「jews」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)9ページ目
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to these countries to obtain the release of the | Jews living there. |
s and Lithuanian police killed more than 21,000 | Jews living in Vilnius in a rapid extermination prog |
There are 32,800 | Jews living in the Netherlands. |
Most of the | Jews living in Sadhora during World War II were murd |
of the Elbe river (as opposed to the Ashkenazi | Jews living to the West of it, or the Sephardi Jews |
There are estimated 400 | Jews living in Novi Sad today. |
as said to have generally dealt kindly with the | Jews living on its lands. |
ly, the song may have originated with Sephardic | Jews living in Spain, who then immigrated to Turkey, |
anian halachic authorities for Haredi Ashkenazi | Jews living in Israel. |
also reveal much detail about the lives of the | Jews living in the Land of Israel at the time. |
was a tragic but largely inevitable outcome of | Jews living in exile from their homeland, in an anti |
opulation policy and the murder of the European | Jews, London: Arnold; New York: Oxford University Pr |
loyed every possible German cruelty against the | Jews long before my book was published" |
Lee, Felicia R. "Coping: Afghan | Jews Look Back in Sorrow" New York Times Dec. 30, 20 |
After Tanna'it Barzani died, many | Jews made pilgrimages to her grave in Amadiyah in So |
In 1850, | Jews made up 50% of Bauska's population. |
Jews made 13% (136 persons) of all officers in the d | |
Camp des Milles was used as a transit camp for | Jews, mainly men. |
Today only Karaite | Jews maintain the prohibition against eating the aly |
Today | Jews make up around 0.5% of Shpola's population. |
A large number of Ethiopian | Jews make their home in Rehovot and surrounding town |
the case of Athens, where a large proportion of | Jews managed to escape death. |
At the height of the war, dying Hungarian | Jews managed to smuggle a letter to that Allies. |
Some local | Jews managed to escape into hiding, though very few |
s and DFC Prag was created by a group of German | Jews, many of them students at Charles University in |
d the outbreak of hostilities between Arabs and | Jews, Mar Samuel relocated to the United States in 1 |
3; but widows may have paid a reduced rate, and | Jews may have paid 125 akces. |
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 |
The total number of people who helped the | Jews may be much higher. |
of Regensburg, Germany and several other German | Jews members of the Lehr family and the Kalonymus fa |
ng waves of immigration to Dallas that included | Jews, Mexicans and other cultural minorities, elites |
he Church; but there was no custom to which the | Jews might appeal, and the Church laid them under it |
and New Orleans, a thriving urban center where | Jews might be inclined to settle instead of moving o |
ce for the proposal that an assimilation of the | Jews might be possible. |
nd looked throughout the world for places where | Jews might settle and create a state or at least an |
In the revolt's first year (66-67 AD), the | Jews minted only silver coins, which were struck fro |
u'ab-i panjganah ("5 genealogies, of the Arabs, | Jews, Mongols, Franks, and Chinese"). |
l were specifically political, the rest covered | Jews, monks, penitents, freedmen, holy orders, benef |
The state, he said, owes | Jews moral reparation for centuries of brutal persec |
f Scots-Irish, Salzburgers, Italians, Sephardic | Jews, Moravians and Swiss, among others. |
in the situation, as the new government treated | Jews more equably, permitting, for example, the rebu |
ban by entering Jerusalem disguised as Sephardi | Jews, most of the perushim journeyed on to Safed, wh |
A few thousand Latvian | Jews, mostly men, who were not murdered at Rumbula, |
arusian, Lithuanian and Polish, as well as many | Jews, mostly in towns and cities (in some towns they |
rticipated in mass executions of the Lithuanian | Jews mostly in June-August 1941. |
In the 18th century, however, many | Jews moved to the city, and by 1850 made up half the |
Many thousands of | Jews moved to the Italian zone of occupation to esca |
Its mission is to commemorate the six million | Jews murdered by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. |
ust Remembrance Day to remember the six million | Jews murdered in Europe by Nazi Germany and its acco |
0% of its Jewish population, or about 3,000,000 | Jews, murdered by the Nazis. |
by Muhammad Sharif in 1840 demanding that "the | Jews must not be enabled to carry out the paving, an |
All | Jews must have documents and hand in the keys to cur |
Therefore, we who are not | Jews must speak, speak our sorrow and indignation an |
According to halakhah, | Jews must not destroy Jewish graves and in particula |
The destruction of the | Jews must be its necessary consequence. |
The Silver | Jews named their album The Natural Bridge after it. |
By way of analogy, there are many | Jews named Goldsmith, but are we going to note this |
ormers and Zionist nationalists had argued that | Jews needed to become "a normal nation" and urged th |
anes the brother of Anani and the nobles of the | Jews, Never a letter have they sent to us. |
This law granted the Prussians | Jews new rights, but the admission to government pos |
of Jewish Feminism" (The Americanization of the | Jews, New York: New York University Press, 1995). |
When the yellow star was forced on | Jews, non-Jews who objected began to wear yellow sta |
Let us not fast like the God-killing | Jews, nor fast like the Saracens who are oppressors, |
aditional braided challah, while Middle Eastern | Jews normally use pita. |
five years, and with a further restriction that | Jews not make up more than 10% of the refugees. |
ng the personal attitude of Coponius toward the | Jews nothing definite is known. |
27 of the National Conference on Christians and | Jews, now known as the National Conference for Commu |
, then the Greeks, then the Armenians, then the | Jews, now all of them were put on the same level. |
During World War II, Nazis assembled the area's | Jews, numbering about 8,500, into the Cehei Ghetto a |
During World War II Beuthen's | Jews numbering at about 1,300, became the first ever |
At Hanukkah, | Jews observe the custom of eating fried foods in com |
il to observe that a disproportionate number of | Jews occupy positions of control in international fi |
At the sides violent acts against | Jews occur such as the burning of a synagogue and in |
Two massacres of | Jews occurred during the First Crusade, on (June 1 a |
called in and three separate mass shootings of | Jews occurred between August 21, 1942 and October 31 |
is based on the fact that the salvation of the | Jews occurred through wine and the Sages of the Talm |
Henry II of Castile that he could convince the | Jews of the truth of Christianity if they were oblig |
Of special importance, both to the | Jews of his time and as source-material for present- |
own him emperor, and would help him convert the | Jews of Europe, if Emicho would join the Crusade. |
By the summer of 1943, the | Jews of the German and Bulgarian zones were gone and |
an mass deportations in March 1943, sending the | Jews of Thessaloniki and Thrace in packed boxcars to |
The | Jews of Tudela followed the most varying occupations |
probably originated among the Spanish-speaking | Jews of Bordeaux where the song is still sung in Fre |
The | Jews of Burgenland (along with the Roma and Sinti) w |
When the | Jews of Hanover were forced from their homes on Sept |
When the | Jews of the Old City were expelled by Jordanian forc |
dictator Adolf Hitler decided that the 300,000 | Jews of German, Austrian or Czech nationality should |
His family were Sephardi | Jews of Spanish origin, but he was baptised at St Ol |
sions of Reform : Congregation Emanu-El and the | Jews of San Francisco 1849-1999, Judah L. Magnes Mus |
s height from May to June 1944 when most of the | Jews of this section of northern Transylvania were d |
s the period in Jewish history during which the | Jews of the ancient Kingdom of Judah were captives i |
8 July 1885) was one of the most famous British | Jews of the 19th century. |
In 1903 the | Jews of Hermanmiestetz numbered 300, those of the wh |
42, the Germans made preparations to deport the | Jews of Belgium. |
The | Jews of the yishuv were forbidden by Ottoman Law to |
e responsibilities for the ghettoization of the | Jews of Latvia. |
order to avoid the expulsion edict against the | Jews of Spain, de Torres converted to Catholicism sh |
ish religion and claim descent from the ancient | Jews of Palestine. |
n of Wolf Popper, Primator (Chief Judge) of the | Jews of Bohemia. |
men under his command, in the murder of 10,600 | Jews of Riga in the Rumbula forest near the city. |
rted to the heirs of David David, depriving the | Jews of their place of worship. |
The ancient cemetery of the | Jews of Esfahan is situated at front of this complex |
blame for crimes from his regime while accusing | Jews of "bring[ing] destruction upon themselves". |
The majority however, like most of the | Jews of Safed and Tiberias, fled to Jerusalem. |
He appears to have been the chirographer of the | Jews of London, and obtained great wealth, but he lo |
In the early 20th century, the | Jews of Oradea had won prominence in the public life |
o be renamed - Philadelphia Jewish Community or | Jews of Philadelphia or Jewish history OF Philadelph |
Many of the | Jews of throughout the Kingdom of Hungary attempted |
Merwan ha-Levi one of the most prominent | Jews of Narbonne, in the second half of the 11th cen |
instance, the fact that the Church absolved the | Jews of 33 AD of any complicity, direct or otherwise |
o was showing a "more friendly" approach to the | Jews of Spain, noting that permission had been grant |
regard to a pseudo-Messiah who was leading the | Jews of southern Arabia astray. |
minently in books about humanitarian aid to the | Jews of Warsaw and elsewhere during the occupation. |
almudic erudition were on the decline among the | Jews of Spain. |
Jachnun is served by | Jews of Yemenite descent on Shabbat mornings, after |
Sidney Mendelssohn in his book The | Jews of Asia: especially in the sixteenth and sevent |
In his later years he was revered by the | Jews of Russia, and came to be considered the pre-em |
in Hebrew, which was not the vernacular of the | Jews of its time. |
Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the | Jews of Russia; in the same year he declared himself |
In the 16th century, the | Jews of Prague face persecution. |
941, following the Nazi invasion, the remaining | Jews of Bauska and environs were executed and/or tor |
eration Babylon: The Story of the Rescue of the | Jews of Iraq, a memoir of the operation, which was l |
mposed by the Japanese under Nazi pressure, the | Jews of Shanghai survived the war unharmed, as the J |
The Aleynu: A Missinai Melody as sung by the | Jews of Blois, France, University of Nebraska - Linc |
In 1454 the | Jews of Olomouc were expelled. |
attention to the history and literature of the | Jews of Iberia. |
When the | Jews of Denmark were emancipated in 1814, confirmati |
ing the tortures with which in another time the | Jews of old killed Jesus Christ. |
ough active since the late 19th century for the | Jews of the area, as a result of a decrease in the J |
the war between Castile and Aragon in 1367, the | Jews of Calatayud and Daroca, of whom the former had |
oins minted and issued by the Herodian Dynasty, | Jews of Idumean descent who ruled the province of Ju |
Jewish communities with a special focus on the | Jews of Cincinnati; and the records of the Hebrew Un |
The | Jews of Barcelona were massacred in 1391. |
Cesarani claims that some of her opinions of | Jews of Middle Eastern origin verged on racism. |
d been delayed as long as possible, because the | Jews of Ashland "didn't want to lose our identity in |
Jews of Hope, The Plight of Soviet Jewry Today, (198 | |
ael, in particular for his role in rescuing the | Jews of Iraq. |
The | Jews of Arab Lands: Their History in Maps, (1976) |
The righteous | Jews of his generation said he had the soul of the f |
building was erected as a prayer house, as the | Jews of Biesheim, Wintzenheim and Hagenthal discover |
"cloaked them in nice phrases", and accused the | Jews of persecuting him for his remarks, blaming a r |
The | Jews of Landkreis Kreuznach were taken in 1942 to th |
1933 and with the growing discrimination of the | Jews of Cologne Klibanksy didn't have many illusions |
ifford's Tower, where the Rabbi Yom Tob and the | Jews of York were killed in 1190. |
ir expectations - the bad economic situation of | Jews of Eastern Europe and also the riots, forced ma |
n Spain, reveals the deficiencies of the German | Jews of that day in matters of method and systematiz |
he "Jewish Question" - the extermination of the | Jews of Europe. |
th, who assured him that they did not blame the | Jews of Germany (Anthony Grenville: 'Listening to Re |
Bomberg found a ready audience among the | Jews of Italy, whose numbers had been swelled by exi |
Most of the | Jews of Hildesheim lived in the streets and lanes ar |
war, she served on the Central Committee of the | Jews of Poland, and was awarded Poland's highest med |
In 1936, Arab riots forced the | Jews of Peki'in to leave their homes for safer parts |
tal were spread by Ghazzati and Primo among the | Jews of Smyrna and in many other communities, and th |
By 1492, | Jews of Salzburg were publicly burned and Jewish set |
lp design and later run the death camps for the | Jews of Europe. |
ility of Law: Constitutional Patriotism and the | Jews of Belgium, 1940-1945, Routledge-Cavendish, 200 |
She didn't describe the fate of | Jews of the time but wrote mainly about her personal |
ilbert, Martin: The Holocaust: A History of the | Jews of Europe During the Second World War. |
idism and the socioeconomic upheavals among the | Jews of Poland and Ukraine. |
The | Jews of Khazaria. |
Many of the | Jews of the Holocaust were transported to concentrat |
Jews of Cochin | |
an's Invasion of Poland overtook Poland and the | Jews of Baranovich fled for their lives. |
escended from the Xueta, or forcibly converted, | Jews of Majorca, Spain. |
e, Merin became infamous as the dictator of the | Jews of the Zaglebie region, with the power of life |
Israel is home to about 40,000 | Jews of Libyan descent, who maintain unique traditio |
that the Brutakhi are connected to the Mountain | Jews of Daghestan, who are believed to have ruled in |
Of the 3,000 | Jews of Tuczyn, only 20 were still alive on January |
tion with the widespread misconception that the | Jews of this country speak with one voice -- and tha |
was the first known Presbyter Judaeorum of the | Jews of England; appointed to that position by King |
None is Too Many: Canada and the | Jews of Europe 1933-1948 is a book co-authored by Ca |
r Die Yiden in Palermo (Doctor Almasada, or The | Jews of Palermo), Shulamith, and Bar Kokhba, the las |
ily directed, as was the Sixteenth, against the | Jews, of whom Egica seems to have had a profound dis |
o provide decent housing, predominantly for the | Jews of Spitalfields and Whitechapel. |
Khagan; however, more recent works, such as The | Jews of Khazaria by Kevin Brook, assume that he was |
rom his manufacture in Kadyny, dedicated to the | Jews of Germany, and, as Magnus Davidsohn's daughter |
anese Islands in 1912, and large numbers of the | Jews of Rhodes had begun to emigrate during the 1930 |
cott was the first of many measures against the | Jews of Germany, which ultimately culminated in the |
Lusius Quietus, the conqueror of the | Jews of Mesopotamia, was now in command of the Roman |
Other books by Korn include: The | Jews of Mobile, Alabama, 1763-1841 (1971); Benjamin |
A lifelong devotee to the well-being of the | Jews of southern France, Portugal, and Spain, beginn |
The 1941 Mufti inspired Farhud pogrom on the | Jews of Baghdad by pro- Nazi Arabs murdering 140 Jew |
[Caliph] requesting that he dispatch one of his | Jews of the seed of royalty of the House of David. |
This study showed that the | Jews of North Africa showed frequencies of their pat |
When about 1545 the | Jews of Amasia were falsely accused of having murder |
Jacobs, | Jews of Angevin England, pp. |
s who were concerned with the fate of surviving | Jews of German nationality, to also include "other p |
th century, Benjamin of Tudela, a Sephardi Jew ( | Jews of Spanish and Portuguese descent) who was a me |
raised awareness among American Jewry about the | Jews of Germany. |
his time Vincent Ferrer laboured to convert the | Jews of Salamanca; from 1460 to 1478 John of Sahagun |
post-war Germany included things like stripping | Jews of civil rights.Not to mention he worked with N |
hores of the Golden Horn': Music of the Spanish | Jews of Turkey,") that "far from being esoteric, thi |
opulation consisting almost entirely of Hasidic | Jews of the Viznitz sect. |
Jews of different backgrounds enjoy sharing the vari | |
anian communist regime disconnected totally the | Jews of Romania from the other Jewish communities in |
e Nazi regime's program of extermination of the | Jews of Europe and encouraged it through the virulen |
uments that Pius was praised by all the leading | Jews of his day for his role in saving more Jews tha |
fter the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, the | Jews of Butrimonys were massacred by Einsatzgruppen |
ertainer Adam Sandler, in which he lists famous | Jews of the 20th century. |
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