Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: sent

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Jewish Museum BerlinA Life Underground – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2017/12/a-life-underground/

The third episode in our blog series “Memories from the Life of Walter Frankenstein” “Her and no one else,” said Walter Frankenstein the first time he saw his future wife Leonie Rosner in the courtyard of the Auerbach Jewish Orphanage. Leonie was from Leipzig and in Berlin she had begun training at the Jewish Seminar …
center for people displaced by bombings, and was 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

Jewish Museum BerlinA Life Underground – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=5504

The third episode in our blog series “Memories from the Life of Walter Frankenstein” “Her and no one else,” said Walter Frankenstein the first time he saw his future wife Leonie Rosner in the courtyard of the Auerbach Jewish Orphanage. Leonie was from Leipzig and in Berlin she had begun training at the Jewish Seminar …
center for people displaced by bombings, and was sent

Jewish Museum BerlinThe First „Kindertransport“ Rescue Mission – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2013/12/the-first-kindertransport-rescue-mission/

75 years ago today, on 2 December 1938, the first of the Kindertransport rescue missions arrived in England. Beatrice Steinberg (née Beate Rose), a benefactor of the Jewish Museum Berlin, was among the last of the Jewish children to be saved in this way, by mass evacuation from Nazi-occupied territories. In her memoirs, which are …
grandmother, who was born in Berkin. my mother uncle who sent

Jewish Museum BerlinGrowing up in the Auerbach Orphanage – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2017/11/growing-up-in-the-auerbach-orphanage/

Second Episode of our blog series: “Remembrances of the life of Walter Frankenstein” Jesse Owens – this name means something to most people, even today. The black athlete from the U.S. national team decided in 1936, disregarding the expectations and fears of his family, friends, and a large number of Americans, to compete in the …
all the children and young people living there were sent

Jewish Museum BerlinFriends Sixteen Times Removed and a Camel on a World Tour – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2016/10/birgit-glatzel/

A Visit to the Photographer and Architect Birgit Glatzel It’s a warm summer’s day when I visit Birgit Glatzel in Prenzlauer Berg, the same kind of day it must have been when she shot her photograph “Angela and Me,” which, like her short film “Going to Jerusalem,” has been available in our art vending machine …
For “A Friend is a Friend of a Friend,” Birgit sent

Jewish Museum BerlinArt and Sanctuary: An Encounter Project in the Blue Room – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=5062

A boat made of wood and painted canvas strips, a yodeling flamingo, a photograph of turquoise tiles from a Berlin subway station, two cake replicas, metamorphosed Ugaritic letters, a fisherman, a play. What do they all have to do with each other? They are all going to be exhibited at the Jewish Museum Berlin this …
In the open call that we sent out to various organizations

Jewish Museum Berlin“The best solution would be that the baby is a girl.” Insights into an internal Jewish debate about circumcision – in 1919 – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/?p=3212

Shortly after the opening of our temporary exhibition “Snip it!”, the Jewish Museum received as a bequest the estate of Fritz Wachsner (1886 – 1942). Included in this delivery was a bundle of letters so enormous that I didn’t have time, in creating an inventory, to delve into each individual piece. But one letter caught …
August 1919: “One doesn’t know yet what God has sent

Jewish Museum Berlin“… to air out the cloak of anonymity.” – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2016/03/to-air-out-the-cloak-of-anonymity/

An Early April Fool’s Joke from the Year 1931 Sometimes figuring out how to classify a document correctly according to its historical context can depend on just one tiny, even seemingly unrelated detail. I was reminded of this again while working on the inventory of a recent donation to our archive. With more than 3,000 …
Hilde Salomonis (1912–1991), who in March of 1931 had sent

Jewish Museum Berlin“The best solution would be that the baby is a girl.” Insights into an internal Jewish debate about circumcision – in 1919 – Blogerim בלוגרים – Blogerim בלוגרים

https://www.jmberlin.de/blog-en/2015/03/internal-jewish-debate/

Shortly after the opening of our temporary exhibition “Snip it!”, the Jewish Museum received as a bequest the estate of Fritz Wachsner (1886 – 1942). Included in this delivery was a bundle of letters so enormous that I didn’t have time, in creating an inventory, to delve into each individual piece. But one letter caught …
August 1919: “One doesn’t know yet what God has sent