968 resultados para Jewish Heritage Video Collection
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Letters (28) to Hans Nauen from family members and friends from Shanghai, Israel, USA. Most of the letters deal with private affairs. One deals with reparation.
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Transcript of the radio broadcast of a ‘political feature’ about the “aryanization” of Jewish businesses under the Nazis and its effect on the German economy in the 1980s. Participants in the broadcast were Fred Grubel, Ernst G. Lowenthal, Albert Ulrich Tietz and others.
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In 1916, the Jewish community of Boston established Beth Israel Hospital on Townsend Street in Roxbury to provide health care to immigrants in the area. Although accessible to everyone, the hospital provided Yiddish-speaking services for Eastern European Jewish immigrants and served kosher food, as well as conducted Jewish religious services. In 1928 the hospital entered into a teaching agreement with Harvard Medical School, Tufts University, and Simmons College. Shortly thereafter, the hospital moved to its current location in the Longwood area of Boston and expanded to a 220-bed operation. During 1935-1936, at the height of the Depression, Beth Israel spent 1.5 million dollars in free patient care and was only one of two local hospitals to offer health care to people on welfare. In 1996, Beth Israel Hospital merged with Deaconess Medical Center and became Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. This collection contains reports, pamphlets and hospital publications.
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Myer Starr was born in Dmitrovka in the Ukraine, which was then part of Russia. As a child he was apprenticed to a tailor and later a bakery before he began work at a dry goods store at the age of 11. After his mother died, Starr and his younger brother crossed the border into Germany and then immigrated to the United States. Starr and his brother sailed on the "Kleist" into New York in February 1913. From there, they traveled to a sister's house in Malden, Massachusetts. Myer later married and had two sons, graduates of Harvard College and Tufts University.
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Christie's; Amsterdam, 1989.
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Two photos of Nicosia.
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Zeitschrift K.C. Blaetter (1932-1933); Festschrift of K.C., New York, 1946; Literaturwegweiser fuer den K.C., Berlin 1926; Hochschulhefte, 1921; misc. printings and publications of the K.C. including fraternity postcards with logos; clipping about the voyage of ship to St. Louis (1939).
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Three items referring to Prof. Jakob Herz: Memorial by Ilse Sponsel in memory of Herz; excerpt from "Erlanger Tagblatt," (May 5, 1983); invitation to participate at the unveiling of the pillar and Alex Bauer's remarks at the occasion, May 5, 1983.
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Photocopies of family papers, such as birth-, citizenship-, and marriage certificates, as well as a permit to trade in Schmiegel, Posen. Also included is a family tree, circa 1787-1880.
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Report about Marianne Cohn, born 1922 in Mannheim, Germany, who was killed by German troops in 1944, when she tried to rescue refugee children in Annemasse, France.
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Documents: passport (Deutsches Reich/1937); citizenship certificate (1908).
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Vital records (originals and translations) and a family tree of the descendents of the cobbler Moses Rosenthal (1820-1896) and his wife Hannchen Stern (1815-1868) from Münchholzhausen, Germany.
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Newspaper clippings realting to the 100th anniversary of Mailaender brewery "Bergbraeu" (1862-1962) in Fuerth, Bavaria.
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A 21 page typescript accompanied by copies of vital records and a family tree.
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Clippings, correspondence, published and unpublished articles on learning disabilities and music therapy; contains testimony on her experience in the internment camp of Gurs, France.