「jews」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)15ページ目
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ng the bishops priests and monks to protect the | Jews they also 1- forbid forced conversion, 2- threa |
e in which (Nazi) Julius Streicher spoke of the | Jews. |
rn-Bush), a description of a persecution of the | Jews at Padua, probably of the same one of which the |
Further information: History of the | Jews in Egypt |
also reveal much detail about the lives of the | Jews living in the Land of Israel at the time. |
t of the Armenians earlier than its use for the | Jews? |
slandering and incentives to hatred towards the | Jews. |
ssionary with American Board of Missions to the | Jews (ABMJ; today, Chosen People Ministries). |
ppears from a lawsuit of the year 1560 that the | Jews then possessed a wooden synagogue, said to have |
mus on such matters, saying that as long as the | Jews deny the divinity of Christ, the Church certain |
Abraham J. Karp, ed., The | Jews in America: A Treasury of Art and Literature, H |
the woman he loves, and Chu Chem discovers the | Jews became so assimilated into their new homeland t |
For centuries the | Jews of Rhodes lived peacefully, preserving the medi |
the creation in Palestine of a homeland for the | Jews. |
"Where is he who is born King of the | Jews? |
chairman of the National Council of the | Jews of Eastern Asia (Far East) in 1937 |
"A rapid dying out of the | Jews is for us a matter of total indifference, if no |
he legal fees for the writs necessitated by the | Jews' law trials, and the seal duty. |
sing degradation of the political status of the | Jews in the thirteenth century is paralleled by the |
abbalists Rabbi Joseph Gikatilla said, when the | Jews send their prayers from the Diaspora in the dir |
The | Jews of Windsor, 1790-1990: A Historical Chronicle ( |
example for this deep dishonesty of most of the | Jews (...) is the constant denial of Jewish excessiv |
The | Jews were therefore made serfs of the king in the ro |
A mysterious man tells him that all the | Jews have gone to the city. |
cate that the vehicle was meant for killing the | Jews he mentioned. |
ogrom" (see History of Limerick, History of the | Jews in Ireland). |
was the monarch under whom the captivity of the | Jews ended, for in the first year of his reign he wa |
ity Fathers of Basel attempted to protect their | Jews but to no avail: the local guilds demanded thei |
ted tens of thousands of foreigners, among them | Jews from the USA, Israel, the UK, Australia and Can |
e-and-a-half million people, 90 percent of them | Jews, who were brutally murdered in the gas chambers |
These | Jews started practicing their religion openly at the |
under Nazi or Vichy French occupation and these | Jews were subject to various persecutions. |
These | Jews were placed under the protection of the Wehrmac |
Since these | Jews are the forebears of much of European and Weste |
These | Jews were sometimes referred to as the Reich Jews. |
There these | Jews were worked to death, so that in June 1942, onl |
Many of these | Jews had been expelled from Spain in 1492. |
Together, they saved thirteen | Jews during the Holocaust in German-occupied Poland. |
In 616, he ordered that those | Jews who refused to convert to Christianity should b |
"Internationally, we will announce that those | Jews who do not remove the rust of the exile from th |
She was critical to those | Jews in Ukraine that were unrestrained practicing wh |
In addition to those | Jews from Norway killed by the Nazis were deported t |
to limit his interests and activities to those | Jews who had been baptized Catholic or were married |
or this cannot be laid at the door of all those | Jews present at that time, nor can the Jews in our t |
Conversely, almost a hundred thousand | Jews living in the Netherlands were expelled from th |
he Roman razzia, which deported over a thousand | Jews to Auschwitz. |
riot in 1504 ended in the death of two thousand | Jews; the leaders of this riot were executed by Manu |
wish Appeal and greeted by more than a thousand | Jews. |
s Jewish inhabitants, but also several thousand | Jews transported from the Lublin Ghetto as well as f |
ilities for the approximately eighteen thousand | Jews who were assembled there from Cluj and the surr |
er Benjamin of Tiberias and a force of Tiberian | Jews. |
in Israel in the 1970s and wrote a book titled | Jews and Turks throughout History which examines Jew |
ristides de Sousa Mendes issued 30,000 visas to | Jews and other persecuted minorities, though it cost |
He helped with providing aid to | Jews in concentration camps. |
The same applies to | Jews and to Muslims, who have their own calendars fo |
alem area, this in effect stopped land sales to | Jews for a few years, beginning in 1897. |
ge was noted for his brutality, particularly to | Jews. |
aiths and its services were freely available to | Jews, Christians, Muslims and others. |
not have been offensive -- or insensitive -- to | Jews, as it was widely portrayed." |
undesirable by the Third Reich, from Gypsies to | Jews, concentrating on the so-called degenerate art. |
Discrimination was not restricted to | Jews who belonged to the "Oriental-Armenoid" race, b |
sh community of Trnava which had been closed to | Jews since they were expelled from it in c. 1555. |
ninger lost his job and pension for his help to | Jews and was later helped by the Sternbuchs. |
On September 1, 1994, a memorial dedicated to | Jews killed in the Second World War was opened in Kl |
at barred property from being sold or rented to | Jews or non-whites, acknowledged the rights of Japan |
e early 19th century as missions by churches to | Jews. |
ry of Ger Toshav to non-Jews who are married to | Jews. |
1816 of the first American Christian mission to | Jews, which was incorporated on April 14, 1820 as th |
In 1777, his efforts led to | Jews from Portugal receiving the right to settle in |
Locating assets belonging to | Jews in the city of David and seeking legal action t |
g of Berlin agreed that the address referred to | Jews, but considered it not specific enough. |
Copper Plate was a copper plate grant given to | Jews by Kulasekhara (Later Chera dynasty) king Bhask |
authorities, started to sell these documents to | Jews who were hiding on the "Aryan" side of Warsaw. |
he described as "offensive to Christians and to | Jews as well, because it made them appear a terrible |
tributing mysterious ruins of unknown origin to | Jews: such attributions are found at a number of oth |
ivists in Germany and would even grant visas to | Jews she knew that had forged passports. |
ulinary item that was erroneously attributed to | Jews because it seemed "old world." |
To | Jews, its a way of life, and is their ethniticity. |
7 before the international border was closed to | Jews. |
ible for the expansion of privileges granted to | Jews under Casimir. |
low in Labour Studies with special reference to | Jews at Queen Mary, University of London. |
All the canons which pertain to | Jews served to maintain a separation between the two |
s include some fields of particular interest to | Jews: adherence to dietary law, frequency of attenda |
nd, when Vienna's public gardens were closed to | Jews, he had "Jews welcome" signs put up in his pala |
Free Negroes were similar (legally similar) to | Jews who lived in various European nations, but who |
igration to Palestine and opposed land sales to | Jews. |
ctive covenant that forbade resale or rental to | Jews. |
Shan Ho, a Chinese diplomat who issued visas to | Jews in Nazi controlled Austria allowing them to lea |
Rescue Committee, which provided assistance to | Jews fleeing prosecution in Poland and Hungary. |
at Columbus [Kentucky] to refuse all permits to | Jews to come south, and frequently have had them exp |
Even the lottery could not award winnings to | Jews. |
'Ashkenazi' refers to | Jews who in the 9th century began to settle along th |
In addition to | Jews, the Nazis and their Latvian collaborators also |
Although magic was forbidden to | Jews in the Hebrew Bible, it was widely practised in |
munity that refused to rent or sell property to | Jews. |
, Rosen made a commitment to be a missionary to | Jews from 1956. |
All the village lands belonged to | Jews who worked in the vineyards and orchards of pea |
Today | Jews make up around 0.5% of Shpola's population. |
was the Committee for the Settlement of Toiling | Jews on the Land (some English sources use the word |
The German people were told | Jews were a threat. |
According to the Torah, | Jews have a mandate to "anhilate their name from und |
Over 120,000 Torah-observant | Jews, including "Haredi" and "Dati Leumi" Jews ralli |
This, as well as a sympathetic attitude toward | Jews (as shown in the 'Simon Aron' character introdu |
criminals and persons who promote hatred toward | Jews. |
ted from Napoleon I's policy of openness toward | Jews, and in the nineteenth century experienced a re |
e, as well as Palestinian Arab violence towards | Jews. |
the aggressive tendencies of the Nazis towards | Jews and other minorities became apparent, Keynes ma |
be characterised as ambivalent policies towards | Jews and Jewish culture, at times supporting their d |
ious tolerance, which was also extended towards | Jews. |
Speaking further of British attitudes towards | Jews in the same interview, Mamet goes on to say tha |
Most of the town's | Jews (around 19% of the population) perished in the |
On April 1, 1942, the town's | Jews were forcibly moved into a ghetto consisting of |
s also drawn attention from less traditionalist | Jews with an interest in Yiddish, since it is a docu |
ion for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender | Jews and all who wish to participate in an inclusive |
Transported | Jews were required to declare their assets and aband |
osed to be scrapped in Japan, which transported | Jews to Shanghai on the way. |
In 1941 they transported | Jews into Warsaw ghetto. |
rders and was only responsible for transporting | Jews. |
its include a cattle car, used for transporting | Jews, a shower/gas chamber, a crematory, and an exhi |
t (1 Macc 4:1-24), his guides being treacherous | Jews. |
rried out the SS's expectations of how to treat | Jews, and that mistreatment of Jews was "systematic |
inted by the way the Russian communists treated | Jews, and published on the topic, leading to his exp |
in the situation, as the new government treated | Jews more equably, permitting, for example, the rebu |
e Elyo Ventura and Bernar Motola, young Turkish | Jews. |
hymns of Gabirol in these services the Turkish | Jews preserve a chant of far more Eastern character, |
anizations in Turkey, and insisted that Turkish | Jews were Turks first and Jews second. |
1986, which resulted in the death of 22 Turkish | Jews, this attacked was blamed on the Palestinian mi |
threats of reprisals against Israel and Turkish | Jews, it included also lections on Armenian Genocide |
of the State of Israel in 1948, but the Turkish | Jews who migrated to that country helped to establis |
Turkish | Jews add brandy to the dough and Moroccan Jews eat t |
rtment in Jerusalem said that about 250 Turkish | Jews are expected to immigrate to Israel in 2009, mo |
simson was succeeded by a party of twenty-three | Jews, who arrived at New Amsterdam in October, from |
er relay race, at the last moment, the only two | Jews on the 1936 US track team, Marty Glickman and S |
sympathizer had pressured to have the only two | Jews on the track team removed at the last moment so |
ecifically in retaliation for the murder of two | Jews in nearby Petah Tiqva. |
e was accused of complicity in the death of two | Jews suspected of being informers and was imprisoned |
nch Antisemitism, due to the involvement of two | Jews of German origin, Jacques Reinach and Cornelius |
Morning Line," "I Have a Dream," "The Last Two | Jews of Kabul," and "Canal Street." |
Typically, | Jews are allowed to break the law in order to save a |
U.S. | Jews Divided on Pullout (FOX News) |
of all ethnic groups and minorities in Ukraine, | Jews in particular, and as a result they supported h |
Einsatzgruppe D with the massacres of Ukrainian | Jews. |
6 in Istanbul, Turkey, to a family of Ukrainian | Jews. |
ad a mixed population of Romanians, Ukrainians, | Jews and Germans. |
lusively" with baptized rather than unconverted | Jews, and viewing their persecution primarily as an |
ied all manner of fake documents to underground | Jews, including certificates of Aryan descent, drivi |
the 1936 Olympics, to be held in Berlin, unless | Jews were allowed to take part in the German trials |
Unlike | Jews in most cities of Czarist Russia, those in Dvin |
ere to be deported, along with the unprivileged | Jews who had been arrested; because of that rumor, t |
This is as opposed to Unterlander | Jews, who resided in the eastern lower lands on the |
Steiner intervened when SS soldiers rounded up | Jews at a railway station in Poland, and attempted t |
launched a campaign (in 1822, or 1823) to urge | Jews to learn trades and skilled factory work. |
This back-to-the-land movement urged | Jews to find a purer life and to renounce sedentary |
The Germans also sometimes used | Jews in forced-labor projects outside the ghetto. |
ut this training to sadistic use by victimizing | Jews as punching bags. |
Influenced by his grandparents, Viennese | Jews who fled the Holocaust and immigrated to Shangh |
According to many views, | Jews who wish to strive for a stricter observance of |
1941, the Nazis began a massacre of the Vitebsk | Jews, which ended on 11 October with the deaths of m |
An estimated 265,000 Warsaw | Jews were taken to the Treblinka gas chambers, and s |
the months afterwards about one thousand Warsaw | Jews emigrated to the United States. |
elements of my change in position: One, the way | Jews saw it, and they were deeply offended [at the A |
Wealthier | Jews were financially extorted in order to avoid com |
icente Ferrer, a large number of the wealthiest | Jews of Calatayud in 1391, and more particularly in |
ved away: in 1842 there were few of the wealthy | Jews who had once settled in Hackney. |
The latter introduced him to some wealthy | Jews in Berlin. |
ttomon Empire, under the Muslim Turks, welcomed | Jews to their lands. |
aith couples and families, while also welcoming | Jews from other backgrounds, as well as non-Jews int |
the New England Holocaust Memorial; well-known | Jews, including Steven Spielberg; and black leaders, |
98 the population was 7,000, of whom 1,967 were | Jews. |
Its inhabitants were | Jews when Saint Peter and Saint James visited the to |
had 62,519 inhabitants of whom 515 (0,8%) were | Jews. |
usand prisoners, the vast majority of whom were | Jews. |
Prayer Union consisted mostly of women who were | Jews who had converted to Christianity and who met f |
Western Allied POWs who were | Jews, or whom the Nazis believed to be Jewish, were |
iner's grandparents Israel and Eva (Meyer) were | Jews who came to America from Bavaria, Germany in 18 |
The people listed below were | Jews, or descendants of Jews, who migrated to the is |
ad about 15,000 inhabitants, 4,000 of whom were | Jews, and 50 Christian traders. |
Their usual targets, however, were | Jews, whom they attacked at Saintes, Verdun, Cahors, |
's capital Ankober and reported that there were | Jews around the capital of Shewa and that they were |
he largest population of inmates, however, were | Jews, initially from the Dachau and Sachsenhausen ca |
ater and by accident that her grandparents were | Jews who were murdered at Auschwitz concentration ca |
d in 1925, Freud recounts that "My parents were | Jews, and I have remained a Jew myself." |
The prisoners of the camp were | Jews, political prisoners, religious prisoners and p |
Chabad House in Mumbai only because they were | Jews.” |
exploitation of slave labor, most of whom were | Jews, in the quarries. |
Many of Jesus's followers during his life were | Jews, and it was even a matter of confusion, many ye |
I was given the answer that these were | Jews who were settled in the Lublin district.” |
during the Roman era around 1 A.d.. Westphalian | Jews refined and conserved this breed for centuries |
The Nazis began to restrict what | Jews could do and Michaelis was prohibited from prac |
Jewish Law dictates that when | Jews pray the Silent Prayer, they should face mizrac |
When | Jews were deported from Rome to Auschwitz, the Pope |
ersecutions became widespread around 1938, when | Jews were harassed and attacked by authorities under |
lived in the post-Napoleonic era, an epoch when | Jews had been granted civil rights in a large number |
Whenever | Jews worked for any length of time, with ordinary Ge |
o the area in the west of Imperial Russia where | Jews were permitted to reside. |
However, in an environment where | Jews were often blamed for many of the evils that be |
ients and food ways of the various places where | Jews lived. |
s the site of the Drancy deportation camp where | Jews, Gypsies, and others were held before being shi |
t was Rome that orchestrated the Crusades where | Jews were slaughtered...It was Rome that orchestrate |
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