September 30
132
C.E. (10 Tishrei): On the secular calendar, Akivah ben Joseph known as Rabbi
Akiva passed away. He was born in 50
C.E., twenty years before the destruction of the Second Temple. According to tradition, he was an unlearned shepherd
until the age of 40 who succeeded in becoming one of the greatest of all the
Mishnaic authors (Tanaim). There are countless romantic stories regarding his
life. He is one of the Rabbis mentioned in the Haggadah who gathered at B'Nai
Brak. He decided to back Bar Kochba in
his revolt against Roman religious oppression and was then executed by the
Romans. He is one of the Ten Martyrs memorialized on the High Holidays. It is
said that while being tortured he began saying the Shema with his life ending
as he reached the word "Achad"(one).
Considering that he did not start studying until the age of forty, Akiva
is "the hero" of Jewish Adult Education. As one educator said, none of us might be an
Akiva, but thanks to Akiva, none of us can say that we are ever too old to start
studying.
420:
Saint Jerome, the creator of the Vulgate passed away in Bethlehem. A linguist
and a scholar Jerome did not trust the text of the Septuagint. Using his knowledge of Hebrew, he began a
translation of the Hebrew Bible into Latin which was completed in 405.
788:
Abd Al-Rahman, the man who laid the foundation for an impressive Muslim dynasty
in Cordoba (Spain) during what the Jews called the “Golden Age” passed away.
The grand mosque he started building still stands today over 1,300 years later,
right outside the old Jewish quarter of Cordoba. Apparently, this is a rather
common name among Muslim leaders and he is not to be confused with some of his
less distinguished brethren whose nomenclature looks similar to unlettered
Western eyes.
1187:
Crusaders surrendered to Saladin at Jerusalem.
1199:
Rambam (Maimonides) authorizes Samuel Ibn Tibbon to translate Guide of
Perplexed from Arabic into Hebrew
1337:
In Bavaria, a German knight named Hartmann von Deggenburg led his horseman
through the gates of Deckendorf, where they joined the local citizenry, in
slaughtering the local Jewish population and seizing their property. The Jews had been accused of desecrating the
host or communion wafer and the slaughter was the punishment for the foul
deed. In reality the councilors of the
city of Deckendorff desired to free themselves and all the citizens from the
debts owed to the Jews. Once again, the avarice of Christians is hidden in
religious doctrine to despoil the Jews. The anti-Semitic violence spread to
fifty-one communities, including Bohemia and Austria. To this day people
reportedly come on pilgrimages to the church where paintings show Jews in
Medieval dress desecrating the host "wafers".
1399:
Henry IV of England begins his reign even though his coronation will not take
place until October. Although the Jews
had been expelled from England and were forbidden by law to return, as is often
the case with monarchs, Henry saw himself above the law. In 1410, Henry brought
Elias Ben Sabbetai from Bologna in 1410 to serve as his physician.
1452:
The first printed book, the Johann Gutenberg Bible, appeared. For "The People of the Book" the
advent of modern printing would have an incalculable benefit on its growth and
survival.
1699:
Seventy-five-year-old Johann Leusden the Professor of Hebrew in Utrecht who
authored several works on the Hebrew philology and who “in 1660, together with
the Amsterdam rabbi and book printer Joseph Athias, published his Biblia
Hebraica, the first edition of the Hebrew Bible with numbered verses passed
away today.
1738(27th
of Tishrei, 5499): Based on the date on his tombstone,
Yosef, the son of Binyamin passed away today
after which he was buried at the Yablonov Cemetery.
1753(2nd
of Tishrei, 5514): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah
1759(9th
of Tishrei, 5520): Erev Yom Kippur
1764(4th
of Tishrei, 5520): Observance of Tzom Gedaliah since the 3rd of
Tishrei fell on Shabbat.
1765(15th
of Tishrei, 5526): Sukkot
1769:
Birthdate of New York native Bilah Juday, the daughter of Samuel Judah.
1771(22nd
of Tishrei, 5532): Shmini Atzeret
1771:
English physician Isaac Schomberg, the Cologne, Germany born son of Meyer Low
Schomberg obtained a fellowship at Cambridgde after which he was appointed
censor in 1773.
1775(6th
of Tishrei, 5536): Shabbat Shuva observed on the same day that John Hancock,
the President of the Continental Congress wrote to General George Washington
saying that members of Congress will be visiting him at his Cambridge, MA
headquarters.
1776(17th
of Tishrei, 5537): Third Day of Sukkoth observed on the same day that General
Washington wrote from his headquarters at the Heights of Harlem to John Hancock
saying “that nothing of importance has happened’ but it would seem based on
movements yesterday by the enemy that the British are up to something.
1776:
During the American Revolution, Jacob Louzada, a Loyalist “was forced to leave”
his home in Bound Brook, NJ and is not heard of again until he arrives in New
York in 1783 when the British have lost the war.
1777:
When the Continental Congress, fearing capture by Howe's British army, left
Philadelphia and held sessions in York, John Adams writes to his wife,: "I
am comfortably situated here at the house of General Roberdeau, whose
hospitality has taken in Mr. Samuel Adams and Mr. Elbridge Gerry.” General Roberdeau, who was a Jew, had, at his
own expense, opened the lead mines in Sinking Valley to supply the Continental
Army with bullets during the Revolutionary War.
1778(9th
of Tishrei, 5539): Erev Yom Kippur observed on the same that General George
Washington wrote from West Point, NY to Major General Lafayette expressing his
pleasure at the warm reception that the French general had received in Paris
and his appreciation for Lafayette’s support for the American cause.
1780(1st
of Tishrei, 5541): Rosh Hashanah observed on the same day that General
Washington wrote to Henry Clinton explaining the circumstances surround the
capture and execution of Major Andre, the spy who conspired with Benedict
Arnold.
1782(22nd
of Tishrei, 5543): Shemini Atzeret
1782(22nd
of Tishrei, 5543): Rabbi David Tebele Scheuer passed away in Mainz, Germany.
Born in Frankfurt am Main in 1712, he was one of the outstanding students of
the Shev Yaakov, Rabbi Jacob Cohen in Frankfurt. He served as Dayan of
Frankfurt during the entire time that the Pnei Yehoshua, Rabbi Yehoshua Falk
was Rabbi of Frankfurt (1741-1756). In 1759 he succeeded his father-in-law
Rabbi Nathan Otiz as Rabbi of Bamberg. There during the Third Silesian War; its
part of the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), where Austria under the Empress Maria
Theresa of Austria tried for the second time in vain to get back Silesia from
Prussia; the Prussians under King Frederick the Great ravaged and plundered the
region. In 1763 during the turmoil, Rabbi Tebele lost many of his writings
including his writings on the tractate Niddah, which he greatly bemoaned. In
1767 he was appointed as Rabbi of Mainz where he led a Yeshiva.
1784(15th
of Tishrei, 5545): Sukkoth
1784:
In Lancaster, PA, Rachel Simon and Solomon Etting gave birth to Elijah Etting
who eventually settled in Baltimore, MD.
1784:
In Newport, RI, Jochabed Levy and Moses Mendes Seixas gave birth to Gershom
Siexas.
1786(8th
of Tishrei, 5547): Parashat Ha’Azinu; Shabbat Shuva observed during Shay’s
Rebellion, an act of violence that led to the calling of the Annapolis
Convention which in turn led to the calling of the convention in Philadelphia
that created the U.S. Constitution
1789(10th
of Tishrei, 5550): As they observe Yom Kippur, American Jews feel a renewed
sense of security as the newly formed U.S. government takes shape while French
Jews felt a wide range of emotions as the French Revolution enters into its
fourth month.
1789:
In Richmond, VA, Judith Solomon and Israel I Cohen gave birth to “Jacob I.
Cohen, Jr the “President of the Baltimore Fire Insurance Company” located in
Baltimore, MD where he passed away and was buried in the family burial ground.
https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/013400/013489/html/13489bio.html
1790(22nd
of Tishrei, 5551): Shmini Atzeret
1791(2nd
of Tishrei, 5552): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah on the same day that a new
constitution dissolving the National Assembly and proclaiming France a
constitutional monarchy with a Legislative Assembly went into effect.
1792(14th
of Tishrei, 5553): Erev Sukkoth
1794:
In Richmond, VA, Judith Solomon and Israel Cohen gave birth to Miriam Cohen,
the younger sister of Jacob I. Cohen
1795(17th
of Tishrei, 5556): Third Day of Sukkoth
1798(20th
of Tishrei, 5559): Sixth Day of Sukkoth
1799(1st
of Tishrei, 5560): Last Rosh Hashanah of the 18th century
1801(23rd
of Tishrei, 5562): Simchat Torah
1801:
Birthdate of Zacharias Frankel, “the founder, in Germany, of Historical
Judaism, the forerunner of Conservative Judaism in America. A member of the
first generation of modern rabbis, Frankel fashioned a multifaceted career as
pulpit rabbi, spokesman for political emancipation, critic of radical religious
reform, editor, head of the first modern rabbinical seminary, and historian of
Jewish law. Frankel was born in Prague, then still the largest Jewish community
in Europe, into a financially comfortable family with a distinguished lineage
of rabbinic and communal leaders. His education combined traditional immersion
in Jewish texts with systematic exposure to secular studies in a manner that
was still far from typical. In 1830 he received his doctorate from the
University of Pest and in 1831 acquired the post of district rabbi of
Litoměřice, becoming the first Bohemian rabbi to hold a doctorate. His advocacy
of changes in the synagogue service, the education of the young, and the
training and role of the rabbi brought him, in 1836, an invitation from the
government of Saxony to occupy the pulpit in Dresden as chief rabbi of the
realm. Despite several subsequent offers from the much larger and rapidly
growing Jewish community of Berlin, Frankel stayed in Dresden until 1854, when
he was called to become the first director of the new rabbinical and teachers'
seminary in Breslau. By 1879, four years after his death, the seminary had
instructed some 272 students and had placed nearly 120 teachers, preachers, and
rabbis in the most important Jewish communities in Europe. A self-styled
moderate reformer in matters of religion, Frankel formulated his program of
"positive, historical Judaism" in the 1840s to stem the rising tide
of radical religious reform. Against the Reform movement's unbounded
rationalism, Frankel defended Judaism's legal character, the sanctity of
historical experience, and the authority of current practice. The term positive
pointed to prescribed ritual behavior (halakhah) as the dominant means for
the expression of religious sentiment in Judaism, while the term historical
designated its nonlegal realm, sanctified by time and suffering. What gives
Frankel's definition its dynamic quality is the role of the people. Genuine
reform evolves organically from below and not by fiat from above. It is for
this reason that Frankel repudiated the innovations of the three rabbinical
conferences of the 1840s; whether dictated by political considerations or the
canons of reason, their measures did violence to prevailing sentiment and
practice.On a popular level Frankel tried, as author and editor, to deepen
Jews' loyalty to the past by offering them a brand of heroic history that
stressed cultural achievement. As a scholar Frankel was the preeminent modern
rabbinist of his generation, and he devoted a prolific career to introducing
the concept of the development of Jewish law over time. Using the method as
well as the ideology of Friedrich C. Savigny's geschichtliche
Rechtswissenschaft, Frankel tried to recover and analyze the stages of
legal evolution, from Alexandrian exegeses of scripture to medieval rabbinic responsa.
In the process he left enduring contributions to the modern study of the
Mishnah and the Palestinian Talmud. Frankel's undogmatic research on the
Mishnah challenged the traditional image of the ancient rabbis as transmitters
rather than creators of the oral law and provoked a bitter assault in 1861 from
the Neo-Orthodox camp of Samson Raphael Hirsch. Growing religious polarization
served to clarify denominational lines and forced Frankel to occupy the middle
ground. Two institutions created by Frankel embodied, amplified, and
disseminated his vision of Historical Judaism. Die Monatsschrift für
Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judentums, which he edited for eighteen
taxing years (1851–1868), provided its readers with a balance of high-level
popularization and critical scholarship, setting the standard for all later
nineteenth-century journals of Jewish studies. Similarly, the Breslau seminary,
which he led for twenty-one years, transformed rabbinic education by
integrating modern scholarship with traditional piety and requiring its
graduates to be both spiritual leaders and practitioners of Wissenschaft.”
1805: Simeon Magruder Levy, the Pennsylvania born
son of Susanna and Levy Andrew Levy, “the second overall graduate” of West
Point and the first Jewish graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, resigned his
commission today because of poor health.
1806(18th of Tishrei, 5567); Fourth Day
of Sukkoth observed as the Lewis and Clark expedition returns to St. Louis,
completing its two-year mission of exploration.
1808(9th of Tishrei, 5569): Erev Yom
Kippur; Kol Nidre chanted for the last time during the Presidency of Thomas
Jefferson.
1809(20th of Tishrei, 5570) Shabbat Shel
Sukkot
1810(2nd of Tishrei, 5571): Second Day
of Rosh Hashana
1810: In Denmark, Hartvig Philip Rée and Thamar (Terese) Rée gave
birth to Hertz Hartvig Ree, the “husband of Marianne Koppel and father of
Johanne Sara Rée; Sigfried Philip Rée; Emanuel Philip Rée and Therese Dorothea
Rée/”
1817(20th of Tishrei, 5578): Sixth Day
of Sukkoth
1817(20th of Tishrei, 5578): Levie
Emanuel Goudsmit, the Dutch born son of Emanuel Salomons and Esther Leiv, and
the husband of Magdalena Hartog Goudsmit passed away to in the Netherlands.
1818(29th of Elul, 5578): Erev Rosh
Hashana
1818: On Ashford Street, in Hoxton, Lewis Barnett
and Elizabeth Levi gave birth to Amelia Barnett.
1821(4th
of Tishrei, 5582): Tzom Gedaliah observed
1822(15th
of Tishrei, 5583): First Day of Sukkoth
1823(25th
of Tishrei, 5584): Thirteen-month-old Gertrude Moses, the daughter of Solomon
Moses and Rachel Gratz passed away today.
1824:
Birthdate of Samuel S. Cox the Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire who while
serving as a member of Congress in 1882 delivered a speech criticizing the
treatment of the Jews by the Russian government which ended with “How long, O
Lord, how long shall rapacity and bigotry despoil this people? Let the dawn come to the children of the
wandering foot and weary heart, waiting, waiting for that morning which will
give them its auroral glory and its cheerful beatitudes.”
1825(18th
of Tishrei, 5586): Fourth Day of Sukkoth observed for the first time during the
Presidency of John Q. Adams.
1828(22nd
of Tishrei, 5589): Shmini Atzeret
1828(22nd
of Tishrei, 5589: Fifty-four-year-old Maryland native John Gettinger, the
husband of Margaret Gettinger with whom he had five children – Catherine,
Elizabeth, Maria, Susan and Daniel – passed away today after which he was
buried at the Glade Cemetery in Walkersville, MD.
1829(3rd
of Tishrei, 5590) Tzom Gedaliah
1831(23rd
of Tishrei, 5592): Simchat Torah
1833:
Frances Levin, the daughter of Nathan and Esther Joseph and the wife of William
Levin with whom she had four children was buried today at the “Brady Street
Jewish Cemetery.”
1837(1st
of Tishrei, 5598): Jews observe Rosh Hashanah for the first time during the
Presidency of Martin Van Buren.
1839(22nd
of Tishrei, 5600): Shemini Atzeret
1840:
In Charleston, SC. Solomon Hyams married Caroline Mathilda Thompson, “second
daughter of the late James Thompson.”
1841(15th
of Tishrei, 5602): Sukkoth
1841(15th
of Tishrei, 5602): Jane Stiebel, the German born wife of Samuel Stiebel with
whom she 6 children passed away today in the United Kingdom.
1845:
In Groningen, Netherlands, Ravel Beer Jacobs, the son of Simon Jacob Jacobs and
Marianne Abraham Hamming / Hammo and his wife Diena Jacobs gave birth to Simon
Jacobs, the husband of Marianna Jacobs.
1846(10th
of Tishrei, 5607): Yom Kippur
1846:
For the second year in a row, Day of Atonement services were held in Chicago with
about the same number in attendance who had been there in 1845.
1849:
In London, Naphtali Hart and Elizabeth Solomon gave birth to Benjamin John
Hart.
1850:
Two days after he had passed away “Zvi bar Jacob” was buried today at the
“Brady Street Jewish Cemetery.
1852(17th
of Tishrei, 5613): Third Day of Sukkoth
1852(17th
of Tishrei, 5613): Fifty-nine-year-old Philip I. Cohen, the Richmond born son
of Israel I. Cohen who married Augusta
Myers in 1826 and served as the postmaster in Norfolk passed away today in
Norfolk.
1853:
In Paris Protestant religious leader Edmond de Pressensé and his wife gave
birth to Francis de Pressensé the French political leader and journalist who
supported Dreyfus at great personal cost including being “struck off the roll
of the Legion of Honour.”
1854(8th
of Tishrei, 5615): Shabbat Shuva
1855(18th
of Tishrei, 5616): Fourth Day of Sukkoth
1856(1st
of Tishrei, 5617): Rosh Hashanah
1856:
Birthdate of Joseph Reinach, the French author and politician who championed
the cause of Alfred Dreyfus. He called
for a public hearing when Dreyfus was first charged and publicly denounced the
documents used to convict him as a forgery.
1856: The New York City column published today
reported that last evening at sunset began the new Jewish year. The New Year, this opening, set down on the
calendar as 5617. In conformity with the
usual custom, religious observances were held last evening in all the
synagogues in the city. Today and
tomorrow public religious exercises will continue, during which time all labor
and business will be suspended. There
are at present over twenty Jewish synagogues in the city and almost 30,000
Jews. Thirty-six years ago, there was
but one synagogue in New York and only a few families of Jews.”
1859:
“The Jewish New Year: Its Observance in this City” published today reported
that “Yesterday being the Jewish New-Year's Day--a festival of immemorial
observance among all the Hebrew race--the occasion was appropriately observed
in the several synagogues of this City, and doubtless in all other parts of the
country. It is called the Rosh Hashanah, or New-Year, the months being counted
from the season of the Passover, according to Exodus xii., 2” It described the services that were held in
the different synagogues and ancient origin of the rituals that were being
followed.
1861:
In New York, Jacob Rosenzweig and Lenore Gefuhlaus gave birth to Rose Lesser,
“the President of the Hebrew Sheltering House and Home for the Aged and
President of the Montefiore Talmud Torah was married to I.G. Samuels before
marrying Lazarus Lesser.
1862(6th
of Tishrei, 5623): Margaret Heyes, the wife of Paul Johann Heyes died of lung
disease in Meran, Italy.
1862:
Philadelphian Jacob Herzog, a Captain in Company E of the 12th
Cavalry resigned his commission today.
1862:
Union troops under the command of Brigadier General Frederick Salomon failed to
capture Newtonia, Missouri during the First Battle of Newtonia. It was the first real setback for Salomon who
had risen from the rank of Captain when he joined the Army in 1861. Whatever blot this may have placed on his
record was removed with the victory at the Battle of Helena (Arkansas) as can
be seen by the fact that Salomon rose to the rank of Major General by the end
of the war.
1862:
This afternoon, the cornerstone of the new Orphan Asylum, which is supported by
the Hebrew Benevolent Society of New York City was laid at the corner of
Seventy-seventh-street and Third-avenue. Benjamin J. Hart, the President of the
Society, addressed the crowd as did Rabbis Raphall and Adler.
1863(17th
of Tishrei, 5624): Third Day of Sukkoth
1863:
During the American Civil War, the 15th Kentucky Cavalry, a unit
that had been formed under the command of Jewish patriot Lt. Col. Gabriel
Netter completed a sweep that had started in Paducah and ended McLemoresville,
TN.(You have to be a real Civil War Junkie and Jewish to appreciate this entry)
1864(29th
of Elul, 5624): Erev Rosh Hashana celebrated as Union forces under General
Grant began the Battle of Peeble’s Farm, part of the siege of Richmond that
ultimately destroyed the Confederacy and saved “the last best hope of man.”
1865(10th
of Tishrei, 5626): Yom Kippur
1865:
In Germany, Rabbo Nathan Rosenau and Johana Brauna Rosenau gave birth to
University of Cincinnati graduate and HUC rabbi Dr. William Rosenau the “rabbi
emeritus of Oheb shalom Congregation and one of the best-known Hebrew scholars”
who married Mary Kruas in 1925 after having been married to Mabel Hillman.
(Wikipedia shows his birthdate as May 30 but the NYT shows this as the date)
1865(10th
of Tishrei, 5626): Samuel David Luzzatto an Italian Jewish scholar, poet, and a
member of the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement passed away Born in 1800 at
Trieste, he was also known by his Hebrew acronym, Shadal. While still a boy he
entered the Talmud Torah of his native city, where besides Talmud, in which he
was taught by Abraham Eliezer ha-Levi, chief rabbi of Trieste and a
distinguished pilpulist, he studied ancient and modern languages and science
under Mordechai de Cologna, Leon Vita Saraval, and Raphael Baruch Segré, whose
son-in-law he later became. He studied the Hebrew language also at home, with
his father, who, though a turner by trade, was an eminent Talmudist.
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/luzzatto-samuel-david
1866(21st
of Tishrei, 5627): Hoshana Raba
1866(21st
of Tishrei, 5627: Alexander Gans, the Amsterdam born of Jacob Moses Gans and
Rebecca Mozes Gans passed away today four months after his first birthday.
1867(1st
of Tishrei, 5628):As they observe Rosh Hashanah Jews in New Orleans continue to
struggle with a Yellow Fever Epidemic that began in July
1868(14th
of Tishrei, 5628): Erev Sukkoth
1868(14th
of Tishrei, 5628): A farm worker named Francisco Qiñones, led Spanish troops to
the hiding place of Mathias Brugman and his son Bauer. Born in New Orleans,
Brugman moved to his mother’s native Puerto Rico where he eventually became an
advocate for gaining the island’s independence from the brutal Spanish
government. He was a leader of the El
Grito de Lares Uprising which began on September 23. The revolt failed thanks to the informers
working for the Spanish. Brugman died in
the town of Yauco.
1870:
Hyman Elias, the son of Elllis Elias and the former Hannah Harris and the wife
of the former Ellen Barnett with whom he had five children was buried today at
the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.
1871:
In Hungary, Eliyahu Menachem Goitein, the son of Zvi (Armin) Hirsch Goitein and
Szali (Sara) Sarolta Goitein and his wife Amalia Mahala Goitein
gave birth to Bernard Yerachmiel Dov Goitein.
1872(27th of Elul, 5632): German Rabbi Benjamin
Hirsch Auerbach, the son of Rabbi Abraham Auerbach and the author of Nahal
Eshkol, a three-volume work on the Sefer HaEshkol, passed away today.
1872: In Chicago, Philip Emanuel Adler and
Bertha (Blade) Adler gave birth to Davenport, Iowa newspaper editor Emanuel
Philip Adler, the husband of Lena Rothschild
http://uipress.lib.uiowa.edu/bdi/DetailsPage.aspx?id=4
1873(9th
of Tishrei, 5634): Erev Yom Kippur
1873:
“The Jewish Fast of Yom Kippur” published today reported that “at sundown this
evening the Jewish nation enters upon the celebration of the solemn fast known
as Yom Kippur or Day of Atonement, the most important of the numerous religious
observances of the ancient faith.”
According to the article “the Israelitish community” has become lax in
its observance of other rituals but all are united in observing this holiday
including the twenty-four fast when they abstain from “all manner of food and
drink.”
1873:
In Cincinnati, OH, Joseph and Hannah Sachs gave birth to Pauline “Polly” Sachs
who became Pauline Mack when she married Theodore Mack with whom she had one
son Henry
1875(1st
of Tishrei, 5636): Rosh Hashanah
1875:
According to a contemporary report for the Orthodox Jews today is the first of
a two-day New Year’s celebration, “but those who have thrown off the yoke of
Rabbinical ordinances and who rejoice in the designation of reformers celebrate
but this one day.”
1875:
Today, “Denver’s Temple Emanuel,” for which the Hebrew Ladies’ Benevolent
Society had “donated the carpets, furniture and other furnishings” opened “at
19th Avenue and Curtis Street” after which it was led by Rabbis,
Samuel Weill, Marx Moses, Henry Bloch, Meyer Elkin, Emanuel Schreiber, Isaac
Mendes de Sola and William S. Friedman
1876(12th
of Tishrei, 5637): Parashat Ha’azinu
1867(12th
of Tishrei, 5637): Eighteen-year-old Victoria Pinto, the Londo born daughter of
Henry Haim Piton and Rosetta Pinto, the London born daughter of Daughter of
Rabbi David Aaron de Sola passed away today.
1876:
In Lithuania, Samuel Lewis Cantor and his wife Sanah Leah Cantor gave birth to
Adolph Conrad Cantor.
1876:
Birthdate Austria native and neuropsychiatrist Dr. Moses Keshner, the holder of
degrees from CCNY, Columbia Medical School and New York Law School who was a
Clinical Professor of Neurology at Columbia and raised four children – Myron,
Sidney, Harold and Hortense – with his wife Dorothea.
1877(23rd
of Tishrei, 5638): Simchat Torah
1877:
In Pine Bluff, AR Joseph and Matilda Josephat Altheimer gave birth to Benjamin
Joseph Altheimer who “in 1910 conceived the idea of setting aside a special day
as Flag Day while attending a retreat formation at Fort Sam Houston, San
Antonio, Texas.”
1877:
It was reported today that Lord Beaconsfield (Benjamin Disraeli) had convinced
Queen Victoria to break her promised to inaugurate the Town Hall at Manchester
because he was angry at the voters of Manchester for having rejected his
candidate for Parliament and voting for Jacob Bright instead. The World, an
English paper described this are part of the “unholy influence of a Hebrew
minster.” Others have risen to Beaconsfield’s defense contending that the
decision was a symptom of the Queen’s desire to remain in seclusion and point
to the fact that she only agreed to open “the season” in London because
Disraeli urged her to do so. Disraeli may be a Jew by birth, but he “is English
to the roots of his hair” - English in
training, in habits in sentiment in ambition.” To his defenders, “Lord
Beaconsfield is the greatest state man of his age. He is a triton among
minnows, and every man who has ever wielded a pen for bread ought to be proud
of this chief of the Brotherhood of Literature.
1878(3rd
of Tishrei, 5639): Tzom Gedaliah is observed for the first time in the newly
consecrated Great Synagogue of Warsaw.
1878:
In New York, Meinhard and Bertha (Baruch) Alsberg gave birth to Columbia
trained Mechanical Engineer Julius Alsberg who began his private practice as a
consultant in 1917 and who married elsie Kessler Fraenkel in 1913.
1878:
In Belfort, France, Marie legros and Phillippe Ascoli gave birth to Marie Anne
Therese Ascoli.
1879:
Three days after she had passed away, Deborah Durlacher, the daughter of
Phillip and Frances Benjamin and the wife of Montague Durlacher was buried
today at “the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemtery.
1882:
Nathan Gottgetren, a 35-year-old Jewish swindler and forger who used the alias
Nicholas Gilbert, cashed three forged checks at three different stores in New
York for a total of $2,460.
1883:
It was reported today that the Standard Library Series has published Jewish
Artisan Life by Franz Delitzsch in which the author examines the
“professions” of Jews during the days of the Second Temple. He found everything from bakers to doctors,
one of whom was famous for dealing with bowel complaints, to makers and sellers
of “Medean Beer which was also known as Babylonian Beer and Zithos, a native
cider.
1882:
Birthdate of Hans Geiger. The world
knows him as the man who invented the Geiger counter. Jews remember as the German scientist who
joined the Nazi party and betrayed Jewish colleagues who had worked with him.
1883:
In what was then Striegau, Germany, Emil and Julie Hellinger gave birth today
mathematician and refugee from the Nazis, Ernst Hellinger.
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Hellinger.html
1883:
The “first Jewish house of worship…a brick structure that served as both Hebrew
school and synagogue” was dedicated today in Salt Lake City, Utah.
1884:
“In Trouble On A Fast Day” published today described an altercation between
Park Policeman Samuel Murphy and three Jews that took place on Yom Kippur in
New York’s Central Park that resulted in the arrest of the three Jews and the
“disappearance” of diamond that belonged to Benjamin Levy.
1885:
It was reported today that a reporter for the Albany Journal had a confusing experience when attending synagogues
in that city. When he went to the Ferry
Street Synagogue, an orthodox congregation, he was admonished for taking his
hat off. Based on that when he went to
the South Pearl Street Synagogue he left his hat on. However, this was a Reform Temple, and he was
admonished for not removing his hat. The
reporter seemed none the worse for wear.
1886(1st
of Tishrei, 5647): Rosh Hashanah
1887:
Leopold Bloch, the “son of Samuel and Jeanette Bloch and his second wife Klara
Bloch gave birth to Frieda Bloch
1887:
The Philadelphia Record reported today that “it is estimated the over $75,000
is contributed annually to” Jewish charities including profits from the annual
charity ball.
1887:
By order of Justice White, Annie Lee, a child who is claimed by “a colored
family named Lee and a Hebrew family named Brodcki” is to be placed under the
care of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children until the Supreme
Court settles the custody dispute.
1888:
As of today, Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society is caring for 585 children, 278
of whom are girls and 307 are boys. Four
hundred forty-two are between the ages of 2 and 5 with the balance being under
the cutoff age of 15.
1888:
It was reported today that “exception measures” have been taken by the Russian
government aimed at limiting the entrance of Jews into the Empire and hindering
their ability to travel in the country through changes in the passport laws. These stringent measures apply equally to
Russian born and foreign-born Jews.
1888:
In Allentown, PA, “Isaac and Esther (Tuck) Goldstein gave birth to Nathan E.
Goldstein, the husband of Annie Ginsberg who was chairman of the Jewish Relief
Committee of Springfield, Palestine Restoration Fund and the Western
Massachusetts United Appeal
1888:
“Israel Schwartz, a man of "Jewish appearance", reported witnessing a
woman, later identified as Elizabeth Stride thought to be a victim of Jack the
Ripper, being assaulted on Berner Street early this morning
1889(5th
of Tishrei, 5650): Sixty-two-year-old Leopold Newland, a Polish born Jew took
his own life today while living at the home of his son-in-law, Elias Green
1889:
At Temple Emanu-El in New York City, President Greenbaum of the Aguilar Library
Association presided over a meeting of representatives from “a score of Jewish
congregations and societies” that had been called to plan the upcoming Hebrew
Fair, a major fund-raising event.
1891:
Sir Edward Levien Samuel, the son of Sir Samuel and Henrietta Matilda Levien,
married “Ray Cowan, the daughter of Abraham Cowan with whom he had two
children, “Vera Lean Henrietta Samuel and Sir Edward Louis Samuel.”
1891:
“Minister Hirsch’s Return” published today described the travels of Solomon
Hirsch, the U.S. Minister to Turkey who visited with groups of Jews in Paris to
discuss ways of improving the conditions of their co-religionist in Russia,
before setting sail for New York where he began to enjoy his leave of absence.
1892(9th
of Tishrei, 5653): Erev Yom Kippur
1892:
In Cleveland, a congregation of Russian Jews is scheduled to hold services in
the assembly room of the New Young Men’s Christian Association Building.
1892:
A group of Russian Jewish immigrants ignore the crosses on the outside of the
building to hear Kol Nidre in a building belong to the YMCA in Cleveland, Ohio.
1892(9th
of Tishrei, 5653): Hector-Jonathan Crémieux passed away. Born in 1828, he was a French librettist and
playwright. His best-known work is his collaboration with Ludovic Halévy for
Jacques Offenbach's Orphée aux Enfers, known in English as Orpheus in the
Underworld
1893:
Sachs, Kestenbaum and Diamond, three of the four charged with perjury in a case
involving prominent Jewish businessman Jacob Bauman remained in jail today
because they could not make bail. The
fourth conspirator and probably mastermind, Annie Bauman, Jacob’s wife made
bail and did not have to remain in jail.
1893:
In Sanitary Inspector Rosse’s report to the Marine Hospital Bureau written
today from Leghorn, Italy concerning the cholera epidemic that the Chief Rabbi
of Leghorn has ordered the closure of the synagogue which is “next to that of
Amsterdam… the wealthiest synagogue in the world” for the first time in its
history.
1893:
In Philadelphia, Mildred C. Nunez and Herbert D. Allman gave birth to Princeton
and Cornell educated horticulturist Drue Nunez Allman, the husband of Blanche
Adelaide Oppenheimer and “breeder of commercial varieties of snapdragons who
was a member of Keneseth Israel and the Federation of Jewish Charities in
Philadelphia.
1894(29th
of Elul, 5654): Erev Rosh Hashanah
1894:
Evening services marking the start of the Jewish New Year will be held for the
first time in the new synagogue of Shaarai Tephilla.
1894:
Louis Berghold almost drowned when his father took him to Benjamin Phillips’
bathhouse on Orchard as part of their pre-New Year’s custom and the boy hit his
head on the bottom of the pool after sneaking in by himself.
1894:
In Memphis, TN, the will of the late Moses H. Katzenberger who was the
President of the Savings Bank of Memphis was filed for probate today.
1894:
Birthdate of Joseph Leonard Prince the graduate of Wharton who practiced law in
his hometown of Pottstown, PA.
1895:
Birthdate of Leib Milstein, the native of what is now Moldavia who came to the
United States in 1912 where he gained famed as Lewis Milestone, the movie
director whose career began while serving with the U.S. Army Signal Corps
during WW I.
1895:
“The Hungarian Reichstage has finally passed the remaining Church Reform bills”
which include the “removal of all existing Jewish disabilities.”
1895:
In Part I of the Court of General Sessions, the arson trial of Morris
Schoenholz resumes after having been postponed because of Yom Kippur per the
request of his attorney Abraham Levy.
1895:
“Who Shall Govern Jerusalem” published today provides a description of how the
Europeans plan on dividing the Ottoman Empire including the squabble based on
religion between the Russians (Orthodox) and French (Catholics) over who shall
control Jerusalem. The author sees no
role for the Jews in governing the City of David “since there is little doubt
that Jewish colonization is a failure.”
1896(23rd
of Tishrei, 5657) Simchat Torah celebrated for the last time during the
Presidency of Grover Cleveland.
1897:
Birthdate of Minsk native and University of Missouri graduate Irving Fagan the
journalist specializing in labor affairs who was an “editor of the Labor Press
Association.
1897:
It was reported today that Louis Yaffa, the Secretary of the Hebrew Citizens’
League has enrolled 400 members in the organization which has selected a
candidate to run for Alderman from New York’s Second Assembly District.
1897:
At 41 Down’s-park Road, Sarah Benkel (nee Lesnsberg) gave birth to a daughter
today.
1899:
When a Russian Jewish woman was asked by her friend why so many stores were
closed today she responded that it was “a yonteff’ (the Yiddish word for
holiday). When asked what Yonteff it
was, the woman responded that it was a “Dewey Yonteff.” Such was her explanation of the holiday like
atmosphere in New York City that was honoring the great naval hero of the
Spanish American War.
1899:
“Mr. Peters’ Book About the Jews” published today provided a review of Justice
to the Jews: The Story of What He Has Done for the World by Madison Peters.
1900:
In “Dr. MacArthur and Bible Wines” published today, Carl Damm that in ancient
and modern Palestine that both “pure juice of the grape, boiled down and
covered with olive oild, as well as that fresh from the press, fermenting
already at its very contact with air” were considered to “wines” which may a
reason for confusion about the story of Jesus turning the water into wine at a
wedding.
1900:
Bertha Fischer, the Czech born daughter of Josef and Julie Kahn who was
murdered at Auschwitz and her husband Dr. Emilian Fischer gave birth to Ottokar
Fischer
1901(17th
of Tishrei, 5662): Third Day of Sukkoth observed for the first time during the
Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt.
1902:
In Munich, Holocaust victims “Sigwart Cahnmann, a chemical manufacturer and
president of the Lodge B'nai B'rith in Munich and Hedwig Schülein” gave birth
to author and sociologist Werner Jacob Cahnman.
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/cahnman-werner-j
1903(9th
of Tishrei, 5664): Erev Yom Kippur
1903:
Birthdate of Buffalo, NY native and Harvard trained and Lasker Award winning
physician, Dr. Sidney Farber, the “director of research at the Children’s
Cancer Research Foundation” who was the husband of “the former Norma C.
Holzman” with whom he had three children – Ellen, Stephen and Thomas.
1904(21st of Tishrei, 5665): Hoshanah Rabah
1904: It was reported today that “by virtue of
the Emperor’s ukase extending the privilges of residence to certain class of
Jews with the Pale, the police have received instructions not to expel Jewish
workman from villages in which they have taken up their residence since 1882”
1905(1st
of Tishrei, 5666): Rosh Hashanah
1905(1st
of Tishrei, 5666): Fifty-five-year-old Charles Ephrussi passed away today in
Paris. Born into a prominent Jewish
banking family in Odessa, he traveled to Paris where he became a collector of
works by Degas, Manet and Monet as well as a connoisseur of Japanese prints,
copies of which he kept at his luxurious mansion on 11 Avenue D’leana.
1905:
In the twelve-month period ending today 100,388 Jewish immigrants were admitted
to the United States 49,655 of whom were men, 23,359 of whom were women and
24,373 of whom were children and of which 72,324 remained in New York.
1906:
In Hazelton, PA, founding of Beth Israel located on N. Laurel Street which
holds service in Hebrew, English and German and whose members included W.H.
Green, Isaac Honig and Jacob Gerhardt.
1906:
“Abraham Srebross, a converted Jew, who is connected with the People's
Tabernacle at 52 East 102d Street, New York, and Mrs. Lion, of 69 Buenavista
Avenue, this city, were stoned at Washington and Riverdale Avenues to-night,
and only for the prompt arrival of the police a race riot might have started.”
1907(22nd
of Tishrei, 5668): Shmini Atzeret
1907:
Today, “a dispatch to a news agency from Odesa says that the Prefect General
Novitsky, has been appointed Governor General of Odessa, in succession to
General Kaulbars, who has been absent from his post since the early part of the
year when it was reported that he had been removed as the result of
encouragement which he is said to have given the Black Hundreds in their
attacks on the Jews at Odessa.”
1907:
“An administrative decree issued today” in Paris “provides for the separate of
Church and State in Algeria” and “places Catholics Protestants, Jews, and
Mussulmans on an equal footing.”
1908:
In Richmond, VA, Charles Hutzler, the Chairman of the City School Board,
“presided” over the laying of the cornerstone for John Marshall High School
today.
1908:
Birthdate of David Fiodorovich Oistrakh,
a Jewish Soviet violinist who made many recordings, and was the dedicatee of
numerous violin works. He passed away in 1974
1909(15th
of Tishrei, 5670): Sukkoth
1909(15th
of Tishrei, 5670): Fifty-seven-year-old Hungarian born, Appleton, Wisconsin
grocer Jacob Charles Ferber, the husband of Julia Ferber and the father of
Fanny Fox and author and playwright Edna Ferber passed away today.
1909(15th
of Tishrei, 5670): Mrs. Taube Horowitz passed away today after which she would
be buried in the Liepaja Jewish Cemetery
1909:
Both Sephardic and Ashkenazic rabbis in Jerusalem pledge to work hand in hand
in the interest of the entire Jewish community. Together they found a relief
committee to benefit Jewish families whose heads will be called to military
service.
1910:
The Ninth Biennial Convention of the Order of the Knights of Joseph which had
been founded in 1896, continued for a third day in Rock Island, Illinois
1911:
In Brooklyn, David and Gussie Gruber, two Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe
gave birth to
writer and humanitarian Ruth Gruber, who led a 1944
American mission to save 1,000 WWII refugees.
https://jwa.org/thisweek/sep/30/1911/ruth-gruber
1911: In Berlin, a group of Jewish students visit
the Turkish Ambassador and volunteer for service in the Turkish Army, while a
group of Zionist doctors consider the advisability of organizing a Jewish
Sanitary Corps for Turkish field forces.
1912(19th of Tishrei, 5673): Chol Hamoed
Sukkoth
1912(19th of Tishrei, 5673): Six years
after his father’s death, Reb Aharon, the Kidushas Aharon, who served as Admor
of Sadigur, passed away today.
1912(19th of Tishrei, 5673): Ninety-one-year-old
“communal worker” Julie Stettheimer passed away today in Brooklyn, NY.
1913: A revival of “The Auctioneer” produced by
David Belasco opened today at the Knickerbocker Theatre today.
1913: “Shon the Piper” an historical drama set in
Scotland starring Robert Z. Leonard was released today in the United States.
1913: The first annual convention of the newly
formed Jewish Socialist Federation of America continued for a second day in New
Haven, CT.
1914(10th of Tishrei, 5675): Yom Kippur
1914: Services will begin at 10 o’clock this morning
at Temple Emanu-El where Dr. Joseph Silverman will deliver a sermon on “Where
is God in the Present Conflict?”
1914: An article published today in the Evening Public Ledger entitled “Day
of Atonement the World Over” reported that the holy day was being observed in
the synagogues of Philadelphia, PA as well as on the European battlefield. According to the Ledger, there are over
400,000 Jewish soldiers fighting in the armies of the various belligerents and
the commanders of the various armies have given the Jews permission to set
aside their guns to observe “Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement also” known as
Yom Hadin.
1914:
“Yom Kippur Fast Today” published today described the observance of “the Day of
Atonement” including the afternoon memorial service “in all the synagogues held
in memory of those members who have passed away during the preceding year.”
1915(22nd
of Tishrei, 5676): Shmini Atzeret
1915:
In Petrograd, M. Weinstein was elected to the Council of the Empire making him
the first Jew to hold such a position.
1916(3rd
of Tishrei, 5677): Shabbat Shuva
1916:
In New York, hopes of the continuation of a walkout supporting the striking
Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees of America
received a serious blow “when the International Ladies’ Garment Workers; Union
announced that no sympathetic strike had been ordered and that the 150,000
members practically all of whom are Orthodox Jews would return to work when
their religious holiday came to an end.
1916:
It was reported today “that a blind Moscow Jew named Broido” who “recently
graduated as a lawyer” and had had his application for permission to be
enrolled as an Assistant Advocate rejected by the Ministry of Justice would now
be able to fill the that position the Czar had sanctioned his appointment.
1916:
As the British government wrestled with problem of what do about the thousands
of Russian and Polish Jews who had come to the United Kingdom before the war to
escape serving in the Czar’s Army Sir Herbert I. Samuel, the Home Secretary
modified the original proposal to allow for the waiver of the naturalization
fee for any foreign born Jew who had enlisted by the last day of September.
1916:
It was reported today that H.S. Seligman has now joined Australian John Monash
in a “unique club of two” – the only two Jews serving as generals in His
Majesty’s Armed Forces.
1916:
The Russian Government announced that “Jews will enjoy greater education
advantages in Russia in the future” because “a series of high schools and
technical schools exclusively for Jewish students is to be established and
greater freedom will be accorded with respect to their entry into the
universities.”
1917(14th
of Tishrei, 5678): Erev Sukkoth
1917:
At the Free Synagogue in Carnegie Hall, Rabbi Wise is scheduled to deliver a
sermon entitled “What Can Stay-At-Homes Do In and For the War
1917:
At Temple Israel of Harlem, at 8 PM, Dr. H.M. Harris is scheduled to lead a
Sukkah service.
1917:
In Brooklyn, vaudevillians Bess (née Skolnik) and Robert Rich gave birth to
drummer Bernard “Buddy” Rich.(As reported by James Barron)
1917:
“The American Jewish Relief Committee announced” today “that on Yom Kippur
approximately $500,000 had been contributed for the alleviation of distress
among the 3,000,000 Jews left homeless by the war.”
1917:
In Brooklyn Samuel Burstein and Sara Plotkin gave birth to physicist Elias
Burstein the husband of Rena Ruth Benson and the father of Joanna, Sandra and
Miriam Burstein.
1917:
Birthdate of Irving B. Kahn, the inventor of the teleprompter who headed the
Teleprompter Company. In the mid 50's, Kahn designed and built what was perhaps
the first remotely controlled, multi-image, rear projection system in the world
for the U.S. Army’s facility in Huntsville, Ala., to make persuasive
presentations to visiting Congressmen. With five images (one large, 3¼ by 4
slide or film image in the center flanked smaller slides at each side) and
random access it could search and select among 500 slides. TelePrompTer
also made many technological contributions to the early cable TV industry. In
1961, Kahn and Hub Schlafley demonstrated Key TV, an early pay TV concept, by
showing the second Patterson vs. Johansson heavyweight fight, essentially
giving birth to pay-per-view.
1917(14th
of Tishrei, 5678): Hours after he either fell or was thrown while horseback
riding and two hours after an unsuccessful operation was performed on his skull
at Mt. Sinai Hospital by Dr. C.A. Elsberg and Dr. Bernard Sachs, sixty-two-year-old
banker Isaac Newton Seligman, the husband of Guta Loeb whom he married in 1883
and the son-in-la of Solomon Loeb who had become head of the New York branch of
Seligman and Hellman “in 1885, on the
death of his father Joseph Seligman and his brother” passed away today.
1918:
As Allenby’s campaign is on the verge of complete success, his forces captured
the Ottoman garrison that had been holding Damascus as it tried to make its
escape.
1918:
The Allied Powers and Bulgaria signed the Armistice of Salonica ending
Bulgarians involvement in WW I which had claimed the lives of over 200 Jewish
soldiers fighting in the Bulgarian Army.
1918:
Two days after he had passed away, 60-year-old Jacob Hyman was buried today at
“the Belfast Jewish Cemetery in Northern Ireland.”
1918:
Today Andrew Somers, who while serving in Congress “presented a joint
resolution in the House of Representative “asking for United States recognition
of ‘the Hebrew National’ as an intergovernmental agency to repatriate Jews
surviving in Europe to Palestine and for an administration to facilitate the
establishment of a free state there guaranteeing civil, political and religious
rights of all its inhabitants” began serving as an aviator with the Naval
Reserve Flying Corps.
1919:
Today, the American Jewish Relief Committee made public a letter Henry Davidson
sent to Henry H. Rosenfelt, the director of the committee in which he said “In
my travels and observations as the Chairman of the War Council of the American
Red Cross, I had occasion to study the needs of the eoples with those countries
and also an opportunity to observe the excellent work done by the Joint
Distribution Committee, the importance of which seems to me greater today, even
than during the distressing period of the war.”
1920(18th
of Tishrei, 5681): Fourth Day of Sukkoth observed for the last time during the
Presidency of Woodrow Wilson.
1920:
The new list of contributors to the “Match the President Fund,” a pro-League of
Nations organizations included Percy Straus and Jesse Isidor Straus both of
whom contributed $1,000 to the cause.
1921:
It was reported today that Jewish soldiers in the U.S. Army are to receive
furloughs for Rosh Hashanah.
1921:
“The Story of Christine von Herre” featuring Julius Falkenstein as “Hausarzt
Dr. Wendlin” was released in Germany today.
1922:
UNC defeated Wake Forest coached by George Levene.
1923(20th
of Tishrei, 5684): 6th day of Sukkoth
1923:
“Breaking Into Society,” a silent comedy filmed by cinematographer Irving Reis
was released today in the United States.
1923:
Outfielder Moses Solomon made his major league debut with New York Giants.
1924(2nd
of Tishrei, 5685): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah
1924:
Birthdate of author Truman Capote the author who denied he was anti-Semitic
when he talked about “the rise of…the Jewish Mafia in America letters. This is a clique of New York oriented writers
and critics who control much of the literary scene through the influence of the
quarterlies and intellectual magazines.
All these publications are Jewish-dominated, and this particular coterie
employs them to make or break writers by advancing or withholding attention.”
1925:
Infielder Buddy Myer’s Washington Senators lost to the Boston Red Sox today.
1925:
A cable sent today said that the University of Pennsylvania expedition to
Beisan, Palestine “had discovered an image of the goddess of Ashtaroth, a deity
of the Philistines, with a shrine, bronze serpents, doves and similar objects
used in the cult worship.
1926(22nd
of Tishrei, 5687): Shemini Atzeret
1926:
Middleweight Cy Schindel (born Seymour Schinell) won brought his won his
seventh fight in eight outings today at Yonkers, NY.
1927:
In Bavaria, Ferdiand Weill, the son of Samuel and Maichen Wiel and his wife
Sitti Weil gave birth to Firtz Kurt Weil.
1928(16th
of Tishrei, 5689): Second Day of Sukkoth
1928:
In Brooklyn, Harry Margolis, “a clothing salesman” and “the former Dorothy
Perlow, a milliner” gave birth to Eta Roslyn Margolis who gained fame as
crusading attorney Roslyn Litman. (As reported by Sam Roberts)
01928: Birthdate of Elie
Wiesel. This author and Nobel Prize
winner is too well known to require any further comment.
1929(24th
of Elul, 5689): Sixty-nine-year-old Zionist leader who had come to Berlin
seeking medical treatment passed away today in the German capital
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/israel-belkind
1930:
Former Senator Simon Guggenheim the brother of the late Daniel Guggenheim is
expected to arrive from Europe this morning aboard the Ile de France.
1930:
Birthdate of Jacob Fiszman, the native of Cracow who would gain fame as Dr.
Jack Fishman the developer of naloxone, a powerful medication that has saved
countless people from fatal overdoses of heroin and other narcotics. (As
reported by William Yardley)
1930:
Funeral services for Daniel Guggenheim are scheduled to be held at 2 p.m. at
Temple Emanu-El on 5th Avenue.
1931(19th
of Tishrei, 5692): Fifth day of Sukkoth
1931:
“Despite the testimony of soldiers that they had taken part in shooting down
seven Jews twelve years ago in Slovakia under the orders of former Corporal
Karl Horak of the Czech Legionnaires, Horak was acquitted today of their
murder, although a verdict of manslaughter was found against him.”
1932(29th
of Elul, 5692): Erev Rosh Hashanah
1932:
“A Bill of Divorcement” a drama directed by George Cukor, produced by David O.
Selznick and with music by Max Steiner was released today in the United States.
1933(10th
of Tishrei, 5694): Yom Kippur
1933:
“Footlight Parade” a musical featuring the lyrics of Irving Kahal, and the
music of Sammy Fain premiered tonight.
1933:
“As Thousands Cheer” a musical review with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin
and a “book” by Moss Hart “opened on Broadway at the Music Box Theatre
1933:
The German government submitted a letter to the Council of the League of
Nations claiming that the rights of the Jews living in Upper Silesia had been
restored. The letter had been written after the League had responded to the
Bernheim Petition which claimed that the Jews were being discriminated against
in violation of the German-Polish Convention of 1922. The American Jewish Congress and the Comité
des Délégations Juives had vigorously supported Franz Bernheim in his claim and
at this juncture the newly empowered Nazi government was not ready to thumb its
nose at the League of Nations.
1934(21st
of Tishrei): Hoshana Raba
1934:
In Cleveland, “a membership campaign under the chairmanship of L.R. Morris of
the Temple Men’s Club has closed with an increased enrollment of 200 members.”
1934:
“A protest against any trade agreement for the exchange of merchandise between
the United States and Germany was sent to Secretary of State Hull today by
Samuel Untermyer, president of the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League to Champion
Human Rights”
1935(3rd
of Tishrei, 5696): Tzom Gedaliah
1935:
Harry L. Cantor, the Lithuanian born son of Samuel Lewis Cantor and Sanah Leah Cantor,
and the husband of Rose (Cramer) Cantor passed away today in Philadelphia.
1935:
Mathematician Issai Shur finally fell victim to the Nazi purge of Jewish
professionals when he was dismissed today as a Professor at the University of
Berlin1935: George Gershwin's
"Porgy & Bess" premiered in Boston.
1936(14th
of Tishrei, 5697): Erev Sukkoth
1936(14th
of Tishrei, 5697): Sixty-nine-year-old Coningsby Ralph Disraeli, the son of
Ralph Disraeli and the nephew of Benjamin Disraeli who served as an MP passed
away today.
1936:
“Herbert C. Pell, the vice chairman of the Democratic National Campaign
Committee made public an open letter to banker Felix M. Warburg expressing
surprise that Mr. Warburg should have come out for Governor Landon’s election
in view of what Mr. Pell called ‘the most open and vigorous anti-Semitic
campaign that has ever occurred in this country’ against President Roosevelt.”
1936:
“Southern Roses,” a “musical comedy directed by Frederic Zelnik” and produced
by Isadore Goldsmith and Max Schach was released today in the United Kingdom.
1937:
The Palestine Post reported on the
death in London of Earl Peel, the Chairman of the Royal (Peel) Commission on
Palestine, at the age of 71. Earl Peel properly appreciated the Jewish part and
effort in the development of Palestine. The entire Hebrew press, paid a warm
tribute to Lord Peel, who frequently expressed his appreciation of the
excellent development work the Jewish community was performing in Palestine
1937:
Birthdate of Jurek Becker, a survivor of the Lodz Ghetto and author Jacob
the Liar which was made into a unique Holocaust film starring Robin
Williams in the title role and featuring Alan Arkin and Bob Balaban
1937:
The Palestine Post reported that the
Arab press accused the Post and other Jewish organizations of exploiting the
murder by of Lewis Andrews, the much-respected district commissioner for
Galilee and of his driver, on the steps of the Anglican Church in Nazareth, for
the strong criticism of Arab terror and the society which condones such crimes.
1938(5th
of Tishrei, 5699): Erev Shabbat Shuvah
1938:
This evening Rabbi Harold I. Saperstein delivered a sermon “Return to Thy
People” in which he “alludes to events in Italy, Austria and Poland, but
focuses on a theme drawn from the central motif of the Sabbath Haftarah
(beginning with Hosea 14:2), the motif of return (though return to the Jewish
people is substituted for the return to God in the prophetic text) and less
directly from the Torah reading.” Unfortunately, “the experience of the last
year demonstrates that” even Jews wished to escape their identity “the
anti-Semites will not allow them to escape their identity.
1938:
“A jubilant and confident Democratic State Convention today renominated Herbert
H. Lehman for Governor after he had finally decided to yield to a draft
movement of an intensity surpassing all recent movements of the kind”
1938:
Hitler convinced Chamberlain and Daladier that he wanted to protect German
rights in the Sudetenland by annexing it, (hence, the Munich Agreement) and
that he had no further demands. Chamberlain gave in, claiming that by doing so
he had achieved peace "in our time". Bowing to German pressure,
France and Britain agreed to the annexation of this part of Czechoslovakia to
Hitler as part of the infamous Munich Agreement. Slovakia feigned independence
but became a satellite of Germany. This was one more the events that led
up to World War II and one more act of cowardice on the part of the western
democracies that emboldened Hitler to follow his bloody path.
1938:
As a result of today’s Munich Agreement 18-year-old Max Mannheimer and his
family were now under Nazi jurisdiction which led to his father being
imprisoned after Kristallnacht.
1938:
As of today, in Germany the medical licenses of all Jewish doctors have been
expired by order of the Nazi government.
1938:
As the Detroit Tigers play their last home game of the season, Hank Greenberg
fails to hit a home run and his hopes for breaking Ruth’s record of sixty for
the season begin to fade.
1938:
Nine days after having premiered in New York, “Room Service,” a Marx Brothers
comedy was released in the rest of the United States today
1938,
Eleanor Rathbone denounced the just-published Munich Accords. She pressured the
parliament to aid the Czechs and grant entry for dissident Germans, Austrians
and Jews. In late 1938 she set up the Parliamentary Committee on Refugees to
take up individual cases from Spain, Czechoslovakia and Germany. During World
War II she regularly chastised Osbert Peake, undersecretary at the Home Office,
and in 1942 pressured the government to publicize the evidence of Holocaust.
1939(17th
of Tishrei, 5700): Shabbat Sukkoth Chol Hamoed.
1939:
“Loyalty Day was observed by Temples and Synagogues throughout” New York City
today.
1939:
During his sermon, Rabbi Israel Goldstein of Congregation B’nai Jeshurun said,
“The death of Professor Sigmund Freud removes from the scene an explorer into
the field of human nature whose findings have revolutionized the science of
psychology and medicine. His death in
exiles is another poignant reminder of the exile of German civilization from
its native soil.”
1939:
During his sermon, Rabbi Louis I Newman of Congregation Rodeph Shalom said
“Sigmund Freud was a complex contradictory exemplar of the Jewish genius, and
his influence deserves criticism as well as praise.”
1939:
“A new Yiddish company directed by Jacob Ben-Ami opened its season tonight at
the National Theatre on Houston Street with ‘Chaver Nachma,’ dramatized by I.J.
from his own novel East of Eden.”
1939:
Tonight “the Yiddish Folk Players presented as their first production at the
Second Avenue Theatre Nuchim Stutchkoff’s ‘In a Jewish Grocery.’”
1940:
“Messages by Mayor La Guardia, Louis J. Moss, president of the United Synagogue
of America and Dr. Emil W. Leipziger of New Orelans, president of the Central
Conference of American Rabbis were among those made public today in connection
with the beginning tomorrow at sundown of Rosh Hashanah, 5701.
1940:
Days before Rosh Hashanah, in New York today in the wholesale meat markets,
kosher “veal fore saddle averages were steady” today “while kosher “calf fore
saddles were steady to slightly lower” and today’s “averages for kosher lamb
fore saddles “were uneven.”
1941(9th
of Tishrei, 5702): Erev Yom Kippur
1941:
The Nazis completed the deportation of 2,000 Jews from “Łódź and to the Chełmno
extermination camp.”
1941:
The two-day massacre of the Jews of Kiev at Babi Yar came to an end. “The
killing rate, almost 35,000 in two days, was unequaled even by the death
factories of Treblinka and Auschwitz.” The intent was to wipe out the entire
Jewish community in Kiev in what has been described as “the largest single
massacre” during the Holocaust. The victims were as varied as little Velvele
Valentin Pinkert and 70 year old Yakov-Pinhas Zindelivich, who was dragged out
of his apartment by one of his Ukrainian neighbors and turned over to Nazis.
According to Sir Martin Gilbert, the old man, wrapped in his prayer shawl was
driven to BabiYar, ‘praying all the way’. After the slaughter, the Nazis and
their collaborators collapsed the walls of the ravine, turning it into a mass
grave. The Jews who had not died from gunfire were buried alive.[There is no
way that this brief entry can do justice to evil of the crime]
http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/this_month/september/06.asp
1941:
Opening of the Battle of Moscow. This
clash of the Nazi and Red armies would last for five months. If the Nazis had been successful, and in the
opening stages it looked as if they would the Soviet capital, it might well
have meant the end of meaningful Soviet resistance in Europe. As the two armies
slammed against each other through the Russian Winter, the fate of European
Jewry hung in the balance. Even if the Soviets had remained in the war, the
total victims of the Holocaust would have been closer to nine or twelve million
and not the six million who actually perished.
1942(19th
of Tishrei, 5703): Chol Hamo’ed Sukkoth
1942(19th
of Tishrei, 5703): Twenty-six-year-old Jacques Van Praag, the Amsterdam born
son of Levie Van Praag and Sabiena Cohen was murdered today at Birkenau.
1942:
SS exterminate 3,500 Jews in Zelov Lodz Poland in a 6-week period
1942:
In Toronto, Mayer Kirshenblatt, a refugee from Poland who “ran a paint and
wallpaper store” and his wife gave birth to Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, “a
scholar of Performance and Jewish Studies” and co-author of They Called Me
Mayer July: Painted Memories of a Jewish Childhood in Poland Before the
Holocaust.
1942: New construction at the Treblinka death
camp greatly increases its gas-chamber capacity.
1942: Polish Jews trapped in the Warsaw Ghetto begin
the construction of bunkers for a military defense. By January of 1943, they will have
constructed more than 600 fortified bunkers.
1943(1st
of Tishrei, 5704): Rosh Hashanah
1943(1st of Tishrei, 5704): Seventy-nine-year-old
Franz Oppenheimer, the German
sociologist and political economist, who also studied in the area of the
fundamental sociology of the state
passes away in Los Angeles today. From 1934 to 1935, Oppenheimer taught
in Palestine. In 1936 he was appointed an honorary member of the American
Sociological Association. From 1938 onwards, he taught at the University of
Kobe in Japan. After he emigrated to the United States in 1942, he became a
founding member of the American Journal of Economics and Sociology.
1943: The Krupp arms factory at Mariupol,
Ukraine, is dismantled and relocated west to Fünfteichen, Silesia, Poland,
where it is staffed by Jewish slave laborers.
1943: Between now and April of 1944, Jewish slave laborers
exhume at least 68,000 corpses of murdered Jews and Soviet POWs at the Ponary,
Lithuania, killing ground, near Vilna.
1944:
Jewish deportations from Slovakia resume. Between now and March 31, 13,500 were
deported and another 5,000 were imprisoned locally.
1944:
Johanna Elisabeth Hermine Berta Zenk, the wife of anti-Nazi and Red Orchestra
member Bernhard Bästlein found out today that her husband had been executed on
September 18.
1944(13th
of Tishrei, 5705): Seventy-six-year-old Rabbi Michael Adler passed away today.
https://sarahfairhurstjmm.wordpress.com/2013/10/15/a-chaplain-in-the-trenches/
1944:
After a German army patrol had searched the cellar warehouse used by the
Ehrenfeld Group and failed to capture Hans Steinbrück, a genuine leader in the
anti-Nazi resistance, the police searched the building and arrested two Jewish
women who were hiding there.
1944(13th
of Tishrei, 5705): Fifty-one year old Eich Germany native and attorney Berthold
Guttman, the leader of the Jewish community, the husband of Clair Guthmann ,who
reached the rank of Lieutenant and was awarded the Iron Cross Second Class for
bravery while serving as an observer and gunner with the Imperial German Air
Force during WW I which did not keep the Nazis from murdering him at
Auschwitz-Birkenau today.
1945(23rd
of Tishrei, 5706): Simchat Torah
1945:
Hank Greenberg's final day home run won the pennant for the Tigers.
1946:
Twenty-two top Nazi leaders were found guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg.
1946:
Twenty-five days after the premiere of “A Flag is Born” “the American League for a Free Palestine
held a testimonial in honor of actor Paul Muni during which former Iowa Senator
Guy M. Gillette, President of the of the American League for a Free Palestine,
refereed to Muni’s character of Tevya as a ‘Hebrew Abraham Lincoln.’”
1947(16th
of Tishrei, 5708): Second Day of Sukkoth
1947:
The World Series, featuring the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers, is
televised for the first time. Both teams had large followings among the Jewish
population. How did those who were not
supposed to use electricity cope with the temptation on the second day of
yontiff? How many Reform Jews decided to
stay home and observe a second of Sukkoth?
So far, these questions remain unanswered which means there is at least
one topic left for a doctoral thesis in Jewish studies.
1947:
Several Arab leaders including Mohammad Nima Hawari, a lawyer who founded the first
and largest of the paramilitary Arab youth organizations in Palestine,
expressed their opposition to the UNSCOP plan and the creation of a Jewish
state. They said that any such move
would result in a violent reaction on the part of the Arabs in Palestine. They said that any attempt to create a Jewish
state would be met by a Pan-Arab Army led by a modern-day Saladin who lead them
to victory as had happened in the days of the Crusaders.
1948:
During the siege of Jerusalem, amidst reports that spies were providing
information to the Jordanians, George Hawkins, one of those so accused was
released from custody.
1949:
Two days after he had passed away, funeral services were held for Israel Sachs,
the husband of Fannie Sachs, the Vice President of the Ladies League of Beth
Israel Hospital with whom he had four children – “Jeannette, Nathan, William
and Abraham.”
1950:
“The Breaking Point” directed by Michael Curtiz, produced by Jerry Wald, with
music by Max Steiner and co-starring John Garfield was released in the United
States today by Warner Bros.
1950:
Eight hundred athletes continued to compete in the 3rd Maccabiah.
1951(29th
of Elul, 5711): Erev Rosh Hashanah
1951(29th
of Elul, 5711): As day gives way to night, and Jews begin to usher in 5712,
President Chaim Weizmann and Prime Minister David Ben Gurion each issued New
Year’s messages expressing their hopes for peace for the world in general and
for the Jewish people and Israel in particular.
Both also cited the burden Israel faced as it moved to accept an ever
growing tide of immigrants. Ben Gurion
clearly stated the challenge when he said, “Great and hard are the problems of
integration…we shall support this burden fully aware that it is for our
generation to discharge this primary task.”
He expressed the hope that “the Jewish people throughout the world will
devotedly join in this historic enterprise.”
1952:
A commercially viable demonstration of Cinerama entitled “This Is Cinerama”
co-produced by Mike Todd opened on Broadway today.
1952:
The Jerusalem Post reported from
Moscow that Minister Samuel Eliashiv handed a note to the Soviet Government on
the possibility of obtaining reparations from East Germany.
1952:
The Jerusalem Post reported that a
guard, Shimon Badini, was killed and a farmer badly wounded by infiltrators
from Jordan who stole from Jewish villages in the Jerusalem Corridor, during
the Yom Kippur fast.
1953(21st
of Tishrei, 5714): Hoshana Raba
1953(21st
of Tishrei, 5714): Leo Arkin, the native of Grodno, who was a “landsman of
Aaron Samuel Lieberman, the father of Jewish socialism,” passed away today in
Brooklyn.
1953:
“Donovan’s Brain” the film version of Curt Siodmak’s novel of the same name was
released today United Artists today in the United States.
1954:
“Woman’s World” a comedy that provides a classic look at corporate management
co-starring Lauren Bacall, a cousin of Shimon Peres was released in the United
States by 20th Century Fox.
1954:
The U.S.S. Nautilus, an atomic submarine, was launched by the United States
Navy. The Nautilus was the first
atomic powered vessel launched by the United States. It was also the progenitor
of what would become America's major "ace-in-the-hole" during the
Cold War - the fleet of atomic powered submarines armed with ballistic
missiles. Admiral Hyman Rickover was the
father and driving force behind the sub fleet.
1955:
In the World Series, the Brooklyn Dodgers whose team included Sandy Koufax won
game three.
1955(14th
of Tishrei, 5716): Erev Sukkoth
1955(14th
of Tishrei, 5716): Brooklyn born, NYU trained chemist and “All-American
basketball star” Colonel Samuel N. Cummings the veteran of two world wars who
“in civilian life was president of the Pylam Products Company,” a supporter of
the Brooklyn Hebrew Home and Hospital for the Aged and the Union Temple of
Brooklyn and the husband of Molly Cummings with whom he had two daughters –
Joan and Roberta – passed away today.
1956:
French and Israeli officials met in Paris where the French seek to induce the
Israelis in being part of the Anglo-French plans to take control of the Suez
Canal away from Egypt’s Nasser.
1957:
It was reported today that “Israel Embassy officials who attended Rosh Hashanah
services in Moscow’s Great Synagogue were surrounded by hundreds of friendly
Russian Jews who demonstrated their affection by shaking hands with each
Israeli.”
1957:
In Kew Gardens, Queens, Morty Drescher, a naval systems analyst and his wife
Sylvia, a bridal consultant gave birth to multi-talented Francine “Fran”
Drescher known to many as “Fran Fine” in the sitcom “The Nanny.”
1960(9th
of Tishrei, 5721): Erev Yom Kippur
1960(9th
of Tishrei, 5721): Seventy-five-year-old retired financier and a founder of the
Columbia Broadcasting System Jay Paley, the uncle of C.B.S. Chairman William S.
Paley, the father of Mrs. Jacqueline Greberm, and the brother of Brother of
Benjamin Paley and Mrs. Sophie Brocktor, passed away today at his home in Bel
Air.
1961(20th
of Tishrei, 5722): Shabbat Shel Sukkoth
1962(2nd
of Tishrei, 5723): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah
1962:
Two terrorists attacked an Egged bus traveling to Eilat.
1963(12th
of Tishrei, 5724): Sixty-seven-year-old Etta Levin Greenberg, the Springfield,
MA born daughter of Eli and Bessie Aronson Levin, and the husband of Louis
Greenberg passed away today after which she was buried at B’nai Jacob Cemetery
in West Springfield, MA
1964(24th
of Tishrei, 5725): Eighty-five-year-old Rabbi Jacob Sonderling and Zionist
leader passed away today.
1965:
Martin Jay Gruber, the Professor Emeritus of Finance at the New York University
Stern School of Business and Ellen Gruber gave birth to Harvard trained PhD
economist Jonathan Gruber who has been on the faculty of MIT, his undergrad
alma mater since 1992 and is the father of Rachel, Jack and Ava Gruber.
1965:
Columbia trained physicist Harold Brown completed his service as the 2nd
Director of Defense Research and Engineering
1965:
Sergeant-Major Lawrence N. Freedman, the husband of Teresa Freedman and a member
of Delta Force enlisted in the Army today 27 years before he was killed while
working “as a CIA paramilitary officer.”
1969(18th
of Tishrei, 5730): Fourth of Sukkoth
1969:
In Chicago “radio personality John Records Landecker, the son of German Jewish
refugee Werner Landecker” and his wife gave birth to “actress Amy Lauren
Landecker.”
1971(11th
of Tishrei, 5732): Sixty-four-year-old Meyer Applebaum, the St. Paul, MN born
son of Oscar and Bertha Applebaum, the husband of Eva Applebaum and the father
of Howard Applebaum who passed away in 2008 passed away today in St. Paul
1972(22nd
of Tishrei, 5733): Shemini Atzeret
1972(22nd
of Tishrei, 5733): Samuel Norton “Sam” Gerson passed who won the Silver Medal
for freestyle wrestling as a member of the United States 1920 Summer Olympic
Team and who was one of the founders of the Philadelphia Maccabi Sports Club
passed away today in Philadelphia.
1972(22nd
of Tishrei, 5733): Sixty-eight director and set designer Edgar Georg Ulmer who
produced People on Sunday (Menschen am
Sonntag) a silent film with a script by Billy Wilder passed away today.
1973:
A second group of Egyptian reservists were called to duty, ostensibly to take
part in a training exercise; in reality they were part of the force that would
attack on Yom Kippur.
1974:
“Analytical note of the Propaganda Division of the Central Committee of the
CPSU consultant L. Onnikov "On the exit of part of the Jewish population
from the USSR."
1974:
“Cinderella Liberty” directed and produced by Mark Rydell and starring James
Caan and Elia Wallach was released in Germany today.
1975:
“Two Jewish cemeteries in Kiev were reported to have been desecrated by
vandals.”
1976(6th
of Tishrei, 5737): Real estate developer William Zeckendorf, Sr. the owner of
Webb and Knapp passed away today.
1977:
Charles Miller Metzner the former “counsel to the General Jewish Council who
had serving on the United States District for the Southern District of New York
since 1959 “assumed senior status” today
1979(9th
of Tishrei, 5740): Erev Yom Kippur
1979:
“One Day At A Time” starring Bonnie Franklin opens for its 5th
season.
1981(2nd
of Tishrei, 5742): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah celebrated for the first time
during the Presidency of Ronald Reagan.
1982:
Yitzhak Berman completes his terms as Minister of Energy and Water Resources.
He resigned “due to the government's attitude towards the Kahan Commission,
which was investigating the Sabra and Shatila massacre.”
1982:
Premiere of “Cheers” the sitcom co-starring Rhea Perlman and Bebe Neuwirth
co-created by James Burrows.
1982:
“Taxi’ the sitcom created by James Brooks, Stan Daniels and Ed Weinberger and
starring Judd Hirsch began its fifth season on ABC.
1983(23rd
of Tishrei, 5744): Simchat Torah
1985(15th
of Tishrei, 5746): Sukkoth
1986(26th
of Elul, 5746): Fifty-eight-year-old award-winning author Arthur A. Cohen
passed away today. (As reported by Edwin McDowell)
1986:
Mordechai Vanunu, a nuclear technician, disappeared before his revelations
about Israel’s atomic program at Dimona were published in the Sunday Times of London.
1988(19th
of Tishrei, 5749): Fifth Day of Sukkoth
1988
(19th of Tishrei, 5749): Rabbi Joachim
Prinz passed away. Born in Germany,
Prinz was a rabbi in Berlin from 1926 through 1937. He was an early opponent of the Nazis and
urged the Jews to leave the country. He
left in 1937 for the United States where he became a leader of the Reform
Movement and a leader in the American Civil Rights Movement. He was a speaker at the 1963 March on
Washington. He was 86 at the time of his death.
1989(1st
of Tishrei, 5750): Rosh Hashanah, 5750
1989:
Lieutenant General Sidney T. Weinstein, one of the highest-ranking Jewish
soldiers at that time, completed his three years “as the Deputy Chief of Staff
for Intelligence, Headquarters, Department of the Army.
1991(22nd
of Tishrei, 5752): Shemini Atzeret
1991(22nd
of Tishrei, 5752): Heavy-weight boxer King Levinsky passed away. Levinksky, who was born in Chicago in 1910,
was known by his given name – Harris Krakow – and another nickname – “Kingfish”
Levinksy. Although he never fought for
the heavyweight championship, he fought a number of noted heavyweights
including his co-religionist, Max Baer, Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis and Primo
Carnera. He was marred to Roxana Sand, a fan dancer whose birth name was Golda
Glickman
1993(15th
of Tishrei, 5754): Sukkoth
1993(15th
of Tishrei, 5754): Seventy-seven-year-old Irwin Witty, who led NYU to “the
first-ever national postseason Basketball tournament, the NIT, where they
advanced to the Final Four before losing to Colorado by one point before losing
to ultimate tournament victor Oklahoma A&M, passed away today.
1993:
Premiere of season three of “The Simpsons” the cartoon sitcom developed by
James Brooks and Sam Simon.
1994(25th
of Tishrei, 5755): French microbiologist Andre Micael Lwoff who won the Nobel
Prize for Medicine in 1965 passed away.
1994:
In a letter Ruth Gruber wrote today to historian Martin Gilbert, she described
how her in May of 1945, her brother Dr. Irving Gruber, “a captain with the
Ninth Infantry…took over a small hospital in Bad Lippsringe” which he enlarged
to two hundred beds so that he could care for “Russian slave laborers rescued
from the nearby salt mines.
1994:
After premiering at the New York Festival, “Ed Wood” starring Martin Landau and
Sarah Jessica Parker and with music by Howard Shore was released throughout the
United States.
1997:
Emmy award winning actress Rena Sofer returned as a guest star on the long
running soap opera “General Hospital.”
1997:
In “Iran: Life of Jews Living in Iran,” published today, Barbara Demick
reported that "Tehran has 11 functioning synagogues, many of them with
Hebrew schools. It has two kosher restaurants, and a Jewish hospital, an
old-age home and a cemetery."
1997:
The Roman Catholic Church in France issues a public apology for remaining
silent during the persecution and deportation of Jews conducted by the pro-Nazi
Vichy regime during World War II. Around 76,000 Jews were taken from France to
Germany, and most died in Nazi concentration camps
1998(10th
of Tishrei, 5759): Yom Kippur
1998:
On Yom Kippur, Salem Rajab al-Sarsour, 29-year-old Palestinian terrorist made a
grenade attack on an army post in Hebron, wounding 14 Israeli soldiers and 8
Palestinian passers-by.
1998:
CBS broadcast the first episode of season eight of “The Nanny” the sitcom
created by Peter Marc Jacobson and Fran Drescher who also starred in the
program.
1998:
ABC broadcast the first episode of “The Secret Live of Men” a sitcom directed
by James Burrows.
1999:
In Toronto, Paul Stanley (Stanley Bert Eisen) began playing the title role in a
production of The Phantom of the Opera for a second time.
2000(1st
of Tishrei, 5761): Rosh Hashanah
2001(1st
of Tishrei, 5761): Ninety-year-old Chicago
native and George Washington University graduate Samuel Mayer Dodek, the
Jefferson Medical College and Case Western University Reserve trained
obstetrician and gynecologist and husband of Miriam Dodek with whom he had two
daughters – Samayla and Mariamne – passed away today.
2000:
Arab leaders today on their community to begin a general strike to protest the
killing of five Palestinian protestors by Israeli police yesterday on what was
the first day of a wave of Arab terror kown as the Al Aqsa Intifada.
2000:
“A History of Britain, a BBC documentary series written and presented by Simon
Schama, was first transmitted in the United Kingdom” today
2001: The New York Times reviewed books by
Jewish authors and/or about topics of Jewish interest including War In A
Time Of Peace: Bush, Clinton, and the
Generals by David
Halberstam, Family Business::Selected
Letters Between a Father and Son by Allen Ginsberg and Louis Ginsberg
and Long Time No See by Susan
Isaacs.
2002:Today,
“President George W. Bush signed the “Foreign Relations Authorization Act,
Section 214 of which was entitled "United States Policy with Respect to
Jerusalem as the Capital of Israel," and included various statutes
regarding the status of Jerusalem, including invoking the Jerusalem Embassy Act
of 1995.”
2003: A closely watched legal dispute over the
ownership of works of art once looted by the Nazis reached the Supreme Court as
the justices accepted an appeal by Austria and one of its state art museums on
whether American courts have jurisdiction to resolve such cases. An 87-year-old
California woman, the niece and heir of a prominent art collector, Ferdinand
Bloch-Bauer, who fled Vienna in 1938 and died shortly after the end of World
War II, has spent decades trying to get back the remains of the collection he
left behind. At issue are six paintings by Gustav Klimt, including two
portraits of Mr. Bloch-Bauer's wife, Adele. The six paintings, now in the
Austrian Gallery in Vienna, are worth more than $100 million.
2003:
A memorial service was held today English director and actor John Richard
Schlesinger the son of two middle class London Jews – Dr. and Mrs. Bernard
Edward Schlesinger.
2004(15th
of Tishrei, 5765): Sukkoth
2004:
Ross Mark Kagan a former director of independent motion pictures and the son of
“a close knit Jewish family” from Highland Park, Illinois, was arrested and
charged with multiple felonies connected with a counterfeit jewelry ring.
2005:
Under oath, Judith Miller was questioned by the special prosecutor before a
federal grand jury but was not relieved of contempt charges
2005:
Haaretz reported that “the Vatican
library has loaned the Israel Museum four illuminated Jewish manuscripts from
the 13th and 15th centuries, which will be on exhibit to the public for the
next four months. The manuscripts include a 15th-century manuscript of Maimonides'
Mishne Torah, a 15th-century manuscript of Rabbi Jacob ben Asher's Arba'ah
Turim, a 13th-century manuscript of the Bible, and a 13th-century book of
Psalms. The most famous of the manuscripts on loan is the copy of Maimonides'
famous legal composition, the Mishne Torah.
2005:
USA Today listed the Brenham kehilla
as one of "10 great places to share history of the Jewish faith."
2005:
The Washington Post reported that Leo
Sternbach, the inventor of a revolutionary new class of tranquilizers that
included Valium, one of the first blockbuster "lifestyle" drugs, has
died at his home in North Carolina. He was 97. Named one of the 25 most
influential Americans of the 20th century by U.S. News & World Report,
Sternbach's credits include 241 patents, 122 publications, honorary degrees and
other awards.
2006(8th
of Tishrei, 5767): The Sabbath of the Return – Shabbat Shuvah.
2006:
Philadelphia University dedicated The Kanbar Campus Center named in honor of
alumnus and philanthropist Maurice Kanbar “a well-known and successful
inventor, entrepreneur, author and Hollywood producer.”
http://www2.philau.edu/News/pdf/06/092706kanbar.pdf
2006:
The shiva ended this evening for Mortimer Ostow, “the director and scientific
leader of the Psychoanalytic Research and Development Fund” who had passed away
at the age of 88, predeceased by his wife Miriam and described as a “dedicated
physician, distinguished scholar and teacher and committed Jew.”
2007:
As part of Chol Hamoed Sukkoth, Temple Judah sponsors a Sukkah Hop.
2007:
An exhibition celebrating 100th anniversary of the birth of Mexican
artist Frida Kahlo comes to an end in Cayoacan.
2007:
The Sunday Washington Post book
section featured reviews of the following books about Jewish topics or by
Jewish authors: Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice by Janet Malcolm which
asks the question, “How did two elderly Jewish writers living in occupied
France survive the Nazis?” and Exit Ghost by Phillip Roth, featuring
Roth’s alter ego, the 71 old Nathan Zuckerman
2007:
The Sunday New York Times book
section featured reviews of the following books about Jewish topics or by
Jewish authors: The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism by
Naimoi Klein in which the Jewish reporter “tracks 50 years of global
capitalism, spotting ruthless opportunism at every turn.” The Art of
Political Murder: Who Killed the Bishop? In which author Francisco Goldman
whose father is Jewish, and mother is from Guatemala “investigates the real
life killing of a Roman Catholic bishop.” Ike: An American Hero by Michael
Korda, part of the famous Hungarian born, British film making family. Stanley The Impossible Life of Africa’s
Greatest Explorer by Jim
Teal that includes the story of the “rescue of Emin Pasha a.k.a. Eduard
Schnitzer, the Silesian born German Jew whose roguish life reads more like a
novel than anything else.
2007:Israeli chess
player Boris Gelfand tied former chess world champion Vladimir Kramnik of
Russia for second place with a masterful display of cunning in the world chess
championship in Mexico. Indian national Vishwanathan Anand emerged the victor
of the grueling competition.
2007: New York Met Shawn Green plays his last game.
2007: In the wake of the Israeli airstrike “on a
nuclear reactor in Syria” to which nobody would admit had happened “Syrian
Vice-President Faruq Al Shara announced that the Israeli target was the Arab
Center for the Studies of Arid Zones and Dry Lands, but the center itself
immediately denied this.”
2007: Dominique Strauss-Kahn was formally named as
the new head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
2007: Tzipora "Tzipi" Obziler reached her
first final on the WTA Tourbat the Guangzhou International Women's Open where
she did not prove victorious.
2008(1 Tishrei, 5769): First Day Rosh Hashanah, Sephardic
Jews living in northern Brazil's Amazon region have additional reason to
celebrate the New Year because of the publication of the first Rosh Hashanah
Machzor (New Year prayer-book) which incorporates their unique liturgy and
customs. The Machzor will benefit other Portuguese-speaking Sephardic Jewish
communities as well as Bnai Anousim (people whose ancestors were compelled to
convert to Catholicism at the time of the Inquisition, whom historians refer to
as "Marranos") throughout Brazil and Portugal. The Machzor, called Ner
Rosh Hashanah, was prepared and edited by Rabbi Moyses Elmescany and Cantor
David Salgado, and includes the traditional Hebrew text of the Jewish New Year
prayer services, together with both a transliteration and translation into
Portuguese.
2009: The Center for Jewish History presents
Nostalgia by Headless Horse Dance, a dance performance choreographed by Robin
Rapoport.
2009: In Cedar Rapids, Hadassah book club discusses Sotah
by Naomi Ragan.
2009: Final
day for making submissions to The D.C. Jewish Community Center’s annual writing
contest being held in conjunction with the upcoming Hyman S. & Freda
Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival, being held in October. . As in years past,
the contest's theme is keyed to the festival's Opening Night, which this year
will celebrate the 50th anniversary of Philip Roth's coming-of-age classic,
Goodbye, Columbus. Jewish tradition states that 13 is the age at which young
people come of age, but the question being posed by the contest is what age do
you believe to be your true turning point, that one transformative moment?
2009: Stuart E. Weisberg discusses and signs his new biography, Barney
Frank: The Story of America's Only Left-Handed, Gay, Jewish Congressman, at
Lambda Rising Bookstore, in Washington, D.C.
2010(22nd of Tishrei, 5771): Shemini Atzeret
2010: “The Obama administration is trying to cajole the Israeli
government into a 60-day renewal of the freeze on Jewish settlement building by
offering it security guarantees, ranging from military hardware to support for
a long-term Israeli presence in the strategically sensitive Jordan Valley,
according to lawmakers and other officials briefed on the proposals.
2011: On the secular calendar, today marks the 70th anniversary of
the second and final day of the two day
slaughter at Babi Yar which ended on September 30., 1941.
2011: A production Wendy Wasserstein’s “Heidi Chronicles”
“premiered in Italy, at Rome's Teatro dell'Arciliuto near Piazza Navona, to
wide acclaim.”
2011: A 49-year-old
resident of the UK was detained and tried in court after making a Nazi salute
and singing the words Auschwitz and Birkenau to a Jewish teenager at a hospital
in Wrexham, the Daily Telegraph reported today.
2011(2nd of Tishrei, 5772): Second Day of Rosh Hashanah
שנה טובה, כתיבה וחתימה טובה.
2012:
The New York Times features books by
Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The
Obama White House and the Supreme Court by Jeffrey Toobin the recently
released paperback edition of The Swerve: How the World Became Modern by
Stephen Greenblatt
2012(14th
of Tishrei, 5773): Erev of Sukkoth
2012(14th
of Tishrei, 5773): Ninety-five-year-old Barry Commoner, a leading ecologist and
environmentalist passed away today. (As reported by Daniel Lewis)
2012(14th
of Tishrei, 5773): Italy lost a national hero to when 88-year-old Shlomo Venezia, “a Holocaust survivor who
since the 1980s had been speaking and writing tirelessly about his nightmarish
experiences, having been forced to serve in an Auschwitz Sonderkommando” passed
away today. (As reported by Lisa Palmieri-Billig)
2012:
The Los Angeles Times features books
by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The
Signal and the Noise: Why So Many Predictions Fail – But Some Don’t by Nate
Silver.
2012:
In cooperation with the Russian Jewish Community, the Illinois Holocaust Museum
& Education Center is scheduled to commemorate the seventy-first
anniversary of the 2 day Massacre at Bai Yar which ended today with 34,000
Jewish men, women and children having been killed in a ravine near Kiev by
German killing squads.
2012:
In the best tradition of fulfilling the Jewish mission of social justice The
Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington is scheduled to sponsor a
performance of “Fly” at Ford’s Theatre to show its support for the Lincoln
Legacy Project.
2012:
Revelation: The Fourth Annual Stern College Senior Art Show is scheduled to
come to an end
2012:
Iran's economy is edging towards collapse due to international sanctions over
its controversial nuclear program, Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz told Israel
Radio today.
2012:
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu did not intend to indicate the date of the
next general election when he said in his speech to the United Nations General
Assembly Thursday that the world's red line for preventing Iran's
nuclearization must be next spring, sources close to Netanyahu said today.
2012:
In the Game, an exhibit at the Oregon
Jewish Museum, that explores sports and Oregon's Jewish community is scheduled
to come to a close. (As reported by “Harriet Rochlin & Jewish History http://www.rochlin-roots-west.com/whats-new-june-2012
2013:
The Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center of San Diego (CA) is scheduled to
host its annual charity golf tournament.
2013:
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is scheduled to address the United Nations
General Assembly
2013:
Transcending Tradition: Jewish Mathematicians in German-Speaking Academic
Culture is scheduled to open at the Center for Jewish History in NYC
2013:
UKJF-JW3 are scheduled to present a free screening of “Noodle” a film about a
37 year old twice widowed El Al flight attendant.
2013:
US President Barack Obama assured Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
today that the US remains committed to preventing Iran from attaining nuclear
weapons, is keeping the military option on the table, and will not reduce
sanctions unless or until it is clear that Iran is taking verifiable actions to
match its purported willingness for progress. (As reported by Raphael Ahren)
2013:
The Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial announced that it has recognized Egyptian Dr.
Mohamed Helmy as Righteous Among the Nations, a title reserved for gentiles who
risked themselves to save Jewish lives during the Holocaust. Dr. Mohamed Helmy
and Frieda Szturmann, a German woman, were honored for hiding several Berlin
Jews from the Nazis who otherwise would have been deported to death camps.
Helmy is the first Egyptian to receive this honor, Yad Vashem announced. Helmy,
who was born in Khartoum, Sudan in 1901 to Egyptian parents, came to Berlin to
study medicine in 1922 and worked at the Robert Koch Institute until he was
fired, due to his non- Aryan ethnicity, in 1937.According to Yad Vashem, Helmy spoke
out against Nazi policies despite the extreme risk, and when 21-year-old Anna
Boros, a family friend, was in danger of deportation, he successfully hid her
and, later on, her family from Nazi authorities. Boros later recalled that
Helmy had hid her “in his cabin in Berlin-Buch from March 10 until the end of
the war. As of 1942, I no longer had any contact with the outside world. The
Gestapo knew that Dr. Helmy was our family physician, and they knew that he
owned a cabin in Berlin-Buch. ”He managed to evade all their interrogations. In
such cases he would bring me to friends where I would stay for several days,
introducing me as his cousin from Dresden. When the danger would pass, I would
return to his cabin,” she said. “Dr. Helmy did everything for me out of the
generosity of his heart and I will be grateful to him for eternity.”Yad Vashem
is looking for Helmy’s family; he died in 1982 in Berlin. Danny Rainer of the
International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation praised the decision to acknowledge
Helmy’s actions. (As reported by Sam Sokol)
2014:
TCM is scheduled to show “The Young Lions,” “The Way We Were” and “Hearts of
the West” as part of its series “The Jewish Experience on Film.”
2014:
“Punter Adam Podlesh was released by the Pittsburgh Steelers today.”
2014:
“Sara Levy's World: Music, Gender, and Judaism in Enlightenment” is scheduled
to come to an end at Rutgers University.
2014:
“George Prochnik, author of a brilliant new study of Stefan Zweig” is scheduled
to present “Stefan Zweig: The Impossible Exile” at the Center for Jewish
History.
2014:
“Masked Palestinian youth threw stones and fired fireworks at a complex housing
a preschool this afternoon in the Mount of Olives neighborhood in a
continuation of increasing incidents of violence in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem in particular.” (As reported by Noam 'Dabu' Dvir)
2014:
“Two lions and a pregnant lioness were transferred today from the Bisan City
Zoo in the “northern Gaza Strip to a zoo in Jordan via Israel.” (As reported by
Roi Kais)
2014: Six months into a one-year deal punter Adam Podesh
was released today by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
2014:
Knopf is scheduled to release “Martin Amis’s latest novel, The Zone of
Interest, a satire set in a concentration camp during the Second World
War.”
2014:
Natan Zach, “an acclaimed Israeli poet took out an ad in Haaretz today
asserting that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas had spoken the
“truth” in his UN speech, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had told
“tall tales” in his. (As reported by Spencer Ho)
2014(6th
of Tishrei, 5775): Eighty-seven-year-old Nobel Laureate Martin Perl passed away
today.
2015:
In Ma’ayan Harod National Park, the Gilboa Balloon Festival is scheduled to
come to an end today.
2015:
The Priestly Blessing ("Bircat Cohanim") is scheduled to take place
at the Kotel
2015:
The Leo Baeck Institute is scheduled to host historian Christoph Kreutzmeuller
speaking on “Final Sale in Berlin: The Destruction of Jewish Commercial
Activity, 1930-1945.”
2015:
“Suzanne Last Stone (University Professor of Jewish Law and Contemporary
Civilization, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University) is
scheduled to have a conversation with Israel’s Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked
in which they discuss the role of shmita, the sabbatical year, in contemporary
Israeli society, the prospect of economic reform and debt relief, Israeli
constitutional law, and the model that shmita offers for Israeli and
international social justice” at the Center for Jewish History.
2016(27th
of Elul, 5776): Ninety-four-year-old professional photographer George Barris
passed away today. (As reported by Anita Gates)
2016(27th
of Elul, 5776): Seventy-three-year-old medical researcher Dr. Allen Roses
suffered a fatal heart attack today at Kennedy International Airport. (As
reported by Sam Roberts)
2016:
After premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival,“Denial,” a film
“based on History on Trial: My Day in Court with a Holocaust Denier was
released today in the United States.
2016:
A large number of foreign dignitaries including President Obama and Prince
Charles attended the state funeral for Shimon Peres at Mount Herzl in
Jerusalem. “From across the ocean and across the Green Line, they came today to
the mountaintop sanctuary of Mount Herzl to bid farewell to Shimon Peres,
marking what one called the “end of the era of giants.”
2016:
Today at the burial of President Shimon Peres, when his daughter, Professor
Tzvia Walden, a leader in the Israeli Reform movement, came to the last line of
the mourners Kaddish she closed with that movements modernized last line that
reads “May the one who makes peace in the heavens bring peace to us and the
Jewish People and upon all mankind.”
2016:
“Britain’s heir to the throne, Prince Charles of Wales, quietly visited his
grandmother’s grave at a Jerusalem convent today following his attendance at
the funeral of former president Shimon Peres. Charles stopped at the Mount of
Olives’ Church of Mary Magdalene before heading back to the UK, where his
paternal grandmother Princess Alice of Battenberg, who saved a Jewish family
during the Holocaust, was interred in the late 1980s.
2016:
Today “it was announced that the Midtown Manhattan branch of the deli would
close by the end of the year. The owner, Marian Harper Levine, stated that she
needed a more permanent break from operating the restaurant, saying, "At
this stage of my life, the early morning to late night days have taken a toll,
along with my sleepless nights and grueling hours that come with operating a
restaurant business in Manhattan." Two branches in Las Vegas, Nevada and
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania remained open, as well as the wholesale distribution
service.
2017:
Publication of “Hava Nagilah: The Story behind the Quintessential Jewish Song”
by Dr. Yvette Alt Miller.
https://www.aish.com/jw/s/Hava-Nagilah-The-Story-behind-the-Quintessential-Jewish-Song.html?s=mm
2017:
In Gothenburg, Sweden’s second largest city, the neo-Nazi Nordic Resistance
Movement are scheduled to march today, but not within 200 yards of the city’s
main synagogue as they had originally planned.
2017(10th
of Tishrei, 5778): Yom Kippur– for more
see http://downhomedavartorah.blogspot.com/
G'mar Chatimah Tovah
2017:
Russ & Daughters is scheduled to provide a Kosher Break the Fast at the
Jewish Museum.
2017:
“Paramedics from the Magen David Adom ambulance service treated over 1,500
Israelis during the day today.
2017:
Tonight, “Sheikh Hassan Nasralah,” “the leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah terror
group…accused Israel and the United States of orchestrating a…referendum on
support for Iraq’s Kurdistan.”
2018:
As part of the Bearing Witness program, the Breman Museum is scheduled to host
lecture by “Holocaust survivor Murray Lynn who was only 14 years old when he,
his mother and three brothers were sent by cattle train to Auschwitz-Birkenau”
where “his mother and brothers were murdered upon their arrival.”
2018:
The New York Times featured reviews
of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers
including the recently released paperback editions of Grant by Ron
Chernow and The Book of Separation by Tova Mirvis.
2018:
As part of the “Home: Lens on Israel” series, the Temple Emanuel Streicker
Center is scheduled to open the photographic exhibition “The Disabled Receiving
Cutting-edge Care in Haifa”
2018:
Dr. Elliot Lefkovitz is scheduled to deliver the keynote address at the
ceremony marking the commemoration of the 77th anniversary of the
Babi Yar Massacre co-sponsored by The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education
Center
2018:
Rookie quarterback Josh Rosen is scheduled to make his first start for the NFL
Arizona Cardinals.
2018(21th
of Tishrei, 5779): Hosha’na Rabbah;
2018:
Today, “The Zionist Federation of the UK and Ireland joined forces with
Mizrachi UK to hold a vigil in Hendon, remembering the victims of Palestinian
terror in Israel.”
2019:
At the end of this month, Donald Newhouse, the New York City born son of Mitzi
Epstein and Samuel Irving Newhouse, Sr. was ranked # 114 on Forbes’ list of
Billionaires with a “real time net worth of $12.4B.”
2019:
“The commander of Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said today
that destroying Israel was now an “achievable goal.”
2019:
After being on display for four month at the Bremen Museum, a “13-panel
exhibition created by the Arnold-Liebster Foundation examines the lives and
experiences of young Jehovah’s Witnesses who suffered due to their refusal to
accept Nazi ideology” is scheduled to come to a close today.
2019:
This evening the Oshman Family JCC is scheduled to host “Rosh Hashanah in the
Park” with a special emphasis on making it a celebration for both children and
adults.
2019:
This evening, “the Auqarian Minyan, Reboot and Yeashore” are scheduled to host
a “Bonfire of Reflection,” which include sharing stories, singing and
meditating around the fire.
2019(1st of
Tishrei, 5780): Rosh Hashanah.
2020: The Illinois Holocaust
Museum is scheduled to host Never Heard -Never Forget: A Virtual Commemoration
of the 79th Anniversary of the Massacre at Babi Yar and the Holocaust in the former
Soviet Union
2020: Live on Zoom, the
American Sephardi Federation and the Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America
are scheduled to present “Preparing for the High Holidays – Sukkot.”
https://programs.cjh.org/event/sukkot-2020-09-30
2020: The American Sephardi
Federation is scheduled episode two of Sephardic Culinary History – A Special
Sukkot Edition – “Beans and Chicken” and “Brown Nougat”
2020: The Jewish Film
Institute is scheduled to present a screening of “Guy Hirschfeld, a Guy with a
Camera,” a”12-minute documentary about an Israeli veteran who now battles
Israeli occupation and other social issues with photography.”
2020: The Jewish Children’s
Regional, a truly worthwhile organization, is scheduled to host its Board
Meeting in New Orleans.
2020: J Street is schedule to
launch J Street CLE with a virtual celebration including a private reception
U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown and Jeremy Ben-Ami, J Street founder and president.
2020:
As Israelis begin the day, they face continued lockdown due to the pandemic
which is fueled by yesterday’s reports that for the first time, Israel’s daily
coronavirus deaths per capita have surpassed those of the United States and
that “Israel has passed the threshold of 800 serious coronavirus patients — the
point that has in the past been cited as a red line beyond which the healthcare
system won’t be able to adequately treat everyone.”
2020:
The Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston is scheduled to
present, online, celebration of Jeremy Burton’s decade as the executive
director of the JCRC.
2021:
Rabbi Laurence Elis Milder of Congregation Beth Emek is scheduled to teach the
first session of “People of the Book,” an “eight-part series on holy Jewish
texts, commentaries, legal codes and more, and how they have shaped Judaism and
Jewish history.”
2021:
John T. Earnest who pleaded guilty to murder “and other charges in connection
with a deadly shooting at Southern California synagogue on the last day of
Passover is scheduled to be sentenced today which means he will “serve the rest
of his life in prison without possibility of parole…”
2021:
The Museum at Eldridge Street is scheduled to host a screening and discussion
of the film “The Forward: From Immigrants to Americans.”
2021:
The Illinois Holocaust Museum is scheduled to “open a new, multi-gallery
augmentation of our core exhibition highlighting the breadth and scope of the
Holocaust in the Soviet Union.”
2021:
The American Jewish Historical Society is scheduled to present “author and
journalist Julie” interviewing Gemma Birnbaum, “the new Executive Director of
AJHS.”
2021:
Ninety-six-year-old Irmgard Furchner who as teenager worked in the camp
director’s office at Stutthof in occupied Poland is scheduled to be charged
today in a German court “with the complicity of the murders of 10,000 people…”
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/r1qwt3gnf
2022:The Illinois
Holocaust Museum is scheduled to host a “free admission day” so that visitors
can “learn the history and lessons of the Holocaust through its core
exhibition, "meet" Holocaust Survivor Sam Harris' hologram, explore
the newly-opened Chim exhibition, and so much more.”
2022: Sixth and I
Synagogue is Mindfulness teacher Alison Cohen is scheduled to lead “Shabbat:
Exhale,” a one-hour alternative Shabbat service, unwind and reconnect through
guided meditation, reflection on Jewish teachings, and communal singing.
2023: In New Orleans,
the Oscar J. Tolmas Charitable Trust is scheduled to sponsor the “Federation –
JNOLA Sukkot Event.”
2023: Adar Shafran’s
“Running on Sand” is one of the films scheduled to be screened today at the
Haifa Film Festival.
2023: The Stav Festival
– A celebration of Israeli Arts and Culture – is scheduled to present “The
Holylanders,” “an original Israeli hit play by Moria Zrachia.
2023(15th of
Tishrei, 5754): Sukkoth
2024: The Steicker
Center is scheduled “to welcome the former Republican representative from New
York’s 1st congressional district in Suffolk County, Lee Zeldin, to discuss
what is at stake in November, particularly at this fraught moment for Jews”
2024: The Center for
Jewish History is scheduled to present the opening of the exhibition “Between
Anti-Semitism and Activism; The Jewish University Experience In Historical
Perspective.”
2024:
As September 30th begins in Israel, an unprecedented wave of anti-Semitism that
has included Hamas supporters calling for Zionist passengers on a New York
subway to raise their hands, sweeps the United States and the Hamas held
hostages begin day 360 in captivity while Jerusalem braces for more rocket
attacks by Hezbollah (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)