「jews」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)5ページ目
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lent Exodus) describing the fate of the million | Jews who fled Arab countries after 1948. |
tugal, being probably among the large number of | Jews who fled thence from the Inquisition. |
Benito Mussolini stepped up the persecution of | Jews, Cagli fled to Paris and later went to New York |
s in London, and consequently Italians, chiefly | Jews, were flocking into the country. |
as extras, and Dr. Pearl now entertains elderly | Jews in Florida retirement communities. |
d-winning collaboration between young Arabs and | Jews that focuses on humanizing the Israeli-Palestin |
bbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson often encouraged | Jews to follow this cycle, emphasizing that these st |
e first day of Sukkot falls on Shabbat, Israeli | Jews should follow the Mishna and Talmud Yerushalmi' |
he left, he agreed to a compromise allowing the | Jews to follow their customs and to worship as they |
This was considered as idolatrous by | Jews, but followed in the Idumean tradition of Zenod |
lted in the incarceration of over 30,000 German | Jews immediately following the mass destruction of J |
nesset Yisrael neighborhoods, one for Sephardic | Jews, one for Ashkenazim, which were even further aw |
n of rosh yeshiva in a yeshiva which the city's | Jews founded for him. |
Jewish community, enabling the foundation of a | Jews' Hospital for the Aged Poor and the Education a |
laws of the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur, on which | Jews atone for their sins from the previous year. |
Christian scholars interpreted Bath Kol as the | Jews' replacement for the great prophets when, "afte |
to Jerusalem, and was one of several Bukharian | Jews responsible for building the Bukharian Quarter, |
Whenever | Jews worked for any length of time, with ordinary Ge |
But amidst the huge body of material about | Jews collected for Mead's project... is an interview |
Before World War II, the town's 4,500 | Jews accounted for nearly half the population, but f |
reloading point) in the Warsaw Ghetto was where | Jews gathered for deportation to the Treblinka exter |
2. Mendelian Diseases Among Roman | Jews: Implications for the Origins of Disease Allele |
s of SS victims, stealing information to rescue | Jews scheduled for transport and killing a Gestapo o |
o the main camp, he found it in flames, and the | Jews ready for battle. |
versally held opinion among right-wing Orthodox | Jews (see, for example, the writings of Rabbi Shimon |
"A rapid dying out of the | Jews is for us a matter of total indifference, if no |
was the monarch under whom the captivity of the | Jews ended, for in the first year of his reign he wa |
In many cities, | Jews were forbidden to enter designated "Aryan" zone |
mber 30 and on December 8, 1941, a total 24,000 | Jews were force-marched out of the ghetto, and shot |
There they gathered with Arians and | Jews fleeing forced conversions at the church's hand |
The | Jews were forced to gather in the Festhalle Frankfur |
The Germans also sometimes used | Jews in forced-labor projects outside the ghetto. |
ating Judaism in Rhodes, by expelling all adult | Jews and forcibly baptizing their children. |
housands ethnic Poles, and also Belarusians and | Jews, were forcibly deported to Siberia. |
On April 1, 1942, the town's | Jews were forcibly moved into a ghetto consisting of |
8, 1943, during the German occupation of Italy, | Jews and foreigners in the territories of the Italia |
o in Southern Italy, was an internment camp for | Jews and foreigners established by Benito Mussolini |
Jews were formally sealed into the ghetto on 1 May o | |
and Robin Washington, of the Alliance of Black | Jews, which formed in 1995. |
rers looking for a place to live, in particular | Jews and former citizens of the old Austria-Hungary, |
The Ben Ezra Synagogue of the Palestinian | Jews in Fostat was named in his honour: "Synagogue o |
econd against "heretics"; the third against the | Jews; the fourth, against Muslims; and the fifth giv |
Main articles: History of the | Jews in France and History of the Jews in Germany |
itchipoi is the imaginary place where displaced | Jews in France believed they would be deported to, w |
not hold religious and moral authority over all | Jews in France, his charisma earned him a certain re |
had hoped to provoke tensions between Arabs and | Jews in France. |
h civil servant complicit in the deportation of | Jews from France. |
u'ab-i panjganah ("5 genealogies, of the Arabs, | Jews, Mongols, Franks, and Chinese"). |
d not see his Palestinian brothers killed while | Jews walked freely in Djerba to enjoy themselves and |
te being denounced as "political Catholicism"), | Jews, Communism, Freemasonry and others. |
Like many | Jews, including Freud, Kohut fled Nazi occupation of |
His friend tells of the persecution of the | Jews through Friedrich's eyes. |
artment under Roosevelt did not allow a boat of | Jews fleeing from the Nazis into the United States. |
Jews expelled from Portugal and from many German cit | |
Beth Hamedrosh HaGadol in West Philadelphia by | Jews fleeing from West Philadelphia. |
London as the centre of international commerce, | Jews immigrating from Germany and Poland settled for |
ng the Third Reich he worked to help persecuted | Jews escape from Germany. |
abilities also included special taxes levied on | Jews, exclusion from public life, and restraints on |
arned of the miracles of Jesus from Alexandrian | Jews returning from a pilgrimage in Jerusalem. |
s Jewish inhabitants, but also several thousand | Jews transported from the Lublin Ghetto as well as f |
ite (he attempted, for example, to have Eastern | Jews expelled from Bavaria in 1919), he was instrume |
ced in South Africa, small numbers of Ashkenazi | Jews arrived from Britain and Germany. |
Of the 762 | Jews deported from Norway to German concentration ca |
n of the ghetto almost doubled due to influx of | Jews expelled from Moravia, Germany, Austria and Spa |
News of massacres, perpetrated on | Jews, invade from the east to Berlin. |
he largest population of inmates, however, were | Jews, initially from the Dachau and Sachsenhausen ca |
his most notable activities was helping Polish | Jews expelled from Germany in 1938 and 1939. |
logians in the 1930s, that the Japanese and the | Jews sprang from a common ancestry. |
rities inConstantinopleto prohibit the entry of | Jews arriving fromRussia. |
e built in many capitals of Europe to show that | Jews were full and free citizens. |
He was among the first Russian | Jews to gain a mastery of the Russian language, star |
ourt does take judicial notice of the fact that | Jews were gassed to death at Auschwitz Concentration |
No | Jews were gassed in any German concentration camps a |
It also asked Christians, Muslims and | Jews to gather at the main entrance to Bethlehem and |
About 33,000 local Polish | Jews were gathered there. |
r the judge said this was not an attack against | Jews in general but against a type of person "distin |
nd share their thoughts about the Holocaust and | Jews in general. |
s also written about subjects such as Sephardic | Jews in general; the Jewish communities in Gibraltar |
r 1943, after the news about the deportation of | Jews from Genoa and the community of Montecatini, Va |
known as "primrose red" (primula rossa) to the | Jews of Genoa. |
iew was clearly expressed in his letters to the | Jews of Genoa: "The true mark of civilitas is the ob |
become Queen Esther of Persia and saves Persian | Jews from genocide. |
igious assimilation) and interfaith marriage of | Jews with gentiles. |
wish descent, they were considered among fellow | Jews as gentiles. |
The David Baazov Museum of History of | Jews of Georgia is a principal museum of the Jewish |
5, after passage of the Nuremberg Laws excluded | Jews from German universities, he moved to Prague, t |
duction in the perceived over-representation of | Jews in German public life. |
s who were concerned with the fate of surviving | Jews of German nationality, to also include "other p |
laims of being instrumental in saving Finland's | Jews from German hands may be exaggerated, but the F |
nch Antisemitism, due to the involvement of two | Jews of German origin, Jacques Reinach and Cornelius |
dictator Adolf Hitler decided that the 300,000 | Jews of German, Austrian or Czech nationality should |
Braune organized and conducted mass murders of | Jews in German-occupied areas of southern Ukraine an |
By these laws, | Jews and Germans were forbidden to intermarry, and " |
3,247 students, there were 2,117 Romanians, 679 | Jews, 199 Germans, 155 Ukrainians (decreasing from 2 |
ad a mixed population of Romanians, Ukrainians, | Jews and Germans. |
tion began, especially amongst ethnic Russians, | Jews and Germans. |
marriage and extra marital intercourse between | Jews and Germans. |
ale, 1988) on the German Jewish Salon, and "How | Jews Became Germans: The History of Conversion and A |
on but refused to stay abroad although life for | Jews in Germany had become unbearable and the beginn |
th, who assured him that they did not blame the | Jews of Germany (Anthony Grenville: 'Listening to Re |
He was one of the leading campaigners against | Jews from Germany being allowed to enter the United |
and financial demands continuing to be made by | Jews upon Germany almost fifty years after World War |
triarch Arida openly condemned the treatment of | Jews in Germany in 1933. |
ted from Hamburg, Germany in 1939, carrying 937 | Jews from Germany to Havana, Cuba. |
In 1933, Wegner denounced the persecution of | Jews in Germany in an open letter to Adolf Hitler. |
ilitated the emigration of approximately 50,000 | Jews from Germany to Palestine. |
The visas were available to baptized | Jews in Germany and other countries, but were requir |
March 1942, and served as overflow housing for | Jews from Germany and Austria, who had originally ha |
t der Juden in Deutschland ("Central Council of | Jews in Germany") has awarded Burda its Leo Baeck Pr |
at der Juden in Deutschland (Central Council of | Jews in Germany) from 1992 to 1999. |
e Knobloch, President of the Central Council of | Jews in Germany, and Ronald Pofalla, General Secreta |
el, the then chairman of the Central Council of | Jews in Germany, who described the idea as "irrevere |
s she had no idea of the building danger to the | Jews in Germany, and thought it a pity to interfere |
rom his manufacture in Kadyny, dedicated to the | Jews of Germany, and, as Magnus Davidsohn's daughter |
cott was the first of many measures against the | Jews of Germany, which ultimately culminated in the |
raised awareness among American Jewry about the | Jews of Germany. |
The | Jews & Germany: From the "Judeo-German Symbiosis" to |
the notion that you can't speak honestly about | Jews without getting into trouble. |
urch from international opinion (his locking of | Jews into ghettos and treatment of minorities had be |
He was involved in the displacing of | Jews into ghettos. |
ed not only a system that permits to census the | jews and gipsies in all invaded Europe, but to exter |
The local | Jews were given ten days in which to move into the a |
Israel, rabbis of Orthodox Judaism insist that | Jews allow gleanings to be consumed by the poor and |
d martyr who was reported to have been slain by | Jews in Gloucester, England, in 1168. |
And again, | Jews cite God's characteristic of “steadfast lovingk |
The charter claims that the | Jews deserve God's/Allah's enmity and wrath because |
By way of analogy, there are many | Jews named Goldsmith, but are we going to note this |
A mysterious man tells him that all the | Jews have gone to the city. |
March was diverse, including Iberians, Basques, | Jews and Goths who had been conquered or subjugated |
n in 1933, due to Nazi regulations which barred | Jews from government service. |
f the Professional Civil Service which excluded | Jews from government employment. |
chief motivating factor behind the massacres of | Jews in Granada in 1066, when nearly 3,000 Jews were |
In 1939, | Jews were granted 4601 permanent and temporary resid |
er for External Relations, from 1938-1944, many | Jews were granted visas to Brazil - despite the circ |
1879), the Haham of the Spanish and Portuguese | Jews of Great Britain |
Contrary to national trends, the number of | Jews in Greater Boston has been growing, fueled by t |
See also: History of the | Jews in Greece |
The murdered priest was deeply mourned by both | Jews and Greeks, and the king also, on his return, w |
d came to believe that they had a shared enemy: | Jews, a group he accused, among other things, of cre |
A natural and objective assimilation process of | Jews is growing around the world." |
es draw big crowds, raising fears among Israeli | Jews about growing extremism among the nation's Arab |
ne, did not, since he had an agreement with the | Jews that guaranteed him extra income through taxati |
murdering up to 5000 German and Czechoslovakian | Jews and Gypsies in 1942-1943. |
n Europeans, the Slavic peoples, and especially | Jews and gypsies were all considered "foreign races. |
nist, and a survivor of the Nazi persecution of | Jews and Gypsies during the events that led to World |
he National Socialist effort to purge Europe of | Jews, Communists, Gypsies, homosexuals, political di |
ere to be deported, along with the unprivileged | Jews who had been arrested; because of that rumor, t |
om and took stringent measures against baptized | Jews who had relapsed into their former faith. |
e sake of Heaven") which was founded in 1849 by | Jews who had immigrated from German-speaking Central |
hs later, along with tens of thousands of other | Jews who had been brought to these camps from northe |
Any | Jews who had acquired German citizenship had their c |
ved away: in 1842 there were few of the wealthy | Jews who had once settled in Hackney. |
maintain contact with and establish the fate of | Jews that had been deported from Norway. |
icing, were faithful, Yiddish-speaking Orthodox | Jews who had emigrated from Russia. |
Schutzmannschaft and made to lie down on top of | Jews who had already been shot … The corpses were li |
Prayer Union consisted mostly of women who were | Jews who had converted to Christianity and who met f |
Later, foreign | Jews who had been living in hiding in the south of F |
from the double rate of taxation which all the | Jews then had to pay. |
Of the 140,000 | Jews that had lived in the Netherlands prior to 1940 |
rgson Group to commemorate two million European | Jews who had already been murdered. |
to limit his interests and activities to those | Jews who had been baptized Catholic or were married |
The | Jews themselves had demolished the interior of their |
rta, held talks with Cohen about the 13 Persian | Jews who had been accused of working for Israel by t |
The daughter of Polish | Jews, Shtettin had a strict Orthodox Jewish upbringi |
oted himself to proselytizing especially fellow | Jews who had not embraced Christianity as he had. |
nd, when Vienna's public gardens were closed to | Jews, he had "Jews welcome" signs put up in his pala |
Before the expulsion of the | Jews Corbeil had a flourishing Jewish community, whi |
The | Jews even had permission to fly their own flag. |
He sought help for a group of German | Jews, who had hoped to go to South America, being he |
Synagogue was established in 1888 by Ashkenazi | Jews who had immigrated from Eastern Europe. |
ins, so-called Xuetas, descendants of Mallorcan | Jews who had converted to Christianity, but continue |
Abba Kovner, one of the young | Jews who had been saved by Borkowska, personally pre |
was not widely popular among Lissauer's fellow | Jews, who had a tendency to identify with England's |
Taxation of the | Jews in Hamburg |
When the | Jews of Hanover were forced from their homes on Sept |
to inquire whether possible deportations of the | Jews can happen to British-controlled Palestine by s |
ersecutions became widespread around 1938, when | Jews were harassed and attacked by authorities under |
al power" became a "superfluous luxury" for the | Jews, a hardy and persevering people. |
jority of the residents of Har Nof are Orthodox | Jews, both Haredi and Dati Leumi. |
he Years of Extermination: Nazi Germany and the | Jews, 1939-1945, HarperCollins, 2007. |
During Shimon's patriarchate the | Jews were harried by daily persecutions and oppressi |
debates in the White House between Palestinian | Jews, President Harry S. Truman, and the United Nati |
He applied Vichy's racist laws against | Jews very harshly (see Vichy France). |
to the International Council of Christians and | Jews, he has been actively involved in interfaith di |
Czernowitz has been then largely populated by | Jews and has been after Wilno the most an important |
ard 50, a list of America's 50 most influential | Jews, and has been part of Newsweek's list of "top 5 |
d which is sold all over the world where Haredi | Jews reside has a weekly circulation of 75,000 the l |
That | Jews are hated and need to protect themselves? |
soul of my family and all of us here (...) Now | Jews too have behaved like Nazis and my entire being |
3; but widows may have paid a reduced rate, and | Jews may have paid 125 akces. |
In the Middle Ages, few | Jews would have seen these: they were often performe |
ast and Europe with the aim of rescuing Iranian | Jews who have been subjected to religious persecutio |
Many of these diaspora | Jews would have Greek as their first language, and t |
The | Jews themselves have three main ethnic divides: Ashk |
Jews would have owned the goddamned world. | |
All | Jews must have documents and hand in the keys to cur |
rejuvenated recently by the renewed presence of | Jews who have moved into the area. |
Romanus, a persecutor of the | Jews, may have been seeking to counter Khazar retali |
r ivory, apes, and silver, and the first Cochin | Jews may have been the children of Israelite sailors |
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