「jews」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)14ページ目
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he camp, and the transports of Warsaw and Radom | Jews began to arrive again on September 3, 1942. |
ity Fathers of Basel attempted to protect their | Jews but to no avail: the local guilds demanded thei |
the case of Athens, where a large proportion of | Jews managed to escape death. |
During the early 20th century | Jews began to settle in Puerto Rico. |
the fall of Dutch Brazil it was imperative for | Jews planning to leave Europe to find other new home |
Yeshu, a name used for those who sought to lead | Jews astray to idolatry, in particular an idolatrous |
on August 18 the same year, with the remaining | Jews taken to Jaslo ghetto. |
to provide a spacious and modernized place for | Jews accustomed to the intimate and often squalid sh |
Bishop Nicolaus (1390) granted the | Jews permission to settle in any city within the Spe |
While all throughout history | Jews immigrated to Israel (such as the Vilna Gaon's |
on behalf of the families of 12 missing Iranian | Jews seeking to block the Israeli government from re |
ormers and Zionist nationalists had argued that | Jews needed to become "a normal nation" and urged th |
In the mid 15th century the Ashkenazi | Jews began to arrive in Amsterdam in large numbers f |
His work helping | Jews led to him narrowly escaping death from a firin |
By the 31 July 1741, all | Jews had to leave his lands and were only permitted |
A second large wave of Ashkenazi | Jews came to Istanbul during the 1930s and 1940s fol |
Some Polish | Jews refer to pancakes with these ingredients as bub |
When Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany and | Jews began to be persecuted, Frieda moved to France |
f these on one occasion being so great that the | Jews had to find seats in the women's gallery. |
Thousands of | Jews froze to death. |
antisemitic laws began in Italy, 10,000 Italian | Jews belonged to the Italian Fascist Party. |
At the height of the war, dying Hungarian | Jews managed to smuggle a letter to that Allies. |
After the end of this revolt, | Jews continued to live in Jerusalem in significant n |
saying that the existence of the Rabbinate gave | Jews strength to carry on, although such a formality |
All the canons which pertain to | Jews served to maintain a separation between the two |
As many Eastern European | Jews began to emigrate to the United States, the mov |
s include some fields of particular interest to | Jews: adherence to dietary law, frequency of attenda |
vach nacht" custom, practised by many Ashkenazi | Jews, is to have children come and recite the Shema |
Hanotea served to assist German | Jews' immigration to Palestine as part of the Zionis |
The | Jews seem to be a privileged class that can travel a |
of the 19th century and 1930, large numbers of | Jews began to arrive from Lithuania and Latvia. |
A well-known auspicious practice among | Jews is to pray for 40 consecutive days at the Weste |
So know this: of all those among us [the | Jews] happen to be more ancient than many: [for inst |
was divided among 57% Poles, 42% Germans and 1% | Jews according to official German statistics. |
ans announced through the Judenrat that all the | Jews were to go to the old cemetery, which was situa |
is life to the reconciliation of Christians and | Jews, and to the study of antisemitism. |
eat exodus from Russia took place; thousands of | Jews forced to emigrate took up their residence in P |
burial site for trainloads of Central European | Jews transported to Estonia for extermination. |
Some local | Jews managed to escape into hiding, though very few |
Most | Jews traveled to nearby Charleston for services and |
Many | Jews immigrated to the region after having been expe |
of the Elbe river (as opposed to the Ashkenazi | Jews living to the West of it, or the Sephardi Jews |
lagers of Hucisko have been noted for harboring | Jews trying to escape the Nazi German Holocaust. |
He went on to allege that a group of | Jews close to President Barack Obama "control the wo |
to bring the king into direct contact with the | Jews, and to speak of both in laudatory terms. |
old Romance language is the name that Sephardic | Jews gave to their spoken Romance language in Iberia |
Over 15,000 | Jews had to flee from the region. |
nored their parishioners who were classified as | Jews (according to the Nuremberg Laws), and the some |
Like all non-Muslims, | Jews had to pay the harac ("head tax") and faced oth |
re in 538 BCE, the Persian Cyrus the Great gave | Jews permission to return to Judea, and more than 40 |
nofficial and particular measures taken against | Jews up to 1935. |
ney-lending activities carried out by the Roman | Jews were to cease. |
Before World War II it was lived by Poles and | Jews, but today it is an exclusively Polish town. |
ssionary with American Board of Missions to the | Jews (ABMJ; today, Chosen People Ministries). |
wearing of a talis prior to marriage, as German | Jews do today. |
In 837 he suppressed a revolt of Christians and | Jews in Toledo. |
el' d'Hiv), the mass arrest of more than 13,000 | Jews which took place on16 and 17 July 1942 in Paris |
ther to Northern Israel to try to return lapsed | Jews to Torah Judaism. |
s chapter, "A Community of Co-Enablers: Why Are | Jews Ignoring Traditional Jewish Law by Protecting t |
Romanian | Jews from Transnistria who left Romania as a result |
marks the beginning of Romanian deportations of | Jews to Transnistria, in 1942. |
f the war, thousands and thousands of Hungarian | Jews were transported to certain death in German con |
e to the poor conditions in the settlement, 200 | Jews were transported to Jasenovac and 2,800 to Ausc |
ater, her family, along with thousands of other | Jews were transported via cattle cars to Auschwitz c |
The Danish | Jews were treated better in Theresienstadt than othe |
he legal fees for the writs necessitated by the | Jews' law trials, and the seal duty. |
Other colors identified | Jews (two triangles superimposed as a yellow star), |
r Holim admits a very high percentage of Haredi | Jews, and tries to cater to their needs. |
History of the | Jews in Trieste |
controversial work aiming to demonstrate to the | Jews the truths of Christianity, and an introduction |
Of the 3,000 | Jews of Tuczyn, only 20 were still alive on January |
The | Jews of Tudela followed the most varying occupations |
See also: History of the | Jews in Turkey |
hores of the Golden Horn': Music of the Spanish | Jews of Turkey,") that "far from being esoteric, thi |
anizations in Turkey, and insisted that Turkish | Jews were Turks first and Jews second. |
in Israel in the 1970s and wrote a book titled | Jews and Turks throughout History which examines Jew |
Jews, in turn, might assert that Christians practice | |
ing the mass murder of hundreds of thousands of | Jews, later turning into the Nazi systematic extermi |
t of the Wehrmacht, he witnessed the herding of | Jews into two ghettos and the shooting of thousands |
She was critical to those | Jews in Ukraine that were unrestrained practicing wh |
sought shelter in these caves, since 95% of the | Jews in Ukraine were exterminated. |
See also: History of the | Jews in Ukraine |
les and citizens of the Second Polish Republic ( | Jews, Belarusians, Ukrainians) were eligible for rec |
Polish citizens (not only ethnic Poles but also | Jews, Belarusians, Ukrainians) killed in Katyn over |
a number of these early colonists were Spanish | Jews, who, under the guise of Marranos, had hoped to |
The mass murder of | Jews began under the military occupation, which last |
CE) to the advent of the modern state when most | Jews lived under rabbinical law in segregated commun |
he Judenrat did not succeed in gathering enough | Jews, SS units gathered the rest. |
Jewish Science: Spiritual Healing and American | Jews (Oxford University Press, USA, November 2004) |
ys of Sorrow and Pain: Leo Baeck and the Berlin | Jews (Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-502800-7), |
950, a law was passed which apparently depicted | Jews as unprotected aliens. |
Today | Jews make up around 0.5% of Shpola's population. |
In 1850, | Jews made up 50% of Bauska's population. |
ked ideology, but that he condemns criticism of | Jews based upon race. |
He with his father and several other German | Jews took upon themselves an oath of piety and becam |
Almost 90% of the | Jews were urbanized, living in large cities where th |
Churches and National Council of Christians and | Jews in USA. |
uring the Jewish Sabbath so that local Orthodox | Jews can use these facilities during this time. |
aditional braided challah, while Middle Eastern | Jews normally use pita. |
The Germans blamed the massacre on the | Jews and used the NKVD's atrocity as propaganda to i |
ts of Wlodawa in a car while he talks about the | Jews who used to live in the passing houses. |
ience in conducting the mass murder of deported | Jews as valuable for the conference. |
whole notebook with such gems as "Save Russian | Jews, collect valuable prizes" and "Mammon is the ki |
His was a family of pious | Jews who valued Torah scholars and visited the grave |
policy, being responsible for the shootings of | Jews in various areas between the Dniester and the S |
This number includes Christians, | Jews, and various other denominations as well as non |
le are involved in the community including born | Jews with varying degrees of Jewish knowledge, peopl |
erefore there was a vast number of religion and | Jews were very much included. |
of his reign (see Josephus's Antiquities of the | Jews, Book VI, Chapter XII, Paragraph 7. |
of hundreds of thousands of suffering European | Jews, the victims of Nazi atrocities; and provocativ |
lusively" with baptized rather than unconverted | Jews, and viewing their persecution primarily as an |
in flames : the struggle and destruction of the | Jews in Vilna in the Holocaust (1980) |
given the near-universal conversion of Iberian | Jews during Visigothic times, (quoting Roth) "[W]ho |
isit the tish of another Rebbe, and non-Hasidic | Jews often visit a tish also. |
ice tanner who regularly came into contact with | Jews and visited their homes as part of his trade. |
Where the Nazis primarily persecuted | Jews, the Visitors were likewise depicted to persecu |
torical Articles on the Destruction of European | Jews, 9 volumes, 1989. |
vision of Partners in Torah in the USA, matches | Jews who want to learn more about their heritage wit |
r Freunde" in Berlin, a society of mainly young | Jews who wanted to think outside the bounds of stric |
minently in books about humanitarian aid to the | Jews of Warsaw and elsewhere during the occupation. |
In 1941 they transported | Jews into Warsaw ghetto. |
riminal Jack Reimer, charged in the killings of | Jews in Warsaw. |
lonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and | Jews 1430-1950 was the Runciman Prize and Duff Coope |
ninger lost his job and pension for his help to | Jews and was later helped by the Sternbuchs. |
points out that in the oral legends of Algerian | Jews, "Kahya" was depicted as an ogre and persecutor |
Shomrei HaChomos, an organization of Hungarian | Jews, but was abandoned after the riots of 1938. |
1816 of the first American Christian mission to | Jews, which was incorporated on April 14, 1820 as th |
tance activities by forging identity papers for | Jews, but was discovered and jailed for several mont |
estified in Rami's defense and claimed that for | Jews it was indeed a religious duty to kill Gentiles |
ed The Netherlands and began acting against the | Jews, Penraat was an interior designer, architect an |
GI | Jews, a Washington Post Best Book of the Year, is a |
de Steve Malkmus and David Berman on The Silver | Jews “American Water” album (1998 Drag City). |
ear that he intended the "disappearance" of the | Jews one way or another. |
in judging offenders, above all the rest of the | Jews, as we have already observed; when, therefore, |
they hear that the French government will force | Jews to wear an identifying mark. |
When the Nazis began requiring all | Jews to wear the Star of David, he voluntarily wore |
nadian newspaper the National Post as requiring | Jews to wear yellow ribbons, Christians red, and Zor |
They included provisions requiring | Jews to wear specific and identifying clothing such |
the Iranian law to the Nazi requirement for the | Jews to wear yellow badges that "ended with the Holo |
il many years later, includes a requirement for | Jews to wear distinguishing marks. |
Among many other restrictions the laws forced | Jews to wear distinctive clothes and denied from the |
of 1789 and the German revolution of 1848, many | Jews worldwide welcomed the Russian revolution of 19 |
the Riga of base camp 350 and by deported Czech | Jews as well as few German Jews from KZ Jungfernhof. |
he ‘curriculum' - and that means Christians and | Jews as well as Muslims. |
Jewish people, since God's revealed will is for | Jews, as well as Gentiles, to enter into the New Cov |
bers include Hispanics and whites who were born | Jews, as well as former Christians and Muslims. |
publicly acknowledging that faith, yet lived as | Jews, as well as those who concealed their origin an |
he described as "offensive to Christians and to | Jews as well, because it made them appear a terrible |
tually crossed into Spain, their attacks on the | Jews were well-known, and James II of Aragon vowed t |
hough there were some such attacks, but to save | Jews, who were under persecution from the Nazis duri |
Turkish and Greek | Jews alike were deported to the death camps from the |
American organizations working to free Russian | Jews, who were not allowed to emigrate during the So |
at the age of 25, was amongst 3,000 upper class | Jews who were exiled to Babylon. |
ey still consider themselves as victims, as the | Jews once were in reality?" |
The majority of the | Jews sent were scholars, professionals, artists and |
Long Beach, was famously built and financed by | Jews who were not allowed to live in the neighborhoo |
stem from the tradition that they are converted | Jews, who were evangelized by St. Thomas. |
ce the SS decided to kill most of the remaining | Jews, who were employed in forced-labor projects and |
He was chief justice of the | Jews who were subject to the exilarch (the political |
nd the Babylonian Jewry of Kaifeng, see Kaifeng | Jews), or were forced to assimilate into the Han Chi |
t that several notable Zionologists were ethnic | Jews who were supposed to represent an expert opinio |
authorities, started to sell these documents to | Jews who were hiding on the "Aryan" side of Warsaw. |
Declining to be classed either as Christians or | Jews, they were excluded from the edict of toleratio |
that Popovici would be allowed to nominate 200 | Jews which were to be exempted. |
The majority of | Jews who were killed by the Nazis were people whom t |
t was used by Northwestern and Eastern European | Jews who were forbidden by kashrut (Jewish dietary l |
the regime had excepted from deportations some | Jews who were experts in fields such as forestry and |
Jews who were not French nationals. | |
r personal life Pchilka was critical to some of | Jews that were ignorant towards the Ukrainian cultur |
n 1492 in order to save the Arabs and Sephardic | Jews who were expelled by the Spanish Inquisition. |
It is dedicated to the | Jews who were killed in the Holocaust during World W |
ig-Blut and St. Georg, and also secretly helped | Jews who were escaping to Switzerland through the un |
as outside the Jewish Pale of Settlement, where | Jews usually were not allowed to reside. |
, 1940, Germany invaded the Netherlands and the | Jews there were subject to the same anti-Semitic law |
by Portuguese settlers, exiles, and Portuguese | Jews who were victims of the Inquisition. |
h'erit ha-Pletah continued to grow as displaced | Jews who were in Western Europe at war's end were jo |
e-and-a-half million people, 90 percent of them | Jews, who were brutally murdered in the gas chambers |
ater and by accident that her grandparents were | Jews who were murdered at Auschwitz concentration ca |
als living in Hungary decided to deport foreign | Jews; these were mostly Polish and Russian Jews, but |
ilities for the approximately eighteen thousand | Jews who were assembled there from Cluj and the surr |
ription "Mi-Geresh Prag", marking the graves of | Jews who were driven from Prague, some of whom died |
eep silent on the fate of the mass of Hungarian | Jews who were being transported to Auschwitz. |
* 1899; † 1965) and her spouse Ludwig supported | Jews who were persecuted during Nazism. |
erged when he allowed the Coptic Christians and | Jews, who were deeply ingrained into Egypt's highly |
I was given the answer that these were | Jews who were settled in the Lublin district.” |
tic of usury and he blamed this practice on the | Jews, citing Werner Sombart as his inspiration for t |
ynagogue intended to serve both gay and non-gay | Jews in West Hollywood, California. |
Over 50,000 | Jews from western Poland were forced to work for Ger |
The | Jews understand what passive and powerless acceptanc |
a strong advocate of Zionism and the return of | Jews to what was then the British Mandate for Palest |
"Aftonbladet's problematic attitude towards the | Jews, both when it comes to purported criticism of I |
dent of the Anglo-Jewish Association and of the | Jews' College, where a portrait has been placed. |
ecting the personal possessions of the captured | Jews, amongst which were Anne Frank's diaries and ma |
core of their belief system follows that of the | Jews in which a single Divinity, or God is the highe |
her- Creole cookbook, which shows how observant | Jews can whip up Fake Frog's Legs or Oysters Mock-a- |
and sometimes self-contradictory feelings about | Jews", wrote on National Review Online regarding wha |
s -, who had grandparents, who were enrolled as | Jews, or who were married with such persons, were al |
When the yellow star was forced on | Jews, non-Jews who objected began to wear yellow sta |
eform Judaism, a group of traditionalist German | Jews emerged who supported some of the values of the |
himself noted for intervening on behalf of the | Jews, and who helped establish the local synagogue a |
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