This Day, January 5, In Jewish History by Mitchell A and Deb Levin Z"L
January 5
1209:
At Winchester Castle King John of England and his wife Isabella gave birth to
Richard, Earl of Cromwell “to whom Abraham of Berkhampstead “was very dear” and
on whose behalf he intervened to get him released after being charged with
desecrating an image of the Virgin Mary.”
1355:
Charles I of Bohemia was crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy in Milan.
Charles I morphed into Charles IV, the Holy Roman Emperor who at the beginning
of his reign made an ineffectual attempt to protect his Jewish subjects by
issuing “letter after letter forbidding the person of the His Jews, his ‘servi
camerae,’ to be touched.” His Christian
subjects in Germany disregarded their Emperor and continued their persecution
of the Jews.
1425:
In Valladolid, Spain “John II of Castile and Maria of Aragon” gave birth to
Henry IV during whose reign “the condition of the Spanish Jews was one of
comparative peace and comfort.”
1548:
Birthdate of Francisco Suarez the Jesuit theologian who “advocated the banning
of the Talmud and the building of synagogues as well as forbidding ‘any
familiarity with Jews.’” (As described by The History of the Jewish People)
1589: Catherine de Medici, Queen of France, the
wife of King Henry II passed away. Along
with several other French rulers and power brokers including Cardinal Richelieu
and Louis XIV, she had a penchant for collecting Hebrew Manuscripts.
1642:
King Charles I of England sent soldiers to arrest members of Parliament,
commencing England's slide into civil war. The Civil War would bring Oliver
Cromwell to power. Cromwell would
champion the return of the Jews to England, leading to the creation of the
modern Jewish committee in Great Britain, and by extension throughout the
British Empire including the United States.
1759:
Thirty-four-year-old Frankfort-on-Main who 1765 came to America where “he was a
merchant and an Indian trader” married Shinah Solomon Blum today.
1760(16th
of Tevet, 5520): Abraham Joseph was buried at the Hoxton Old Jewish Burial
Ground today.
1772(29th
of Tevet, 5532): Yaacov Ze'ev ben Yisrael passed away today in London.
1773(10th
of Tevet, 5533): Four days after the appearance of “Amazing Grace” which was
based on "1 Chronicles 17:16–17", refers to David's reaction to the
prophet Nathan telling him that God intends to maintain his family line
forever” Jews observe Asara B’Tevet
1786:
One day after he had passed away, Moses Mendelsohn was buried today in the
Jewish Cemetery in Berlin.
https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/moses-mendelssohn/
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/moses-mendelssohn
1792(10th
of Tevet, 5551): Asara B’Tevet
1796:
Birthdate of Joseph Salvador the native of Montpellier and French historian
“who according to family traditions were descendants of the Maccabees” but
whose mother Elizabeth Vincens was a Roman Catholic.
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13049-salvador-joseph
1797:
Birthdate of German-Jewish banker and astronomer Wilhelm Wolff Beer, the
half-brother of Giacomo Meyerbeer.
1799(28th
of Tevet, 5559): Parashat Vaera
1799:
On the same day that Jews read the Torah in New Jersey, Isabella (Brown) and
Zebulon Pike gave birth to American explorer Zebulon Montgomery Pike, of Pike’s
Peak fame who was killed leading American forces to victory at the Battle of
York.
1805(5th
of Shevat, 5565): Parashat Bo
1805(5th
of Shevat, 5565): Isaac Cohen Azevedo the London born son of Haham Moses Cohen
d'Azevedo and Sara de Abraham Cohen D'Azevedo, husband of Rachel de Abraham
Cohen D'Azevedo and father of Sarah Motta who “had lived briefly in Newport”
passed away today in Charleston, SC.
1807:
Eliza Judah and New York native Moses Myers gave birth to Georgianna Myers.
1808:
Judah Davis married Leah Mendosa at the Great Synagogue today.
1808:
Birthdate of Mohammad Shah Qajar, whose son Nasser
al-Din Shah Qajar brought Dr. Jacob Euard Polak to Persia to teach medicine and
surgery to a whole generation of Persian physicians as part of an attempt to
modernize the kingdom.
1814:
Today Chief Rabbi Lehmans of The Hague organized a special thanksgiving service
and implored God's protection for the allied armies.
1817:
In Charleston, SC, Rebecca Phillips and Isaiah Moses gave birth to Aaron I
Moses, the husband of Judith A Ottolengui and the father of Ottolengui Aaron
Moses.
1817:
In Bavaria, Sarah Floss and Feischel Bloch gave birth to Henrietta Bloch, the
wife of Samuel Lehrberger and the mother of Sophia, Emma, Jacob, Bella and
Timothy Lehrberger.
1826:
Maryland put into effect the "Jew Bill", which allowed Jews to hold
public office if they believed in Reward and Punishment in the Hereafter.
1828:
Rabbi Moss Myers of Ramsgate and his wife gave birth to Rabbi Jonas M. Myers,
the husband of Sarah Benjamin who was a successful businessman in Australia
where he founded the Adelaide Synagogue and the Brisbane Hebrew Congregation.
1830(10th
of Tevet, 5590): Asara B’Tevet
1834:
The Gazette Musicale de Paris,
founded by Maurice Schlesinger, “first appeared” today.
1835:
One day after he had passed away, Isaac Barnett was buried today at the “Brady
Street Jewish Cemetery.”
1839:
In Frankfort-on-Main Edward Werner and Rosalie Schlesinger gave birth to Adolph
Werner a graduate of City College of New York, earned a Ph.D. from Rutgers and
became a Professor of the German Language and Literature at City College City
of New York.
1841:
Birthdate of Shlomo Elyashiv, the son of Rabbi Chayim Chaiil Elisahoff and
author of Leshem Shevo V’Achlama.
1844:
Birthdate of Major General Sir Henry Trotter, who as the General Officer
Commanding the Home District attended a “public display” in 1909 of the Jewish
Lads Brigade, “the UK’s oldest Jewish youth movement founded by Colonel Albert
E.W. Goldsmid” with a goal, in part of helping the children of poor immigrants
assimilate into British society.
1845(26th
of Tevet, 5605): Forty-four year old Henry S. Hart, the son of Michael and
Esther Hart passed away in Easton, PA.
1846:
In Slovakia, Samuel Bettelheim, the son of Eva and Dr. Leopold Bettelheim and
his wife Chava Eva Bettelheim gave birth to Dr. Jozsef Bettelheim
1846:
Birthdate of Arsène Darmesteter the French Philologist who “deciphered the
difficult and beautiful French elegy, preserved in the Vatican, on the burning
of the thirteen Jewish martyrs at Troyes in 1288.”
https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Talmud.html?id=HRZQfUKlTYAC
1848:
Birthdate of Celia Hofheimer Fleisher, the wife of Simon B. Fleisher and the
mother of Samuel and Adler Fleisher.
1852:
Samuel Samuels, the husband of Esther Benjamin and the father of Moses, David
and Barnett Samuels was buried today at the “Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.”
1853:
Israel Levy married Elizabeth Harris today at the Great Synagogue.
1856:
Under the heading “We May Eat Pork Without Fear of the Tape Worm,” the New
York Times published a letter to the editor written in response to a
previously published article warning about the relationship between pork
consumption and tape worm infestation.
Citing the statement “that a Jew
was never known to have a tape-worm,” the author warns any “hypochondriac” who “should be tempted to turn Jew from this statement
and forswear pork” need not do so since
it is a “rare occurrence in this country” for anybody to be infested by the worms “notwithstanding we are such universal pork-eaters.”
1859:
Alexandru Ioan Cuza, who as a leader of united Romania “tried to prepare for
the emancipation of the Jews” began his reign as Prince of Moldavia.
1859:
Today, in Pilsen, the owners of the “match factory of Neuberger and Eckstein”
examined the damage to their establishment which had caught on fire yesterday.
1859:
Twenty-seven-year-old (Israel) Robert Weeks Nathan, the son of Sarah Seixas and
Isaac Mendes Seixas Nathan married Annie Augusta Florance in Philadelphia today
after which they had four children – Maud, Annie, Harold and Robert.
1860(10th
of Tevet, 5620): Asara B’Tevet
1860:
Two days after she had passed away, Jessey Marks, the daughter of Moses and
Phoebe Davis and the husband of Emanuel Marks with whom he had had six children
was buried today at the “Brompton (Fulham Road) Jewish Cemetery.”
1861(23rd
of Tevet, 5621): Parashat Shemot
1861:
As Jews begin to read the second book of the Torah, General Winfield Scott
moves ahead with plans to resupply Fort Sumter which is surrounded by Rebels in
Charleston by selecting the “Star of the West” to carry provisions to the U.S.
Army forces on the island.
1863:
Lazarus Powell, the U.S. Senator from Kentucky called on Congress to adopt “a
resolution condemning…General Orders No. 11 as ‘illegal, tyrannical, cruel and
unjust.’”
1863:
Philadelphian Abraham Casner completed his service with Company I of the 38th
Regiment.
1865:
Birthdate of New York City native Samuel A. Tuska, the 1884 graduate of CCNY
and “member of Heller, Hirsh & Co” who was a trustee of both the Aguilar
Free Library society and the Society for Ethical Culture.
1866:
In Philadelphia Meyer and Bertha Cauffman Gans gave birth to Lean G. Gans
Steppacher, the wife of Walter Meyer Steppacher and the motherof Walter,
Lester, and George Steppacher.
1867:
Birthdate of Julius Grünbaum, the native of Berlin who married Emma Karstein
and gained fame as German movie producer Jules Greenbaum.
1868(10th
of Tevet, 5628): Asara B’Tevet
1869:
In Boston, Asher Bamber and Rosetta Stein gave birth Golde Bamber, the graduate
of the Boston University School of Oratory, the Director of the Hebrew Women’s Sewing
Society and the Superintendent of the Hebrew Industrial School of Boston who
was a “delegate to the World’s Fair Congress of Religions at Chicago.”
https://jwa.org/people/bamber-golde
1871:
In Montgomery Country, OH, Charles and Sophie Fries Axman gave birth to Jacob
Axman, the husband of Anna Witendorf Axman.
1871:
Springfield, IL clothing store owner Samuel Rosenwald the German-born son of
Vogel and Bendix Rosenwald and his wife Augusta Rosenwald gave birth to Sophie
Adler, the wife of Manasseh Max Adler with who she had four children – Cyrus,
Robert, Lois and Rosebud.
1874:
It was reported today that when the noted author Léon Gozlan passed away, he
was buried by a Catholic priest. “He had
the features of a Jew and lived like a Jew…but it was positively declared that
he had been so baptized so the Rabbi gave way” and Gozlan was interred using
the rites of the Church.
1874:
In San Francisco, two Jewish immigrants from the Kingdom of Wurteemberg who had
during the California Rush gave birth to Nobel Prize winning physiologist
Joseph Erlanger who won the award in 1944. (Editor’s note – if his parents
hadn’t left Germany, instead of winning the Nobel Prize he would probably have
been a pile ashat Auschwitz)
erlanger-joseph.pdf
(nasonline.org)
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Joseph-Erlanger
1875(28th
of Tevet, 5635): Seventy-four-year-old Émile Péreire one of the two Péreire
brothers, 19th century Sephardic French financiers who were on a par
with the Rothschilds passed away today.
1875:
A meeting of the Executive Committee of the Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children, which includes several Jewish members, was held at their
new offices on Broadway and 34th Street.
1876:
Birthdate of Konrad Adenauer.
Adenauer was the first post-war Chancellor of West Germany. He took office in 1949. Having been imprisoned by the Nazis during
World War II, Adenauer sought to return
1877: In San Francisco, Henry and Johanna Grunbaum gave birth
to Otto S. Grunbaum, the head of
Grunbaum, Bros and “pioneer Seattle, WA furniture man” and husband Adaline
Grunbaum
1877: The Supreme Court of Massachusetts upheld a lower court
decision that Jews must observe the laws of the state regulating the observance
of the Sabbath. The case grew out of an
attempt to keep a store open on Sunday.
1878(1st of Shevat, 5638): Rosh Chodesh Shevat
1878: In Schwienfurt, Germany, Philipp Salazar, the son of “Maier
and Silah Malzer” and his wife Lina Fuchs gave birth to Isidor Salzer
1878: It was reported today that “a thrilling tale of a brave
young Jew will appear in the New York
Weekly on the morning of January 7.
1878: Rabbi Abram S. Isaacs will deliver lecture entitled “The
Dance to Death” at tonight’s meeting of the Young Men’s Hebrew Association in
New York’s Lyric Hall.
1879(10th of Tevet, 5639): Asara B’Tevet
1879: Effie Bertha Mocatta, the infant daughter of Abraham de
Mattos Mocatta and Florence Justina Cohen was buried today at the “Balls Pond
Road Jewish Cemtery.”
1879: The Board of Directors of the Home for Aged and Infirm Jews
met this afternoon. The Board limited
itself to routine business and did not take up the matter of accepting or
rejecting Judge Hilton’s recent offer to contribute $250 to the Home. Judge Hilton is the New York businessman who
banned Jews from his hotel at Saratoga Springs.
1879: An article profiling Otto von Bismarck published today
reported that “mixed marriage in Germany” is “a source of horror to the
orthodox Christians as well as to orthodox Jews.” Bismarck coarsely described mixed marriage as
“the crossing of a Jewish mare with a Christian stallion.”
1881: The price of l'Union Générale stock began an eleven-day
crash, which the anti-Semites would later blame on a conspiracy of Jewish
bankers.
1881: In Konigsberg, Germany, Max and Eva Schulman gave birth to
CCNY and National Academy of Design graduate Abram Gustav Schulman, the painter
and professor of art at CCNY and husband of Bertha Holman whom he married in
1910.
1882: Amherst College graduate and newspaper man Rudolph Max
Kaufmann, the Zanesville, OH born son of Samuel Hay Kauffmann and Sarah Clark
Fracker married Jessie R. Kennedy today in Washington, DC.
1883: Today, the American
Israelite published a letter from the “24 Russian Jewish families that had
established the Jewish community of Beersheba in Kansas” to “Moritz Loth, the
president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregation” expressing their
appreciation for the financial and material support provided for them.
1884(8th of Tevet, 5644): Fifty-four-year-old Eduard Lasker, “a
German politician and jurist” who “promoted the unification of German” passed
away today in New York City.
1885: Ludovic Trarieux, the future Minister of Justice who would
become a defender of Alfred Dreyfus, was elected Senator from the Gironde.
1885: In Cincinnati, OH, Adolph Aria Berman and Mary Agnes Jacobs
gave birth to Oscar A.Berman.
1886: Birthdate of Franz Kaufman, the German jurist who was
baptized by his Jewish parents and helped Jews survive the Holocaust before he
was arrested, taken to a concentration camp and murdered in 1944.
1886(28th of Tevet, 5646): Seventy-five-year-old Lazarus (Levi)
Adler, the author of "Emancipation and Religion of the Jews, or the Jewish
Race and its Adversaries" passed away while serving as the chief rabbinate
of the electorate of Hesse, at Cassel, as successor to Philip Roman, who had
died 1842.”
1886: Birthdate of Israeli scientist Markus Reiner.
1888(21st of Tevet, 5648): Henri Herz, the Austrian born French
pianist and composer passed away. Hertz
owned his own piano factory, built a concert hall in Paris and still found time
to teach write and perform.
1890: Birthdate of Sam Finkelstein, the native of White Russia who
“arrived in Canada in 1911” and during WW I “enlisted in Jewish Legion” and
served in Palestine.
1890: Birthdate of Sarah Aaronsohn, the native of the moshav
Zikhron Ya’akov who became a leader of Nili during World War I. After being
tortured by the Turks, she took her own life in 1917.
1891” It was reported today that “Solomon J. Solomons has been
moved Russia’s persecution of the Jews to” create a painting that is an
allegorical representation of the struggle.
In the picture, “the Russian Eagle falls with the beak and claw on a
Jewish family while a Fury, masquerading as Justice, presented to defend the
family from the monster’s attack.”
1892: Captain Strauss of the Seventh Precinct took five children,
all Russian Jewish immigrants, from a hotel on 141 Madison Street. They were suffering variously from varioloid,
diphtheria and/or scarlet fever.
1892: In Dubno, Diana and Yehuda Bernstein gave birth to Samuel
Joseph Bernstein, the husband of Jennie Charna Bernstein and the father of
three children including celebrity musician Leonard Bernstein
1892: Birthdate of Louis Waldman, a native of the Ukraine who
became an American labor leader and a leader of the Socialist Party.
https://spartacus-educational.com/Louis_Waldman.htm
https://www.nytimes.com/1982/09/14/obituaries/louis-waldman-90-counsel-to-labor.html
1892: A review of the MacLean-Prescott company’s production of
“The Merchant of Venice” described Marie Prescott’s portrayal of the Jewess
Portia as “very bad, cold” and “stilted.”
R.D. MacLean’s portrayal of Shylock which appeared to be on par with
Cruikshank’s drawing of Fagen was based on “a totally false idea.”
1894: Rabbi Gottheil officiated at a private funeral service for
Adolph L. Sanger, the late President of the Board of Education after which a
public ceremony was held at Temple Emanu-El followed by burial at Salem Field
in Cypress Hills Cemetery.
1894: It was reported that “Marie,” a one act play by Charles D.
Levin was performed at the Berkley Lyceum as part of a fundraiser for the Louis
Down-Town Sabbath and Daily School.
1894: It was reported today that during the current economic
depression Nathan Straus has begun the sale of bread “at his sterilized milk
depot” at reduced prices and will begin selling coal at reduced prices starting
next week.
1894: It was reported today that the United Hebrew Charities had
spent over $171,000 in aiding the needy. Due to the economic downturn in 1893,
the organization had spent $200,000 through November of 1893.
1895: According to the will of the late multi-millionaire Eugene
Kelly, which was filed in the Surrogate’s office today, $10,000 should “go to
such Hebrew charitable institutions” as may be selected y by the executors.
1895: Colonel David S. Brown is scheduled to set sail today on the
SS Normannia for a trip that will
take him to Egypt and then to Palestine.
1895:
Alfred Dreyfus was publicly degraded and sent to
1896:
“Colonial New York City” published today provides a picture of “the Big Apple”
in 1748 based on the writings of Peter Kalm who visited the city at that time
which includes a description of “the Jews of New York at that time” who “formed
a considerable portion of the population.
They had stores and fine houses and ships and a flouring synagogue and
enjoyed all the privileges of the other citizens. The young Jews, especially when away from
home made no scruple about eating pork when” the opportunity presented itself.
1896:
Julius Harburger, the Excise Commissioner of New York City, addressed a meeting
of the Boston chapter of the Independent Order of Free Sons of Israel, of which
he is a Grand Master.
1896:
The will of Eugene Kelly which was filed for probate today included a bequest
of “$10,000…to go to such Hebrew charitable institutions” of which the
executors “may approve.”
1896:
Dr. Joseph Silverman delivered his second lecture today entitled “Another Basis
on Which Christians and Jews Can Unite” at Temple Emanu-El.
1896:
It was reported today that the most recent census of the state of New Jersey
shows that there are 16.413 people in the category of “other nationalities”
which includes Jews as well as Italians and Hungarians.
1896:
Detective Sargent Cuff was on his way to Chicago today where he was to take
custody of Jacques Oschs, a Romanian born Jew and bring him back to New York to
face charges of participating in swindling schemes many of which were aimed at
his co-religionist which earned him over $50,000.
1896:
“Effect of Hellenism on Judaism” which relied on information that first
appeared in The Edinburgh Scotsman
provided a summary of an address delivered by Claude G. Montefiore in Glasgow
entitled “Some Reflections on Hellenistic Judaism.” Montefiore used the term “Hellenic Judaism”
to described “that Judaism which was touched an influenced by the Hellenism of
the time of Alexander the Great and his immediate successors.
1896:
It was reported today that Reverend C.H. Parkhurst publicly expressed his
appreciation for the support the Jews have given to the City Vigilance League,
the successor to the Society for the Prevention of Crime.
1896:
It was reported today that 16-year-old Jennie Zellers saved the lives of her
five siblings when a fire broke out in a tenement building in Philadelphia. A
grocery store owned by Samuel Lipman occupied the first floor of the four-story
building that suffered $5,000 in damages.
1897:
Realtor Ephraim Rosenberg, the New Orleans born son of Rachel Wolff and
Benjamin Rosenberg and supporter of Touro Synagogue married Jessie Hillborn
today after which she gave birth to their daughter Lillie.
1897:
It was reported today that the Trustees of Columbia tendered their thanks to
Benjamin Stern and Charles A. Dana for their donation of Hebrew manuscripts to
the school’s library.
1898:
In the Supreme Court in Brooklyn, Justice Gaynor is scheduled to hear Mrs.
Martha Reubel’s petition for an annulment based on a claim that he is a
Christian. Mrs. Reubel is an 18 year old
Jewess and contends that her husband Siegfried mis-represented himself as being
an Orthodox Jews.
1898:
Herzl’s "The New Ghetto" was finally produced in the Carl-Theater in
Vienna.
The play was also performed in Berlin and Prague.
1898:
Birthdate of CCNY basketball player and coach Morris Holman, the younger
brother of CCNY basketball star Nat Holman
1899:
The will of David Marks, benefactor of Jewish organizations, was filed for
probate today.
1899:
It was reported today that a French civil court has fined Comtesse de Martel
who writes under the nom de plume of “Gyp” five thousand francs for libeling
Senator Ludovic Trarieux, the former Minister of Justice. The libel consisted
of an unfounded accusation that the Senator had become a Protestant “in order
to contract a rich marriage.
1899:
It was reported today that the Comtesse de Martel, who proclaimed herself to be
an anti-Semite said the Jews should not only be driven out of Paris but out of
the whole country.
1899:
“Alleged Outrages on Jews” published today summarized the “anti-Semitic
prejudice existing in “the United States as described by Brooklyn resident
Leopold Cohn, a former rabbi who had converted to Christianity
1900:
“The French Conspirators” published today reported that has had been “foreseen,
the French Senatorial High Court of Justice failed to establish the existence
of a tripartite conspiracy promoted by the leaders of the Royalists, the
Anti-Semites and the Nationalist”
because when one considers “the character of the personages in power at
the time the charges were formulated “the failure to connect the propaganda of
the Duc D’Orleans, with the Jew-baiter Guerin and the head of the patriotic
league’s M. Deroulede does not come as any surprise.
1900:
In New York City, Gerta Epstein and Abraham Frank gave birth to University of
Buffalo trained attorney and HUC trained rabbi Solomon Frank who led Shaarey
Zedek in Winnipeg and the Spanish and Portuguese Synagouge of Montreal and
became a leader of the Canadian Jewish community.
https://www.newspapers.com/clip/54346575/obituary-for-rabbi-frank-aged-82/
1900:
Birthdate of George E. Price, the vaudeville entertainer known as George who
made “Bye Bye Blackbird” his theme song before buying a seat on the NYSE in
1934 after which he went to a successful career as a stockbroker.
1901(14th
of Tevet, 5661): Parashat Vayechi
1901:
Work continues on the erection of Harvard’s Semitic Museum whose origins can be
traced to a gift ten thousand dollars given by Jacob H. Schiff in 1899.
1902:
Birthdate of Haverhill, MA native and Boston University attorney Walter M
Espovich, the husband of Helen Espovich and father of Sybil Espovich whose clients included the Service Wood Heel
Company.
1902:
Two thousand Jews attended “a mass meeting of Zionist at the Medinah Temple
Theatre” where many of them express their support for “the plan as determined
at the Basle conference” the idea of which is “to create a legally assured home
for the Jews and a refuge for Jews who could not be assimilated by the people
among whom they had come to live.”
1903:
It was reported today that “during the reading of the annual report at the
tenth annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Educational Alliance the
announcement was made that $50,000 had been donated for the enlargement of the
organization's building” and that “the men who gave the amount jointly report
are Felix M. Warburg and Mortimer L. Schiff.
1904:
Birthdate of Austrian violinist Erika Morini who began her studies under the
guidance of her father, Oscar Morini, who directed his own school in Vienna.
1904:
Birthdate of New York native Herman Silverberg, the bantamweight who fought
under the name of Herman “Kid” Silvers.
1904:
“Representative Goldfogle of New York to-day introduced a resolution, asking
the President to take steps to secure fair treatment of American Jews by the
Russian Government.”
1905:
Solomon Pozner, a historian who “encouraged Jewish participation in Russian
society, and his wife gave birth to Vladimir S. Pozner, the Parisian author and
husband of painter and photographer Elisabeth Makovska who successfully escaped
from occupied France to become an Oscar nominated screenplay writer in
Hollywood.
1906:
In London, biblical scholar Sir Frederic Kenyon and Amy Kenyon gave birth to
archaeologist Kathleen Kenyon who worked on excavations at Jericho from 1952
until 1958 and at Jerusalem “concentrating on the ‘City of David’ from 1961 to
1967.”
1906:
“According to” today’s “telegrams from London Mr. Gerald Balfour failed to
obtain a vote of confidence from his constituents because his responsibility
for England’s law…regulating the admission of undesirable immigrants” which is
having “its effect in the exclusion of Russian Jews, who are numerous in Mr.
Balfour’s constituency.”
1906:
It was reported today that “a Jewish conference just held in St. Petersburg
came to the conclusion that nothing could be expected from the Witte Ministry”
in so far as quelling the anti-Semitic attacks or repealing anti-Semitic laws
in Russia.
1906:
Two Russian officials who have investigated the massacres at Odessa and Kieff
gave almost identical statements concerning the slaughter of the Jew at Odessa
and Kiev saying that the authorities were negligent in not taking action to
avoid the bloodshed, but that evidence did not exist to prove that the
authorities had planned the massacres.
1906:
“The Russo-Jewish Relief Committee announced that the Russian Government’s
order prohibiting the distribution of relief funds without official supervision
has been rescinded.”
1907(19th
of Tevet, 5667): Parashat Shemot
1907:
It was reported today that “The Sigma Delta basketball team of the Young Men's
Hebrew Association added another victory to its credit yesterday by defeating a
picked five from the Monarch Athletic Club by the score of 34 to 9 on the
courts of the Young Men's Hebrew Association, Ninety-second Street and
Lexington Avenue.”
1908:
Birthdate of American playwright, novelist and screenwriter Harry Kurnitz.
1908:
Adas Israel dedicated its new sanctuary at Sixth and I NW in Washington, DC
which replaced the original building at Sixth and G Streets, NW. The
cornerstone for the building, which was designed by Louis Levi, the Baltimore
Architect, was laid in 1906.
https://www.milkenarchive.org/artists/view/alois-kaiser/
https://jewishmuseummd.pastperfectonline.com/byperson?keyword=Kaiser%2C+Alois+%28Cantor%29
1909: In Switzerland, Ernest Bloch and his wife gave
birth to American artist Lucienne Bloch.
1910: French economist Leon Walrus, whose fame is due in
part to the work of William Jaffe, the “historian of economic thought” who was
recognized as the leading authority on Walrus, passed away today.
1910: In Richmond, Study Circle No.2 which is studying
the Bible is scheduled to take place this afternoon “in the home of Mrs.
William Joel.”
1911: In Paris actress Suzanne Cahen and Alexandre
Salmons, the owner of La Maison du Blanc gave birth to French actor Jean-Pierre
Aumont who earned the Légion d'Honneur and the Croix de Guerre for his World
War II military service.
1911: Twenty-four-year-old Yale University of Music
trained violinist and conductor Nikolai Sokolff, the Kieff born son of Marie
Sokoloff married Lyda Marix today.
1911:
“Defeated in Court Weds Girl Lawyer” published in today’s Spokane Daily
Chronicle described the events leading up to the marriage of New York attorneys
Harris Koppelman and Esther Kunstler.
1912:
Birthdate of Kalmen Kaplansky, the native of Bialystok who has been described
as “the zaideh of the Canadian human
rights movement.”
1912:
State organization formed in Boston, Mass. to encourage naturalization of Jews
living in the
1912:
In Denver, CO, Samuel S. Schwartz, the Erie, PA born son of Jannah and Julius
Schwartz and his wife Harriet Hattie Schwartz gave birth to Eleanor Lehman
Soman, the wife of Robert Adolph Sloman
1912:
The Philadelphia Jewish community requested leniency in the enforcement the
Sunday Closing Law of 1794.
1912:
The Boston Section withdrew from Council of Jewish Women.
1913:
In Cincinnati, O, Eva and Eli F. Guggenheim gave birth WW II veteran, attorney
and Democratic Party activist Richard E. Guggenheim, the husband of Carol
Guggenheim.
https://www.tributearchive.com/obituaries/21014706/Richard-E-Guggenheim
1913:
In Baltimore, MD, founding of “Moses Montefiore Emunatch Israel Synagogue and
Talmud Torah.
1914:
Mary Kursheedt and 24-year-old Albert Kursheedt, the son of Alexander E.
Kursheedt and the nephew of Moses Montefiore Kursheedt were wed today.
1914(7th
of Tevet, 5674): Sixty-nine-year-old French banker and horse breeder Michel
Ephrussi, the Odessa born son of Henriette Halperson and Charles Joachim
Ephrussi, a trader in wheat “who founded a bank, Ephrussi & Co” the
half-brother of banker Ignace von Ephrussi, the older brother of banker Maurice
Ephrussi and the husband of “Belgian-born Amélie Wilhelmine Liliane Beer, a
niece of composer Jacob Liebmann Beer,” who “was a close business associate of
the Rothschild in Paris” and was injured when he fought a duel with a French
anti-Semite, passed away today.
1914:
Birthdate of Heinz Berggruen a
German art dealer and collector who founded the
1914:
“Many Protestant and Jewish pastors in New York City expressed approval of the
attitude of the Roman Catholic Church in discountenancing the tango and similar
dances after they had read articles describing the popularity which these
dances have acquired in this country and Europe.”
1915:
“From Leo M. Frank” published today contained a letter from Leo M. Frank
expressing his appreciation for the stand the New York Times has taken for the
cause of justice as it relates to his case, for “Mr. Marshall’s successful
presentation of his appeal before Supreme Court Justice Lamar and wishing
everybody on behalf of his wife and parents, a Happy New Year.
1915:
The list published today of donors to the fund of the American Jewish Relief
Community included the Montefiore Benefit Corporation of Boston, the Jewish
Community of Attelboro, Mass., the New Bedford (CT) Jews, Meyer Cohen of
Washington, DC, Jewish Women, Bedford, PA; Lover of Israel, Susquehanna, PA;
Zion Lodge, Chicago, Ill; Phoenix Packing Company, San Francisco, CA; Jewish
Community, Beaumont, TX; Jewish Community, Tyler, TX and Congregation Adath
Israel, Douglas, Arizona.
1916:
African-American actor Sam Lucas who in 1878 became the first black man to play
the part of Uncle Tom when he appeared a production of Uncle Tom’s Cabin
produced by Charles and Gustave Frohman “who financed a number of theatre
productions featuring African American actors” – something quite unusual for
its time passed away today.
1916:
It was reported today that Dr. J.L. Magnes is scheduled to speak at the
upcoming “mass meeting” in Kansas City where funds will be raised to aid the
Jews suffering in the war zones of Europe and Palestine.
1916(29th
of Tevet, 5676): Seventy-five-year-old Max Adler, who with his fellow Bavarian
Jew Isaac Strouse, founded the Strouse, Adler Company 1862, a corset company
that was employing 1,200 by 1889, passed away today in New Haven, CT.
1916:
Simon Wolf wrote to President Woodrow Wilson for assistance in getting
permission to ship “whole wheat” that “can be used to make unleavened bread”
during the upcoming holiday of Passover to the war-torn zones of Europe where,
without it, “thousands of Orthodox Jews would starve during the eight-day
period.”
1916:
In New York, $10,000 in cash and pledges was collected at luncheon attended by
40 clothing manufacturers which will be sent to the American Jewish Relief
Committee to be used to meet the goal for raising five million dollars to aid
the Jews suffering in the war zones of Europe and Palestine.
1916:
The Knights of Zion Convention is scheduled to continue with an evening session
in Chicago.
1917:
According to reports published today, that while Kansas City has “a population
of 12,000” the citizens have already pledged $100,000 toward the 1917 campaign”
of Central Committee for the Relief of Jewish War Sufferers.
1918:
Today, Adjutant General Sherill released a statement on behalf of Governor
Whitman announcing “the removal of Samuel H. Cragg as a member of Local
Exemption Board 24 in Brooklyn” because it had been verified that while
speaking at patriotic exercise last December, Mr. Cragg whose “district is over
80 per cent Jewish delivered a speech in which he said “There are three epochs
in the life of the Jewish boy” first at birth, circumcision; second at 13,
confirmation; third at 21, exemption” and that while Cragg admitted making the
statement he had refused to resign. (Editor’s Note: The false charges of draft
dodging and lack of patriotism are ones that Jews have faced despite the facts
to the contrary. Ironically, the same
charges were made in Germany. A special
census was conducted, but the results were held back after the numbers showed a
disproportionate number of Jews fighting for the Kaiser. Anti-Semitism – the common glue of
civilization!)
1919: The National Socialist Party
(Nazi) formed as German Farmers Party.
Hitler was not one of the party founders.
1919: Dr. Leopold Jaches, the Latvian born son of Minna Gelhaar
and Philip Jaches, the NYU trained and Columbia trained radiologist who had
enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War I began serving as the consultant in
roentgenology for the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) today.
1919: Today, at a time when members of the House Committee on
Immigration and Naturalization “believed that millions of potential immigrants,
including were ready to overrun” the United States and Harvard Professor Robert
Ward “had apprised that a well-organized Jewish mass immigration was imminent,
Fredrick Wallis, the commissioner of immigration at Ellis Island, testified
that unlimited numbers were “clamoring to come to this country” and that
although there “only 311,000 passport applications were on filed in Poland,
there was a rumor that 8,000,000 Jews were ready to come to the United States.”
1920: “Star Palestine Fund Campaign” published today described a
meeting at the Washington Heights Synagogue where Judge Julian W. Mack, A.H.
Fromenson and Dr. Max Drob kicked off the drive to raise ten million dollars
for use in helping the Jewish community in Palestine.
1921: Having left Jaffa yesterday, Mendel Bellis, the victim of the
so-called “Bellis Affair” is on board a ship today bound for the United States “where
he expects to make his home.”
1922: “The Curse” direct by Felix Basch was released today in the
United States.
1923: The Jewish Tribune published
“Prison Reform Through Sculpture” by Marie Trommer, the Ukraine born daughter
of Bertha Edlin and Bernard Trommer who attended the Woman’s Art School at
Cooper Institute in New York.
1923: In Manhattan Alfred Bernstein and
the former Sylvia Bloch gave birth to Harvard graduate and WWII Army Forces
veteran Robert L. Bernstein, the chief executive of Random House who was the
husband of the former Helen Walter and the father of Peter, Tom and William
Bernstein. (As reported by Robert D. McFadden
1923: Birthdate of Israel Prize-winning
author and translator Aharon Amir. Amir, who was born in
1924: Leon and Henrietta Shershevsky
gave birth to George Leon Sherry, a United Nations official who helped calm
crises around the world — a role that evolved from his time as the leading
rapid-fire translator of speeches by Russian diplomats in the organization’s
early days…(As reported by Dennis Hevesi)
1924(28th of Tevet, 5684): Parashat
Vaera
1924: Dr. Samuel Schulman, who was
“elected rabbi for life” in December, is scheduled to complete his 25th
year today as Rabbi of Temple Beth-El.
1925: Birthdate of British actor Wolfe
Morris whose “grandparents and escaped the Russian pogroms” arriving in London
at the end of the 19th century.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/obituary-wolfe-morris-1362661.html
1926: In New Britain, CT, Louis Raphael,
the owner of a department store chain, and the former Naomi Kaplan gave birth
to Dana Louise Raphael “an apostle of breast-feeding and a catalyst for the
movement to recruit nonmedical caregivers to assist mothers during and after
childbirth — attendants she called doulas...” (As reported by Sam Roberts)
1927: In Brooklyn, “Jacob Newman, a
construction union organizer and the former Ida Levine” gave birth to criminal
lawyer. Gustave Harold Newman.
1928: Reports of a large number of
unemployed workers in the non-agricultural sector of the economy are a cause of
major concern for the Government and leaders of the Labor movement. While approximately 21,000 people are
employed non-farm jobs, there may be as many as 10,000 unemployed workers. It is hope that the situation will be
alleviated, in part, with the construction and operation of a variety of public
works projects including the building of the Straus Health Clinic in Jerusalem.
1928(12th of Tevet, 5688):
Laura Rosenstein Baer Ungerleider, the German born son of Daniel and Sophia
Rosenstein who married Rabbi Morris Ungerleider in 1888 after the death of her
first husband David Baer whom she had married in 1864 passed away today after
which she was buried at Rosehill Cemetery in Chicago.
1929: Syracuse defeated Cornell 31-18
thanks in no small measure to the 17 points scored by Louis Hayman. (As
reported by Bob Wechsler)
1930: “Hell’s Heroes” a western directed
by William Wyler and produced by Carl Laemmle Jr. was released today in the
United States.
1930: Birthdate of New York native and
co-found of Vanguard Records Maynard Elliot Solomon the Phi Beta Kappa graduate
Brooklyn College who “held visiting professorships at SUNY Stony Brook,
Columbia University, Harvard University and Yale University, joining the
graduate faculty of the Juilliard School of Music in 1998” and the younger
brother of Seymour Solomon with whom he co-founded the record label known to
anyone who was serious about folk music during the 1950’s and 1960’s.
1930: Mapia was founded today “by the
merger of the Hapoel Hatzair founded by A. D. Gordon and the original Ahdut
HaAvoda (founded in 1919 from the right, more moderate, wing of the Marxist
Zionist socialist Poale Zion led by David Ben-Gurion
1931(16th
of Tevet, 5691: Sixty-year-old Memphis born Martin Isaacs, the Lake Forest
University trained lawyer who served as a Master in Chancery of the Superior
Court of Cook County passed away today.
1931: Elections were held today to choose members for the Asefat
Hanivcharim (The Jewish Elected Assembly). Only 35 to 40 per cent of those
eligible are expected cast their ballots.
The sharpest contest is between the Labor Party and the
Revisionists. Labor is expected to win
23 seats and the Revisionists will end up with 18 seats, the same number
expected to be won by the Party representing “Oriental Jews.” There are a total of 71 seats at stake. There has been no prediction about how many
seats will be won by the United Women’s ticket head by Henrietta Szold.
1932: The Commissioner of Immigration at Ellis Island announced
today that he would hold a luncheon for “the consuls of twelve principle
European countries” to acquaint them with the processes at the immigration
facility which as greeted thousands upon thousands of Jewish immigrants since
the turn of the century
1932: Funeral services are scheduled to be held today at Temple
Israel of Washington Heights for Charles D. Greenbaum, the husband of Rose
Greenbaum and the father of Irving, Milton, Joseph and Gertrude Greenbaum.
1933: Construction of Golden Gate Bridge, one of whose three
designers was Joseph Strauss, began today.
1933: Birthdate of Leonard Marsh, the New York born window washer,
who along with his brother Hyman Golden and childhood friend Arnold Greenberg
founded the Snapple Beverage Corporation. (As reported by Margalit Fox).
1934: It was reported today that a resolution introduced by
Bernard S. Deutsch and Nathan Straus, Jr.” which calls “upon all Jews and
non-Jews to ‘provide adequate resources to assist in the settlement of
German-Jewish refugees and Jews of other countries in Palestine’” has been
approved by the American Palestine campaign
1935(1st of Shevat, 5695): Parashat Vaera; Rosh Chodesh
Shevat
1936(10th of Tevet, 5696): Asara B’tevet
1936: Birthdate of Steven Cojocaru, Canadian born American
television personality and fashion critic.
1936(10th of Tevet, 5696): Seventy-four-year-old CCNY
graduate Simon Frank Rothschild, the Efula, AL born son of the former Amanda
Blun and Frank Rothschild and President and chairman of the board of Abraham
and Strauss who was the husband of Lillian Isabelle Rothschild and the father
of Walter and Howard Rothschild passed away today in Manhattan.
1937: Yale graduate and Stetson University Law School trained
attorney David Sholtz, the Brooklyn born son of Annie Bloom and Michael Sholtz
completed his terms of office as Governor of Florida.
1937: In the Beit She’an Valley, members of the Sadeh group from
the Mikveh Israel agricultural school and immigrants from Austria, Germany and
Poland Kibbutz HaSadeah, which was later re-named Sde Naum in honor of Zionist
leader and author Nahum Sokolov
1937: Israel Rokach, Mayor of Tel Aviv, testified before the Peel
Commission. Rokach said that he was not
opposed to a certain amount of governmental involvement with municipal affairs
but that the real dispute centered on underfunding of the city government. Members of the commission expressed positive
interest in Rokach’s proposal to develop a port that would serve both Jaffa and
Tel Aviv.
1937: At a pre-nuptial gala tonight for Crown Princess Juliana and
Prince Bernhard, the band played the Nazi “Host Wessel Song” despite the
refusal of Dr. Van Anrooy, to conduct the German marching song as well as
“Duetschland uber Alles.”
1937: Today, Louis Lipsky, chairman of the board of the Palestine
foundation, the fundraising organization in the United States of the Jewish
Agency, announced today that “a total of $2,500,000 was expended by the Jewish
Agency for Palestine on immigration, colonization, security and other
activities including the settlement of German Jews during the year” that ended
on October 1, 1936.
1938: The Palestine
Post reported that the British government was about to send to Palestine a
new, largely technical commission, essentially a fact-finding body, which would
plan how to implement Partition, according to the terms of the agreement
reached with the Mandatory Commission of the League of Nations. The government,
however, indicated that it was in no way committed to the actual execution of
such a plan. Three Arabs out of a band of 40, apparently arms smugglers, were
killed close to the Syrian border. Haskiel Joseph and Nathan Yairoff were shot
and badly wounded by an Arab terrorist inside the Jaffa Gate of the Old City of
Jerusalem.
1938(3rd of Shevat, 5698): “While escorting a prisoner
from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv in a bus,” “Jacob Kliger, a 35-year-old policeman”
was mortally wounded in an attack by Arabs.
1938: Mrs. Andrew J. Noe, the president of the New York City
Federation of Women’s Clubs is scheduled to preside over a meeting of The
Women’s Committee of the National conference of Jews and Christians at the
Hotel MaAlpin where the topic for discussion will be “The Future of Religion in
America.”
1938(3rd of Shevat, 5698): Three passengers were
wounded this evening when at 7 p.m. twenty shots were fired at a Jewish-owned
bus traveling from Jerusalem to the suburb of Beit Vegan.”
1938: Today in Jerusalem, “the general feeling” among “both Arabs
and Jews” is that “the British White Paper on Palestine” is “just another
ambiguous British document saying nothing and solving nothing” that “is
intended to keep both Jews and Arabs guessing” giving “both communities hope
that their opposing wishes will be fulfilled.
1938(3rd of Shevat, 5698): Fifty-eight year old Laredo,
TX banker Benjamin Mortimer Alexander, the son of Samuel and Rossa Aaron
Alexander and husband of Jessie Lee Hellman Alexander passed away today after
which he was buried in the “Jewish section” of the Laredo City Cemetery.
1939: The gathering of a group of young Jews in Riga is captured
in a photograph which will later become the property of Yad Vashem.
http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/this_month/january/03.asp
1939: Sir Horace Rumbold, a member of the Peel Commission,
attempts to explain away his description of the Jews of Palestine as an “alien
race” by saying that he merely meant that the Jews were a race with different
characteristics from the Arab race.
1939: Germany declared Karaite Jews exempt from enforcement of the
Nuremberg Laws.
1939: President Roosevelt nominated Felix Frankfurter to serve as
an Associate Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
He was chosen for the position following the death of Benjamin N.
Cardozo. When Frankfurter was confirmed
two weeks later, he became the third Jew to serve on the High Court.
1940:
Funeral services are scheduled to be held this afternoon at Temple Bethel in
Great Neck, NY for Fifty-seven-year-old
Lester Francis Avnet, the oldest child of Celia Avnet and Russian born American
businessman Charles Avnet and husband of the former Joan Grossman with whom
head two daughters and a son, who helped to make “Avnet, Inc. into one of the
country’s major electronic corporations” while serving as “a trustee of
Brandeis University and of the Ameri can Federation of Arts, an overseer of the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine, a governor of the Hebrew Union College ‐Jewish Institute of Religion and a former general chairman
for the Metropolitan New York area of the United Jewish Appeal”
1940:
Jews were forbidden by the General Gouvernment be in the streets between
1941:
“The Administrative Council of the Zionist Organization of America, the ruling
Zionist body between annual conventions, met” in Philadelphia “this afternoon
and unanimously endorsed the independent campaign by the United Palestine
Appeal for $12,000,000 in 1941 to meet the growing and extraordinary war needs
of immigration and colonization in Palestine.”
1942:
Birthdate of Elzbieta Ficowska, nee Koppel, one of the 2,500 children smuggled
out of the Warsaw Ghetto by Irena Sendler and her associate Stanislawa, a
widowed Catholic mid-wife. (Shades of the story of the brave midwives found in
the Book of Exodus.)
1942:
The Jewish ghetto at
1943:
The Vught,
1943:
In an orgy of killing that would last for the next two days the Nazis murdered
thousands of Jews at
1943:
One day after she had passed away, funeral services are scheduled to take place
today at the Toowong Cemetery for Mrs. Miriam Hertzberg, “the widow of the late
A.M. Hertzberg” and the mother of Olga, Marcus and Ralph Herzberg
1943:
In Kenton, OH, “Francis Stager, a farmer, and the former Marcella Mae Wilson
gave birth to Larry Elwood Stager, who gained fame as Lawrence E. Stager, the
Dorot Professor of the Archaeology of Israel in the Department of Near Eastern
Languages and Civilizations at Harvard University and Director of the Harvard
Semitic Museum” who since 1985 “has overseen the excavations of the Leon Levy
Expedition to Ashkelon.
1944: Birthdate of Ed Rendell, Democratic
Mayor of Philadelphia in the 1990’s before being elected Governor of the State
of
1944:
Twenty-nine-year-old Jean Tatlock, the woman whose “romantic relationship” with
J. Robert Oppenheimer would help to lead to his loss of top security clearance,
passed away today.
1945:
In “American Boy’s Find Tel Aviv Like a Home Town” published today Anne O’Hare
McCormick described conditions in Palestine’s major metropolis. According to her, “40% of the Jewish
population of Palestine lives in Tel Aviv.”
She describes Tel Aviv “as being one of the world’s youngest cities” and
as being “better planned and more modernistic that the Florida boom towns it
resembles.” This very cosmopolitan city
is suffering from a housing shortage brought on by an influx of refugees from
Europe and North Africa.
1946: The long running Broadway revival
of "Show Boat" opened at Ziegfeld Theater in New York City for the
first of 417 performances. This was a musical adaption of a novel of the same
name by Edna Ferber, Jewish author who remembered being taunted as a “sheeny”
when walking the streets of home town in Michigan. Ferber’s willingness to tackle the touchy
subjects of race and miscegenation stood in stark contrast to the romanticized
formula followed by Margaret Mitchell and others and is yet another example of
Jews advancing the cause of social justice.
The creation of the musical by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II is a
reminder that this unique culture phenomenon is in many ways, a Jewish
creation.
1947: In a
broadcast from its secret transmitter, Haganah, the
Jewish defense organization denounced Irgun Zvai Leumi and the Stern Gang as
extremist organizations and blamed them for the latest outburst of violence in
Eretz
1948: Benjamin Rabin begins serving on
the New York Supreme Court.
1948:
Warner Brothers offered the first color newsreel, covering the Tournament of
Roses Parade and the Rose Bowl Game. At that time, the company was still the
property of the four brothers name Warner – Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack L. –
Polish Jews who came to the United States via Canada.
1948:
As the siege of Jerusalem continues, the Haganah launches an attack against
Katamon, a suburb from which Arab gunmen have been firing non-stop into
adjacent Jewish neighborhoods.
1949: As the War of Independence winds
down, Israeli forces struggle to dislodge the Egyptians from
1950: Birthdate of guitarist Chris
Stein, co-founder of “Blondie.”
1951: In Brooklyn, realtors Sol and
Shirley (Kaslow) Goldman gave birth to University of Miami trained attorney
Susan Goldman who gained fame as “Susan Rosenblatt, who with her husband and
law partner, Stanley Rosenblatt, took on Big Tobacco in a Florida case that
seemed an absurd mismatch for their small firm, but that resulted in a record
$144.8 billion jury award in favor of people sickened by cigarettes…” (As
reported by Neil Genzlinger)
1951(27th of Tevet, 5711):
Eighty-three-year-old Siegfried Reginald Wolf, the son of Josef and Julie Wolf
and the husband of Ida Wolf passed away today in Haifa.
1953:
Shlomo-Yisrael Ben-Meir was appointed Deputy Minister of Welfare.
1953: The Jerusalem Post reported that East Germany had launched a
Zionist witch-hunt, accusing two Jewish Communist leaders of being Zionists,
American agents, Titoists and Trotskyites.
1955: Today, 60-minute version of
‘Arsenic and Old Lace’ with Peter Lorre again playing the part of “Dr.
Einstein” “aired on the CBS Television series The Best of Broadway.”
1955: Abraham Ribicoff began serving as
the 80th Governor of Connecticut.
1959: In his introduction to A Matter of Taste:
The Albert D. Lasker Collection: Renoir to Matisse that includes
commentaries by Wallace Brockway, Alfred Frankfurter asks, “What was it that
made an American businessman * * * train his eye and his energies so
spectacularly as to produce this extraordinary array of art?"
1961:
“Mister Ed,” a sitcom created by Martin Ransohoff’s Filmways production house
was shown for the first time in syndication nine months before CBS began
broadcasting it.
1963:
After 873 performances, the curtain came down on the original Broadway
production of Lerner and Loewe’s “Camelot” which was directed by Moss Hat.
1964: Pope Paul VI and President Zalman
Shazar of Israel met today at Megiddo, the scene of ancient battles, and both
voiced hope for a moral revival and for peace among men.
1964: Under the leadership of Head Coach
Sid Gillman, the San Diego Chargers defeated the Boston Patriots for the AFL
Championship.
1966(13th of Tevet, 5726): Franco-Jewish
lawyer Henry Torees, the grandson of
Isaiah Levaillant, the founder of the League for the Defense of Human
and Civil Rights during the Dreyfus Affair, who defended “Samuel Schwartzbard,
a Jewish watchmaker who shot and killed in Paris Simon Petlura, the leader of
the “Petlura Government” in the Ukraine during the notorious pogroms on Jews
which took place there in 1919” and “Herschel Grynzpan, the young Jewish
refugee from Poland who shot and killed Ernest von Rath, a member of the German
Embassy in Paris, in 1938” passed away today.
1966: “7 Women” a drama set in China
with music by Elmer Bernstein premiered in Los Angeles today.
1968: “Informed Jewish sources said
today that Jacob Kaplan, the Chief Rabbi of France told President de Gaulle of
his concern over the fact that” his statement calling the Jews “an elite
people, people, sure of itself and domineering” “had been used by ‘real’
anti-Semites as an instrument against Jews.”
1970(27th of Tevet, 5730): Max Born passed away at the age of 87. A native of
1970: Nine Egyptians soldiers crossed
the
1972(18th of Tevet, 5732):
Seventy-nine-year-old Russian born Nathan Bryllion Fagan who at the turn of the
century came to the United States where he earned undergraduate degrees at
George Washington University and a doctorate from Johns Hopkins where he taught
until 1957 while serving as “director of the Hopkins Playshop” and wrote
“several books, including The Histrionic Mr. Poe” passed away today in
Sarasota, FL.
http://snaccooperative.org/ark:/99166/w6cz3vjj
1973(2nd of Shevat, 5733):
Hyman Reznick who had founded the Halevi Choral Society with Harry Coopersmith,
passed away today.
1976: Broadcast of the first episode
“Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman” a satire of soap operas developed by Norman Lear
and starring Louise Lasser in the title role.
1976: Claims were made to “that the
Jackson Amendment which became law a year ago had led to a” reduction in the
emigration of Soviet Jews.
1977: Russian born; Jewish human rights
activist Alexander Podraninek initiated creating the Working Commission to
Investigate the Use of Psychiatry for Political Purposes
1978: Shmuel Katz who had been serving
as “Adviser to the Prime Minister for Information Abroad” for Menachem Begin
“quit” his position today “because of differences with the cabinet over peace
proposals with Egypt.”
1978: The Jerusalem Post reported that at
1978: The Jerusalem Post reported that The Jewish National Fund started
ground-breaking operations for eight new settlements in Sinai, between Yamit
and El Arish.
1979(6th of Tevet, 5739): New
York native and Northwestern University and University of Chicago trained
professor of English and Linguistics and author of Fiction and the Shape of
Belief passed away today.
1980(16th of Tevet, 5740):
Parashat Vayechi
1980(16th of Tevet, 5740):
Seventy-four-year-old Jersey City, NJ born St. Johns trained attorney Henry
Jacob Lilienfeld, who served as a “foreign service officer” and worked “with
the New York City Welfare Department” passed away today.
1980: Harold Pinter’s “Betrayal”
premiered today on Broadway at the Trafalgar Theatre.
1981: Yoram Aridor, a member of Likud,
began serving as Communications Minister.
1982(10th of Tevet, 5742):
Asara B’Tevet
1982(10th of Tevet, 5742):
Fifty-eight-year-old Brooklyn born actor Harvey Lembeck, the sidekick of Sgt.
Ernie Bilko on the “Phil Silvers Show” who memorably appeared in that film
classic “Stalag 17 and who had married his dancing partner Caroline Dubs, with
whom he raised two children – Michael and Helaine -- passed away today.
https://www.classicfilmtvcafe.com/2013/03/harvey-lembeck-stays-liked.html
1983:
Joe Lieberman ban serving as the 21st Attorney General of the
state of Connecticut.
1985: In response to pressure from Arab
countries, Sudan ended the airlift of Jews from Ethiopia after Israeli Shimon
Peres held a press conference confirming reports of what would become known as
Operation Moses. With help from the
http://www.thejc.com/news/on-day/43249/on-day-operation-moses-suspended
1986: In Pittsburgh, the 49th Carnegie
International Exhibition which included ''Large Interior W 11 (after Watteau)''
by sixty-three-year-old Lucian Freud, “the oldest contributor to the show” is
scheduled to come a close today.
1988: Richard Mathew Stallman starts
developing GNU. GNU is a free software operating system.
1988: The New York Times reviews Operation
Babylon by Shlomo Hillel (Translated from the Hebrew by Ina Friedman) which
relates the fascinating tale of the rescue of the Iraqi Jewish community.
1989: Under Law no. 7716 passed by the
Brazilian Senate, anyone found violating the prohibition against “the
manufacture, trade and distribution of swastikas for the purpose of
disseminating Nazism” “is liable to serve a prison term from between two and five
years.”
1989: Secretary of State George P. Shultz said today that the reported death
threat by Mr. Arafat against other Palestinians ran counter to a P.L.O. pledge
to refrain from terrorism and had created a ''real problem'' for the United
States. Mr. Arafat was reported to have said in the radio broadcast on Monday
that ''any Palestinian leader who proposes an end to the intifada exposes
himself to the bullets of his own people.'' Speaking to reporters on his way
here for a conference on chemical weapons, Mr. Shultz said that the United
States did not have direct information about Mr. Arafat's reported statement.
He said: ''What we have is reports of what Arafat is alleged to have said. We
have not seen any statement as such.'' But the Secretary then assailed the
reported remark. ''It represents a real problem and an equivocation,'' he said.
1990: After premiering in Germany, “Last
Exit to Brooklyn’ the movie version of the novel by the same name starring
Stephan Lang and Jerry Orbach and with music by Mark Knopfler was released in
the United Kingdom today.
1992: “Yeshivas Defy the Odds” published
today described the growth of the Rabbi Jacob Joseph School.
http://www.nytimes.com/1992/01/05/education/yeshivas-defy-the-odds.html
1993: Israel approved a $380 million
grant today to support a major upgrading of the Jerusalem plant of the
computer-chip manufacturer Intel Israel. The money, spread over seven years,
was approved under a law authorizing state grants covering 38 percent of
high-technology business ventures in the city. The cost of upgrading the
silicon chip manufacturing plant is estimated at $1 billion. A Treasury
spokeswoman said it was now up to Intel, based in Santa Clara, Calif., parent
of Intel Israel, to give the plan final approval. Intel Israel, established in
1974, has operations in Haifa, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
1993: Mark B. Cohen began serving as the
“Democratic Whip of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives” today.
1994(22nd of Tevet, 5754):
Seventy-eight-year-old historian and genealogist Rabbi Malcom Stern passed
away. (As reported by Wolfgang Saxon)
http://collections.americanjewisharchives.org/ms/ms0626/ms0626.html
1996: Yahya Ayyash, chief bomb maker for Hamas, was killed by an
Israeli-planted booby-trapped cell phone.
1996(13th of Tevet, 5756): Eight-eight-year-old
multi-talented Harvard University graduate Lincoln Kirstein, a World War II
Monuments Man and co-founder of the New York City Ballet passed away today.
https://www.monumentsmenfoundation.org/the-heroes/the-monuments-men/kirstein-pfc.-lincoln-e.
1997:
In the Southern Ocean near 52°S 100°E, Tony
Bullimore's boat, Exide Challenger capsized and the majority of press and media
reports assumed that the 55 year old sailor was lost
1997: A revival production of "Show
Boat" the famed musical that owes its music, lyrics and book to three
American Jews closed at Gershwin Theater New York City.
1997: The Sunday New York
Times book section featured review of books by Jewish authors or of special
interest to Jewish readers including My Teacher’s Secret Life by Stephen
Krensky, A Journalist's
Search for the Heart of His Country by Henry Grunwald which tells
the story of how a Jewish refugee from Hitler’s Germany became editor in chief
of all publications in the vast Time Inc. empire, before retiring at the end of
1987 and Unfinished People: Eastern European Jews Encounter America by
Ruth Gay which “is essentially a memoir of Jewish life in the West Bronx in the
1920's and 30's, including the author's discomfort with her Eastern European
immigrant family and her ''ordeal of civility,'' to use John Murray Cuddihy's
phrase, in moving from ghetto culture to gentility.”
1998: To commemorate her 30 years on the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE), Muriel Siebert rang the closing bell to mark the end of
the trading day. She was the first woman to own a seat on the NYSE “Known
as the "First Woman of Finance," Muriel "Mickie" Siebert
was a dentist's daughter from
1998:
Funeral services are scheduled to be held today for Judge Edward Rosenwald, the
husband of the former Ruth Leshner and the father of Gayle Smith and Lawrence
Rosenwald who served on the Superior Court of Pennsylvania.
1999:
Stanford University trained attorney and “active member of the Jewish
community” Eric Fingerhut, the son of Alice and Samuel Fingerhut, the husband
of Amy Fingerhut and the father of Sam and Charlies Fingerhut began serving as
a Member of the Ohio State Senate from the 25th District.
1999:
It was reported today that yesterday’s attack on a van transporting Jewish settlers
in Hebron during which two women were wound was “the first successful terrorist
attack on Israelis since early November.”
2000:
“Israel will transfer another chunk of the West Bank to the Palestinians by
tomorrow after negotiators resolved a lingering dispute over the land today,
ending a stalemate that had dispirited both sides.”
2001:
In response to demands by Israel’s chief rabbis, that Israel must maintain
control over the Temple Mount, it was reported today Prime Minister Barak’s
spokeswoman said that “He does not intent to sign any document that will
transfer sovereignty over the Temple Mount to the Palestinians.”
2002:
In the wake of shoe-bomber Richard Reid’s attempt to blow up a plane last
December, airlines and government officials are looking at additional security
measures. As food service deliveries and food cars used on planes are coming
under scrutiny the stringent procedures followed by El Al, the Israeli airline
is considered the gold standard for aviation security. At its catering center,
several miles from Tel Aviv's airport, security guards monitor every step of
food packaging, from items being ladled onto trays and sealed with plastic
wrap, said Isaac Zeffet, a former chief of El Al security who now runs a
consulting concern in Cliffside Park, N.J. Mr. Zeffet, the former El Al
security chief, said banning food carts would be only a patch on a security
system that requires a complete overhaul, including tighter controls on
everyone and everything that comes in contact with planes before takeoff.
2003:
Deborah “Solomon made her debut as the New
York Times Magazine's "Questions For" columnist.”
2003(2nd
of Shevat, 5763): In the deadliest attack against Israel in 10 months a pair of
suicide bombers blew themselves up just seconds apart today in the Neve
Sha’anan neighborhood of Tel Aviv, an area crowded with foreign laborers,
killing 23 other people and injuring 100 more.
2004: The Center Art
Gallery at Calvin College presents “Talmud: in the Art of Ben-Zion and Marc
Chagall,” an exhibit that brings together the Biblical work of two of the most
important Jewish artists of the 20th Century.
2004:
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was showered with catcalls on today from his own
right-wing party during a speech in which he said he would take down some
Jewish settlements and permit the formation of a Palestinian state if the two
sides reached a peace agreement.
2005
Eris, the largest known dwarf planet in the solar system, is discovered by the
team of 4 that included David L. Rabinowitz.
2005(24th
of Tevet, 5765): Seventy-year-old German Jewish “billionaire and banker” passed
away today.
http://articles.latimes.com/2005/jan/08/local/me-passings8.1
2005:
The 10th Pan American Maccabi Games came to an end in
Santiago, Chile.
2006: The owner of the Buffalo Bill, “enlisted 80 year old Marv
Levy to act” as the team’s “General Manager and Vice President of Football
Operations.”
2007:
Haaretz reported that The Amsterdam
house where Anne Frank wrote her diaries in hiding before dying in a Nazi
concentration camp drew almost a million visitors during 2006. The total of
982,000 was 16,000 higher than in 2005. Most of the visitors were young tourists,
primarily from the United States and Britain, the Anne Frank House said.
2008:
In
2008:
The Israeli Army wound up a large-scale, three-day operation in the northern
2009:
Rabbi Ari Solomon, a native of Boston, has been named director of the Yeshiva
University S. Daniel Abraham Israel Program.
2009:
“For Women Only,” a drama, song and dance review showcasing the Jewish women
and girls of Baltimore was presented at Goucher College.
2009:
Lawmakers are scheduled to take their first close look at financier Bernard
Madoff's alleged $50 billion fraud and why the Securities and Exchange
Commission failed to discover the scandal. Critics say the SEC missed warning
signs and failed to uncover the scandal until Madoff's sons went to the
authorities and told them he confessed to the fraud.
2009:
The Washington Post reviewed Old
Flame, a Jackson Steeg novel,
by Ira Berkowitz.
2009:
The Minnesota State Canvassing Board certified results today showing Al
Franken, a Democrat, winning the Senate recount over Republican Norm Coleman,
who is expected to challenge the result. Earlier today, the state Supreme Court
rejected the Coleman campaign’s petition to count several hundred additional
absentee ballots.
2009: The disgraced financier Bernard L. Madoff tried to
hide at least $1 million in watches and jewelry from government investigators
and should have his bail revoked and sent to jail immediately, federal
prosecutors told a judge this afternoon.
2009: In
2009
(9 Tevet 5769): Four soldiers were killed in
friendly-fire incidents that took place during fighting on Monday night. Three
soldiers were killed when a tank mistakenly opened fire on a home in Saja'iya
occupied by officers and soldiers from the Golani Brigade. Another tank
accidentally fired on a home in al-Atatra, killing an officer in the 202nd
Battalion of the Paratroop Brigade. The soldiers were Cpl. Yousef Moadi, 19,
who lived recently in
2010:
In Jerusalem, Hama'abada presents a Double Feature show featuring Uri Dror a
Jerusalemite singer-songwriter gaining recognition in the Israeli rock music
scene in advance of his upcoming debut album and missFlag, the four-piece band
from Jerusalem that will soon begin a tour in the United States.
2010:
The Yellow Submarine's Zik Gallery presents Diyukan (Portrait), a group
photography exhibit of the Third Year Students at the Musrara School of
Photography and Media
2010:
Defense Minister Ehud Barak held a phone conversation today with UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and asked him to assist in renewing peace talks
with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Barak also updated the UN
chief regarding Israeli efforts meet the humanitarian needs of Palestinians in
the Gaza Strip.
2010:
Pro-Palestinian protesters demonstrated in New Zealand against Israel’s
top-ranked women's tennis player amid a bomb scare in the arena. Shahar Pe'er,
22, was delayed from entering the arena for her opening match in the ASB Tennis
Classic in Auckland for about 20 minutes today after an unattended bag in the
ASB Tennis Centre prompted the bomb scare.
2010(19th
of Tevet, 5770): Murray Saltzman a Reform Rabbi and civil rights leader passed
away. Born in 1929 to a Russian-immigrant family, he was the youngest of three
sons. He led congregations in Maryland, Indianapolis, and Florida, among them
Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation and Baltimore Hebrew Congregation. Saltzman
was appointed by President Gerald Ford to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights,
after marching with Martin Luther King, Jr. and leading in various civil action
projects.
2010:
Rabbi Shira Stutman is scheduled to lead an interactive conversation about Rosh
Chodesh, traditionally considered a “woman’s holiday” for reasons including
perceived connections between the moon and the female cycles answering the
question ‘How does the monthly reminder of womanhood shape our identity as
women and as Jews?’ at the Historic 6th & I Synagogue in
Washington, D.C.
2011:
After Senators returned Amy Totenberg’s nomination to the President at the end of
the 111th Congress, he re-submitted the nomination today.
2011:
The 92nd St Y is scheduled to feature a screening of “Coming to
America: The History of the Syrian Jewish Community 1900-1919.” This
documentary is envisioned as part of a series on Syrian Jewish History and
includes interviews with Syrian Jews living in the New York metropolitan area
talking about their own families' experiences, histories, customs and
traditions.
2011:
Terrorists from the Hamas-controlled Gaza region struck the western Negev with
another mortar attack this morning.
2011:
The following is a list of the 39 Jewish members — 12 senators and 27
representatives — who are expected to serve in the 112th U.S. Congress, which
is set to convene today.
U.S.
SENATE
Richard
Blumenthal (D-Conn.)
Barbara
Boxer (D-Calif.)
Benjamin
Cardin (D-Md.)
Dianne
Feinstein (D-Calif.)
Al
Franken (D-Minn.)
Herb
Kohl (D-Wisc.)
Frank
Lautenberg (D-N.J.)
Joseph
Lieberman (I-Conn.)
Carl
Levin (D-Mich.)
Bernard
Sanders (I-Vt.)
Charles
Schumer (D-N.Y.)
Ron
Wyden (D-Ore.)**
(Sen.
Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) does not identify a religion, but notes that his
mother is Jewish and a Holocaust survivor.)
HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES
Gary
Ackerman (D-N.Y.)
Shelley
Berkley (D-Nev.)
Howard
Berman (D-Calif.)
Eric
Cantor (R-Va.)
David
Cicilline (D-R.I.)*
Stephen
Cohen (D-Tenn.)
Susan
Davis (D-Calif.)
Ted
Deutch (D-Fla.)
Eliot
Engel (D-N.Y.)
Bob
Filner (D-Calif.)
Barney
Frank (D-Mass.)
Gabrielle
Giffords (D-Ariz.)
Jane
Harman (D-Calif.)
Steve
Israel (D-N.Y.)
Sander
Levin (D-Mich.)
Nita
Lowey (D-N.Y.)
Jerrold
Nadler (D-N.Y.)
Jared
Polis (D-Colo.)
Steve
Rothman (D-N.J.)
Jan
Schakowsky (D-Ill.)
Allyson
Schwartz (D-Pa.)
Adam
Schiff (D-Calif.)
Brad
Sherman (D-Calif.)
Debbie
Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.)
Henry
Waxman (D-Calif.)
Anthony
Weiner (D-N.Y.)
John
Yarmuth (D-Ky.
2011:
Relatives and friends of those killed in the devastating Carmel fire last month
refused to let Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speak today as he stood at the
podium of the official state memorial ceremony to deliver a eulogy to the
victims.
2011:
According to an email sent today from the West Coast branch of Hebrew Union
College-Jewish Institute of Religion Songwriter Debbie Friedman is sedated and
on a respirator at a hospital in Orange County, Calif.
2011(29th
of Tevet, 5771): Seventy-three-year-old “David G. Trager, a federal judge in
Brooklyn whose rulings were pivotal in a racially charged case in Crown Heights
and in the first civil suit to challenge the Bush administration’s practice of
sending terrorism suspects to countries that employ torture, died today at his
home in Brooklyn.” (As reported by Robert D. McFadden)
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/07/nyregion/07trager.html?_r=0
2012:
The Red Sea Classical Music Festival is scheduled to open this evening at
Eilat.
2012(10th
of Tevet, 5772): Asara B’Tevet
2012(10th of Tevet, 5772): Yahrzeit of Judy Rosenstein (nee Levin), a true woman of valor who will
always be missed.
2012: Israel Police has been unsuccessful in running its agents in the West
Bank, a senior police officer said today, adding that officers have been
struggling to gather evidence on crimes committed by right-wing activists.
2012: Ehud Olmert, who resigned as prime minister of Israel in 2008 amid
corruption charges, was indicted today for allegedly taking bribes in the
construction of a huge residential complex while he was mayor of
Jerusalem.
2013: “Les Troyens,” a cinematic presentation of
Berlio’s epic is scheduled to be shown at the Jerusalem Jewish Film Festival
2013: Ms. Erica Strauss, a soprano making a guest
appearance with the Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre is scheduled to present a
one-hour program of live opera and Jewish music this evening at Temple Judah in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
2013(23rd of Tevet, 5773): Eddie
Goldstein, who lived in Boyle Heights for almost 8 decades, possibly making him
“the last Jewish resident from the original Boyle Heights Jewish community”
passed away today.
http://www.jewishjournal.com/obituaries/article/eddie_goldstein_last_jew_of_boyle_heights_dies_at_79
2013: Israeli documentary "The
Gatekeepers" was awarded the nonfiction or documentary prize by the
National Society of Film Critics in the U.S. today
2013: The traditional minyan at Temple Judah
starts its 12th year of Saturday morning services.
2013: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed
willingness to form a broad-based coalition with center-left parties but
claimed they have negated the possibility in advance.
2013: Vienna's Jewish Museum holds hundreds of
books and works of art that may have been stolen by Nazis, a newspaper reported
today.
2014:
“Discovery and Recovery: Preserving Iraqi Jewish Heritage” an exhibition that
had opened at the National Archives in October is scheduled to come to a close
today.
2014:
The New York Times features reviews
of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers
including Little Failure: A Memoir by Gary Shteyngart and The Downfall
of Money by Frederick Taylor in which he described Germany’s hyperinflation
during the 1920’s which some contend helped bring Hitler to power.
2014:
When Aaron Liberman of Northwestern checked in for the final minute of action
against Michigan he made history by being the first basketball player to wear a
kippa in Big Ten Conference history. (As reported by Adam Soclof)
2014:
“Behind the Candelabra” and “Happy Happy” are scheduled to be shown at the
Jerusalem Jewish Film Festival.
2014:
Thousands of African asylum seekers in Israel and their supporters held a
silent march and then a rally in Tel Aviv today in an escalation of their
protest against measures restricting their movement and ability to work.
2014:
New York government officials publicly condemned the New York Post today, hours
after the paper published a front-page picture of a slain Hasidic businessman
and the headline “Who didn’t want him dead?”
2014:
Pope Francis today announced long-awaited plans to travel to Israel, the West
Bank and Jordan this May.
2014:
“Radical Transformation: Magnum Photos into the Digital Age” is scheduled to
have its final showing at the University of Texas’ Harry Ransom Center in
Austin, TX.
http://forward.com/articles/186539/the-jewish-inspiration-that-guided-photographers-o/
2015:
At the Center for Jewish History David is scheduled to “tell, for the first
time, the dramatic story of how Yiddish poets Abraham Sutzkever and Shmerke
Kaczerginski rescued hundreds of treasures from YIVO’s archives following WWII
and brought them to YIVO’s new headquarters in New York.”
2015:
“Border Patrol forces setting up a barricade near their base arrested a
knife-carrying terrorist Monday night who intended to stab them.” (As reported
by Yishai Karov and Cynthia Blank)
2015:
Eighty-five-year-old Al Bendich who defended the right to free speech in cases
involving Allen Ginsberg and Lenny Bruce passed away today. (As reported by Margalit Fox)
2015:
In Poland, the University of Wroclaw said “it will restore doctorate degrees to
262 people, most of them Jewish, decades after Nazi Germany annulled them in
the run-up to World War II.”
2015(14th
of Tevet, 5775:): Seventy-eight year old Joan Peters, the author of From Time
Immemorial: The Origins of the Arab-Jewish Conflict Over Palestine passed away
today. (As reported by Daniel E. Slotnik)
2015(14th
of Tevet, 5776): Ninety-seven-year-old New York City sculptor, known best for
his bronze works, passed away today in California.
http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-milton-hebald-20150108-story.html#page=1
https://www.askart.com/artist_bio/artist/19889/artist.aspx
2015:
“Jewish Agency for Israel Chairman Natan Sharansky presented a check for more
than $100,000 to the family of Har Nof terror attack victim Howie (Chaim)
Rothman in Jerusalem” today. (As reported by Renee Ghert-Zand)
2015:
An exhibition “Batsheva Dance Company at 50: American Concepts and the Israeli
Spirit” is scheduled to come to an end at the New York Library for the
Performing Arts.
2016:
Today’s American Airlines flight from Tel Aviv to Philadelphia is scheduled to
be the last flight to or from the United States by this U.S. company which is
going through a cost-cutting retrenchment.
2016:
Rabbi Yaron David, a rabbi for the Netzah Yehuda Battalion, eulogized first
sergeant Yishai Rozales today after he was killed in a training accident at the
Tze'elim Base in the Negev.
2016(24th
of Tevet, 5776): On the Jewish calendar Yahrzeit of Rabbi Eliyahu Eliezer
Dessler.
http://www.aish.com/dijh/Tevet_24.html
2017:
“Through the Wall” is scheduled to be shown for a final time at JW3 in
London.2017: In Jerusalem, Menachem Gottlieb is scheduled to lead a shiur that
deals with the questions of
* Do the Jewish People Have
an Obligation to Prevent Holocausts?
* When Does "Darkei
Shalom" Apply?
* What is Wrong With a
Prayer?
* Does It Make A Difference
if Syria Murdered 42 Israeli POWs & Thousands of Jews in the Wars?
2018:
Today, “Senior US officials denied reports that $125 million in aid to the UN’s
Palestinian refugee agency had been frozen over Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas’s refusal to enter US-led peace talks with Israel.” (As reported
by Eric Cortellessa)
2018:
In Jerusalem, the Kakadu Art and Design Gallery is scheduled to host a “Friday
Family Workshop.”
2018:
A high school classmate of 19-year-old college student Blaze Bernstein was
taken into custody and charged with murdering the U. of Pennsylvania student
who was home on break.
2018:
In Memphis, Temple Israel is scheduled to host its first Tot Shabbat of the
year “followed by a Shabbat Dinner.”
2018(18th
of Tevet, 5778): Seventy-four-year Carole Hart, a co-creator of “Sesame Street”
passed away today. (As reported by Neil Genzlinger)
2018:
“Israelis awoke to a morning of harsh weather conditions today as heavy rains
and furious storms lashed the country from north to south, inflicting floods on
various areas and causing trees to come crashing down on parked cars in Tel
Aviv.”
2018:
Today, Robert Siegel who had been one of the co-hosts for “All Things
Considered” since 1987 broadcast his last show.
2019(28th
of Tevet, 5779): Parashat Va-ayrah; \
2019(28th
of Tevet, 5779): On the Jewish calendar, “Yahrtzeit of Rabbi Chizkiyah Da
Silva.”
http://www.aish.com/dijh/Kislev_28.html
2019(28th
of Tevet, 5770): Ninety-year-old Bernice Resnick who gained fame as Bernice
Sandler the holder of a D.Ed. from the University of Maryland who was the
driving force behind the implementation of Title IX passed away today. (As
reported by Katharine Q. Seelye)
http://www.bernicesandler.com/
2019:
In JW3 is scheduled to host a screening of “RBG”.
2019:
The Joyce Theatre is scheduled to host a performance of “Riff this/Riff that”
featuring the work of award-winning choreographer Ephrat Asherie and jazz
pianist Ehud Asherie
2019:
The “Cedar Rapids Opera Theatre 7th Annual Temple Judah Opera Winter Preview
Concert” is scheduled to take place this evening.
2020:
In Brookline, MA, the Temple Sinai Adult Jewish Learning and Rainbow Committees
are scheduled to host Mimi Lemary as she reads from her book What We
Will Become: A Mother, a Son and a Journey of Transformation, “a mother’s
memoir of her transgender child’s odyssey.”
2020:
The ADL, AJC, JCRC, NYBR and the UJA Federation of New York are scheduled to
sponsor the “No Hate, No Fear” March, a response to the latest wave of violent
anti-Semitic attacks.
2020:
The New York Times features reviews
of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers
including A Bookshop in Berlin: The Rediscovered Memoir of One Woman’s
Harrowing Escape from the Nazis by Francoise Frenkel.
2020:
The Albany, CA, Community Center is scheduled to host “Ethiopians and Civil
Rights in Israel during which “author and photographer Irene Fertik chronicles
25 years of Ethiopian Jewish immigration to Israel, in a presentation of photos
and text from her book From Tesfa to Tikva.”
https://www.bkwrks.com/irene-fertik
2021:
Judaism Your Way in Colorado which is offering virtual cooking classes to make
Jewish comfort foods is scheduled to provide a hands-on lesson in how to
prepare two all-time favorite “Jewish
Foods,” Noodle and Potato Kugel.
2021:
Brandeis University’s Hebrew Program, The Schusterman Center for Israel
Studies, The Jewish Studies Program at Colby College, Middlebury College School
of Hebrew, Hebrew College and Northeastern University Hillel are scheduled to
co-host Gilv Hovav, lecturing on “My Great-Grandfather, the Prophet, the first
in four-part series “How to Revive a Dead Language in 100 Years” presented
online by the Consulate General of Israel to New England.
2021:
In spite of the Pandemic and the after-effects of the worst weather disaster in
Cedar Rapids, Confirmation Class is scheduled to begin this evening at Temple
Judah.
2021:
ADF is scheduled to present the world premiere of +972 by Dana Ruttenberg,
featuring Netta Yerushalmy and Dana, followed by a conversation moderated by
Jesse Zaritt. Photo: Uriel Sinay.
2021:
The ASF Institute of Jewish Experience is scheduled to presents to present the
first session of the writers’ workshop “Tell Your Sephardi-Mizrahi Story” with
award-winning author Gila Green.
2021:
“Following an announcement by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the government
was scheduled to convene today in order to discuss tightening coronavirus
restrictions during the country's third lockdown since the start of the
pandemic.” (As reported by Itamar Eichner)
2022:
Beth David Women is scheduled to present, online, “Zack Bodner, president and
CEO of Oshman Family JCC, discusses his new book, Why Do Jewish?,
subtitled “A Manifesto for 21st Century Jewish Peoplehood,” on making Jewish
identity a meaningful and relevant part of everyday life.
2022:
The Washington Square Minyan is scheduled to present online “Torah Reading
Class for Beginners, the first of a three session Zoom series that will teach
participants “how to turn the synbols in the traditional tune used to chant the
Torah in public.” (Editor’s Note – consider the connection with the item
above.)
2022:
Based on earlier reports Israelis can take comfort today that “a fourth dose of
COVID-19 boosts antibodies five-fold a week after the shot is administered”
while worry about prediction by the International Crisis Group that Israel
could face two conflicts in 2022 -- one with the terrorists in the Palestinian
territories and one involving both the Iran and the United States.
2022:
YIVO is scheduled to host a lecture by Timothy Snyder, the Richard C. Levin
Professor of History at Yale on “How We Should Think About Freedom?”
2023:
In Cedar Rapids, the Hadassah Book Club is scheduled to discuss The Lost
Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff.
2023:
Lockdown University is scheduled to host a lecture by Trudy Gold, via zoom, on
“Rescue and Resistance in France, Both Jewish and Non-Jewish.”
2023:
Based on action taken yesterday by Justice Minister Yariv Levin, the Knesset is
scheduled to deal with a number of bills designed to reform Israel’s judicial
system including one that would allow the legislature to override Supreme Court
rulings with a 61-vote majority in the 120-seat Knesset which
opponents
say would be the end of an independent judiciary in Israel. (As reported by Tova
Zimuki)
2024: Deadline for teens to apply
directly for the “Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Awards.
2024: The Boston Synagogue is scheduled
to host a Friday Night Shabbat complete with a Community Dinner.
2024: In Berkley, CA, Urban Adamah and
the Shomer Collective are scheduled to “present retreat rooted in Jewish
spirituality for adults ages 20-39 who’ve experienced loss of a parent,
sibling, partner or friend.”
2024: In Sharon, MA, is scheduled to
present a musical evening “Raise Your Spirits at Spirit Rising Shabbat.”
2024: As January 5th begins in Israel,
the Hamas held hostages begin day 91 in captivity. (Editor’s note: this
situation is too fluid for this blog to cover so we are just providing a
snapshot as of the posting at midnight Israeli time