「jews」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)6ページ目
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district of working class citizens: Germans and | Jews to the north and Blacks to the south. |
other residents of Brno, including Germans and | Jews. |
78 Romanians, 454 Hungarians, 1,359 Germans, 19 | Jews and 152 Roma. |
actions of the government of Germany regarding | Jews in its territory during the period of that gove |
When Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany and | Jews began to be persecuted, Frieda moved to France |
id conscription for forced labor in Germany and | Jews. |
On April 9, 1941, a ghetto for | Jews was created. |
can city, analogous to the European ghetto) the | Jews vegetated there. |
In a Prague ghetto, poor | Jews find themselves oppressed by Emperor Rudolph II |
Copper Plate was a copper plate grant given to | Jews by Kulasekhara (Later Chera dynasty) king Bhask |
iddish as a language and as the binding glue of | Jews throughout Eastern Europe needed help. |
s Absence", reflected on the meaning of God for | Jews during the Holocaust. |
ventist, Sabbatarian Churches of God, Messianic | Jews, Jehovah's Witnesses (who call it the 'Memorial |
battle between a true God and a false God, with | Jews acting as agents of the false God against the t |
in the situation, as the new government treated | Jews more equably, permitting, for example, the rebu |
ater and by accident that her grandparents were | Jews who were murdered at Auschwitz concentration ca |
Influenced by his grandparents, Viennese | Jews who fled the Holocaust and immigrated to Shangh |
the Zionist father through adoption, grant [the | Jews] one out of its more than fifty states..?" |
de a legal religion, the government granted the | Jews a plot of land for a cemetery. |
Bishop Nicolaus (1390) granted the | Jews permission to settle in any city within the Spe |
ible for the expansion of privileges granted to | Jews under Casimir. |
Grave of | Jews executed in the "Skra" Stadium |
ription "Mi-Geresh Prag", marking the graves of | Jews who were driven from Prague, some of whom died |
Poles had gray ones; | Jews and Romas, yellow; Russians and other non-Polis |
re in 538 BCE, the Persian Cyrus the Great gave | Jews permission to return to Judea, and more than 40 |
809 in Hechingen, was one of the greatest Court | Jews of her time, and was reputed to have been the r |
de of native Egyptians (as opposed to Greeks or | Jews) embraced the Christian faith. |
, this was the only permitted burial ground for | Jews. |
During the Gold Rush in 1849, a small group of | Jews held the first High Holyday services on the wes |
The synagogue was founded by a small group of | Jews in 1893. |
bor camps, more than one-fifth of this group of | Jews perished. |
A group of | Jews left Jaffa for the sand dunes to the north, whe |
He went on to allege that a group of | Jews close to President Barack Obama "control the wo |
The first large group of | Jews to settle in Puerto Rico were European refugees |
t and died on May 3, 1943, escorting a group of | Jews out of the ghetto. |
Blaichman heard that a group of | Jews were hiding in the forest, so after two days wi |
ettlers from Holland was a significant group of | Jews. |
The essay itself inspired the group, and | Jews throughout Europe, and was a landmark in the de |
They took groups of | Jews to the Jewish cemetery and to Lunecki prison an |
Groups of | Jews were taken to the Jewish cemetery and murdered |
come, he requested that the prison guards admit | Jews only if they had beards and wore head coverings |
undesirable by the Third Reich, from Gypsies to | Jews, concentrating on the so-called degenerate art. |
The remaining percentage consists gypsies and | jews. |
the "surviving remnant" (Sh'erit ha-Pletah) of | Jews in post-Holocaust Europe. |
en searching for records of Arabs who had saved | Jews from the Holocaust, was first informed of Abdul |
Until then, Mosdorf had regarded | Jews as enemies of Poland and the Polish nation. |
War II, 55% of the town's inhabitants had been | Jews. |
begun under Cyrus the Great, who had permitted | Jews held captive in Babylon, to return to Jerusalem |
Hart's children and grandchildren had remained | Jews, but in later generations, Hart males intermarr |
f the anti-Semitic campaign that had persecuted | Jews in that country. |
al thieves, aware that the couple had sheltered | Jews on their property, believed that there were Jew |
In 1921 Piaski had 2,674 | Jews among its 3,974 inhabitants. |
in 17 Syllables (Gotham Books, 2004) Haikus for | Jews: For You a Little Wisdom (Harmony Books, 1999), |
Over half million | Jews were living in the district's area when the Ger |
the war there were never more than a handful of | Jews in the village and the synagogue was closed in |
The handful of | Jews who did not kill themselves surrendered at dayb |
lived under Philip Augustus, at whose hands the | Jews suffered much, Isaac prohibited the buying of c |
long time and therefore play into the hands of | Jews and Muslims. |
Once in German hands, the | Jews, often still in family units, were forced to ma |
anian halachic authorities for Haredi Ashkenazi | Jews living in Israel. |
By 1765 the town has 630 | Jews. |
In particular, he has accused | Jews of deicide: "the leaders of Israel... mistreate |
Hitler and may have inspired in him a hatred of | Jews which led, ultimately, to the Holocaust. |
criminals and persons who promote hatred toward | Jews. |
In spite of Lohse's hatred of | Jews, he finds Lenz's services useful, but soon find |
This law could have prevented | Jews from carrying cooked dishes to the homes of fri |
imitated the king: "they endeavored to have the | Jews considered an inalienable dependence of their f |
ite (he attempted, for example, to have Eastern | Jews expelled from Bavaria in 1919), he was instrume |
become public that he admitted to have executed | Jews on the Eastern Front. |
of the same legislation which would have barred | Jews and created preferences for northern Europeans. |
Yahya Ahdout and Jacqueline Hayempour, Iranian | Jews who left Iran to go to the U.S. with their baby |
During trips out of Germany he smuggled | Jews and their possessions in the boot of his Triump |
who prosecutors said is on tape saying he hated | Jews. |
Nor did he mention | Jews or antisemitism. |
ancisco State University in which he criticized | Jews, whites, Catholics and homosexuals. |
in the extermination process, where he selected | Jews from arriving transports to the gas chambers. |
nor retracted his comments, in which he accused | Jews of "causing all wars." |
thored a book on child care, in which he called | Jews "rootless parasites" ("wurzelloses Parasitentum |
ader Martin Luther in 1543, in which he equated | Jews with the Devil and described them in vile langu |
Heinze's book, | Jews and the American Soul: Human Nature in the Twen |
ted in the religious controversies held between | Jews and Christians; and the fullest account of thes |
Jewish Joint Distribution Committee to help the | Jews in Europe in the period leading up to, and espe |
ng the Third Reich he worked to help persecuted | Jews escape from Germany. |
He believed that Agudism could help prepare | Jews to live in their ancestral home. |
political clout and connections to help German | Jews, including Leon Trotsky's son, who he aided in |
ninger lost his job and pension for his help to | Jews and was later helped by the Sternbuchs. |
uania for Sweden to appeal for outside help for | Jews in occupied Poland. |
tonian population in part attempted to help the | Jews by providing food and so on." |
Mosdorf did everything in his power to help the | Jews in the Auschwitz camp, and he died together wit |
but he decided to stay in Hungary to help local | Jews escape prosecution by using his status and infl |
Some of the local Ukrainians helped the | Jews by selling them food, but others came close to |
Some towns and churches also helped hide | Jews and protect others from the Holocaust, such as |
oned in Buchenwald for his having helped French | Jews escape the Nazis), and modern-day deniers conti |
the 30's (follow the link), and it helped kill | jews at a large scale. |
The total number of people who helped the | Jews may be much higher. |
r who played an important role helping European | Jews and intellectuals escape the Holocaust during W |
created in 1936 with the goal of helping German | Jews to leave Germany. |
his most notable activities was helping Polish | Jews expelled from Germany in 1938 and 1939. |
His leadership was instrumental in helping the | Jews of Yemen survive some of the worst persecution |
she gave recital tours, speaking to her fellow | Jews "wherever I was permitted to speak." |
t of the Wehrmacht, he witnessed the herding of | Jews into two ghettos and the shooting of thousands |
oins minted and issued by the Herodian Dynasty, | Jews of Idumean descent who ruled the province of Ju |
d their altar of Yahweh beside the highway; the | Jews in Egypt in the Ptolemaic period had, besides m |
and zealously promoted the cause of his fellow | Jews. |
s the Apter Rov's passionate love of his fellow | Jews. |
He is a leading scholar of the history of | Jews in the Middle Ages under Islam. |
There is a long history of | Jews in London with the first Jews arriving in 1657. |
The David Baazov Museum of History of | Jews of Georgia is a principal museum of the Jewish |
nd share their thoughts about the Holocaust and | Jews in general. |
be considered victims of the Holocaust, namely | Jews, Roma, and the mentally and physically disabled |
the notion that you can't speak honestly about | Jews without getting into trouble. |
in homage of Eliezer Papo, who is honored among | Jews for his book Pele Yoetz, and revered in Silistr |
He is honored by | Jews as a Righteous Among the Nations for his leadin |
ress his sentiments about the hostility between | Jews and Muslims in the Middle East: he felt that to |
kday mornings, as these are the only hours that | Jews are presently allowed to frequent the Mount. |
result of the breaking up of the households of | Jews deported during the Third Reich and had grown i |
March 1942, and served as overflow housing for | Jews from Germany and Austria, who had originally ha |
her- Creole cookbook, which shows how observant | Jews can whip up Fake Frog's Legs or Oysters Mock-a- |
How many | Jews were saved through his actions is unknown, but |
identified immigration agent was asked how many | Jews would be allowed in Canada after the war. |
he Dalai Lama was interested in knowing how the | Jews had survived with their culture intact.) |
shed in March of that year, summarized how many | Jews remained in Germany, Austria and Europe; detail |
However, some | Jews do not eat matzah brei during Passover because |
In the 18th century, however, many | Jews moved to the city, and by 1850 made up half the |
There were, however, few | Jews in the US at the time, and the organization was |
Their usual targets, however, were | Jews, whom they attacked at Saintes, Verdun, Cahors, |
he largest population of inmates, however, were | Jews, initially from the Dachau and Sachsenhausen ca |
Conversely, almost a hundred thousand | Jews living in the Netherlands were expelled from th |
of 15-16 of August 1943, several hundred Polish | Jews started an armed struggle against the troops ca |
ohn's daughter, Ilse Stanley, saved hundreds of | Jews from concentration camps, and was the author of |
of World War II, she helped shelter hundreds of | Jews in a building belonging to the Sisters of Socia |
ultimately expanded to comprise of hundreds of | Jews. |
When the Nazis purged Hungary of | Jews in 1944, only his aunt and a nephew survived. |
Milice, a militia force recruited to hunt down | Jews and battle the Communist underground threat in |
i like | jews |
During World War I, many | Jews left the shtetl because of nearby fighting. |
March was diverse, including Iberians, Basques, | Jews and Goths who had been conquered or subjugated |
and organization are founded upon the idea that | Jews have the right to visit the Holy Land. |
oup of gentiles who shared religious ideas with | Jews, to one degree or another. |
Though not Jewish, Troncoso identifies with | Jews because he admires in them qualities he adored |
ze Judaism and strengthen Jewish identity among | Jews the world over; above all, of his gift of visio |
This was considered as idolatrous by | Jews, but followed in the Idumean tradition of Zenod |
emons, had deserted the true God for idols, the | Jews and Samaritans possessed the revelation given t |
If American | Jews had taken a more forceful approach, government |
The Nazi government has announced that if any | Jews, anywhere in the world, protest at anything tha |
The whole thing was made as if the | Jews killed Jesus, and Pilate came off a saint. |
During World War II many | Jews from Sedan were sent to the concentration camps |
During World War II Beuthen's | Jews numbering at about 1,300, became the first ever |
the Armenians, Tibetans, World War II European | Jews or Rwandans--have the power to destroy the worl |
ned that it might promote unfavorable images of | Jews. |
He was the son of immigrant Russian | Jews; his father was a pianist accompanying silent f |
939, and was involved in illegal immigration of | Jews from Hungary. |
followed by a very considerable immigration of | Jews. |
s, Betar aided in the widespread immigration of | Jews to Palestine in violation of the British Mandat |
the fall of Dutch Brazil it was imperative for | Jews planning to leave Europe to find other new home |
Austria in 1772, special taxes were imposed on | Jews for marriage permits, kosher meat, synagogues, |
most concerned about the great increase in the | Jews in Palestine: 80,000 in 1948. |
Nations" for his wartime activities in rescuing | Jews. |
teous Among the Nations for her work in helping | Jews during World War II. |
He was educated in the | Jews' School at Manchester, whither his family had r |
In 1850, | Jews made up 50% of Bauska's population. |
re circumstances to place her, at age 6, in the | Jews Hospital and Orphanage. |
regin was predominately engaged in agriculture, | Jews appear to have composed much of the population |
ience, who claims particular skill in detecting | Jews. |
role The Republic of Turkey played in rescuing | Jews from Nazi Germany's final solution and "About F |
oportion of male genetic admixture in Ashkenazi | Jews amounts to less than 0.5% per generation over a |
Haemophilia C; this mainly occurs in Ashkenazi | Jews and is believed to affect approximately 8% of t |
In 1939, | Jews were granted 4601 permanent and temporary resid |
In 1899, | Jews formed 37% of the population, and Vaslui was ho |
version is evidence of the high regard in which | Jews were held in Carolingian France. |
Large Nazi German Ghettos in which | Jews were confined, and later shipped to concentrati |
since the end of Communism," an agenda in which | Jews are portrayed as antagonistic to the existence |
He made a tremendous effort in encouraging | Jews to study these works. |
wrote various essays that were published in The | Jews and the life and The Jewish thesaurus (in print |
In 1350, | Jews were persecuted in Brabant. |
(The parliamentarians are, in addition, | Jews). |
n and nature of the Millennial temple, in which | Jews will once again hold the priesthood; some other |
n the 1920s, Wolman became active in supporting | Jews in Palestine. |
rers looking for a place to live, in particular | Jews and former citizens of the old Austria-Hungary, |
In 1669 | Jews were again permitted to reside in Regensburg bu |
Evian had agreed on that day to take in 17,000 | Jews at once, every Jew in the Reich could have been |
He supported Julius Madritsch in rescuing | Jews during World War II. |
of all ethnic groups and minorities in Ukraine, | Jews in particular, and as a result they supported h |
In 1941, | Jews constituted approximately 14% of the total popu |
Frequency was the highest in Libyan | Jews 3.6%. |
ve heard of my conversation in time past in the | Jews' religion, how that beyond measure I persecuted |
In addition, | Jews from as far as France, Austria and Germany were |
He went on to work with the Irgun in smuggling | Jews out of Europe during the Holocaust. |
Its members include Sephardi | Jews from many parts of the world, especially Iraqi |
Other books by Korn include: The | Jews of Mobile, Alabama, 1763-1841 (1971); Benjamin |
s were predominantly Serbs, but included 37,000 | Jews. |
f Hotin County was 15,334, which included 37.7% | Jews, 36.6% |
This number includes Christians, | Jews, and various other denominations as well as non |
All 21 on board, including 12 | Jews, were killed in the bombing. |
le are involved in the community including born | Jews with varying degrees of Jewish knowledge, peopl |
ose to 20,000 people in Kalmykia, including 100 | Jews. |
Polish political groups, and including, besides | Jews, some without party affiliation. |
The incoming Zionist | Jews were mainly foreign nationals of many lands... |
of the Orthodox community-and indeed, Orthodox | Jews who intermarry almost invariably leave the Orth |
Uprising, he did all in his power to induce the | Jews to sympathize with the Polish cause. |
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