Schary was released in the United States today.

1940: Birthdate of Judith Rose Fingeret, the Pittsburgh native, who, as Judith F. Krug, led the campaign by libraries against efforts to ban books, including helping found Banned Books Week, then fought laws and regulations to limit children’s access to the Internet.

1941: In Amsterdam, Etty Hillesum a young woman studying Slavic languages at Amsterdam University recorded her rage of the deportations (of the Jews) writing in her diary “The whole German nation must be destroyed root and branch. They are all scum.”

1942: The First Dünamünde Action, a murderous assault designed “to execute Jews who had recently been deported to Latvia from Germany, Austria, Bohemia and Moravia” conducted by the Nazis and their Latvian collaborators began today in the Biķernieki forest, near Riga, Latvia.

1942: In Brooklyn, bookkeeper Eleanor Friedman and insurance salesman Alan Jacob Friedman gave birth to Alan Jacob Friedman “a physicist who specialized in communicating the tenets of science to nonscientists and as the director of the New York Hall of Science in Queens oversaw its growth from a moribund museum to one of the city’s formidable educational institutions.”

1942(26th of Adar, 5702): Seventy-year-old Viennese born composer and conductor Alexander von Zemlinksy passed away today in the United States.

http://www.zemlinsky.at/en/

http://orelfoundation.org/composers/article/alexander_zemlinsky/

1943: In Toronto, Canada, “Esther (née Sumberg), a musician, and Milton Cronenberg, a writer and editor’ gave birth to David Paul Cronenberg  a Canadian film director and occasional actor who is one of the principal originators of what is sometimes known as the "body horror" genre, which explores people's fears of bodily transformation and infection.

http://www.filmreference.com/film/84/David-Cronenberg.html

http://thechronicleherald.ca/heraldmagazine/99409-canadian-icon-david-cronenberg

1943: The deportation of the Jews from Thrace began. When Hitler was dismembering the Balkans, he gave Thrace to Bulgaria. The price was for the Nazis largesse was the extermination of the local Jewish population. The Jews of Thrace ended up at Treblinka. At the time of the deportation, Anthony Eden, the British Foreign Minister was meeting in Washington with the Cordell Hull, the Secretary of State. Hull raised the issue of rescuing the Balkan Jews. Eden cautioned against this. After all, Hitler might offer the Allies the Jews of Poland and Germany as well and there simply were not enough ships available for such an effort.

1943(8th of Adar II, 5703): At the Theresienstadt Ghetto, Trude Neumann died of starvation. She was the daughter of Theodor Herzl, founder of the Zionist movement.

1943: “The Silver Fleet,” a British war movie co-produced by Emeric Pressburger and filmed by cinematographer Erwin Hillier.

1943: In Cleveland, Ohio, “Helen (Smolen) Moss, a schoolteacher, and Nelson Nathan Moss, a lawyer and small-business owner: gave birth to Harvard Business School professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter.

https://books.google.com/books?id=tV3CKGuGoRkC&pg=PT25#v=onepage&q&f=false

1943: “In the aftermath of the Stalingrad disaster, Hitler informed Joseph Goebbbels that the liquidation program should not ‘cease or pause until no Jew is left anywhere in the Reich.’”

1944: Fort Ontario, an 80-acre federal reservation on Lake Ontario, was closed today, only to be re-opened later in the year as the European refugee center that would be known as “Safe Haven.”

1944: Birthdate of Josef Joffe, the native of Łódź, Poland who grew up in West Berlin and became editor of Die Zeit, a weekly German newspaper before moving onto a career in academia in the United States.

1944: Abba Berditchev parachuted into Yugoslavia. His “mission was to assist the Jews, gather intelligence and help rescue members of the air forces who were captured or had parachuted into Romania. He did not succeed in reaching Romania, instead returning to Bari, Italy. In August 1944 Berditchev traveled to Slovakia, where he participated in the Slovak National Uprising. After two months of fighting in the mountains, Berditchev was captured by the Germans and transferred in December 1944 to Mauthausen along with other captives, where he was brutally tortured and murdered by the Nazis.”

(As chronicled by Yad Vashem

1944:  Bowing to international criticism led by the British and Americas, Turkey abolished the “Varlik Vergisi” or “Wealth Tax” levied on that nation’s non-Muslim population including the Jews.

1944: Birthdate of Adèle Geras, the native of Jerusalem, wife of Norman Geras and author Sophie Hannah who gained fame as author specializing in works for “young children and teens and winner of the National Jewish Book Award for Golden Windows.

http://www.adelegeras.com/

1944: Today, the National Council of Resistance whose members including Stephane Hessel “urged the younger generations to live by and pass on the legacy of the Resistance and its ideals of economic, social and cultural democracy.”
1945: Birthdate of New York politician Mark J. Green

1945: The exact date of the death of Anne Frank has not been established. According to one source, on this date Anne Frank died in Bergen Belsen concentration camp from Typhus shortly before the liberation. Anne was born in Frankfurt but spent most of her life in Holland. Once the deportations began Anne and her family moved to a hiding place and stayed there from July 9, 1942 until August 4, 1944 when they were betrayed. Anne had hoped to become a writer and succeeded beyond anything she could have imagined when her diary was published after World War II

1946: British premier Attlee agreed to India's right to independence. This decision had a major, if under-reported effect on the future of the Jews in Palestine. Once the British decided to give up India, the need to protect the Suez Canal, the British lifeline to India, had greatly diminished. The British had wanted the Palestine Mandate primarily to protect this lifeline. Now that this would no longer be needed, the British were prepared to give up the Palestine Mandate which led to the creation of the state of Israel two years later.

1947: For the first time, British authorities have shipped “authorized immigrants” from Palestine to Cyprus on Shabbat, the Jewish day of rest. The immigrants are Jews who had come to Palestine aboard the Susannah.

1948: Birthdate of Kate Bornstein, American transgender author.

1948: “The meeting of the United Nations Security Council scheduled today for consideration of the Palestine question was postponed until 2:30 P.M. tomorrow as a result of an eleventh-hour decision by the United States, China and France to ask Jews and Arabs whether they would agree to a truce in the Holy Land,”

1948: “A spokesman of the Jewish Agency protested today that the seven-day curfew on road traffic which imposed on Jewish settlements in the Upper Galilee was ‘inconsistent’ with the neutrality that British security forces had professed to maintain.”

1949(14th of Adar, 5709): Purim

1949(14th of Adar, 5709): Emma Menko, the wife of Jake Menko and the daughter of Charles Wessolowsky, an earlier supporter of B’nai B’rith in Alabama, passed away.

1950: “Tarzan and the Slave Girl,” another film about the Jungle man directed by Lee Sholem, produced by Sol Lesser and written by Hans Jacoby was released today in the United States.

1952(18th of Adar, 5712): Parashat Ki Tisa; Shabbat Parah

1952: In Tangiers, a Muslim demonstration supporting union with Morocco turned violent and "many Jewish-owned shops were among those looted and burned."

1952: The Jerusalem Post reported from Egypt that a political battle was shaping up in Cairo between Palestine hard-liners and moderates over the future of the Palestine Liberation Organization¹s role in the Middle East and its relations with Jordan and Syria.

1953(28th of Adar, 5713): Eighty-year-old Herman B. Baruch, the brother of financier and Presidential adviser Bernard Baruch who was both a doctor like his father and a former Ambassador to the Netherlands   and Portugal passed away today.

http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=9403E5DB173EE53BBC4E52DFB5668388649EDE

1953(28th of Adar, 5713): Seventy-six-year-old Democratic Party leader and “chairman of the board of trustees of Yeshiva University Samuel Levy, the St Patrick Day born NYU trained lawyer and husband of Sadie Vesell Levy with whom he raised two children – Bernice and Lawrence – passed away today.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1953/03/16/83714230.pdf

 

1956: "My Fair Lady" opened on Broadway. The lyrics were written by Alan J. Lerner and the music was composed by Frederick Lowe. These are but two Jews connected with that unique American entertainment creation - the musical comedy. Some other names include the team of Rogers and Hammerstein, Moss Hart, Leonard Bernstein, Frank Loesser, Jerome Kern and the Gershwin Brothers, George and Ira.

1957(12th of Adar II, 5717): Twelve days after having been shot by Zeev Eckstein, Rudolf Israel Kastner succumbed to his wounds and died today in Tel Aviv.

http://www.jewishjournal.com/yom_hashoah/article/rudolph_kastner_gets_a_new_trial_20110426

http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/nazioccupation/kastner.html

http://movies.nytimes.com/2009/10/23/movies/23killing.html

1957: On Long Island NY, chemical engineering professor Joseph Silverman and his wife gave birth to

 David Silverman, the American animator best known for his work on the television “The Simpsons.”

1959: In Irvine, CA, Austrian born Holocaust survivor and former resident of Israel Eric Teltscher and his wife, a native of pre-state Israel gave birth to American tennis pro Eliot Teltscher.

http://www.worldtennismagazine.com/archives/14107

1961(27th of Adar, 5721): Seventy-one-year-old Bertha L. Goldberg Schlossberg, the wife of Joseph Schlossberg with whom she had three children – Harry, Regina and Selma – passed away today after which she was buried in the Lincoln Park Cemetery at Warwick, RI.

1962: “No Strings” with music and lyrics by Richard Rodgers which was the first musical he composed after the death of Oscar Hammerstein II, opened on Broadway at the 54th Street Theatre.

1962(9th of Adar II): Seventy-four-year-old Minsk native Daniel Persky who “had been a columnist for the Hebrew weekly Hadoar” since 1921 and columnist for Haaretz as well as the winner of Louis LaMed Prize winner for the best Hebrew book of 1948 for writing Ivri Anokhi (I Am a Hebrew) passed away today in New York’s Mt. Sinai Hospital.

1962: Congregation Zichron Ephriam announced today that Rabbi Arthur Schneier, who has been served as the “spiritual leader of Congregation B’nai Jacob in Brooklyn” will be installed tomorrow evening as “its new spiritual leader.”

1965: President Lyndon Johnson asked Congress to ensure everybody's right to vote regardless of any race, religion, sex, etc. This landmark legislation which was heavily supported by Jewish voters and politicians would be known as the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It would change the landscape of American politics forever. And it was a true act of political and physical courage for Johnson to make and support such a proposal.

1966(23rd of Adar, 5726): Abe Saperstein, founder of the Harlem Globetrotters passed away at age 63.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/saperstein.html

http://news.investors.com/management-leaders-and-success/100400-350265-basketball-promoter-abe-saperstein-innovations-let-his-globetrotters-glitter.htm

1967: ABC broadcast the last episode of “The Monroes” created by Milt Rosen and co-starring Barbara Hershey.

1967: “In Like Flint,” a spy spoof produced by Saul David, co-starring Lee J. Cobb, featuring Herb Edelman and with music by Jerry Goldsmith was released in the United States today.

1968(15th of Adar, 5728): Shushan Purim

1968(15th of Adar, 5728): Seventy-nine-year-old “French philanthropist and property developer” Noemie de Rothschild the Paris born daughter of Jules Halphen and Marie Hermine Rodrigues-Pereire and the granddaughter of Sephardic financier Eugene Pereire who was the husband of Maurice de Rothschild and the mother of Edmond Adolphe de Rothschild.

1969(25th of Adar, 5729): Parashat Vayakhel-Pekudei

1969(25th of Adar, 5729): Eighty-six-year-old antique dealer Abraham Ash, the husband of the former Tilly Adler with whom he had two daughters – Rose and Florence – who operated the Madison Galleries on West 45th Street passed away today.

1969: US Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas resigned under a cloud of scandal. Fortas was a close friend and advisor to Lyndon Johnson. According to some accounts, when Johnson told Fortas that he was going to appoint him the "Jewish seat" on the Supreme Court, Fortas, cautioned against this. He told Johnson that neither he, nor the Jewish community, would consider his appointment as fulfilling that role. Apparently, Fortas saw himself only nominally as a Jew and did not see this accident of birth as a steppingstone to power. Johnson ignored him and made the appointment later.

 

1970: “After 28 previews, the Broadway production” of Purlie directed by Phillip Rose who also wrote the book for this musical by Louis Johnson, opened at The Broadway Theatre.

1970(7th of Adar II, 5730): Eighty-three-year-old Sarah Grobstein, the Kaunas born daughter of Mera and Leizer Benjamin Ipp and the wife of Jacob Grobestien passed away today in Youngstown, OH.

1972: “Slaughterhouse-Five” a movie version of the novel by the same name co-starring Ron Leibman was released in the United States today.

1972: “The Godfather,” a movie version of the novel by the same name produced by Albert S. Ruddy and co-starring James Caan and Abe Vigoda opened at the Loew’s State Theatre.

1973(11th of Adar II, 5733): Ta’anit Esther

1973: An attack on the Israeli and Jordanian embassies in Paris” was “forestalled” today when “2 Arabs were arrested by French police at the French-Italian bordered, leading to the arrest of one Palestinian and one English doctor in Paris.”

1973: André Bettencourt, who like so many Frenchmen of his generation had a checkered pass, as can be seen by his service as cabinet under President Pierre Mendès France after having written during the days of Vichy France that Jews were “hypocritical Pharisees whose race has been forever sullied by the blood of the righteous” for which “they will be cursed” began serving as French Foreign Minister.

1974: “President Nixon stated that the rise in the number of Jews permitted to leave the USSR is due to his personal contacts with Soviet leaders; passage of his trade bill necessary for continuing dialogue with Russians and further emigration.”

1974: “Senators Henry Jackson and Abraham Ribicoff told Dr. Kissinger that Soviet assurance of more than 35 thousand Jewish emigration permits annually are the condition for considering compromise on the Jackson Amendment.”

1974: Funeral services were held today in Brooklyn, for Judge Harold W. Cohn, the husband of Lillian Cohn and father of Steven and Michelle who was a long-time board member of the Williamsburg YM/YWHA.

1975: In a case of Jews playing Jews, U.S. premiere of “Funny Lady” with Barbara Streisand as Fanny Brice and James Caan as Billy Rose.

1976(13th of Adar II, 5736): Ta’anit Esther and Erev Purim

1976: Just days before his 75th birthday, Jewish born set designer Jo Mielziner who converted to Catholicism passed away today. (As reported by Albin Krebs)

https://www.nytimes.com/1976/03/16/archives/jo-mielziner-dead-at-74-pioneering-set-designer-dozens-of-hits-a.html?_r=0

1976: “In Beersheba, Meir and Esther Ohana, Sephardic Jewish immigrants from Morocco gave birth to their third son, Amir Ohanah, who has served as both the Minister of Justice and the Minister of Public Safety and who “ss the first openly gay right-wing member of the Knesset and the first openly gay man from Likud to serve in the Knesset.

1977: In Johannesburg, South Aica, Melanie and Mervyn Hurwitz gave birth to Sara Hurwitz a “Rabba at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, “the president and co-founder of Yeshivat Maharat” and the wife of “lawyer Joshua Abraham, with whom she has four sons.

1977: The Jerusalem Post reported that at his press conference in Washington US President Jimmy Carter suggested how Israeli and international troops, assisted by listening stations, might possibly man Israel¹s "defense line" which would be outside of the sovereign border. He refused, however, to say where the "line" would be. He warned that further Israeli settlement in the administered territories hampered the peace effort.

1977: The Jerusalem Post reported that The Knesset Law Committee discussed legislation which would introduce partial constituency elections in Israel.

1977: The Religious Torah Front, a political alliance in Israel composed of Agudat Yisrael and Poalei Agudat Yisrael that held five seats in the Knesset split with Agudat Yisrael taking three seats and Poalei Agudat Yisrael two.

1977: The Hadash movement which included Rakah and Non-Partisans parliamentary group was formed in preparation for the 1977 elections.

1978(6th of Adar II, 5738): Fifty-year-old “Milton Perlmutter, president and chief executive officer of the Supermarkets General Corporation” passed away today.

https://www.nytimes.com/1978/03/16/archives/milton-perlmutter-head-of-store-group-president-of-supermarkets.html

1978: “House Calls,” a comedy based on a story by Julius J.Epstein and Max Shulman, directed by Howard Zeiff and co-starring Walter Matthau and Richard Benjamin was released today in the United States.

1979: In Cincinnati, Ohio, Carolyn and Mike Youkilis, a wholesale jeweler, gave birth to professional baseball player Kevin Youkilis.

1980: “The Union of Council for Soviet Jews convened an international consultation in London and in Israel, meeting with officials and local groups to coordinate efforts and discuss strategies and programs to defend Soviet Jews.”

1981: The BBC broadcast the final episode of seven-part mini-series based on Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility with a script written by Alexander Baron, the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland who had settled in the East End of London.

1982: Paul Saginaw, Michael Monahan and Ari Weinzweig founded Zingerman's, a kosher-style delicatessen, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

1983: “Over 1,000 delegates from 30 countries attended the opening session of the Third World Conference on Soviet Jewry in Jerusalem.”

1984: Ninety-one-year-old Henning Linden, the Brigadier General who led a group of reporters including Marguerite Higgins and a detachment of the 42nd (Rainbow) Infantry Division as the soldiers liberated Dachau, generating international headlines by freeing more than 30,000 Jews and political prisoners, passed away today.

1985: “Lost In America” a comedy directed by, written by and co-starring Albert Brooks was released in the United States today.

1987: In an article entitled, “For Israel and U.S., A Growing Military Partnership,” David K. Shipler describes how the relationship between the two nations continues to thrive despite the Jonathan Pollard fiasco.

1987: Today an Israeli newspaper quoted Rafael Eitan, named as the spymaster in the Pollard case, as saying that his superiors had known of the operation, contradicting the Government's position. Mr. Eitan later denied having made such a statement.

1988: CBS brought the series “My Sister Sam” featuring Rebecca Schaeffer as “Patricia Russell” back to the air today due in part to letters from fans and the 1988 Writers Guild of America strike which affected the production of other television series for CBS and the other two major television networks. (Schaeffer would be murdered by an obsessive, stalker a year later)

1990: The first London production” of “Sunday in the Park with George, a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim” “opened at the Royal National Theatre today, and ran for 117 performances, with Maria Friedman as Dot

1990: Haim Bar-Lev complete his terms as Minister of Public Security

1990: Yitzhak Rabin completed his term as Minister of Defense.

1990: Gad Yaacobi completed his term as Minister of Communications

1990: Ezer Weizman completed his term as Minister of Science and Technology.

1990: The Labor Alignment left the National Unity Government leading to the defeat of Likud’s Yitzchak Shamir.

1990: Yitzhak Moda'I and four other MKs (all of them former members of the Liberal Party) broke away from Likud to form the Party for the Advancement of the Zionist Idea, later renamed the New Liberal Party.

1992: In “Separating the Men From the Apes” published today Frans B. M.de Waal reviewed The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal by Jared Diamond.

http://www.nytimes.com/1992/03/15/books/separating-the-men-from-the-apes.html

1994(3rd of Nisan, 5754): Arthur Taubman, a self-made businessman who built the Advance Stores auto parts chain into a multimillion-dollar business passed away at the age of 92. During World War II, Mr. Taubman also helped about 500 European Jews reach the United States by filing affidavits with the immigration authorities saying the Jews were relatives. When questioned by Federal officials, he said any Jew facing death in Nazi-occupied Europe was his first cousin. In addition, he was the founding chairman of Alliance Tire and Rubber Company Ltd., which he and Prime Minister David Ben Gurion of Israel established in 1953. The company, based in Hadera, Israel, became the largest such manufacturer in the Middle East. Mr. Taubman, who was born and reared in Astoria, Queens, went to work as a stock boy in a New York department store at the age of 13 after completing the sixth grade. He served in the Navy in World War I and later began an auto parts chain in Pittsburgh. When the business failed in the early 1930's, he moved to Roanoke, Va., and started over, making a down payment on three failing auto-parts shops. This time he achieved success. The chain, Advance Stores, a privately held family business based in Roanoke, now has 370 stores. Automotive Marketing magazine estimated its 1992 sales at $320 million. Mr. Taubman was president of the chain until 1969, when he became chairman. He retired in 1973 but was vice chairman until 1985.

1995(13th of Adar II, 5755): Ta’anit Esther; Erev Purim

1995: It was reported today that Secretary of State Christopher has gotten Syria to agree to direct talks with Israel during which they hope to find a forumula for peach.

1998: Funeral services are scheduled to be held at “Boulevard-Riverside” this morning for Samuel Goldman, the husband of Bea Goldman and the “father of Eileen and Robert Roman, Elizabeth and Lawrence Goldman” who was a member of Temple Beth-El in Cedarhurst, NY which is led by Dr. Sholom Stern and Rabbi Allan Kroningold.

1998: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or special interest to Jewish readers including The Children by David Halberstam and Persian Brides by Dorit Rabinyan

2000: Barbra Streisand opened her concert at the Colonia Stadium in Melbourne.

2001 Thirty-seven-year-old Khalid Abu Elba, the Palestinian bus driver who ran over and killed eight Israelis last month, told reporters in Tel Aviv, while speaking in Hebrew that “I am not sorry.”

2002: Three Israelis made the Forbes list of 500 Billionaires - Cruise ship heiress Shari Arison Dorsman, shipping magnates Sammy and Yuli Ofer and software kingpin Gil Schwed are the world's richest Israelis. Jewish billionaires featured on the list include New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a media mogul turned Republican politician, whose $4.4 billion fortune ranks him at No. 72. Mortimer Zuckerman, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, is No. 413 with $1.1 billion

2003: “President Bush's announcement in Washington today of plans to publish the long delayed plan for Middle East peace represented a gain for Prime Minister Tony Blair at a time when the British leader is getting little lift elsewhere.”

2004(21st of Adar, 5764): “Two Palestinian suicide bombers blew themselves up minutes apart at the industrial port here today, killing 10 others and prompting Israel's prime minister to cancel a first meeting with his Palestinian counterpart.” (As reported by James Bennet)

2005: Dignitaries from all over the world attended the opening of Yad Vashem's new History Museum in Jerusalem.

2006: Attorney David Etra stays overnight at the White House on the day after Purim and when asked to explain the holiday’s meaning, Etra summed it by saying, “It was a about a crazy guy in Iran who wanted to kill all the Jews” which caused President Bush to remark that “not much has changed.”

2006: 15th of Adar 5766 – Shushan Purim. This day points out one of the differences between the Jews and those who sought to conquer or destroy them. There are still Jews around to celebrate Purim and Shushan Purim. Where are the Romans who must “Beware of the Ides of March”?

2007(25th of Adar, 5767): Stuart Rosenberg an American film and television director whose notable works included the movies Cool Hand Luke), Voyage of the Damned ,The Amityville Horror, and The Pope of Greenwich Village passed away at the age of 79.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/19/arts/19rosenberg.html

2007: As part of its program to republish out of print “classic works” Amazon published a paperback edition of Chronicle of An American Crusade by Rabbi Samuel S. Mayerberg.

https://www.amazon.com/Chronicle-American-Crusader-Samuel-Mayerberg/dp/1406758817

2007: “Stan Lee Media's new president, Jim Nesfield, filed a lawsuit against Marvel Entertainment for $5 billion, claiming that the company is co-owner of the characters that Lee created for Marvel.”

2007: USA Today reported that Businessman Jimmy Delshad is set to become the first Iranian-American mayor in the USA. The sixty-sixty-year-old Delshad, who immigrated to America at the age of 19, will assume the top job in Beverly Hills, California. As the article points out, 8,000 of the city’s 35,000 residents are of Iranian descent. Just as America benefited from the German Jews who fled Hitler in 1933, so it would appear that America is benefiting from the Iranian Jews who fled the Ayatollah in 1979.

2007: The Canadian Jewish News reported that Zahal Square, the barren space just outside the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City, is to be rebuilt by Canadians, Jewish and non-Jewish, into an attractive public gathering place and site of national celebrations and cultural events, under a joint project of the Jerusalem Foundation, the municipality and leading Israeli businesspeople.

 

2008: Shabbat Zachor, 5768

2008: The Jewish Federation of the Quad Cities and The Iowa Arts Council present Israeli Pianist Ofra Yitzhaki at the Galvin Fine Arts Center, St. Ambrose University. Ms. Yitzhaki is a recipient of the Vladimir Horowitz Scholarship at Julliard and the winner of the Van Cliburn Institute Concerto Competition.

2008: In Washington, D.C. The National League of American Pen Women hosts author Cynthia Polansky presenting a lecture, "Why a Holocaust Novel? The Far Above Rubies Journey," delving into the real-life story that inspired her novel.

2009: Soviet-born Israeli-American pianist “Yefim "Fima" Naumovich Bronfman “performed Brahms's Second Piano Concerto with the Houston Symphony Orchestra.”

2009: In an event that is part of the Chaim Kempner Author Series and is co-sponsored by the Italian Cultural Institute Robert Zweig discusses and signs Return to Naples: My Italian Bar Mitzvah and Other Discoveries at the D.C. Jewish Community Center.

2009: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The Other Side of the Island by Allegra Goodman

2009(19th of Adar, 5769): A Palestinian terrorist shot Israeli Senior Warrant Officer Yehezkel Ramzarkar, 50, and Warrant Officer David Rabinowitz, 42, as they patrolled near the northern Jordan Valley town of Massua.

2009: Over 600 Jewish professional from across North America who are attending the National Young Leadership Conference in New Orleans took a break from lectures and learning opportunities to work on restoring Archbishop Hannan High School in St. Bernard Parish which had been abandoned in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

2009(19 Adar, 5769): Twenty-four-year-old Sgt. Robert Weinger was killed near Bati Kot, Afghanistan, when his vehicle struck an explosive device.

2010: After a nearly 62-year hiatus, the renowned Hurva synagogue inside the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City has been rebuilt and is again an operational house of prayer. Hundreds of people, braving the wind and an unexpected Jerusalem chill, crowded into a courtyard opposite the outer walls of the synagogue tonight to take part in an official rededication ceremony for the newly-rebuilt shul – which stands in the exact spot it did before its destruction at the hands of the Jordanian Arab Legion during the War of Independence in 1948. Huvra’s first incarnation came in 1701, when it was constructed by disciples of Judah Hahasid. Its first destruction came some 20 years later, when those same disciples lacked the funds to repay local creditors, who in return burned the Hurva to the ground.It was nearly 150 years before the Hurva stood again, but in 1864, after a massive construction project was approved by the Ottoman Turks and funds were procured from Jewish communities the world over, a neo-Byzantine Hurva was soon towering over the rest of the Jewish Quarter. However, Hurva, which hosted the likes of Theodor Herzl and Ze’ev Jabotinsky before the creation of the state, also met with ruin. The Jordanian army took Jerusalem’s Old City in May of 1948, loaded the building with explosives and set off a blast whose smoke cloud could be seen miles away.

2010: The New York Philharmonic is scheduled to present “Sondheim: The Birthday Concert” marking the 80th anniversary of the birth of Stephen Sondheim.

2010: Phillips-Van Heusen (the Phillips part of the name goes back to a Moses and Endel Phillips a 19th century that sewed shirts and sold them in a pushcart in Pennsylvania) was “acquired by Tommy Hilfiger today for three billion dollars.”

2010: Actress Isla Fisher who took the Hebrew name “Ayala” when she converted in 2007 married actor/comedian Sacha Baron Cohen.”

2010: An Israeli lawmaker told a delegation of American Jewish leaders that he would consult with Diaspora Jewry on issues involving conversion.

2011(9th of Adar, 5771): Fifty-one-year-old “Yakov Kreizberg, an internationally known conductor praised for the depth and intensity of his interpretations” passed away today.  (As reported by Margalit Fox)

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/12/arts/music/yakov-kreizberg-orchestral-conductor-dies-at-51.html

2011: “Action Bronson's debut studio album Dr. Lecter was independently released under Fine Fabric Delegates” today.

2011(9th of Adar II): On the Jewish calendar anniversary of First Dispute Between Two Schools of Torah Thought (1st century CE). According to Chabad-Lubavitch, “The schools of Shammai and Hillel for the very first time disagreed regarding a case of Jewish law. This occurred around the turn of the 1st century. In the ensuing generations, the schools argued regarding many different laws, until the law was established according to the teachings of the "House of Hillel" -- with the exception of a few instances. According to tradition, following the arrival of the Moshiach the law will follow the rulings of the House of Shammai. All throughout, the members of the two schools maintained friendly relations with each other.”

2011: The five finalists for the Sami Rohr Prize in fiction for Jewish Literature are scheduled to meet with judges in New York City. The winner is expected to be announced shortly after these meetings.

2011: “Yolande: An Unsung Heroine” is one of the films scheduled to be shown today at the 15th New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival.

2011: Samuel Heilman is scheduled to deliver a lecture entitled “Lubavitchers: What Do They Want, and Who Sent Them?” at Ohev Shalom – The National Synagogue.

2011: Nissim Reuben, the American Jewish Committee’s Program Director for Indian-Jewish American Relations is scheduled to deliver a lecture about the Jewish community in India, Jewish Indian Americans, their relationship with Israel, and his personal story at Congregation Beth Emeth.

2011: The IDF seized a freighter ship with dozens of tons of weaponry from Iran headed for Hamas in the Gaza Strip today.

2011: At 11:00 AM this morning, people throughout the country stopped, observing five minutes of silence in honor of Gilad Schalit.

2011: The Tel Aviv Museum of Art announced the selection of painters Asaf Ben Zvi and Michael Halak as the winners of the 2011 Rappaport Prize. (As reported by Daniel Rauchwerger)

2011: Egyptian security officials said that Egypt's army captured five vehicles smuggling weapons into the country from Sudan, and apparently heading to Gaza, AP reported.

2012(21st of Adar, 5772): Seventy-four-year-old “Jerome Albert, who with his father, Dewey, created and operated Astroland, the space age-themed amusement park that breathed new life into the Coney Island Boardwalk in the 1960s” passed away today. (As reported by Denis Hevesi)

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/17/nyregion/jerome-albert-who-helped-bring-space-age-to-coney-island-dies-at-74.html?_r=2&hpw&

2012: Noa (Achinoam Nini) and Mira Awad, two of Israel’s most beloved singing stars and coexistence advocates are scheduled to perform their concert “Two Voices, One Vision.”

2012: Political Stand-up Comedian Jeremy ‘Political’ Man is scheduled to appear at the Off The Wall Comedy Basement in Jerusalem.

2012: “Non-practicing” Jewish authoress Jodi Picoult is scheduled to discuss the moral dilemmas presented in her new novel “Lone Wolf” at the Historic Sixth and I Synagogue in Washington, DC.

2012: New York Congressman Gary L. Ackerman a flamboyant Jewish Congressman from New York and a supporter of Israel announced today that he will not seek re-election.

2012: The Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepted a Grad-type Katyusha rocket fired by Gaza militants toward the southern city of Ashdod today, following hours of relative calm along Israel's border with the coastal enclave. Two more projectiles hit an open field in the Eshkol and Ashkelon regional Councils; no wounded reported.

2013: In Olney, MD, Shaare Tefila is scheduled to sponsor “Shabbat Alive!”

2013: “FDR: Anti-Semite or friend of the Jews?” published today

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/fdr-anti-semite-or-friend-of-the-jews/2013/03/15/7c5b58c6-8bee-11e2-af15-99809eaba6cb_story.html?utm_term=.40d75174b60d

2013: In Tel Aviv, the city’s annual marathon will not be run today because of the expectation of unseasonably high temperatures.  Other races, including the half marathon, are scheduled to be run as planned. (As reported by Adviv Sterman)

2013: Yotam Ben Horin and Sarai Givaty are scheduled to perform at SXSW 2013 in Austin, Texas.

2013: Playwright Jonathan Garfinkel has probably gone where no Canadian Jewish writer has gone before — Pakistan and Afghanistan — to create his new play, “Dust.”

2013(4th of Nisan, 5773): A participant in the Tel Aviv half marathon collapsed and died Friday morning, and more than 20 others were hospitalized due to extremely hot conditions. The deceased runner, Michael Michaelovitch, was a 29-year-old IDF sergeant from the settlement of Tene, south of Hebron

2013: The Jewish Home and Yesh Atid parties signed a coalition agreement with Likud-Beytenu this afternoon, paving the way for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to swear in his new government early next week

2014: The Desert Film Society is scheduled to show “The Sturgeon Queens.”

2014(13th of Adar II, 5774): Shabbat Zachor

 

2014: “My Best Holiday” is scheduled to have its New York Premiere at the New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival.

2014: Today, Masha “Gessen wrote in the Washington Post that Putin's popularity had been restored thanks to the Sochi Olympics and invasion of Ukraine, which had played on the longstanding notion "that Russia is a country under siege, surrounded by enemies and constantly on the brink of catastrophe" and added that "the only way to continue shoring up his popularity is to escalate war rhetoric and the war effort," to paint "the Western/fascist/Ukrainian enemy as ever more dangerous and the Russian invasion of Ukraine as ever more important

2014: In Springfield, VA, Congregation Adat Reyim is scheduled to host a Purim Pasta Party.

2014: In the evening, Ilan Caplan is scheduled to chant the Megalith Esther at Shir Chadish in Metairie, LA.

2014: Four Border Police soldiers were hit by a car, driven by a Palestinian, at a roadblock near Beit Ummar in Gush Etzion in what the driver claimed was an accident. (As reporterd by Yoav Zitun)

2014(13th of Adar II, 5774): Seventy-eight-year-old comedian David Brenner passed away.

http://www.davidbrennersite.com/

http://www.timesofisrael.com/jewish-comedian-david-brenner-dies-at-78/

2015: The New York Times features reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The Last Flight of Poxl West by Daniel Torday and Frank: A Life in Politics From the Great Society to Same-Sex Marriage by Barney Frank.

2015: “The kosher supermarket in Paris attacked by a jihadist gunman linked to the shootings at Charlie Hebdo magazine in January re-opened today.” (Times of Israel)

2015: World premiere of “Khoya: Jewish Morocco Sound Archive” is scheduled to take place at the 18th Annual NY Sephardic Film Festival.

2015: In Chicago the Lyric Opera is scheduled to perform “The Passenger” which tells the story of a former SS officer who thinks she sees one of her former prisoners on an ocean liner.

2015: “Two days ahead of the general election, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Zionist Union leader Isaac Herzog today continued to vie for the premiership, with the former addressing a right-wing rally in Tel Aviv in the evening and Herzog saying he was willing to form a national unity government under his own leadership.” (As reported by Marissa Newman)

2016: In Washington, DC Dr. “Pamela Nadell -- the Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women's and Gender History, Chair of the Department of History, and Director of the Jewish Studies Program at American University – is scheduled explore the lives of Jewish women who immigrated to the United States as she lectures on “Tevye’s Daughters in America.”

2016: “The Man in the Wall” and “Baba Joon” are scheduled to be shown at the Houston Jewish Film Festival

2016: “Hiker finds rare gold coin in Israel” published today described Laurie Rimon’s discovery in the eastern Galilee of “a 2,000-year-old coin with the face of Emperor Augustus…who ruled from” 27 BCE to 14 CE.

http://edition.cnn.com/2016/03/14/middleeast/israel-gold-coin-found/index.html

2016: Mosh Ben Aris, an Israeli from a Yemenite Iraqi family, is scheduled to perform at B.B. King Blues Club in New York.

2016: The Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education is scheduled to host an  “Educators' Open House  which is open to teachers and educators from around the region and is a chance to learn directly from OJMCHE staff about renowned photojournalist Ruth Gruber's importance to the topics of 20th century history.

2017: “Henryk Ross’s Grim Photos Document Life in the Lodz Ghetto” published today provides a description of an exhibition entitled “Memory Unearthed: The Lodz Ghetto Photographs of Henryk Ross” scheduled to open at The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

2017: The Jerusalem Unity Prize, which was “launched in 2015 in memory of three slain Israeli teenagers” -- Eyal Yifrach, 19; Naftali Fraenkel, 16; and Gil-ad Shaar, 16 – included Limmud, “the international network of Jewish learning communities” among the winners announced today.

2017: The Yeshiva University Museum is scheduled to present fabric artist Ita Aber and curator Bonni-Dara Michaels leading a tour of Yeshiva University Museum’s Uncommon Threads exhibition, featuring garments, textiles and jewelry from the Museum’s collection, including Aber’s 1970s customized Israeli flag.

2017: The Streicker Center is scheduled to host “The Jewish Response to Racism” presented by April N. Baskin the Union for Reform Judaism’s Vice President of Audacious Hospitality, Stosh Cotler the CEO of Bend the Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice and longtime U.S. civil rights strategist Eric Ward.

2018: The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center is scheduled to host “If Not Now, When – Impact and Response to the Rohingya Genocide.”

2018(28th of Adar, 5778): Seventy-eight-year-old Robert Samuel Grossman, the son of silk-screen printing shop owner who gained fame as a leading illustrator passed away today.  (As reported by Neil Genlinger)

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/19/obituaries/robert-grossman-illustrator-with-a-brash-touch-dies-at-78.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well

https://www.robertgrossman.com/

2018: “Journey from Tunisia” and “Remember Baghdad” are scheduled to make their premiere showing on the final night of the 21st NY Sephardic Jewish Film Festival.

2018: “Saving Neta” and “Winter Hunt” are scheduled to be shown at the Houston Jewish Film Festival.

2018: The Chabad Rosh Chodesh Society is scheduled to meet in Metairie, LA.

2018: Liz Alpern and Jeffrey Yoskowitz—cofounders of Gefilteria and coauthors of The Gefilte Manifesto: New Recipes for Old World Jewish Foods -- are scheduled to host “All About Gefilte Fish” at the Streicker Center.

2019: In Metairie, LA (suburban New Orleans), Congregation Beth Israel is scheduled to host Community Dinner featuring a talk by Jessie Wilson, author of Under Water.

2019: Despite yesterday’s rocket attacks, Balkan Beat Box, fronted by Tomer Yosef, is scheduled to perform at the Barby in Tel Aviv.

2019: Edlavitch Jewish Community Center of Washington DC is scheduled to co-host a production of “The Jewish Queen Lear,” an “1898 Yiddish play be Jacob Grodin” officially titled “Mirele Efros”

2019: Washington Hebrew Congregation is scheduled to host “District Shabbat” at the Southwest Waterfront featuring “internationally celebrated musicians Dan Nichols and Alan Goodis.”

2019: Following yesterday’s rocket attack aimed at Tel Aviv, “a rocket fired at the Eshkol Regional Council from the Gaza Strip overnight landed in the coastal enclave, failing to reach Israeli territory.” (YNET)

2020: As the world wrestles with pandemic, one bright spot is the opportunity to celebrate the birthday of Betty Asher whose virtues are too numerous to list and who is the embodiment of the term Ashish Chayel. (I would have written this even if she weren’t my aunt)

2020: “Out of concern for the welfare of our community and in accordance with the recommendations of Governor Pritzker and Mayor Lightfoot, Illinois Holocaust Museum is canceling “Jump For Justice” which was scheduled to take place today.

2020” In Belmont, MA, Beth El Temple Center is scheduled to host “Purim Drag Story Time and Purim Carnival.

2020: In Berkley, Urban Adamah has cancelled “Preparing for Passover through Meditation which had been scheduled to take place today.

2020: The Breman Museum is canceling Bearing Witness featuring Dr. Alfred Schneider which was scheduled to take place today in Atlanta.

2020: The gala honoring Rabbi Peretz sponsored by HaMaqom scheduled for today has been canceled in response to “the public concerns over COVID-19.

2020: The New York Times features reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including Separation Anxiety by Laura Zigman, The Nation City: Why Mayors Are Now Running the World by Rahm Emanuel, Facebook: The Inside Story by Steven Levy and The Ones We’ve Been Waiting For: How a New Generation of Leaders Will Transform America by Charlotte Alter.

2020: Yiddishkayt is scheduled to host “Virtual Passover Around the World” this evening online.

2021: KlezCalifornia is scheduled to host “Klezmer by Ear,” during which Klezmatics violinist and composer Lisa Gutkin teaches a workshop on how to play music by ear, including classic klezmer tunes.

2021: The National Museum of American Jewish History, for which Mitchell Levin is “an official content provider” is scheduled to present, online “For the Love of Opera,” Celebrating RBG’s 88th Birthday.”

2021: While the world is worrying about vaccinations, masks and social distancing, Betty Levin, the matriarch of the Levin Clan is spending her birthday worrying about how she will get enough fish to make her famous gefilte fish while her family and friends get to bask in her warmth for another year.

2021: Based on an announcement made yesterday by Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, Israelis have only to wait another six days for the reopening of nightclubs and bars which is scheduled to take place on

2021: The Streicker Center is scheduled to present American Jewish Matriarchs during which Pamela Nadell discusses the lives of Abigail Franks, Rebecca Gratz and Rose Sonneschein among others.

2021: The Center for Jewish History is scheduled to present Ayala Fader as she talked with Michal Kravel-Tovi about her book Hidden Heretics: Jewish Doubt in the Digital Age.

2021: Suburban Temple-Kol Ami is scheduled to “host its “Cook-Along: A Muffin can be Filling: Potato Kugel Muffins Easy and Perfect for Your Seder!” event featuring Rabbi Shana Nyer.”

2021: The Lappin Foundation is scheduled to present “Mosaics With Mia,” during which Israel-based mosaic muralist Mia Schon leads a one-hour collage workshop via Zoom during which “participants will learn how to creatively repurpose old magazines and paper to create Spring and Passover themed cards.

2021: As part of the Part of Faces of Israel Series this time marking “A Celebration of Ethiopian Jewish Heritage” Contra Costa JCC, East Bay Int’l Jewish Film Festival, Jewish Book Council and local congregations are scheduled to host a screening of “The Passengers,” a “2019 documentary about two young Ethiopian Jewish men advocating for expanded immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel.”

2021: Based on an announcement made yesterday, Israelis may feel a little safer today because “Iron Sting, the new guided mortar system, is now ready for deployment.

2022: It was reported today that a study “of Israeli health care workers, showed that even though fourth shots of either Pfizer’s or Moderna’s vaccine boosted antibody levels, they were not very effective at preventing infections.” (As reported by Sharon LaFraniere)

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/15/us/politics/pfizer-second-booster-shot-older-americans.html?searchResultPosition=2

2022: The mayor who led the seaside town of Surfside, FL, through the traumatic aftermath of the collapse of a condominium tower in which 98 people were killed last year was defeated in today’s election by Shlomo Danziger. (As reported by Maria Cramer)

2022: The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is scheduled to present “A Celebration of Persian Jewish Music in hoor of Purim” this evening with Dr. Galeet Dardashti.

2023: As part of the series “Knowledge Under Siege,” YIVO is scheduled to present a lecture by Anna Bikont on “Irene Sendler: In Hiding.”

2023: Modern Jewish Couples is scheduled to present online “Passover Prep for Jews-by-Choice.”

2023: The Sir Martin Gilbert Learning Center is scheduled to host a lecture by Allen Packwood on “Action this Day: War Aims and Strategy” the second in a four part course on “Sir Winston Churchill and the Second World War.”

2023: The Walnut Street Synagogue is scheduled to present, online, “Crackers, Crepes and Cheese: Jewish Culinary Traditions from Passover to Shavuot.”

2023: The final streaming of “Paris Boutique” presented by UK Jewish Film is scheduled to take place today.

2023: The Jewish Community Library is scheduled to present Marcia Falk as she discusses her new haggadah, which unlike traditional haggadahs, recounts the Exodus narrative in its entirety, highlights the actions of its female characters and includes new blessings.

2023: Based on previous published information hearings under the direction of MK Simcha Rothman, the chairman of the Constitution, Law and Justice committee are scheduled to come to an end today.

2024: In a special event scheduled to take place at Agnon House in Jerusalem today, at 11:30, “we will host Greenbaum for a conversation with Dr. Shira Stavabout father-daughter relations following her work as a photographer and with photographer Gilad Ophirabout generational differences in the artistic arrangements of home and body in the shadow of Israel's wars.’

2024: At Temple Judea, Rabbi Yaron and Canto Shira Ginsburg are scheduled to lead two Shabbat services with a Dessert Oneg immediately following services.

2024: The Museum at Eldridge Street is scheduled to host a “Walking Tour of the Jewish Lower East Side” during which participants can “explore an era of unparalleled growth as waves of immigrants settled, prayed, played, worked, shopped, and attended school in this neighborhood as they built their new lives in a new land.”

2024: Friends and family are over-joyed to celebrate the 95th birthday of Betty Levin, long-time partner in life of Dr. Jack Levin, Z”L, mother of four wonderful children and grandmother and great-grandmother too a whole tribe and the best aunt I could ever ask for.

2024: As March 15th begins in Israel, the Hamas held hostages begin day 161 in captivity.  (Editor’s note: this situation is too fluid for this blog to cover so we are just providing a snapshot as of the posting at midnight Israeli time.)

 

 

 

 

 



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