「jews」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)4ページ目
該当件数 : 3080件
Diaspora | Jews historically observed the festival for eight da |
Major revolts by diasporic | Jews in Cyrene (Cyrenaica), Cyprus, Mesopotamia, and |
Many of these disadvantaged | Jews are recent immigrants from the former Soviet Un |
gainst the Byzantine Christians, who disallowed | Jews from settling in Jerusalem. |
seur and a strong defender of the discriminated | Jews in Brandenburg. |
y it is further proof of Jewish discrimination; | Jews say it shows how the nation's Arabs exploit Isr |
h'erit ha-Pletah continued to grow as displaced | Jews who were in Western Europe at war's end were jo |
itchipoi is the imaginary place where displaced | Jews in France believed they would be deported to, w |
Many of the dispossessed | Jews found refuge in Alexandria, Egypt, where Naeh o |
ries, the yellow star being used to distinguish | Jews from non-Jews. |
vement operated between 1907 and 1914 to divert | Jews fleeing Russia and eastern Europe away from cro |
Milice, a militia force recruited to hunt down | Jews and battle the Communist underground threat in |
About a dozen | Jews survived and formed a partisan combat unit whic |
From this camp, 101,000 Dutch | Jews and about 5,000 German Jews were deported to th |
From about 1850, it was populated by Dutch | Jews (see Chuts), to be joined later by Jewish refug |
ry out an order to round up the remaining Dutch | Jews in the area with his fellow policemen that he i |
Ashes in the wind (The destruction of the Dutch | Jews) on the history of the persecution of the Jews |
he was responsible for the deportation of Dutch | Jews to the concentration camps in Germany and Polan |
Poland is silent... Dying | Jews are surrounded only by a host of Pilates washin |
oins minted and issued by the Herodian Dynasty, | Jews of Idumean descent who ruled the province of Ju |
Jonas, like most early | Jews, settled in downtown Cincinnati. |
league players, which might identify more early | Jews and early pros, he is likely to be both the ear |
Most of the early | Jews were British. |
These early | Jews in Sri Lanka either assimilated into the local |
This love of Empire explains the easiness | Jews change their allegiance... Simple minds call it |
aditional braided challah, while Middle Eastern | Jews normally use pita. |
ite (he attempted, for example, to have Eastern | Jews expelled from Bavaria in 1919), he was instrume |
irectorate of the Department for Middle Eastern | Jews at the Jewish Agency, he served as an emissary |
the everyday life and religion of the Egyptian | Jews. |
Numerous acts of violence against Egyptian | Jews followed in the later years, including the 1948 |
Only eight | Jews were detained here; the camp was designated mos |
Eighteen | Jews were killed (some sources say twenty) and eight |
On March 28, 1945, eighty | Jews from evacuation column, though fit for the jour |
s not form part of the biblical canon of either | Jews or Christians. |
ds had warned them that the lawyers were either | Jews or homosexuals. |
t documentary film about a community of elderly | Jews living in Venice, California. |
as extras, and Dr. Pearl now entertains elderly | Jews in Florida retirement communities. |
eous among the nations, for having saved eleven | Jews during the German occupation. |
Also politically liberal and emancipated | Jews had a patriarchal and traditionalistic attitude |
the time (see left-right politics), emancipated | Jews, as they entered the political culture of the n |
ailable outside the Soviet Union for emigrating | Jews, they decided to emigrate. |
as well as in the Sharia courts of the Empire, | Jews and Christians were for the first time subjecte |
Fritz Klein) in the task of choosing employable | Jews to operate the industrial machines and sending |
bbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson often encouraged | Jews to follow this cycle, emphasizing that these st |
ties, showing tolerance towards and encouraging | Jews and Christians. |
He made a tremendous effort in encouraging | Jews to study these works. |
d came to believe that they had a shared enemy: | Jews, a group he accused, among other things, of cre |
eing eaten after the afikoman therefore enjoins | Jews to distinguish their Passover Seder from the pa |
are Orthodox, Hasidim and Karaites, enlightened | Jews one finds only in Brody. |
he Judenrat did not succeed in gathering enough | Jews, SS units gathered the rest. |
ader Martin Luther in 1543, in which he equated | Jews with the Devil and described them in vile langu |
n Europeans, the Slavic peoples, and especially | Jews and gypsies were all considered "foreign races. |
Prisoners, especially | Jews, were brought to the hotel to be interrogated, |
proposal to move European refugees, especially | Jews from Nazi Germany and Austria, to four location |
ists, Gypsies, the mentally ill, and especially | Jews. |
protestant sects (anabaptists, mennonites etc), | jews, karaims, muslims. |
he air transport by TEA of some 8,000 Ethiopian | Jews from Sudan directly to Israel, ending January 5 |
s a popular artist who speaks to many Ethiopian | Jews. |
rt Israeli military operation to take Ethiopian | Jews to Israel. |
the Falash Mura community, a group of Ethiopian | Jews whose ancestors converted to Christianity. |
l Al cargo planes, transported 14,325 Ethiopian | Jews to Israel. |
ll-being of the sizable population of Ethiopian | Jews, known as Beta Israel, residing in Ethiopia. |
The school was attended by many young Ethiopian | Jews, who introduced him to Ethiopian folk and pop m |
ibutions of Arab, Yemenite, Greek and Ethiopian | Jews. |
The biggest challenge to the Israeli Ethiopian | Jews probably lies in the very low level of formal e |
on Joshua was the 1985 removal of 800 Ethiopian | Jews (called Beta Israel) from Sudan to Israel. |
A large number of Ethiopian | Jews make their home in Rehovot and surrounding town |
voy in 1992, and a memoir, Rescue the Ethiopian | Jews! (1996), the story of his quest. |
The Beta Israel, or Ethiopian | Jews, are often characterized as possessing buda.:20 |
theater, classrooms and a memorial to Ethiopian | Jews who died in Sudan on their way to Israel and Et |
o a key negotiator for the release of Ethiopian | Jews and the resolution to the dispute over the Carm |
There are even black Ethiopian | Jews called Falashas. |
part in the first operations to bring Ethiopian | Jews to Israel. |
t that several notable Zionologists were ethnic | Jews who were supposed to represent an expert opinio |
Ethnically, | Jews predominated, and many members were of Ukrainia |
in the Nazi era attempt to annihilate Europe's | Jews. |
unds in the United States on behalf of European | Jews who faced hunger following World War I. |
with their complicity in the murder of European | Jews. |
caust, antisemitism threatened Eastern European | Jews. |
opulation policy and the murder of the European | Jews, London: Arnold; New York: Oxford University Pr |
r who played an important role helping European | Jews and intellectuals escape the Holocaust during W |
of Salvadoran citizenship" to Central European | Jews (principally through the Swiss Consular Office |
even months before most of the Eastern European | Jews who arrived in Palestine. |
of hundreds of thousands of suffering European | Jews, the victims of Nazi atrocities; and provocativ |
resulted in the murder of six million European | Jews. |
but also Ukrainians, Hungarians, East European | Jews, and the Poles of the Tatra Mountains. |
illed during Hitler's extermination of European | Jews, and Mary blamed herself for not sending enough |
3, the UPJB has been affiliated to the European | Jews for a Just Peace network, which comprises 17 Je |
ge magnum opus, The Destruction of the European | Jews in 1961; this work is regarded today as a semin |
a number of conspiratorial charges at European | Jews and called upon Germans to refrain from intermi |
pronounced by Yiddish-speaking Eastern European | Jews who settled in the United States in the late 19 |
torical Articles on the Destruction of European | Jews, 9 volumes, 1989. |
, is a dessert associated with Eastern European | Jews. |
r father's side, she is descended from European | Jews who arrived in the United States considerably l |
for secularizing their society just as European | Jews promoted the values of Age of Enlightenment and |
nd loss created by the genocide of the European | Jews. |
rgson Group to commemorate two million European | Jews who had already been murdered. |
hov argued that the class structure of European | Jews resembled an inverted class pyramid where few J |
ce prevented him from caring about the European | Jews. |
er made the decision to annihilate the European | Jews. |
t was used by Northwestern and Eastern European | Jews who were forbidden by kashrut (Jewish dietary l |
With increasing persecution of European | Jews, the outbreak of World War II and continuing vi |
It was assumed that by rescuing European | Jews from the Nazis, Japan would gain unwavering and |
l Rassinier published The Drama of the European | Jews. |
As many Eastern European | Jews began to emigrate to the United States, the mov |
German Americans, followed by Eastern European | Jews, before becoming heavily African American after |
. he continued his rescue work to save European | Jews from the Holocaust by joining the Vaad Hatzalah |
tler decided to completely exterminate European | Jews. |
burial site for trainloads of Central European | Jews transported to Estonia for extermination. |
the Armenians, Tibetans, World War II European | Jews or Rwandans--have the power to destroy the worl |
an important role in the rescue of the European | Jews. |
The evacuation of European | Jews to the island of Madagascar was not a new conce |
ecember 1942, deals with the murder of European | Jews. |
basic education, and like many Eastern European | Jews was multi-lingual. |
ratives who helped Eastern and Central European | Jews cross borders en route to Mandate Palestine by |
He also speaks on Europe's | Jews, worrying that “in the literature of nearly all |
juana advocates who denounce 4/20, perhaps even | Jews who find the fact that people could have fun on |
Even | Jews in the Austrian Empire enjoy equal rights, with |
that he even went so far as to refuse to evict | Jews from their homes to make room for the TODT orga |
5, after passage of the Nuremberg Laws excluded | Jews from German universities, he moved to Prague, t |
cion from the German forces, laws that excluded | Jews and their children from certain roles in societ |
f the Professional Civil Service which excluded | Jews from government employment. |
In 1822 it introduced a law excluding | Jews from academic posts and Heine had ambitions for |
ss sector and the state were almost exclusively | Jews, thus helping to pave the road for the Dreyfus |
an would walk across the bodies of the executed | Jews to the next Jew, who had meanwhile lain down, a |
become public that he admitted to have executed | Jews on the Eastern Front. |
day (20 Adar in the Hebrew Calendar) the exiled | Jews were led back into Frankfurt by imperial soldie |
tries went even further and completely expelled | Jews, for example England in 1290 (Jews were readmit |
pain since the Alhambra Decree of 1492 expelled | Jews from that country. |
In Brittany he issued an edict expelling | Jews from the duchy and cancelling all debts to them |
ny's persecution of and programs to exterminate | Jews. |
dea that the Third Reich planned to exterminate | Jews. |
ertainer Adam Sandler, in which he lists famous | Jews of the 20th century. |
ech of the Catalan Bnei Anusim and their fellow | Jews, from the Catalan or Spanish spoken by their no |
and zealously promoted the cause of his fellow | Jews. |
s the Apter Rov's passionate love of his fellow | Jews. |
she gave recital tours, speaking to her fellow | Jews "wherever I was permitted to speak." |
secret war correspondence, and hid their fellow | Jews. |
oted himself to proselytizing especially fellow | Jews who had not embraced Christianity as he had. |
wish descent, they were considered among fellow | Jews as gentiles. |
was not widely popular among Lissauer's fellow | Jews, who had a tendency to identify with England's |
In the Middle Ages, few | Jews would have seen these: they were often performe |
There were, however, few | Jews in the US at the time, and the organization was |
And 17 years later a few | Jews were arrested on suspicion of trafficking in hu |
sz and Jozef back to the farm where all fifteen | Jews were hiding. |
in contends with Irish rebellion, Russia fights | Jews, Finns, Chechens and Azerbaijanis, while Austri |
laims of being instrumental in saving Finland's | Jews from German hands may be exaggerated, but the F |
In 1933, when the Nazis began firing | Jews from their jobs because of their Jewish origins |
the son of Mannes and Tillie Israel, the first | Jews to settle in Kalamazoo. |
First | Jews appear in the town |
The first | Jews who migrated to northwest Florida originally st |
She was one of the first | Jews to be made a life peer.. |
The crew had at least five | Jews on board. |
but the SS discovered the poison and shot five | Jews in retaliation. |
rtly by Dutch Jewry, in order to absorb fleeing | Jews from Nazi Germany. |
Train escort guards shot 23 of the fleeing | Jews. |
ibes how the Italian zone acted as a refuge for | Jews fleeing persecution in Vichy France during the |
ndar by a mathermatical algorithm, in order for | Jews all around the world to observe the feasts acco |
daism continue to hold that it is forbidden for | Jews to enter any part of the Temple Mount and in Ja |
nd establishing it as the standard language for | Jews in Israel. |
over the Foundation Stone, the holiest spot for | Jews. |
Arrangements were made for | Jews to move from the Papal States, but, when the Ot |
er of St Hedwig since 1931, prayed publicly for | Jews in the evening prayer following. |
ermany in 1150 during a time of persecution for | Jews. |
on but refused to stay abroad although life for | Jews in Germany had become unbearable and the beginn |
Conference delegates expressed sympathy for | Jews under Nazism but made no immediate joint resolu |
cipation in an execution commando searching for | Jews and Komsomol members. |
On April 9, 1941, a ghetto for | Jews was created. |
It is thus claimed to have been a holy site for | Jews for many centuries. |
ican Reform Movement in Judaism that called for | Jews to adopt a modern approach to the practice of t |
olony Madagascar available as a destination for | Jews from Europe. |
o in Southern Italy, was an internment camp for | Jews and foreigners established by Benito Mussolini |
calling for greater respect of human rights for | Jews in Russia. |
lauses built in that would make it possible for | Jews to be thrown out if things did not go as planne |
Roman practice of creating civic privileges for | Jews. |
er for Torah study, which had been outlawed for | Jews by a Syrian-Greek king in the 2nd century BCE ( |
uania for Sweden to appeal for outside help for | Jews in occupied Poland. |
same reason it was later to become a refuge for | Jews fleeing the Nazis. |
Camp des Milles was used as a transit camp for | Jews, mainly men. |
conference of the Antisemitenbund he called for | Jews in Austria to be stripped of their citizenship, |
the fall of Dutch Brazil it was imperative for | Jews planning to leave Europe to find other new home |
ctioned as a kind of "social clearinghouse" for | Jews from shtetls, providing employment as well as a |
to provide a spacious and modernized place for | Jews accustomed to the intimate and often squalid sh |
pe provided an additional motivating factor for | Jews leaving with the hope of starting a new life in |
Jewish people, since God's revealed will is for | Jews, as well as Gentiles, to enter into the New Cov |
, then transferred the same day to a prison for | Jews and 'political prisoners' awaiting deportation |
tance activities by forging identity papers for | Jews, but was discovered and jailed for several mont |
s exempt from labor camp service destinated for | Jews, until 1943. |
in 17 Syllables (Gotham Books, 2004) Haikus for | Jews: For You a Little Wisdom (Harmony Books, 1999), |
estified in Rami's defense and claimed that for | Jews it was indeed a religious duty to kill Gentiles |
g of the reality of Pope Pius XII's support for | Jews at their time of greatest danger." |
the law did not provide adequate protection for | Jews from this sort of literature. |
the streets of Frankfurt after 1940 looking for | Jews. |
nished his school examinations in 1938 life for | Jews and people associated with Jews was becoming di |
blish Vaivara concentration camp in Estonia for | Jews. |
of Poles and Ukrainians who "always looked for | Jews and hunted us out." |
rootless cosmopolitans", a Soviet euphemism for | Jews. |
The ever-declining political situation for | Jews in Axis-alliance countries compelled the Krauth |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |