「jews」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)10ページ目
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ewish weavers of the tallit (scarfs used by the | Jews during prayer in the day-time). |
ther historians, of Muslim activities harassing | Jews at prayer. |
Jews in pre-Christian Rome were very active in prose | |
use it is storied that when the governor of the | Jews had predestined predestination upon them to use |
kday mornings, as these are the only hours that | Jews are presently allowed to frequent the Mount. |
In it, Sylten catalogued | Jews or presumed Jews in Norway. |
a unification of the German volk and blamed the | Jews on preventing this unity. |
o compose them, including Christians, Saracens, | Jews, emperors, princes, kings, dukes, counts, visco |
Inmates (mostly | Jews) included prisoners from Czechoslovakia, France |
The prisoners of the camp were | Jews, political prisoners, religious prisoners and p |
They were in favour of giving | Jews a probationary period during which they could b |
he documentary interviews Christians, Zionists, | Jews and probes the politics and alliance between Ev |
rman decrees and ordinances expanded the ban on | Jews in professional life. |
t rabbi of the West London Synagogue of British | Jews, and professor of Hebrew at University College |
ewish procreation, during most of Popper's life | Jews were prohibited from owning property, choosing |
Jews were prohibited from using state hospitals and | |
Emigration for | Jews was prohibited after 1941. |
Many | Jews were prosecuted for participating in Karmalyuk' |
but he decided to stay in Hungary to help local | Jews escape prosecution by using his status and infl |
Rescue Committee, which provided assistance to | Jews fleeing prosecution in Poland and Hungary. |
Jews had prospered on Rhodes during 390 years of Ott | |
Lichtenfeld organized a group of young | Jews to protect his community. |
Some towns and churches also helped hide | Jews and protect others from the Holocaust, such as |
tonian population in part attempted to help the | Jews by providing food and so on." |
ic theology of the era reflected “a view of the | Jews which provoked anti-Semitism on the one hand, w |
In December 1942, when extermination of the | Jews became public knowledge, there were 34,000 immi |
The contribution of Georgian | Jews to public, economic, cultural, and scientific f |
ed to accept them, in spite of a law forbidding | Jews to publish. |
inted by the way the Russian communists treated | Jews, and published on the topic, leading to his exp |
ut this training to sadistic use by victimizing | Jews as punching bags. |
gration and that the 1940 Land Act which banned | Jews from purchasing land in 95% of Palestine be res |
rejected capitalism (which they associated with | Jews) and pushed for nationalisation of major indust |
Once the program for the eradication of the | Jews was put into motion in the camps in German occu |
“From Outcasts to Citizens: | Jews in Qajar Iran” Esther's Children: A Portrait of |
low in Labour Studies with special reference to | Jews at Queen Mary, University of London. |
theory, Heinrich Coudenhove-Kalergi agreed that | Jews are racially distinct. |
n Pruchnicki, the archbishop of Lviv, permitted | Jews to raise a synagogue in the city. |
the movement in favor of the persecuted Russian | Jews, and raised the first fund in England for their |
Richard completed judicial reforms and allowed | Jews to re-enter the Archbishopric of Trier. |
ollowing statement: "...if there were 6,000,000 | Jews within reach of Hitler, which number is widely |
Jews also read the beginning part of the parshah, Ge | |
hen the latter made definite concessions to the | Jews, the reason assigned being that Menelaus, by hi |
litical and religious developments were causing | Jews to reassess their position in American life. |
er national groups in the Soviet Union, Russian | Jews could receive a territory in which to pursue cu |
trengthened Napoleon's favorable opinion of the | Jews, who received the imperial promise that their r |
Many of these disadvantaged | Jews are recent immigrants from the former Soviet Un |
In 1972, her deeds on behalf of Hungarian | Jews were recognized by Yad Vashem after she was nom |
Nearly 80% of the remaining 300,000 French | Jews took refuge there after November 1942. |
Many of the dispossessed | Jews found refuge in Alexandria, Egypt, where Naeh o |
n Poland, which swelled further to over 200,000 | Jews as refugees fled from the Nazis. |
In 616, he ordered that those | Jews who refused to convert to Christianity should b |
panish decree that ordered the expulsion of all | Jews who refused conversion to Catholicism, the Camo |
630-562 BC), King of Babylon throws 3 | Jews for refusing to worship his golden idol. |
All | Jews were registered and a Jewish Council (Judenrat) |
ives could possibly have saved large numbers of | Jews, but regretfully obstruction destroyed these im |
Jewish community-accepting atheist and Buddhist | Jews, while rejecting Jews practicing Christianity-t |
argue that Gentile Christians would turn on the | Jews by rejecting their laws and destroying Israel. |
The pattern wherein | Jews were relatively free under pagan rulers until t |
nt by thousands of Russian and Yiddish-speaking | Jews was released in 2003. |
s Tevye says in the introductory narration, the | Jews have relied upon their traditions to maintain t |
ugh the generations; this guilt then drives the | Jews to religion to make them feel better. |
Laws were passed condemning | Jews whilst religious and administrative mishandling |
espite warnings of impending deportations, most | Jews were reluctant to leave their homes, although s |
Jews who remained were summarily shot on Reymonta St | |
to incite the Christian population against the | Jews, who remained friendly to the Turks. |
as a place of worship for Hasidic and Sephardic | Jews and remains popular among worshippers of differ |
Agency asked him to go to Ethiopia to look for | Jews, reaching remote villages. |
The state, he said, owes | Jews moral reparation for centuries of brutal persec |
r was asked if he knew he could die for helping | Jews, he replied, "It would be an honor to give my l |
Chwolson again took up the defense of the | Jews, and republished his memoir with many additions |
Transported | Jews were required to declare their assets and aband |
official Heinrich Rothmund, passports of German | Jews were required to have a large "J" stamped on th |
Jews were required to hand in their valuables. | |
Four Norwegian | Jews were rescued by the White Buses: Eugen Keil, Jo |
300 | Jews were rescued by the Greda III. |
o 'unarmed resistance fighters' more than 3,000 | Jews were rescued from deportation. |
This is as opposed to Unterlander | Jews, who resided in the eastern lower lands on the |
with Jewish, to refuse giving Palestine to the | Jews, and resistance to the traitors in the east of |
The pretext for the pogrom was a rumor that the | Jews were responsible for the execution of prisoners |
I think that plays as well as saying the | Jews are responsible for their own genocide by Hitle |
ted antisemitism and repudiated the notion that | Jews were responsible for the persecution and death |
o formulated the charge of deicide, namely that | Jews were responsible for the crucifixion of Jesus. |
merican propaganda with the suggestion that the | Jews were responsible, and paid tribute to Hitler on |
In 1772 Frankfurt, Germany, | Jews are restricted to living in the ghetto and freq |
discovery of the full extent of the Holocaust, | Jews were restricted from migrating to Palestine. |
of Frankfurt he ordered all restrictions on the | Jews lifted, resulting in a struggle with the Christ |
Indeed, Isaiah said that the | Jews would retain a perverted and hardened heart unt |
In 1944, Touvier ordered the execution of seven | Jews in retaliation for the Resistance's assassinati |
but the SS discovered the poison and shot five | Jews in retaliation. |
n years later, Cyrus the Great, who allowed the | Jews to return to their homeland and rebuild the Tem |
srael in the hope of preparing the land for the | Jews to return, thereby hastening the coming of the |
The first act of the returning | Jews was returning the desecrated synagogue and deva |
on, A Prayer for the Government: Ukrainians and | Jews in Revolutionary Times, 1917-1920. |
As | Jews, the Reys decided to flee Paris before the Nazi |
anese Islands in 1912, and large numbers of the | Jews of Rhodes had begun to emigrate during the 1930 |
Island of Roses: The | Jews of Rhodes in Los Angeles is a 1995 documentary |
The Sephardic | Jews of Rhodes were once Spaniards who came to find |
For centuries the | Jews of Rhodes lived peacefully, preserving the medi |
2 Live | Jews' original rhyming style involves hip-hop lyrics |
men under his command, in the murder of 10,600 | Jews of Riga in the Rumbula forest near the city. |
This law granted the Prussians | Jews new rights, but the admission to government pos |
In particular, the number of | Jews had risen from 1,000 in 1880 to 3,200 in 1887, |
Approximately 650 | Jews, including Rochczyn, were killed in the fightin |
isemitic, while others believe that Muthee sees | Jews as role models for Christians. |
ts as Polish land owners frequently gave to the | Jews the role of publicans (see tax farming) in the |
ace throughout Romania in order to remember the | Jews and Roma who died in the Holocaust. |
ed as passively opposed to the Regime, like the | Jews, the Roma and many others. |
alth on the extensive Arabian trade, along with | Jews, Armenians, Roman Catholics and others. |
ed pervasive anti-Semitism and violence against | Jews in Romania before World War II, when Romania's |
anian communist regime disconnected totally the | Jews of Romania from the other Jewish communities in |
fled the country during the pogroms against the | Jews in Romania. |
, the possibilities of a mass emigration of the | Jews from Romania. |
898, his numerous studies on the history of the | Jews in Romania. |
seum gives broad coverage of the history of the | Jews in Romania. |
me way, if war comes first to the nation of the | Jews, the Romans shall willingly act as their allies |
This is significant as both | Jews and Romas were persecuted and murdered by the N |
Poles had gray ones; | Jews and Romas, yellow; Russians and other non-Polis |
144,000 | Jews were rounded up and held there. |
Under the dictatorship of Ion Antonescu, | Jews were rounded up and deported to Transnistria, w |
but the 'Politically undesirable' would include | Jews, intellectuals, runaways, and the 'incurably si |
More than 2 million | Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920. |
of the 20th century there was a great influx of | Jews from Russia and eastern Europe under the Galves |
hropist Baron Maurice de Hirsch in 1891 to help | Jews from Russia and Romania to settle in Argentina. |
, which continued to be compulsory for Rabbinic | Jews in Russia and Soviet Union Jews. |
vement operated between 1907 and 1914 to divert | Jews fleeing Russia and eastern Europe away from cro |
the Polish Second Republic (see History of the | Jews in Russia). |
In his later years he was revered by the | Jews of Russia, and came to be considered the pre-em |
calling for greater respect of human rights for | Jews in Russia. |
of articles in The Times on the persecution of | Jews in Russia. |
Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the | Jews of Russia; in the same year he declared himself |
Some of the | Jews spoke Russian as their native tongue; others sp |
1926: 18,020, 61% Ukrainians, 37% | Jews, 1% Russians and 1% Poles. |
This usually meant | Jews, Poles, Russians, and Gypsies. |
s exclusively Ukrainian, with only a few Poles, | Jews and Russians. |
the Armenians, Tibetans, World War II European | Jews or Rwandans--have the power to destroy the worl |
ers heard rumours of the upcoming evacuation of | Jews, they sabotaged preparations for the death marc |
st who helped protect some tens of thousands of | Jews seeking safe-haven in East Asia from Nazi atroc |
The majority however, like most of the | Jews of Safed and Tiberias, fled to Jerusalem. |
ts on the Kastner train, a train carrying 1,684 | Jews to safety in Switzerland, arranged by Rudolf Ka |
eality, only a handful of anti-Zionist Orthodox | Jews, Friedman said, "yes, that's absolutely the cas |
Its inhabitants were | Jews when Saint Peter and Saint James visited the to |
his time Vincent Ferrer laboured to convert the | Jews of Salamanca; from 1460 to 1478 John of Sahagun |
By 1492, | Jews of Salzburg were publicly burned and Jewish set |
The history of the | Jews in Salzburg, Austria goes back several millenni |
emons, had deserted the true God for idols, the | Jews and Samaritans possessed the revelation given t |
ans, historians and writers who write about the | Jews the same as Chrysostom: Epiphanius, Diodorus of |
d the outbreak of hostilities between Arabs and | Jews, Mar Samuel relocated to the United States in 1 |
sions of Reform : Congregation Emanu-El and the | Jews of San Francisco 1849-1999, Judah L. Magnes Mus |
Within the next few years, the remaining 500 | Jews of Sandur emigrated to Israel. |
Zaslaw was a work camp where | Jews from Sanok were deported. |
erent versions, it was driven by priests, nuns, | Jews, vampires, satanists or Satan himself. |
n summer of 1944 he was deported with the other | Jews of Satmar to Auschwitz Death camp where he peri |
n found with lower frequency in Oman, Ashkenazi | Jews, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Greece, the Czech Repu |
How many | Jews were saved through his actions is unknown, but |
ed Muslims-Druze mob were using the defenseless | Jews as scapegoats. |
ckie Mason often pokes fun at the stereotype of | Jews as schnorrers. |
ome to refer exclusively to the genocide of the | Jews in scholarly writing until the 1960s. |
in the London Jewish community, supporting the | Jews' Free School and was the first president of the |
He was educated at the | Jews' Free School in London, and then at the Telshe |
1839 - 3 June 1918) was the head master of the | Jews' Free School, London; born at Swansea, South Wa |
In 1854 he was indentured to Moses Angel at the | Jews' Free School, London, as a pupil-teacher, and i |
e Jewish religion, and the founder of the great | Jews Free School. |
well with the Romans and with the nation of the | Jews at sea and on land forever, and may sword and e |
e has counseled and guided tens of thousands of | Jews from secular backgrounds to draw closer to the |
During World War II many | Jews from Sedan were sent to the concentration camps |
, certain measures were first taken against the | Jews, it seems to please the pope, who had demanded |
ns out to be Zelda) to the city with many other | Jews and sees that they are being killed on the way. |
Some of the local Ukrainians helped the | Jews by selling them food, but others came close to |
Remaining | Jews were sent to camps in Stutthof, Dachau, Auschwi |
rities picked 900 of the youngest and strongest | Jews and sent them southeast to a town 18 km from Ri |
The Nazis exterminated many of the | Jews and sent almost all of the remaining Jews to co |
Until September 1943 almost all | Jews were sent to the Auschwitz or Belzec exterminat |
More than 5,000 | Jews were sent to forced labor camps, where 46 are k |
tead of being transferred to South America, the | Jews were sent to Auschwitz in October 1943 and May |
At this time, he writes, "hundreds of | Jews... were sentenced by military courts to long pri |
ndard speaking language either, and was used by | Jews to separate and give warmth to their sacred lan |
ehicles most likely equipped with gas to murder | Jews in Serbia. |
blished, illustrated, or translated by Romanian | Jews; a serious archive of the history of Romanian J |
A violent tumult broke out; the lives of the | Jews were seriously menaced; and it was only with th |
i-Semitic and represented a Blood libel against | Jews, and set off a diplomatic row between the Israe |
the son of Mannes and Tillie Israel, the first | Jews to settle in Kalamazoo. |
small size would not encourage large numbers of | Jews to settle there permanently and it provided con |
for 3,000 immigration visas for German Catholic | Jews to settle in Brazil. |
The first large group of | Jews to settle in Puerto Rico were European refugees |
nd looked throughout the world for places where | Jews might settle and create a state or at least an |
pronounced by Yiddish-speaking Eastern European | Jews who settled in the United States in the late 19 |
gainst the Byzantine Christians, who disallowed | Jews from settling in Jerusalem. |
It is sung by many | Jews during Seudah Shlishit (the third meal on Shabb |
Polish | Jews suffered severely, being the first targeted in |
mposed by the Japanese under Nazi pressure, the | Jews of Shanghai survived the war unharmed, as the J |
osed to be scrapped in Japan, which transported | Jews to Shanghai on the way. |
The family were Orthodox | Jews, and she is believed to be the eldest of at lea |
Dr. Jacques Faitlovitch reported that there are | Jews in Shewa whom are referred to by the derogatory |
During WW II, approximately 20,000 | Jews were shipped from a railway station in Bobigny. |
While many | Jews were shipped to Nisko and left to die without s |
his career, but his caricatures always depicted | Jews as short, fat, ugly, unshaven, drooling, sexual |
In April 1943, another 1,000 Kozova | Jews were shot by Germans, and in June 1943, 400 mor |
Within hours, some 600 | Jews were shot and 5,000 others rounded up. |
22-24, 1941 in which between 25,000 and 34,000 | Jews were shot or burned alive, or to the murder of |
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