Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: sent

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Jewish Museum BerlinAfter Installation Comes De-Installation – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=4525

Conservation Work on the Boris Lurie Exhibition Visitors to our exhibition “No Compromises! The Art of Boris Lurie” (further information on our website) do not usually realize that they are viewing the result of lengthy groundwork and complex collaboration between various divisions of the museum. Those involved include, among others, employees of the temporary exhibition …
just as they were for the original shipment, and sent

Jewish Museum Berlin“Dispatch Prohibited on Account of the State of War” – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=2153

A Letter from the Archive Tells of the Outbreak of War in 1914 “The situation is extremely serious; His Majesty the Emperor declared this afternoon that Germany is now at war.” Exactly one hundred years ago today, eighteen-year-old Leo Roos penned these lines to his parents and siblings back home in the West Palatine village …
Nothing indicates that he wants to be sent to the front

Jewish Museum BerlinA New Beginning – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2018/01/a-new-beginning/

The fourth episode in our blog series “Memories from the Life of Walter Frankenstein” What were they to do now? Nothing was left of the Frankensteins’ old life. Their relatives and friends had been murdered, including Walter and Leonie’s mothers. All of Europe lay in ruins. The first step in the Frankensteins’ new life was …
Four weeks later, the Jewish Brigade sent Walter to

Jewish Museum BerlinWith Love from Fromet and Moses Mendelssohnplatz! – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2013/10/with-love-from-fromet-and-moses-mendelssohnplatz/

On our “Open Day at the Academy,” this Sunday, 27 October 2013, we will celebrate the namesakes of the new public square in front of the Academy on Lindenstrasse: Fromet Mendelssohn, née Gugenheim, and her husband Moses Mendelssohn are now immortalized on Berlin’s cityscape, following much debate and deliberation. Reason enough to find out more …
over a year, Moses Mendelssohn and Fromet Gugenheim sent

Jewish Museum BerlinWalter Frankenstein’s Life in Images – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2017/10/walter-frankensteins-life-in-images/

The first entry in the series “Memories from the Life of Walter Frankenstein” I first had the pleasure of meeting Walter and Leonie Frankenstein in Stockholm in 2008. Back then, our meeting and the couple’s heartfelt partnership left a lasting impression on me. After 66 years of marriage, the Frankensteins still radiated love and a …
Due to anti-Semitic hostilities, in 1936 he was sent

Jewish Museum BerlinObituary for Reinhard Rürup – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2018/04/obituary-for-reinhard-rurup/

27 May 1934 – 6 April 2018   The Jewish Museum Berlin mourns the loss of Reinhard Rürup. He died on Friday at age 83. Although as a historian his name is most associated with the Berlin Topography of Terror Foundation, the Jewish Museum Berlin also owes much to his work.   Already in 1989, …
lectern, he pulled out the two tickets that had been sent

Jewish Museum BerlinAfter Installation Comes De-Installation – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2016/07/installation-boris-lurie/

Conservation Work on the Boris Lurie Exhibition Visitors to our exhibition “No Compromises! The Art of Boris Lurie” (further information on our website) do not usually realize that they are viewing the result of lengthy groundwork and complex collaboration between various divisions of the museum. Those involved include, among others, employees of the temporary exhibition …
just as they were for the original shipment, and sent

Jewish Museum BerlinForgotten Women Artists – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=1655

An Appeal for Recognition and Dignity “We used to throw stones at her – we thought she was a witch.” With these words, a former resident of Rishon LeZion ruefully told me of her childhood encounters with the sculptor and doll maker, Edith Samuel. Edith wore her long, dark, European skirts under the searing Middle …
Envelope from a letter sent to the Kad ve-Sefel pottery