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One of the most important things that the government has introduced in Russia to improve education among Jews is the decree that each community must choose a…
Contributor:
Berish Rozenblum, Menashe Margolis
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire
(Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1864
Subjects:
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Public Access
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The Yiddish language is our mother tongue. But is it the language of education, by means of which we can best understand each other? Does anyone even make the suggestion that…
Contributor:
Shiye Mordkhe Lifshits
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire
(Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1863
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From the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, Yiddish theater flourished on New York City’s Lower East Side, where it could draw on an audience of more than 1.5 million first- and second…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1909
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Public Access
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So, is it not an injustice for girls to be so neglected that the refined feelings which are God’s gift to all mankind are often destroyed in them? But if you speak to Jewish parents they will tell you…
Contributor:
Urye Kahan, Alexander Zederbaum
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire
(Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1863
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Public Access
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God be praised, it is now a year since we began printing our supplement to Ha-melits, the Kol mevaser, the world’s first newspaper in plain Yiddish. At first, many people ridiculed us, but time has…
Contributor:
Urye Kahan
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire
(Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1863
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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When Berdichev, that famous commercial city, began, in the last few years, to fall from its high estate and the number of newly impoverished but respectable inhabitants kept increasing, I started to…
Contributor:
Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh (Mendele Mokher Sforim), Sholem Yankev Abramovitsh (Mendele Mokher Sforim)
Places:
(Volhynia, Ukraine)
Date:
1865
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Uptown, at 9th Avenue and 155th St., stands the famous field—the Polo Grounds. Every afternoon, 20,000–35,000 people gather there. The entrance fee is from $0.50–1.50. Thousands of poor boys and older…
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1909
Subjects:
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Public Access
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The synagogues where older and more modest congregants pray are spared to some extent. It is a good thing that they are closed all day and all night and are opened only for early morning prayers and…
Contributor:
A. Grodner
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire
(Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1866