This Day, February 23, In Jewish History by Mitchell A and Deb Levin Z"L

February
23

42(16th
of Adar, 3892): King Agrippa I began the construction of a gate for the of
Jerusalem (pg 128)

68(4th
of Adar, 3828): During the Great Revolt, Vespasian occupied the city of Gadara
as the legions made their slow, inexorable march to Jerusalem.

1422: 
During the conflict between the Hussites and the Dominicans, Pope Martin V
issued a Bull favorable to the Jews reminding Christians that their religion
had been inherited from the Jews.  “The pope forbade the monks to preach
against intercourse between Jews and Christians.”

1443:
Birthdate of Matthias Corvinus who as King Matthias I “created the office of
Jewish prefect in Hungary.

1447
Pope Eugenius IV passed away. In speaking about the Jews, Eugenius declared “We
decree and order that from now on, and for all time, Christians shall not eat
or drink with the Jews, nor admit them to feasts, nor cohabit with them, nor
bathe with them. […]  They cannot live among Christians, but in a certain
street, separated and segregated from Christians, and outside which they cannot
under any pretext have houses.”

1455: 
Traditional date for the publication of the Gutenberg Bible, the first Western
book printed from movable type.  This revolution in publishing was one of
the most liberating events in Western history.  Some say that it really
marked the beginning of the Modern Intellectual Era of Western
Civilization.  Soon books would be printed Hebrew giving the People of the
Book greater access to books thus further democratizing the concept of learning
which is a cornerstone of Jewish civilization.  The chapter and verse
system finally took hold in copies of the Torah (books not the Scroll itself)
as a result of the printing revolution.

1484:
Over this day and the next, 30 men and women were burned alive, as well as the
bones of 40 others at the Inquisitional Tribunal of Ciudad Real.

1592:
Emperor Rudolph II invited Rabbi Judah ben Bezalel Lowe, known as the Maharal
of Prague to his castle for what became an hour and a half during which time
they “developed a mutual respect for each other. Rabbi Judah Lowe made use of
his excellent connections with the Emperor, often intervening on behalf of his
community when it was threatened by anti-Semitic attacks or oppression. (As
reported by Chabad Knowledge Base)

1656:
Sir Thomas Pack, who surprisingly joined with merchants in London in opposing
the readmission of Jews, today proposed “a Remonstrance (which became known as
the “Humble Petition and Advice”) which initially proposed that
Cromwell should assume the title of king.”

1658:
Jacob (John) Lumbrozo, the first doctor in Maryland was tried for having,
“Denied Jesus of Nazareth….” Lumbrozo was convicted, sentenced to
death, and was to have all his property confiscated by the government. He was
later freed from these penalties. Lumbrozo was born in Portugal. He then moved
to Holland and finally settled in Maryland in 1656.

1665:
Emperor Maximilian II granted permission to Chrisophe Plantin to print Hebrew
books in Antwerp

1685:
Birthdate of composer George Frideric Handel.  In 1718, he wrote the
oratorio “Esther” which was based on Racine’s 1689 tragic drama of the same
name. Two of his other oratorios were “Deborah” based on the life of the
Biblical Judge and “Athalia,” an operatic treatment of the life of the
murderous Jewish Queen.

1744:
In the ghetto of Frankfurt am Main, “Amschel Moses Rothschild and his wife
Schönche Rothschild (née Lechnich) gave birth to Meyer Amschel Rothschild, the
husband of Gutle Schnapper with whom he had ten children.

1723:
Birthdate of Richard Price, the non-conformist minster who held the lectureship
at Old Jewry, the Presbyterian meeting house built on the site of London’s
original Jewish neighborhood.

1758(15th
of Adar I, 5518): Shushan Purim Katan observed for the first time since the
Russians captured East Prussia during the Seven Years War.

1775:
With the publication today of the pamphlet “The Farmer Refuted” Alexander
Hamilton whom Dr. Andrew Porwancher, among others has determined that Hamilton
“was in all likelihood born and raised Jewish” “embraced wholeheartedly the
‘radical’ American side” of the growing conflict with the Kingdom of Great
Britain.”

https://www.yu.edu/news/was-alexander-hamilton-jewish

1777:
Birthdate of Leopold Bettelheim, the Hungarian physician who “was the recipient
of a gold medal of honor from the emperor Franz I. for distinguished services
to the royal family and to the nobility.”

1788:
In Savannah, GA, Judith Polock and Philip Minis who were married at Newport, RI
in 1774, gave birth to Abraham Minis.

1796(14th
Adar I, 5556): Purim Katan observed for the last time during the presidency of
George Washington.

1799(18th
of Adar I, 5559) Parashat Ki Tisa read as Napoleon pushes his way towards
Palestine and the siege of Gaza which would begin on March 3rd.

1807:
The British Parliament voted overwhelmingly in favor of the abolition of the
slave trade which was a victory due in large measure to the decades’ long
efforts of William Wilberforce. This is the same William Wilberforce who helped
found Christ Church Ministries Jerusalem (CMJ) in
England in 1809. Wilberforce and other leading evangelicals such as Lord
Shaftesbury believed that the Jewish people had to be restored to their ancient
land in order to pave the way for the return of Jesus. From the 1840s on the
Society built in Jerusalem a School of Industry for training Jewish believers
in basic trades; an Enquirers House, a Hebrew College, and a modern hospital
for Jewish people as well as Christ Church.

1812: Birthdate of Fischel Arnheim the Baireuth lawyer and
politician who “was elected by the cities of Hof and Münchberg to the Bavarian
legislature.”

1812: One day after she had passed away, Deborah Levy, the wife of
Abraham Levy, was buried today at the “Brady Street Jewish Cemetery.”

1812: In London, Elizabeth Gershon, the “daughter of Zipporah and
Aaron Nathan Cohen” and her husband Samuel Gershon” gave birth to Rebecca
Gershon.

1813: In Leipzig, Susanna Rosina and Johann Gottfried Delitzsch,
“a peddler, craftsman and day laborer” gave birth to Lutheran theologian Franz
Delitzsch who “wrote many commentaries on books of the Bible, Jewish
antiquities, Biblical psychology, a history of Jewish poetry, and Christian
apologetics.”

https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5063-delitzsch-franz

 

1815(13th of Adar): Patriot and founder of Aaronsburg, PA, Aaron
Levy passed away.

1821: Birthdate of Joel Isaac Cohn, the husband of Edel Nathansen.

1823: In Piotrkow, Poland, Phineas Mendel Heilprin and his wife
gave birth to Michael Heilprin the American author, philanthropist and champion
of social justice.

1825: In what is now the Czech Republic, Markus and Elisabeth Sara
Pick gave birth to Josef Pick, the husband of Eleanor Pick,

1825: In Baltimore, MD, Joseph Osterman married Rosanna Dyer whose
older brother Major Leon Dyer would escort Santa Anna to Washington in 1836 and
who as Rosanna Dyer Osterman would become “one of Texas’ earliest and most
generous benefactors.”

1831: Lewis Cohen married Sophia Andrade at the Hambro Synagogue.

1831: Elias Simmons married Matilda Jones at the Great Synagogue.

1832(22nd of Adar I. 5592): Wolf Heidenheim, who was born at Heidenheim in 1757 and
whose works included several editions of the Pentateuch, a Pesach Haggadah, and
several siddurim passed away today at Rödelheim

1832: In Cracow, Isaac Halberstram, a wealthy merchant and his
wife gave birth to Solomon Joachim Chayim Halberstam known as ShaZHaH.

1832: Birthdate of Hirsch Rabinowitz, the native of Kovno who
founded a technical school for Jewish boys at Dvinsk and who became a leader of
the Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the Jews of Russia after he
moved to St. Petersburg.

1832: Yitzchak Alter and Feigele Lipschitz gave birth to their
seventh child Ester Alter.

1834: Birthdate of Abraham Greenwalt, who won the Medal of Honor
for his “bravery at the Battle of Frankilin (TN)’ during the Civil War

1835: La Juive (The Jewess) a grand opera in five acts
composed by Fromental Halévy premiered today at the Opéra, Paris

1836:
The Siege of the Alamo began at San Antonio, Texas.  Dr. Mark Levy, a
Jewish physician was reportedly one of those manning the walls of the Texas
mission facing the forces of Santa Anna.

1839(9th
of Adar, 5599): Parashat Tetzaveh; Shabbat Zachor

1839(9th
of Adar, 5599): Sixty-two-year-old Emanuel Abrahams, the New York city born son
of Abraham Isaac Abrahams passed away today.

1839:
In New York City “Michael and Sophia (nee Hart) Asher gave birth to Morris
Asher, the resident of Philadelphia and member of Company of B of the 71st
Regiment of Infantry, Pennsylvania Volunteers who fought with the Army of the
Potomac in every battle until Gettysburg where his wounds were so severe that
he was mustered out of service in 1864.

1846:
In Poland, the National Government issued a proclamation “calling for the
Jewish population to join the uprising and ensuring their full equality.”

1848:
David Jacobs married Matilda Rebecca Jacobs today in the United Kingdom.

1848:
John Quincy Adams, Sixth President of the United States passed away.  In
what seems like a strange turn of events, President Adams expressed his support
for a Jewish homeland in the land of Israel.  In a letter to Mordecai
Manuel Noah, one of the most prominent Jews in pre-Civil War America, Adams
wrote that he believed in the “rebuilding of Judea as an independent nation.”

1848:
During the third French Revolution François Guizot, the reactionary Prime
Minister opposed by Adolphe Cremieux was forced to resign and flee the country.

1848:
In Cincinnati, Ohio, Jacob Levinson and Fannie D. Hirsch gave birth to their
daughter Hannah who married Julius Newman and who as Hannah Newman was a
“member of the Board for Jewish Friendless” and was a member of the committee
that originated the first free kindergarten in Chicago.”

1851:
Two days after she had passed away, Jane Hart, the wife of Henry Hart, was
buried today at the “Brady Street Jewish Cemetery.”

1851:
In London, Adan Spielmann, the son of Michele and Lewin (Judah) Spielmann  and his wife Marian Spielmann gave birth to
Dora Spielman whose siblings including Sir Isidore Spielmann.

1852:
Birthdate of Nathan Frank, the native of Peoria, Illinois and leader of the
Republican party who founded the St. Louis Star and served in the 51st
Congress.

1853:
In Philadelphia, a dinner was held at the Samson Street Hall to raise funds for
Jewish charities.

1855:
It was today reported that the concert designed to raise funds for the Hebrew
Benevolent Societies scheduled for February 27 has been moved from Dodworth’s
Rooms to Niblo’s Saloon because of the unusually high demand for tickets.

1855: Birthdate of Beilitz native Maurcie
Blumenfeld, who gained fame as American “philologist and Sanskrit Scholar”
Maurice Bloomfield, the holder of a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins where he taught
starting in 1881, who married Helen Scott after the death of his first wife
Rosa Zeisler and who was “the brother of pianist Fannie Bloomfield Ziesler and
the uncle of “linguist Leonard Bloomfield.”

https://www.jstor.org/stable/593142?seq=1

https://www.amazon.com/Maurice-Bloomfield/e/B00IVBU55K%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share

1858:
David Defries married Esther Moses today at the Great Synaogue.

1860(30th
of Shevat, 5620): Rosh Chodesh Adar observed on the same day that the
“Territorial Legislature pass a bill over the governor’s veto abolishing
slavery in Kansas.”

1860:
In Brooklyn, Charles and Mary Pivany Morningstar gave birth to Joseph
Morningstar, the “head of the firm of Charles Morningstar & Co., importers
of drugs and chemicals and husband of the former Judith Peixotto who was the
son-in-law of Benjamin Peixotto, the United States Consul at Lyons, France.

1861(13th
of Adar, 5621): Parashat Tetzaveh; Shabbat Zachor; Erev Purim

1861:
Birthdate of Emrich Ullmann the Austrian surgeon who was a pioneer in renal
transplantation research.

1864:
Philadelphian Solomon Altman began serving with Company K of the 159th
Regiment.

1864:
The United States Senate voted to confirm President Lincolns’ appointment of
Rabbi Jacob Frankel to serve “as a Chaplain of United States Hospitals during
the Civil War.”

1864:
Michael Rosenbaum began serving with Company F of the 29th Regiment.

1865:
Birthdate of pioneer baseball executive, Barney Dreyfuss, the owner of the
Pittsburg Pirates and the “father” of the World Series.

1866:
Birthdate of Georgia resident Fanny Heyman Massel who married Raphael M.
Massell after the death of Samuel Sate and the mother of Alexander Joe “Alex”
Sater.

1867:
In Grodno, Russia Malka Leshchinski and Solomon Broyde gave birth to Sorbonne
educated Isaac David Broydé, worked in France and the UK before coming to New
York in 1900 where he “joined the editorial staff of the Jewish Encyclopedia.”

1868(30th
of Shevat, 5628): Rosh Chodesh Adar

1868:
Birthdate of San Francisco native Henry Bergman the stage and film actor “best known
for his association with Charlie Chaplin.”

1870:
Professor George Bartchelor delivered a talk on education reform to the New
York Liberal Club.  Batchelor contended that when it came to language,
Hebrew, along with Greek and Latin, were the foundation of liberal
education.  But the public schools were teaching German, French and
Spanish. [Considering who belong to the Liberal Club, one wonders what would
have happened if a Hebrew teacher from the Lower East Side had shown up at its
meeting.]

1871:
The official position of the Jewish community in Ghent was regulated by two
decrees one of which was issued today.

1872:
Mortiz Ellinger ended his term as publisher of the Jewish Times today.

1873:
Birthdate of Milwaukee, WI, native and Wisconsin State Normal School graduate
Meta Schlicting, the wife of fellow Socialist Victor Berger,

1873:
“The State of the Jews in Persia” published today described the conditions of
those living under the rule of the “sovereign in Tehran” who “treats the
Moslems” with “greater forbearance than the Jews” because the latter “are not
always ready to pay when the tax gatherer calls on them which leads to the Jew
being beaten until he discharges his arrears – a fate they could escape “if
they offered to embrace Mohammedanism.”

1874:
It was reported today that there are only ten bakers in New York who
manufacture the Passover Bread” (Matzos) and that they fill orders not only for
those living in New York but for those “from Brooklyn Philadelphia and many
cities outside of “New York State and that matzos are sold for “eleven cents a
pound.”

1874:
Birthdate of Slabetz, Bohemia, native Karl Schenk, who in 1893 came to the
United States where “he organized the American Union Bank in 1917,” organized
the Trade Bank and Trust Company five years later” while serving as a director
for several organization including the Jewish Memorial Hospital while “two
sons, Henry and Monroe” with his wife Sophie.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1947/10/04/87556070.pdf

1874:
It was reported that “some time ago” the Atlantic Monthly published an article
“Our Israelitish Brethren” “which treats in a very pleasant way the religious
observances of this wonderful people.

1875:
Two days after she had pass away, Sarah Isaac, the wife of John Coleman Isaac,
was buried today at the “Brompton (Fulham Road) Jewish Cemetery.”

1875:
Thanks to the efforts of John Simon, who would be knighted in 1886, the House
of Commons today adopted a resolution calling for the appointment of two judges
hear cases involving election petitions.

https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13742-simon-sir-john

 

1878:
“Celebrated Jews In Power” published today claims that the rise of Jewry in
Europe has turned the fiction of “Coningsby” and the predictions of Sidonia
into reality.  One of the proof points is the leading role that Benjamin
Disraeli, the author of Coningsby, plays in British politics.

http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9A05E6D8113FE63BBC4B51DFB4668383669FDE

1879(30th
of Shevat, 5639): Rosh Chodesh Adar

1879:
Birthdate of Colonel Ernest Albert Rose who married Julia Eda Lewis at the
Synagogue Princes Road in Liverpool in 1907.

1879:
In Rochester, NY, today, founding of the Jewish Orphan Asylum Association of
Western New York whose officers have included Abraham J. Katz, Leopold Keiser,
I.H. Danzieger and Joseph Michaels.

1879:
It was reported today that unnamed Jew had scored a coup during the sale of old
military stores at Edinburgh Castle. He bought 600 rusty old helmets for 6
pence a pound.  After he cleaned them up, he discovered that they were
made of “fine steel…adorned with Arabic inscriptions” showing that they were
very old pieces of equipment. After selling a few of the helmets, an Armenian
purchased the lot of them for 18 shillings per helmet. Realizing their error,
the government bought the helmets from him for 2 of 3 English pounds per
helmet.

1880:
In Cincinnati, Joseph and Minnie Workum (Freiberg) Ranshohoff gave birth to
Harvard graduate and University of Cincinnati Medical College trained surgeon
Joseph Louis Ransohoff the husband of Doris Kauffmann, the father of Dr. Joseph
Louis Ransohoff II and Major in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during WW I who
practiced in his hometown

1880:
It was reported that in Germany, associations have been formed for the purpose
of excluding Jews from serving in Parliament. In Breslau, one such group has
announced that it will not support a Jew under any circumstances. [The rise of
anti-Semitism paralleled the moves to emancipate German Jewry.]

1881:
Birthdate of Annie Elizabeth Wannamaker the wife of South Carolinian Mordechai
A. Strauss, the Son of Alfred Abraham Strauss and Amelia Strauss

1881: “At Oegeklooster, near Hartwerd, in the
Province of Friesland, Netherlands, Titus Brandsma who died in 1920 and Tjitsje
Postma who died in 1933 gave birth to Anno Sjoerd Brandsma, who gained famed as
Titus Brandsma, a Carmelite priest arrested by German occupiers in Holland for
speaking out against Nazism as a “lie” and “pagan.” 
Brandsma had been speaking out against the Nazis since the mid 1930’s. 
After his arrest, he was shipped to Dachau in where he was the subject of
medical experiments.  He died of a lethal injection in July of 1942.
Brandsma was declared “Blessed” by Pope John Paul, II in 1985.  Since
then, the promotion of his cause for sainthood has been in progress.

https://www.ynetnews.com/article/s1jv9mtof?utm_source=Taboola_internal&utm_medium=organic

1882:
The SS Illinois arrived at Philadelphia, PA at 3:20 pm carrying 325 men,
women and children who were refugees from the anti-Semitic violence that had
been taking place in the Russian Empire including Poland, Kiev and Odessa.
 The refugees were greeted by members of the committee that has been
preparing for their arrival. After being examined by Dr. T. J. Elleinger and
his medical staff, the refugees were taken to the old Pennsylvania Railroad
station which has been remodeled to meet their needs.  The refugees had
harrowing tales of deprivation and violence to tell their American benefactors
who included Jews and Christians.

1882:
It was reported today that the Toronto Globe has received a cable from
London describing a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Mansion House
Fund for the Relief of Russo-Jewish Refugees presided over by Cardinal
Manning.  With the support of Sir A.T. Galt a sub-committee was
established to select sites for the establishment of agriculture settlements in
Palestine the Canadian Northwest that could provide a viable new home for the
persecuted Jews. The subcommittee has a budget of ten thousand pounds. [This
outpouring of support for the Jews who were the victims of a series of Pogroms
following the assassination of Alexander II is laudable.  Sensing that
England could and New York City could inundated by a wave of refugees, plans
were made to try and settle the Jews in the under-populated areas of Canada,
the United States and Argentina]

1883:
In Russia, Nathan and Shifka Grossberg gave birth to Zionist and NYU trained
lawyer Abraham Goldberg, the husband of Sarah Dancis who was a vice president
of the American Jewish Congress, a member of the executive committee of the
World Jewish Congress and Chairman of the Jewish council of Russian War Relief.

1884(27th
of Shevat, 5644): Parashat Mishpatim

1884(27th
of Shevat, 5644): Amelia de Leon, the Philadelphia born daughter of Jacob de
Leon who Married Hyam in Charleston, SC passed away today. (some sources show
1879)

1884:
Birthdate of Kazimierz Funk who gained fame as biochemist Casimir Funk who
“while studying a deficiency disease known as beriberi at the Lister Institute
in London, Funk found a substance which prevented the disease, and called it a
“vitamin ” although it was actually vitamin B,

1886:
Lena Lillienthal married Meyer Goldberg. By August of the following year, the
two would be embroiled in nasty divorce case in which she sought to end the
marriage.

1887:
Rachel Davies and South African native Joseph Lipkie gave birth to Ethel
Lipkie.

1887:
Walter Lohnstein, the six-week-old son of “Alfred and Bertha Lohnstein” was
buried today at the “Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.”

1888(11th
of Adar, 5648): Ta’anit Esther observed for the last time during the Presidency
of Grover Cleveland who would later support the cause of Russian Jews suffering
under the Czar.

1889:
In Philadelphia, PA, Charles and Jennie (Bash) Weiman gave birth to journalist,
playwright, and screen writer Rita Weiman whose play “The Stage Door” was the
basis for the Jesse L Lasky film “After the Show” and who married advertising
man Maurice Marks.

1889:
At Banbury, CA, Eva Hartman and William Richard Lonzo Fleming gave birth to
Victor Lonzo Fleming a director “of Jewish Heritage” whose most popular films
were Gone with the Wind, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Director,
and The Wizard of Oz.

1890:
The President and Managers of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of New
York will hold a reception today between 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. in honor of George
Washington’s birthday.  (Washington was born on February 22 which in 1890
fell on Shabbat which accounts for the delay)

1890:
English dramatist Leopold Davis Lewis passed away.  Born in 1828 and
trained as a solicitor he began his dramatic career by translating
Erckmann-Chatrian’s “Le Juif Polonais,” (the Polish Jew) which he then produced
as “The Bells.”

1890:
It was reported today that among those charities received property tax
exemptions were the Ladies’ Deborah Nursery and Child’s Protectory ($12,000)
and the Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews ($30,000).

1890:
“Gladstone At Oxford” published today included comments by the English Prime
Minister about the status of the Jews.  When asked if he thought “that
there is any likelihood of an anti-Semitic agitation in England” Gladstone
replied “I have not the least fear of an agitation in England against the
Jews.  You might as well expect one against the law of gravity.”

1890:
“Sir A Sassoon” published today relying on information that first appeared in The
Spectator
briefly described “this rise of this Jewish family in England”
which “were till quite recently strictly Indian Jews” who were “almost natives
in their manner of life.” (Sir A. Sassoon probably referred to Sir Albert
Abdulah David Sassoon, the First Baronet)

1890:
It was reported today that in the summer of 1875 a group of visitors from
Massachusetts came to Lincoln’s Inn, London looking for Judah P. Benjamin, the
Confederate leader turned British Barrister.  They were surprised that
Benjamin, who was Jewish “was engaged to appear against an influential firm of
Jewish money lenders.”

1891:
“A Row in the Synagogue” published today described the outbreak of fight at the
Grant Street synagogue in Pittsburg, PA.  Ruben Miller bloodied the nose
of Harris Bartniski during a meeting at which congregants were discussing a
sermon by Rabbi Feinich in which he denounced Miller for renting his building
“to a company of atheists.”

1893: New York State Jacob A. Cantor met with party leaders at the
“Tammany Wigwam” to discuss pending legislation in Albany.

1894: In Tétouan, MoroccoRabbi Shlomo Aburbeh and Yocheved Khalfon
gave birth to Amram Aburbeh the Chief Rabbi of the Sephardic congregation in
Petah Tikva, Israel

1894: It was reported that among those who attended the 14th
annual reception of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society included Mr. and
Mrs. Selig Steinhardt, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Seligman, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman
Bloomingdale and the Honorable and Mrs. Joseph Blumenthal.

1895:
It was reported today that English actor John Hare, who has played the lead in
“The Old Jew” will be coming to New York City to perform in December. 
Among the productions in which he is expected to appear is “The Old Jew.”

1896: It was reported today that the sale of tickets and boxes for
the upcoming Purim Ball are “exceeding all expectations.”

1896: “Nordau Replied To” published today contained a detailed
review of Regeneration: A Reply to Max Nordau with an Introduction by
Nicholas Murray Butler.

1896: The Tootsie Roll is introduced by Leo Hirshfield. The soft
chewy candy took its name from the nickname of Hirshfield’s daughter. 
Hirshfield was from Austria.  However, the question as to whether he was
or was not Jewish is still up for grabs.  Like the mystery of the Red
Heifer, this one may not be answered until the coming of the Moshiach.

1896: Today, founding of the Alumni Associaton of the Schools of
the Hebrew Sunday School Society of Philadelphia whose member s have included
Eshter Levi, Louis Bloch and Julius Komerovski.

1896:
Mihail Grigore Sturza, the voivode, (count or
military governor) signed a document recognizing the Jewish community of
Galatz, Romania.

1897: Two days after he had passed away, 41 year old David John
Davis, the son of Hyman and Isabella Davis, was buried today as the “Balls Pond
Road Jewish Cemetery.”

1897: In Hampstead, London, American opera singer Francesca Halle
and Joseph Gluckstein whose family founded J. Lyons and Co. gave birth to
lawyer and Conservative politician Colonel Sir Louis Halle Gluckstein.

1897: Two days after she had passed away, Frances Phillips, the
18-year-old “daughter of Nathan and Esther Phillips” was buried today at the
“Plashet Jewish Cemetery” in London.

1898:
In France Émile Zola was convicted following his trial for libel.  He
received the maximum sentence – one year in jail and a fine of 3000 Frances. He
had written “J’accuse” which was a letter accusing the French government of
anti-Semitism and wrongfully placing Alfred Dreyfus in jail.

1898:
As the Dreyfus Affair reached one of its climaxes, Paul Deroulede attempted to
get the troops at Neuilly to take part in a coup d’état.

1898:
Birthdate of Gershon George Cohen, the “Doctor of dental surgery” who had
graduated from the College of Dental and Oral Surgery of New York.

1899(13th
of Adar, 5659): Ta’anit Esther; Erev Purim

1899:
In France, during President Félix Faure’s state funeral Paul Déroulède, Jules
Guérin and the Ligue des Patriotes attempt a coup which resulted in their
arrest.

1899:
The Nineteenth Century Club heard Israel Zangwill and Hamlin Garland discuss
“The Novel” in Delmonico’s large ballroom tonight, and both authors
agreed so well upon the functions of art in fiction that the men and women
present had to forego the usual argumentative entertainment which they plan for
these meetings by bringing together speakers of supposedly differing views

1899:
In Chicago, Anita “Annie” Taurog (née Goldsmith) and Arthur Jack
Taurog gave birth director and screen writer Norman Rae Taurog who won the
Academy Award for directing “Skippy” which premiered in 1931.

1900:
It was reported to that Nathan Straus was among those who had attended the
dinner hosted by the Democratic Club for the New York City Fire Commissioner.

1901(4th
of Adar, 5661): Parashat Terumah

1901
“Henry Charles Lea’s Moriscos of Spain” published today provides a
review of that tome that includes a description of the impact of the
Inquisition which stepped “in with its ferocious zeal which led from forcible
conversion through long avenues of obloquy and persecution to the final edict of
the banishment of both Jews and Moors.”

1902(16th
of Adar I, 5662): Max Budinger, the native of Cassel German and the son of
Moses Mordecai Budinger, who occupied the chair of history at the University of
Vienna” starting in 1872 and who “was elected a member of the Vienna Academy of
Sciences” in 1887 passed away today.

1902:
The ninth meeting of the Union of Judaeo-German Congregations opened today in
Berlin.

1903:
Leopold Greenberg an English newspaper editor, Zionist and friend of Theodore
Herzl leaves Egypt.

1904:
While sailing from the Mediterranean to China, the USS Chauncey commanded by
Lt. Stanford E. Moses which was part of the “First Torpedo Flotilla” was caught
in a storm today.

1904:
Birthdate of William L Shirer who was one of “Murrow’s Boys” a group
of correspondents hired by Edward R. Murrow who covered the
events prior to and including World War II.  Shirer’s post was Berlin
where he broadcast stories about the rise of the Nazis.  He actually
provided live coverage of the French surrendering to Hitler in 1940.  His
greatest claim to fame was as author of The Rise and Fall of the Third
Reich
, a classic on Hitler and his followers, based, in part, on
Shirer’s first hand observations

1904:
Birthdate of Leopold Trepper, a Jewish James Bond.  Trepper was born in
Poland.  During World War II he organized and ran one of the most famous
espionage rings in history – The Red Orchestra.  Operating in France
in 1940, the ring penetrated German intelligence and was able to provide
the Soviets with detailed information about the impending invasion of Russia by
Germany.  Unfortunately, Stalin refused to believe the warnings. Members
of the Red Orchestra were captured in 1942.  Trepper escaped and hid until
the liberation of Paris in 1944.  When he returned to Moscow, he was
arrested along with thousands of others who had bravely fought the Nazis
and spent ten years in prison.  Eventually he moved to Israel where
he died in 1982.

1904(7th
of Adar I, 5664): Sixty-seven-year-old German-Jewish poet, playwright and
social reformer Friederike Kempner passed away today.

1905:
“Hyman Solomon, who says he is an upholsterer, with a place of business at 207
West Forty-sixth Street, was arrested by detectives from the West Forty-seventh
Street Police Station tonight and locked up, charged with extortion in
procuring money by promising police protection” based on his alleged friendship
with a NYC Police Captain.

1906:
“The East Side Dry Goods Merchants’ Association…decided today to close all of
its stores from Friday at 6 P.M. until Saturday at 6 P.M. in order to the
employees a day off” since Saturday is chosen for a holiday because most
patrons of these stores are Jews.”

1907:
In Potsdam, Count Has von Blumenthal and his gave birth to Hans-Jürgen Graf von
Blumenthal, a German officer who was part of the anti-Hitler resistance and was
hung for his part in the plot to kill Hitler in July of 1944.

1908:
“Song of Songs on Stage” published today described plans for a stage production
of Solomon’s “Song of Songs” at the Queen’s Gate Hall in London under the
auspices of the English Drama Society which is considered to be a “novel and
daring experiment” in the world of the theatre.

1909(2nd
of Adar, 5669): On the Jewish calendar, yahrzeit of the Jews of Speyer who
perished when they set fire to their own homes rather than be seized by a
violent mob.

1910:
Birthdate of Albert Philipson, the native of Ossining, NY and graduate of
Columbia Law School work for the Farm Credit Administration and was active in
Democratic politics.

1910:
The Hahambashi proposes to convene, in summer, a conference of delegates of all
Jewish communities in the Ottoman Empire to consider reform of the rabbinate
and to plan a new reorganization of the community. Included in this would be
the elimination of life appointments in favor of elections.

1911: Governor Mahlakoff began a widespread expulsion of the Jews
from the Province of Tchernigoff, a Government in Little Russia which meant
that two hundred and nineteen families have already been marched through heavy
snow drifts.

1912: A New York Ladino language newspaper called La Aguila
hit the presses but failed due to lack of support and finished running on March
22 of the same year.

1912: Jews in Kustendil, Bulgaria were attacked by a mob and nine
people were injured.

1912: A bill introduced in the Portuguese Congress provides for
cession of land to Jewish emigrants who move to Angola, Portuguese West Africa.

1913: In Rozwadow, Poland, Abraham Chaim Springer, the son Mamci
Springer and Sara Birnbaum was circumcised by Simon Katz.

1913:
Dedication of the Sabbath School Building in Erie, PA.

1913:
Dr. Stephen S. Wise, the rabbi at New York’s Free Synagogue, is scheduled to
deliver a sermon on “What Ails the Jew” at Sinai Temple in Chicago.

1913:
Nellie Woolf and Reuben Davis are scheduled to be the soloists at the Chicago
Hebrew Institute’s Sunday Afternoon Concert directed by Alexander Zukovsky.

1913:
An Auxiliary of the Marks Nathan Orphan Home is scheduled to host a
fund-raising ball at the First Regiment Armory in Chicago.

1913:
Solomon Schechter, President of the Jewish Theological Seminary, founded the
United Synagogue of America, the association of Conservative synagogues in the
United States and Canada. In 1957, it organized the World Council of Synagogues
with membership in 22 countries

1914:
In Philadelphia, at today’s meeting of the American Jewish Historical Society,
Dr. Cyrus led a discussion on question of the possible Jewish origins of
Christopher Columbus which was sparked by a paper Don Garcia de La Riega had
presented to the Geographical Society of Madrid.

1915:
In Bangor, ME, “the town shochet” (ritual slaughter) and his wife gave birth to
Theodore L. Adams, the 1936 graduate of Yeshiva College and the Rabbi at
“Congregation Mt. Sinai in Jersey City and Ohab Zedek in Manhattan who was the
husband of Rebbitzen Bernice Adams with whom he had four children – Larry,
Howard, Sivi and Myril.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/adams-theodore-l

https://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/27/classified/paid-notice-deaths-adams-rebbitzen-bernice.html

1915: The Supreme Court of the United States is scheduled to hold
a hearing today in which the state of Georgia will oppose attempts to get a
writ of habeas corpus granted in the case of Leo Frank.

1916(19th of Adar I, 5676): Twenty-one-year-old Max
Neuman, a citizen of Kleinsteinach, was killed today while serving in the
German Army.

1916: Delegates from Jewish organizations in Manhattan met today
“to consider plans for the proposed Jewish Congress and to elect delegates to
the preliminary conference” to be held next month in Philadelphia.

1917: The Wort, a
Yiddish newspaper published in Warsaw said the Overseas News Agency announced
“that the Jewish administration in that city granted loans without interest,
made gifts in money or distributed free food, milk and medicines” in 1916 to
148,000 people from 25,000 families.

1917(O.S.):
The February Revolution began in Russia.  This is the revolution that
brought down the Czars and brought the Social Democrats to power. 
Unfortunately, they failed and the next revolution brought the Communists to
power with disastrous effects for the world in general and the Jews in
particular.

1917(1st
of Adar, 5677): Rosh Chodesh Adar

1917:
Jenny Sender and David Fink gave birth to Esther Margaret Fink who passed away
before reaching her second birthday after which she was buried in the Jewish
Cemetery in Edmonton, Canada.

1918:
“Felix M. Warburg, Chairman of the Joint Distribution Committee for the various
Jewish war relief funds announced” tonight that plans had been finalized “for
the transmission and distribution of American relief money to the Jews in that
part of Palestine now under occupation through cooperation with the Zionist
Special Committee for the Relief of Jews in Palestine, at Cairo” which has been
recognized by the British military authorities.

1919:
In Dusseldorf, Gustav Cohn, the son of Sophie and Seligman Lazarus Cohn and his
wife Henriette Cohn gave birth to Fritz Cohen

1919:
Three days after he had died “while on military service, 18-year-old Michael
Felperin, the “son of David and Alice Felperin” was buried today at the
“Plashet Jewish Cemetery” in London.

1919:
Benito Mussolini forms the Fascist Party in Italy. According to author
Alexander Stille “What distinguished the story of Italian Jews from that
of Jews elsewhere in Europe was the long coexistence between Jews and Fascists
in Mussolini’s Italy. Italian Fascism was in power for 16 years before it
turned anti-Semitic in 1938. Until then, Jews were as likely to be members of
the Fascist Party as were other conservative-minded Italians. This singular
fact altered the entire moral and existential equation for Italy’s Jews. In
other countries, Fascism was the undisguised enemy. But the experience of
Italian Jews was far more complex: a strange mixture of benevolence and
betrayal, persecution and rescue.”

1920:
In his address tonight at Temple Rodeph Sholom on the subject of “Have the Jews
Helped or Hurt the World?” Rabbi Stephen S. Wise asserted “that both the
‘higher anti-Semitism’ and the ‘lower anti-Semitism’” are products that are
“made in Germany and that “the same forces that planned an carried out the
plans the resulted in world war have, with their scholars and professors,
carried on the movement against the Jew.” 
(Editor’s note – this is thirteen years before Hitler came to power)

1920:
New York University trained attorney and graduate of U.S. Army School of
Military Aeronautics during WW I Newman Levy, the New York born son of Millie
Abrahams and Abraham Levy and co-author with Edna Ferber of “Twelve Hundred a
Year” married Eva Garson today.

https://books.google.com/books/about/1200_a_Year.html?id=sn8kzQEACAAJ

 

1921(15th
of Adar I, 5681): Dermatologist Phineas Simon Abraham the native of Kingston,
Jamaica, who was elected Medical Secretary of Britain’s National Leprosy Fund
and President of the West London Chirurgical Society passed away today.

1921(15th
of Adar I, 5681): Ellin L. Prince who had married James Joseph Speyer, the
German educated banker who was part of “The House of Speyer” which before WW I
was the “third largest investment banking firm” and whose philanthropies
included founding the Museum of the City of New York and the University
Settlement Society of New, “the first settlement house in the United States” in
November of 1897 passed away today.

1921:
Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook and Rabbi Ya’akov Meir were elected as the first two
chief Rabbis of pre-state Israel.  Kook was the Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi and
Rabbi Ya’akov Meir was the Chief Sephardic Rabbi.

1921:
As head of the Colonial Office, Winston Churchill reviews Pinchas Rutenberg’s
request for a concession to harness the waters of the Jordan and Yarkon fivers
for electrical power; a concession that would employ 800 Jews and Arabs.

1922(25th
of Shevat, 5682): Fifty-five-year-old Leon Khan passed away today after which
he was in the Jewish Cemetery in Morgan City, LA.

1922:
“A Vanished World” a silent adventure film directed by Alexander Korda and
co-starring his wife Maria Corda was released today in Austria.

1923:
In today’s issue of the Jewish Chronicle, of author and Zionist Hannah Trager
the London born daughter of Zerah and Rachel Barnett, who had founded the
Jewish Free Reading Room in East London was quoted as saying that “If the
Christian efforts for proselyting [sic] amongst Jews are resented, why do they
not do something themselves for their own religious welfare, and distribute
amongst themselves literature appertaining to the tenets of their own faith,
and thereby try to inculcate a more spiritual outlook in their midst.”

1924:
Birthdate of UJA-Federation of New York leader Edna Perkel Guewitsch, the wife
of Swiss educated Dr. Arno David “Arni” Gurewitsch who practiced medicine in
Palestine before coming to the United States where he practiced at the
Neurological Institute at Columbia-Presbyterian who was “Eleanor Roosevelt’s
friend, confidant, personal physician, housemate, and traveling companion
during her post-White House years…”

1924:
“The attachment tying up $115,000 of Henry Ford’s money on deposit in the Corn
Exchange Bank, in the libel suit for $200,000 instituted against Mr. Ford by
Herman Bernstein, the editor of the editor of the Jewish Tribune was
vacated” today.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1924/02/24/101582582.html?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0&pageNumber=70

1925:
U.S. premiere of “Le Miracle des Loups” (The Miracle of the Wolves) “a French
historical drama directed by Raymond Bernard

1925(29th
of Shevat, 5685): Eighty-six-year-old Yitzhak Yeruham Diskin the son of Rabbi
Juda Leib Diskin and Hinda Rachel Diskin passed away today.

1926:
Irving Lehman and Mrs. Rebecca Kohut are scheduled to address this evening’s
good-will dinner (which will be Kosher) for Jews and Christians being sponsored
by the Greater New Yorker Federation of Churches.

1926:
David A. Brown, chairman of the United Jewish Campaign trying to raise fifteen
million dollars to aid the suffering Jews of Europe, is continuing his tour of
“the west” after addressing a conference of Jews in Fargo, ND that was held to
set a fund-raising target to help with the national campaign.

1927:
In a statement issued today, “Dr. Louis I. Harris, Health Commissioner of New
York, defended Dr. David H. Schelling of the Brooklyn Jewish Hospital against
attacks by the Anti-Vivisection Society.”

1927:
“Albert Thomas, head of the International Labor announced that “Dr. Victor
Jacobson has been appointed representative of the Zionist organization at the
International Labor Office in Geneva.(JTA)

1928:
“More than five hundred persons attended the supper-dance of the Emanu-El
League, a Temple EmanuEl organization of young people, held aboard the French
liner Paris tonight to raise funds for the student fellowships by which young
Jews who show scholastic ability or artistic talent may have a year’s study
abroad.”

https://www.nytimes.com/1928/02/24/archives/supperdance-on-liner-500-persons-at-emanuel-leagues-benefit-for.html?searchResultPosition=2

1929(13th
of Adar I, 5689): Thirty-nine-year-old Mercédès Jellinek, the granddaughter of
Adolf Jellinek, the former chief rabbi of Vienna whose name is the Mercedes in
the Mercedes-Benz automobile succumbed to bone cancer today.

1929:
A recording was made today of “Wedding Bells (Are Breaking Up That Old
Gang Of Mine)” a popular barbershop song composed by Sammy Fain with lyrics by
Irving Kahal and Willie Raskin which number 8 on the pop charts.

1930:
“Chasing Rainbows” a romantic comedy with a script co-authored by Al Boasberg
with music by Milton Ager and Jack Yellen and co-starring Jack Benny was
released today in the United States.

1931(6th
of Adar, 5691): Seventy-four-year-old failed Russian businessman Jacob Koppel
Sander who came to the United States where pursued a successful career as a
“musical director” and “composer whose works included “The Hero and Bracha or
the Jewish King of Poland for a Night” passed away today.

https://www.google.com/search?source=hp&ei=OM1IXa2AGIOAsQWQ2qOwDw&q=jakob+koppel+sandler&oq=Jacob+Kopel+San&gs_l=psy-ab.1.0.0i22i10i30.8577.15098..17616…2.0..0.335.2419.13j3j2j2……0….1..gws-wiz…..0..0j0i131j0i22i30j0i13..12%3A0j13%3A0.pLli6DS0Y1s

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/sandler-jacob-koppel

https://www.jewish-music.huji.ac.il/content/jacob-koppel-sandler

1932:
“The nomination of Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo to an associate just of the
Supreme Court was unanimously reported favorably by the Senate Judiciary
Committee which is chaired by Republican Senator Norris of Nebraska.

1932:
Premiere of “Mamsell Nitouche” a 1932 French-German operetta film directed by
Carl Lamac and filmed by cinematographer Otto Heller.

1932:
In the Netherlands, the Jewish Historical Museum was officially opened. It was
located in a single room on the top floor of the Amsterdam Historical Museum,
which was housed in the Weigh House.

1933:
“Louis Marshall Memorial Hall, the second building erected at the New York
State College of Forestry, was dedicated” today in honor of the Jewish jurist
who “was also a conservationist, and the force behind re-establishing the New
York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University, which evolved into
today’s State University of New York College of Environmental Science and
Forestry.”

1934:
Today the “Tel Hey Memorial,” known as the “Roaring Lion” which had been
fashioned from a 22-ton block of stone by Abraham Melnikov which took the form
of a “lion facing eastward and roaring to the heavens” was officially dedicated
today.

1934:
“Benjamin Gold, the militant Communist labor leader” today “received an
enthusiastic ‘welcome home’ from about 2,000 members of the Needle Trades
Workers Industrial Union, of which he is general secretary upon his release
from Wilmington, Delaware Country Jail.”

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1934/02/24/95475822.html?pageNumber=29

 

1935(20th
of Adar I, 5695): Parashat Ki Tisa

1935(20th
of Adar I, 5695): Romanian born, American Yiddish playwright Joseph Latteiner
passed away today

https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/latteiner-joseph

1936(30th
of Shevat, 5696): Rosh Chodesh Adar

1936:
A conference to choose national officers and assign quotas for the 1936
campaign of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee is scheduled to be
held today in Cincinnati, Ohio, under the leadership of Felix Warburg.

1936:
Birthdate of Harrison Jay Goldin the Bronx born lawyer and former New York
politician who served as an attorney in the United States Department of Justice
Office of Civil Rights during the Kennedy Administration and ran in the 1989
Democratic Primary election for Mayor of New York.

1936:
Sir Arthur Grenfell Wauchope the High Commissioner of the British Mandate of
Palestine was booed by a crowd as he left a museum in Tel Aviv where he had
just given a dedicatory address.  The demonstration was prompted by
reports that the mandatory government is about to implement new regulations
designed to limit Jewish immigration and land purchases by Jews. The High
Commissioner ordered the crowd to disperse but did not order any arrests.

1937:
In what must have seen like a moment of irony considering the rise of Nazi
German, 2,000 ex-servicemen attended synagogue services in Berlin honoring
12,000 of those who had had died during the World War.

1937:
It was reported today that author Marvin Lowenthal described the Jews Poland to
be “in the same condition as those in Germany with one million absolutely
dependent upon charity” and another 2,400,000 needing outside to subsist” in a
country that has not passed “public legislation on the Jewish question” but has
“numerous other ways to destroy the Jews.”

1937:
One day after he had passed away, funeral services were held in Prague today
for 73 year old Dr. Maximillian Reiner, “a founder of the Czech-Jewish
movement” and an active member of “Sokol, the national gymnastic and
educational organization.”

1938:
“Assailing Hitlerism as ‘fundamentally anti-German and anti-Christian’ and
picturing the Nazi regime as ‘the Antichrist’ and the enemy of Western
civilization, Dr. Ernst Wilhelm Meyer” a sixteen-year veteran of the German
diplomatic service announced his resignation “as the first secretary of the
German Embassy in Washington” where he has served for the last six years.

1938(22nd of Adar I, 5698):
Seventy-year- Samuel Gutmann the German born son of Hirsch Gutman who in 1884
came to the United States where he settled in Des Moines, IA and who was the
husband of the former Hattie S. Stricker whom he married in 1896 passed away
today in Cincinnati after which he as buried in the Walnut Hills Jewish
Cemetery.

1938:
Today is the planned date on which passengers will begin debarking at the newly
refurbished port of Tel Aviv.  The event is viewed as “a milestone in the
rebuilding of the Jewish National Home.”

1939:
Birthdate of Lester Glassner, an artist who graduated from Pratt Institute who
created a “museum-size collection that included dolls and wind-up toys, plastic
fruit sculptures and costume jewelry, sunglasses and makeup kits, greeting
cards and matchbooks, salt and pepper shakers and Christmas ornaments, not to
mention movie stills, posters, cardboard cutouts, books, magazines, records,
and 8- and 16-millimeter films.”

1939:
“The chief architect and designer of the Palestine Pavilion” at the New York
World’s Fair, Arieh El-Hanani arrived today “on the Queen Mary to supervise
“the setting up of the Palestine exhibits, which will arrive next week on the
liner Excalibur.

1939:
“Under a decree that Field Marshall Goering announced today, all German or
Stateless Jews must surrender with a fortnight all jewels,” “knives, forks,
other tableware” “and other objects of gold, silver or platinum as well as all
diamonds, pearls and other precious stones”

1939:
At a time when “the present wave of anti-Semitism is aimed at the destruction
of as a whole as well as the Jewish religion,” “ministers of a dozen Protestant
denominations and non-denominational groups” met at Temple Israel to study
Jewish religious forms and discuss common Jewish and Christian problems in a
meeting “arranged by the Central Synagogue, Temple Israel and the Greater New
York Federation of Churches.

1940(14th
of Adar I, 5700): Purim Katan

1940:
Ruth Sussman, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sussman married Meyer Loebelson
today.

1940:
Al “Bummy’ Davis lost a unanimous decision at the lightweight level.

1940:
Seventy-seven-year-old businessman and philanthropist Henry Frederick Samstag,
the Washington, DC born son of Samuel and August Samstag who moved to New York
in 1895 where founded Samstag and Hilder, co-founded the Federation for the
Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies” and raised three children – Henry,
Katherine and Matilda – with his wife Belle Samstag passed away today.

https://www.geni.com/people/Henry-Samstag/6000000029722005300

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1940/02/24/92890229.pdf

1941
Romanian born painter Marcel and Medi Janco and their two daughters who had
survived the Iron Guard’s Bucharest Pogrom, arrived in Tel Aviv

1941:
David Zacharin, Russian born cellist and director of the Tel Aviv Academy gave
his first New York recital tonight at the Town Hall. His program was devoted
Jewish music.  Of the seventeen works played 14 were his own while the
remaining three were Bloch’s “Schelomo” (Hebrew for Rhapsody, Gnessin’s “Song
of the Wandering Knight” and Bruch’s “Kol Nidre.”  Zacharin “achieved real
eloquence” when he played “If I Forget Thee Jerusalem,” a piece of his own
creation.  Whatever the evening lacked in artistic perfection was overcome
by the fact that it gave “insight into the longings and religious aspirations
of an ancient people.”

1941:
A large scale pogrom in Amsterdam continued for a second day.

1942:
Edward M.M. Warburg, son of the late Felix Warburg and Chairman of the Joint
Distribution Committee, joined the army last week as a private, despite the
fact that he is married and has a 6-months-old son, it was learned here today.
A member of Company B, 518th Military Police Battalion, Private Warburg is in
training at Governors Island, home station of the unit. Army headquarters, in
disclosing Mr. Warburg’s enlistment, emphasized that the battalion was a field
unit subject to call to active service. Warburg himself declined to comment on
his enlistment.

1942:
Author Stefan Zweig and his wife Elizabeth who had died yesterday “were found
dead of a barbiturate overdoes in their house in the city of Petropolis,
Brazil.”

1942:
Struma, a ship chartered to carry Jewish refugees from Axis-allied Romania to
British-controlled Palestine during World War II, with its engine inoperable,
was towed from Istanbul through the Bosporus out to the Black Sea by Turkish
authorities with its refugee passengers aboard, where it was left adrift.

1943:
A division of the Red Army attacked the Germans at Alexseyevka, in the Ukraine.
Many of the attacking soldiers were Jews.

1943:
Lydia Litvyak “was awarded the Order of the Red Star, made a junior lieutenant
and selected to take part in the elite air tactic called okhotniki, or
“free hunter”, where pairs of experienced pilots searched for targets
on their own initiative.”

1944:
It was reported today that “in a move to combat the wave of terror that flared
up in Palestine this week, a Jewish vigilant organization calling itself
‘Yishuv’s Guard’ has been formed in Jersualem.

1944:
At Zwadka, Poland, a Polish man and his daughter were killed by Germans, along
with the two Jewish women whom they had helped.

1945(10th
of Adar, 5705): As the Soviet Army approached Schwarzheide, in the Dresden
(Germany) area 300 Jews who had been moved from Berkenau to the Schwarzheide
factories were shot. The German camps of Belsen, Dachau, Buchenwald,
Mauthausen, Sachsenhausen and Ravnebruck became the destination of thousands of
evacuated Jews from all the other camps

1945:
Father Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski who had been arrested by the Gestapo in
1939 died today at Dachau.

1945:
Joe Rosenthal took the most famous picture of World War II, “Raising the
Flag on Iwo Jima.” 

https://www.pulitzer.org/article/joe-rosenthal-and-flag-raising-iwo-jima

1946:
In a report issued by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation
Administration, medical authorities said that there were no reports of Plague
in Europe with the exception of the Mediterranean ports including Jaffa with
two cases, and Haifa and Tel Aviv with one case each.

1946:
As the Allies sought to rebuild the media in Germany after WWII, the
Broadcasting Control Unit in Hamburg issued an “Access Authorization to the
Broadcasting Studio Hamburg for Major Everitt.”

https://jewish-history-online.net/source/jgo:source-145

Access Authorization to the Broadcasting
Studio Hamburg for Major Everitt, issued by the Broadcasting Control Unit
Hamburg 1946 | Key Documents of German-Jewish History
(jewish-history-online.net)

1947:
In Washington, DC, Harvard Law School and New Deal veteran Norman S. Altman and
the former Sophie Robinson, a Yale Law School graduate and television producer
gave birth to Woodrow Wilson High graduate and George Washington trained
attorney Robert Alan Altman, a protégé Clark Clifford and husband of “Wonder
Woman” Lynda Carter with whom he had two children, James and Jessica.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/13/business/robert-altman-dead.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage&section=Obituaries

1947:
General Eisenhower opened a drive to raise $170 million in aid for European
Jews

1948:
In Tel Aviv, Ruth and Gad Paz gave birth to their son Amnon Paz who perished
aboard the Israeli Submarine Dakar on January 25, 1968.

1949(24th
of Shevat, 5709): Fifty-nine-year-old printmaker Todros Geller who a leading
Chicago artist passed away today leaving behind a treasure trove of work part
of which can be seen at the Spertus Institute.

http://www.oakton.edu/museum/Geller.html

http://nwpressbooks.blogspot.com/2008/02/1937-from-land-to-land-by-todros-geller.html

http://blog.chicagohistory.org/index.php/2013/02/my-jewish-chicago-todros-geller/

1950:
Birthdate of Rebecca Newberger, the native of White Plains, NY, gained fame as
author Rebecca Goldstein.

https://www.rebeccagoldstein.com/

1952:
“Love is Better than Ever” a romantic comedy directed by Stanley Donen and
starring Larry Parks and Elizabeth Taylor was released in the United States
today.

1952: Three
years after being released in the United Kingdom, “The Small Room” which Emeric
Pressburger co-directed, co-produced and co-wrote was released in the United
States today.

1952:
In Philadelphia, Frieda (née Schreiber) and Alexander Herskovitz gave birth to
Marshall Schreiber Herskowitz, the director, producer and writer who won
several Emmys for “Thirtysomething” the television series he created.

1954:
The first mass inoculation using the Salk Polio Vaccine began.  In one of
the irony of history the first polio vaccine was created by a Jewish
Doctor, Jonas Salk.  But the second polio vaccine was also created by a
Jewish Doctor, Albert Sabin. 

1955:
In France, the second government led by Pierre Mendès France ended today.

1955:
Marianne Winters began playing the role of “Gelda” in a production of “The Dark
Is Light Enough” which opened today.

1957:
“The Diary of Anne Frank” which had opened at the Cort Theatre in 1955 was
performed for the last time prior to moving to the Ambassador Theatre where it
would open three days later.

1958(2nd
of Adar, 5718): Eighty-three-year-old Fort Plain, NY born University of Buffalo
trained orthodontist Abram Hoffman who taught orthodontics at Buffalo, NYU and
Northwestern passed away today in Ft. Lauderdale, FL.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1958/02/25/89055199.pdf?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0

 

 

1959:
Publication of Henderson the Rain King by Saul Bellow.

https://books.google.com/books?id=HPDqaTLKOEEC&pg=PA194&lpg=PA193&dq=%22Henderson+the+Rain+King%22&as_brr=3&ie=ISO-8859-1&output=html

1960(25th
of Shevat, 5720): Seventy-eight-year-old gold medal winning Olympic fencer
Alexandre Lippmann passed away.

1961:
Today, under the guidance of Atlantic Records producer Phil Spector the Top
Notes recorded “Twist and Shout” co-authored by Bert Berns

1962:
Churchill’s friend Montague Brown wrote a letter expressing his concerns about
the retired Prime Minister’s plan to visit Israel on an upcoming cruise to the
eastern Mediterranean.  He was fearful of the effect such a visit would
have on Britain’s Arab friends in the Middle East. Ultimately, Churchill’s
yacht would pass the coast of Israel at night and would not make landfall.

1962(19th
of Adar I, 5722): Fifty-seven-year-old Chelsea, MA born Boston University Law
School graduate Ada Feinberg York, “a lawyer for the NLRB,” “Republican
candidate of Secretary of State of Massachusetts” and “former vice president of
the Women’s Division of the American Jewish Congress” who was the wife realtor
and insurance broker Benjamin H. York with who she raised a son and two
daughters passed away today.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1962/02/25/113419297.pdf

1964(10th
of Adar, 5724): Seventy-two-year-old Yale University graduate and NYU trained
attorney Louis H. Solomon, the general counsel to the American Fur Merchants
Association, the
American Cloak and Suit Manufacturers and the Laundry Owners Trade Council and
the
permanent chairman of the meat division of the United Jewish Appeal who was
reinstated after having been “disbarred from practice in the federal courts for
unethical conduct and impropriety in handling bankruptcy affairs”  and who chairman of the board of the Academy
for Higher Jewish learning as well as  a
“donor of the building that houses the NYU Jewish Cultural Foundation passed
away today at Doctors Hospital.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1964/02/24/97380432.pdf?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0

1965:
Sixty-four-year-old Herberts Cukurs, a member of the Arajs Kommando which
slaughter thousands of Jews in Latvia died today in Uruguay.

1965:
In Houston Lorraine Charlotte (née Langfan), a stockbroker and Alexander Dell,
an orthodontist, gave birth to Michael Dell, founder of Dell Computers.

1965:
American classic’s scholar Charles A. Robinson, the husband of Celia Sachs and
son-in-law of art historian Paul J. Sachs who played a key role in saving
European art from the Nazis, passed away today.

1966:
“Elimination From Liturgy of More Passages Offensive to Jews Suggested”
published today included a call by “the Rev. Walter M. Abbot, association
editor of America, the Jesuit weekly” for “the Catholic Church” to “make
further changes in liturgy to eliminate readings which either hurt or offend
Jews” such as the one “from John that referred to the disciples ‘gathered
together for fear of the Jews.’” (JTA)

1966:
Funeral services were held today for “seventy-seven-year-old Yiddish poet and
editorial staff member for the Jewish Forward Nachum Yud who was born in Russia
in 1888 and to come the United States in 1916.”

1967:
Izvestia
reported today that “a Soviet Jew,” retired engineer Solomon
Dolnik “who was lured into espionage by Israeli diplomats who met him at the
Moscow synagogue” “has been convicted of spying for Israel and fabricating
anti-Soviet propaganda.”

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1967/02/24/90271475.html?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0&pageNumber=7

 

1968:
In Rochester, NY, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Boller announced the engagement of their
daughter Jane to Howard S. Klotz, the son of Judge Arthur Klotz and the former
Rose Cohen.

1968(24th
of Shevat, 5728): Fannie Hurst passed away at the age of 78.  Born in 1889
in Ohio, she graduated from Washington University (St. Louis) and then
furthered her studies at Columbia in NYC. (This educational activity was
unusual in and of itself for a woman of her times.  Hurst was a successful
author, friend of Eleanor Roosevelt and supporter of the New Deal and aid to
refugees from Nazi Europe.  By the time she passed away she had written
seventeen novels, nine volumes of short stories, three plays, many articles,
speaking engagements, a television talk show and collaborated on a number of
films. One of the most amusing stories about her, which shows that she was way
ahead of her times, involved her marriage. “In 1915, she had secretly married
pianist Jacques Danielson and they each had their own residence. When their
marriage was revealed in 1920, a New York Times editorial took them to
task for having separate residences when there was a housing shortage. Hurst
retaliated by stating that a married woman had the right to retain her own
name, her own special life and her own personal liberty. They remained happily
married until his death in 1952.” When Justice Arthur Goldberg declared in
1962, “that it is time that we evaluated Women on merit and fitness for a
job,” she snapped back, “Time sir! You are a half century too late.

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/hurst.html

1969(5th
of Adar, 5729): Seventy-two year old WW I Army Signal Corps veteran and NYU
trained attorney Judge Lawrence Peltin and husband of “the former Rosalie
Glasser” passed away today.

1970:
One American was killed and two more injured when terrorists opened fire on a
bus at Halhoul.

1971:
The First World Conference on Soviet Jewry which had opened in Brussels on
February 23 came to a close today.

1973(21st
of Adar I, 5733): Tehilla Lichtenstein passed who served as leader of the
Society for Jewish Science from 1938 until her death, passed away today.

1974(1st
of Adar, 5734): Songwriter Harry Ruby passed away.

http://www.songwritershalloffame.org/exhibits/C308

1977:
Leonard Steinberg, Baron Steinberg of Belfast in the County of Antrim was shot
by the Provisional Irish Republican Army after he refused to give in to a
demand to pay “protection money.”

1979:
Release date in Italy for “Christ Stopped at Eboli” (Cristo si è fermato a
Eboli
) a film adaptation of the book of the same name by Carlo Levi.

1980(6th
of Adar, 5740): Parashat Terumah

1980(6th of Adar, 5740):
Seventy-four-year-old Ukraine native Samuel Greenburg, the “painter, graphic
artist, author and Chicago public school teacher who “studied at the Académie
André Lhote in Paris, Bezalel Art School Jerusalem, and Chicago. He earned his
bachelor and master’s degrees at the University of Chicago and took art classes
at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) passed away today.

http://www.chicagomodern.org/artists/samuel_greenburg/

1981:
Birthdate of actor, comedian and singer Joshua Ilan “Josh” Gad whose father
“was a Jewish immigrant from Afghanistan.”

1981:
Alan Berg made his “debut broadcast” today on KOA in Denver where he worked
until his murder.

1982(30th
of Shevat, 5742): Rosh Chodesh Adar

1982(30th
of Shevat, 5742): Seventy-seven-year-old Dallas native and Missouri trained
lawyer Irving Fane who was the attorney for the Sport’s Authority in Kansas
City passed away today.

1982:
Today, “Tanya Gulyaeva-Gurevich, the daughter of Minsk refusenik,
Lieutenant-Colonel Lev Ovsischer, who emigrated to Israel in 1979, was allowed
by the Soviet authorities to pay a month’s visit to her sick mother in Minsk.”

1983:
Moshe Arens replaced Menachem Begin as Defense Minister.

1986:
In “The Museums of Israel,” published today, Nitza Rosovsky, the curator of
exhibits at the Harvard Semitic Museum and the author of Jerusalem Walks
describes “Israel, as a crossroads of ancient civilizations in which the
countryside itself is like a museum filled with the remains of those who were
here before, from Canaanites to Philistines, from Romans to Crusaders. Even the
present-day inhabitants -Jews from some 80 lands, Arabs from all over the
Middle East, Christians of different denominations – create a living
museum.”  In describing the rich variety of museums to be found in Israel,
she captures both the history and the efforts to capture the history of the
land and cultures that are now part of the Jewish homeland.

1987:
The Russian Writers Union accepts Boris Pasternak as a as member posthumously

1987:
Aulcie Perry Jr., a former basketball player who became an Israeli citizen and
was hailed as a sports champion there, was convicted in Brooklyn Federal Court
tonight of smuggling heroin with a street value of $1.8 million into the United
States

1987:
“Former Soviet Prisoner of Conscience Iosif Begun” who “was pardoned last week
after serving three years for ‘anti-Soviet activities’ as a result of his
teaching Hebrew” arrived in Moscow this morning after his released from
Chistopol Prison.

1988:
Elections for the President of Israel were held today in the Knesset with Chaim
Herzog, who was unopposed winning re-election.

1989:
At the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Soviet émigré pianist Vladimir Feltsman is
scheduled to play the music of Schubert and Mussorgsky at a benefit performance
designed to raise funds for the Maimonides Research and Development Foundation.

1990(28th
of Shevat, 5750): David Samuilovich Kaufman who wrote under the name of David
Samoylov passed away. Born in 1920, he was a “notable poet of War generation of
Russian poets and considered one of the most important Russian poets of the
post-World War II era.” 

1992(19th
of Adar I, 5752): Seventy-seven-year-old London native Leslie Harman who gained
fame as Avraham Haman the 3rd Israeli Ambassador to the United States and
president of Hebrew University and whose wife Zina Harman and daughter Naomi
Chazan were both members of the Knesset passed away today.

https://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/25/world/avraham-harman-is-dead-at-77-head-of-university-and-diplomat.html

 

1992:
In Philadelphia, Israeli tennis player Amos Mansdorf lost in the finals to
American Pete Sampras.

1995:
The Washington Post reported today
that “Steven T. Katz, who is to become director of the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum here next month, was reprimanded in the early 1990’s for
misrepresenting his scholarly achievements and violating leave policies while
on the faculty at Cornell University.”

1997:
Sixty-five million viewers watch the completely uncensored version of
“Schindler’s List” on NBC television.

1997(16th
of Adar I, 5757):  Oscar Lewenstein, British producer and director, passed
away at the age of 80.

1997:
Palestinian Ali Abu Kamal opens fire on tourists on the observation deck of the
Empire State Building, killing one and wounding another six before committing
suicide.

1997:
The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of
special interest to Jewish readers including Nazi Germany and the Jews,
Volume 1: The Years of Persecution, 1933-1939
by Saul Friedlander and Conflicting
Accounts: The Creation and Crash of the Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising
Empire
by Kevin Goldman

1998:
Osama bin Laden publishes a fatwa declaring jihad against all Jews and
Crusaders. Considering what the Crusaders did to the Jews during the Middle
Ages, this is a strange declaration indeed.

1999:
In another example of personalization and splintering of Israeli politics,
Yitzhak Mordechai quit Likud and formed the Israel in the Centre Party. Other
members included David Magen and Dan Meridor from Likud, Hagai Meirom and
Nissim Zvili of Labour, and Eliezer Sandberg of Tzomet.

1999:
Michael Nudelman and Yuri Stern left Yisrael BaAliyahto form Aliyah, which
later entered into an alliance with another Russian-immigrant party, Yisrael
Beiteinu.

2000(17th
of Adar I, 5760): Ofrz Haza, popular Yeminite Israeli singer, passed away. Born
in 1957, she made her international debut at the Eurovision Song Contest 1983,
which she very narrowly failed to win for Israel with the song “Hi”.
Ofra Haza had a world-wide hit in 1988 with “Im Nina’lu” from the
album Fifty Gates of Wisdom. Her international hits also included
“Temple of Love (Touched by the Hand of Ofra Haza)” with the
Leeds-based post-punk band, The Sisters of Mercy in 1992 and “My Love is
for Real” with Paula Abdul in 1995. She also sang in the animated film The
Prince of Egypt
in 1998. Her Israeli hits include “Shir
ha-Frekha” (“The Bimbo Song”, theme from the movie Shlager,
in which she also acted) and “le-Orekh ha-Yam” (“Along the
Shore”). Haza, who came from the poor Hatikvah neighborhood of Tel-Aviv,
at one time almost a slum, was a success story and the subject of pride on
behalf of many Israelis of Yemenite origin. She died of AIDS.

2001(30th
of Shevat, 5761): Rosh Chodesh Adar

2001(30th of Shevat, 5761):
Eighty-seven-year-old Marcus Joseph Sieff, Baron Sieff of Brimpton, “the second
son of Israel Sieff, the decorated WW II veteran and advisor to the IDF at the
request of Prime Minister Ben Gurion who served as chairman of Marks and Spencer,
the family company passed away today.

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/feb/26/guardianobituaries

2002(11th
of Adar, 5762): Parashat Tetzaveh; Shabbat Zachor

2002:
It was reported today that at Shabbat eve service Ronald B. Sobel, the senior
rabbi at Temple Emanu-El spoke out about the arrest of Cantor Howard Nevison
“on charges that he molested his nephew.

2003(21st
of Adar I, 5763): Meyer R. Schkolnick, who became the famed sociologist Robert
K. Merton, passed away at the age of 93. According to one source he is the man
who coined such as phrases as “unintended consequences,” “role model” and
“self-fulfilling prophecy.”

2003(21st
of Adar I, 5763): Seventy-three-year-old Jerusalem native Shlomo Argov the
confidant of David Ben Gurion and Israeli Ambassador to several countries
including the United Kingdom who with his wife Hava had three children –
Gideon, Yehudit and Edna – passed away today.

2003:
Bruce Fleisher won the Verizon Classic.

2003:
An International Conference hosted by the Dubnow Institute on “Transforming
Religious and Ethnic Emblematics of Judaism and Jewishness” continued for a
second day.

2004:
“Federal prosecutors in Manhattan who had charged a prominent orthodox rabbi
with stealing grant money last year said today that they would not prosecute
the rabbi, Milton Balkany, who admitted that he was wrong in not complying with
specific terms of the grant’s use.”

2004:” Wrath of a Pulp Patriarch; Will Eisner Draws a
Rebuttal to the Notorious ‘Protocols’ was published today.

https://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/23/books/wrath-pulp-patriarch-will-eisner-draws-rebuttal-notorious-protocols.html?searchResultPosition=1

2005(14th
of Adar I, 5765): Purim Katan

2005:
The French Law on Colonialism passed to by the Union for a Popular Movement was
opposed by Jewish French historian Pierre Vidal-Naquet

2005:
Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz announced that Dan Halutz would be the
next IDF Chief of Staff.

2005:
Effi Eitam and Yitzhak Levi announced that they had officially split from the
NRP to form a new party, the Renewed Religious National Zionist Party

2005:
“Serenada Schizophrana,” “a series of compositions written by American film
composer Danny Elfman in 2004 premiered at Carnegie Hall in New York City by
the American Composers Orchestra today.

2005:
Chief Nazi hunter Eli Rosenbaum was the guest speaker for “Prosecuting
Nazi War Criminals”. Over 150 students, staff and community members
crammed into the UMKC School of Law Courtroom for the lecture. Eli Rosenbaum
has directed the Office of Special Investigations (OSI) for over 10 years.

2006:
As reported in The Washington Post, Frederick Busch, 64, a writer whose
novels and short stories were esteemed by critics but who never quite found a
large following with the general public, died of a heart attack at a New York
City hospital. Since 1971, Mr. Busch had written 27 books and came to be known,
perhaps in sympathy with his middling sales, as the quintessential
“writer’s writer.” Novelist Scott Spencer called him “a
first-rate American storyteller,” and Washington Post book critic Jonathan
Yardley praised him as “a serious and gifted novelist” whose stories
and novels “tend to be quiet, reflective and subtle.”

2006:
The Roundabout Theatre Company revival of “The Pajama Game,” a musical created
by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross opened today.

2006:
“’Maternal ambivalence’ is Ayelet Waldman’s baby” published today.

http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2006-02-23-waldman_x.htm

2007:
Ben Stiller received the Hasty Pudding Man of the Year award from Harvard’s
Hasty Pudding Theatricals. According to the organization, the award is given to
performers who give a lasting and impressive contribution to the world of
entertainment.

2007(5th
of Adar

2007:
In Amsterdam, the Jewish Historical Museum opens Retrospectives of the works of
photographers Robert Capra and Eva Besnyö.  

2007:
In Jerusalem the 23rd International Book Fair which is being held at the
Binyanei Haooma Convention Center comes to an end.

2007(5th
of Adar, 5767): Heinz Berggruen, collector and gallery owner passed away at the
age of 93. (As reported by Alan Riding)

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/27/arts/design/27berggruen.html

 2008:
In Washington, D.C. Susan Jacoby author of Half Jew: A Daughter’s Search
for Her Family’s Buried Past
discusses and signs her newest work, The
Age of American Unreason.

2008: Joseph Cedar, director of the Oscar-nominated
Israeli film Beaufort, and an Orthodox Jew, will attend a symposium sponsored
by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the five finalists vying
for the best foreign-language film Oscar today. Since the symposium is being
held on Shabbat attending presented a unique challenge for Cedar.  Cedar’s
rabbi told him he could attend as long as he walked to the event and did not
use a microphone. Observing Shabbat would require a two mile long walk to the
Samuel Goldwyn Theatre which Cedar, New York born whose parents made Aliyah
when he was five, figured he could cover in about two hours.

2008:
Simon Garfield described the story of Anne Frank’s lost love.

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/feb/24/news.features

2009:
Manhattanville College sponsors a lecture and Q and A session with Ambassador
Danny Carmon, Deputy Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations
entitled “Israel and Europe: An Insider’s Perspective.”

2009:
After undergoing surgery to remove a tumor on her pancreas, Supreme Court
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg returned to the court in time for three days of
oral arguments.

2009:
Sport Illustrated “remembers the life” the late Joe Goldstein, the
“old-school sports public relation man” who recently passed away at the age of
81.  He was known for his upbeat manner as well as his persistency which
cause an NBC executive to describe him as “the Jewish equivalent of the Chinese
water drip.”  His clients included “Joe Frazier, Bob Hope, the New York
City Marathon, Evel Knivel and the Palisades Parkway.”

2009:
In Washington, D.C., Sara Houghteling reads from and signs her new
novel, Pictures at an Exhibition, at the Sixth & I Historic
Synagogue (formerly the home of Adas Israel, the only Conservative Synagogue
still located in the District of Columbia.)

2009: The Israel Antiquities Authority announced today
that a routine archeological excavation that was conducted before the scheduled
start of a private construction project in an Arab neighborhood on the
outskirts of Jerusalem has uncovered a series of seal impressions from the
reign of the biblical King Hezekiah 2,700 years ago.

2009: IDF soldiers foiled a large-scale attack at the
Kissufim border crossing against troops or a southern Israeli community.

2009:
Gaza terrorists fired two Kassam rockets at southern Israeli civilian areas on
Monday. One hit an open area in the Sha’ar Hanegev region, while the other
landed in a field near Sderot. No one was wounded and no damage was reported.

2010:
The three-day long meeting of the Jewish Agency for Israel being held in
Jerusalem is scheduled to end.

2010:
The Jewish Studies Program at Tulane University under the leadership of Dr.
Brian Horowitz and the Center for Cultural Judaism are scheduled to present a
program about Satmar Chasidism featuring Dr. David N. Myers, Professor and
Director, UCLA Center for Jewish Studies.

2010:
Israel said today that Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon will lead a
high-level delegation next week to China, the most prominent holdout against
tough sanctions on Iran. Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer will also
travel with the delegation, expected to discuss issues shared by both nations.

2010:
Delaware’s first Jewish governor hung a mezuzah at the governor’s mansion in
Dover today. Among those joining Jack Markel in today’s ceremony in the capital
were Rabbi Peter Grumbacher of the governor’s synagogue, Congregation Beth
Emeth in Wilmington; Rabbi Steven Saks of the Rabbinical Association of
Delaware; and Glenn Engelmann, president of the Jewish Federation of Delaware,
according to the Sussex Countian. Markel received the mezuzah as an
inauguration gift, according to the report.

2011:
“Vidal Sassoon: The Movie” and “The Klezmatics: On Holy Ground” are two of the
documentaries scheduled to be shown tonight at the Atlanta Jewish Film
Festival.

2011:
The 25th Jerusalem International Book Fair is scheduled to present a
program entitled ”The Changing Jewish Kitchen – Is Jewish food still Jewish
food and what is it?”

2011:
David McKenzie is scheduled to present a program entitled “Isachar Zacharie:
Lincoln’s Chiropodist—and Peace Envoy” at Adas Israel in Washington, DC.

2011:
Eleven Palestinians were injured today when Israeli Defense Forces fired at a
group of militants on the border with Gaza, Palestinian news agencies reported.
The IDF responded by saying that an explosive device was detonated toward
soldiers who were performing routine activity in the area, on the northern part
of the border. The IDF noted that in the past two months, “over 12 devices
were laid along the security fence and exploded at IDF forces.”

2011(19th
of Adar I, 5771): Eighty-seven-year-old Joseph H. Flom, a pioneering corporate
lawyer who helped build Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher and Flom into one of the
nation’s leading law firms, passed away today.

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/02/23/joseph-h-flom-pioneering-deal-lawyer-dead-at-87/

2011(19th of Adar I, 5771): Jack Gottlieb, a composer who brought synagogue melodies
to concert halls and who worked closely with the legendary composer and
conductor Leonard Bernstein passed away today at the age of 80.

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/lohud/obituary.aspx?n=jack-gottlieb&pid=149164072

2012(30th
of Shevat, 5772): Rosh Chodesh Adar

2012:
Dina Zvi-Riklis’s 2006 film “Three Mothers” that explores Israel’s history
through the lives of three Egyptian-born sisters Triplets Rose, Flora and
Yasmin who were born into “high society” over 60 years ago in Alexandria, Egypt
and now live in Israel, is scheduled to be shown at The Yeshiva University Ring
Family Israel Film Festival. 

2012:
“Jewish Soldiers in Blue and Gray” is scheduled to shown at the Columbus Jewish
Film Festival in Columbus, GA

2012:
In London, “Mordechai Richler: The Last of the Wild Jews” a film about the
Canadian-Jewish author is scheduled to be shown as part of Jewish Book Week.

2012:
In London, Simon Goldhill is scheduled to discuss “Freud’s Couch, Scott’s
Buttocks, Bronte’s Grave” as part of Jewish Book Week.

2012:
Iran submitted a letter of protest to the United Nations Security Council
today, charging Israel of attacking its nuclear scientists and coloring recent
accusations of Tehran’s links to attempted attacks against Israeli officials
worldwide as being part of a “war game” against the Islamic Republic.

2012:
Interior Minister Eli Yishai said today that “The government will have to
extend Tal Law until alternative legislation regulating yeshiva students’
military service is drafted, with the collaboration of the Defense, Justice and
Finance ministries

2013:
The Northernmost Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to open in Fairbanks,
Alaska.

2013:
In Iowa City, Hillel is scheduled to host its annual fundraising event in which
Benjamin Coelho will join with colleagues from the University Of Iowa School Of
Music to perform a program entitled “Songs without Words.”

2013:
Purim in Ein Karem “More than Carnival: with the Ensemble Millennium is
scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. today.

2013:
The Maccabeats are scheduled to perform at Temple Moses in Miami Beach, FL.

2013(13th
of Adar, 5773): Shabbat Zachor Erev Purim

2013:
In the evening, reading of the Megillah Esther

2013:
Today’s announcement by the Pentagon it was grounding all F-35 fighter jets due
to a crack found in one of the engine blades” could have an unforeseen impact
on Israel’s military capabilities since the IAF has ordered 20 of the planes in
a bid to maintain a qualitative edge over its vast array of actual and
potential adversaries

2014:
Adam Liptak, Supreme Court correspondent for the New York Times is
scheduled to Hadassah Attorneys Council dinner in Washington, DC

2014:
“Handle With Care,” a hilarious and heartwarming romantic comedy about an inept
package deliverer who loses an Israeli grandmother’s corpse in a Virginia
parking lot on a snowy Christmas Eve is scheduled to have its final performance
at Westside Theatre Downstairs

2014:
“Threshold to the Sacred: The Ark Door of Cairo’s Ben Ezra Synagogue” is
scheduled to close today at Yeshiva University Museum.

2014:
Ruth Grumber is scheduled to appear via Skype at the event officially opening
“Ahead of Time: The Extraordinary Journey of Ruth Gruber.”

2014:
The annual Seforim Sale – the largest sale of Jewish books in North America –
is scheduled to come to a close.

2014:
The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of
special interest to Jewish readers including Forgiving The Angel: Four
Stories for Franz Kafka
by Jay Cantor

2014(23rd
of Adar I, 5774): Alice Herz-Sommer, believed to be the oldest-known survivor
of the Holocaust, died this morning in London at age 110, a family member said.
Herz-Sommer’s devotion to the piano and to her son sustained her through two
years in a Nazi prison camp, and a film about her has been nominated for best
short documentary at next week’s Academy Awards.

2014:
Following the death today Alice Herz-Sommer, Yisrael “Kristal became recognized
as the wolrd’s oldest known Holocaust survivor.

2014(23rd
of Adar I, 5774): Eighty-seven year old  Rabbi Joseph Ehrenkranz who was
the Executive Director of the Center for Christian-Jewish Understanding at
Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut and was the Synagogue Council
of America’s representative to the United Nations passed away today.

http://www.congregationagudathsholom.org/rabbiehrenkranz.htm

2014(23rd
of Adar I, 5774): Samuel Sheinbein, an American-Israeli convicted murderer
serving his sentence in Israel was shot and killed today at Rimonim Prison
today after he shot three people today, all of whom were apparently prison
guards.

http://www.timesofisrael.com/alice-herz-sommer-oldest-known-holocaust-survivor-dies-at-110/

2015:
Cecile Kuntz is scheduled to “explore how Jews asserted their presence in
cities by looking at buildings constructed by Yiddish-speaking communities in
Poland and America” in a lecture styled “Towards a Yiddish Architecture

2015:
The Winter Semester is scheduled start at the Skirball Center offering such
courses as the “Golden Age of Yiddish Cinema” with Dr. Eric Goldman and “Man,
Miracle and Menace – The Truth About Elijah” with Dr. Diane M. Sharon which
comes just in time with Pesach only weeks away to enliven the part of the Seder
when we open the proverbial door.

2015:
In London, “Jewish Book Week, a unique nine day literary festival” is scheduled
to open today.

2016:
The Center for Jewish History and the Leo Baeck Institute hosted the opening
“Burning Words: The Battle of the Books” that examines the 16th
century debate among Christians as to whether or not Jews should be allowed to
publish books on Jewish theology.

2016:
The Jewish Book Council is scheduled to host an evening with Shulem Deen,
Christopher Noxon and Sigal Samuel — 3 authors who will “share their
unorthodox perspectives on what it means to keep the faith with respect to
their writing, personal lives, and the Jewish people at large.

2016:
Under the terms of a settlement announced today by the University of Oklahoma,
the ownership of impressionist Camille
Pissarro’s 1886 “Shepherdess Bringing in Sheep” will be transferred
to Léone Meyer, a French Holocaust survivor whose father owned the painting
when it was stolen and the painting “will split its time being displayed at the
university’s Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art in Norman and a museum in France.”
(As reported by Daniel C. Houston)

2017(27th
of Shevat, 5777): Sixty-six year old Alan Colmes, “the liberal foil” that FOX
used to make it “fair and balanced” and husband of Professor Jocelyn Elise
Crowley passed away today. (As reported by Sam Roberts)

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/23/business/media/obituary-alan-colmes-fox-news.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0

2017:
“The Jewish Community Center in New Orleans was evacuated” for two hours today
“after a receiving a bomb threat this morning – the latest in a series of such
threats made against centers across the United States.

2017:
The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center is scheduled to co-host “a
deli supper reception and docent-led tour of the Museum’s newest special
exhibition, Operation Finale: The Capture & Trial of Adolf Eichmann,
followed by a screening of Faceless, a story about a teenager on trial for
terrorism, pitted against a female Muslim who is brought on to prosecute.

2017:
In San Francisco, Lynn Downey is scheduled to “speak about her book, Levi
Strauss: The Man Who Gave Blue Jeans to the World “
at the Jewish Community
Library

2017:
In London, JW3 is scheduled to present past judges of the JQ Wingate Literary
Prize discus “What Makes a Book Jewish?”

2017:
“An Israeli Air Force fighter jet shot down” an Hamas drone today “before it
managed to infiltrate Israel.” (As reported by Yoav Zitun)

2017:
In Davie, FL, Nova Southeastern University is scheduled to host Holocaust
survivor Alfred Munzer and Syrian immigrant Mouaz Moustafa, the Executive
Director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force as they share their experiences
dealing with “persecution and displacement.” (Editor’s note: One wonders how
Moustafa will deal with the fate of the Syrian Jewish community and/or Syria’s
decades long attempt to destroy the state of Israel – home to the largest
population of Holocaust survivors.)

2017:
At Coe College, Professor Steve Feller is scheduled to lead the final session
of “The Conflicted World Of Chaim Potok” in which he uses the author’s novel to
explore the “conflicts within Judaism.”

2018:
In Coralville, Iowa, Agudas Achim is scheduled to host a Hebrew School Dinner
followed by a Kabbalat Shabbat Song Fest.

2018(8th
of Adar, 5778): Sixty-two year old “Maureen Kendler, one of British Jewry’s
most popular and prolific educators” passed away this morning.

https://www.thejc.com/news/obituaries/obituary-maureen-kendler-1.459733

http://jewishnews.timesofisrael.com/leading-jewish-educator-maureen-kendler-passes-away/

2018:
Following the Friday night Shabbat meal, the Oxford University Jewish Society
is scheduled to hold Committee Elections for Trinity.

2018:
The Jackson Hole Jewish Community Center is scheduled to host services with an
oneg to follow.

2019(18th
of Adar I, 5779): Parashat Ki Tissa;

2019:  While the Torah Portion may be from Shemot,
Jews will be thinking about Beresheet, not the first book of the Torah but the
unmanned, 1,300 pound space craft created by three Israeli’s which, if it is
successful, will be the first privately built vessel to land on the moon.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/21/science/israel-moon-lander-spaceil.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage

 

2019:
Coe College is scheduled to host the 2019 Jazz Summit Grande Finale Concert
under the leadership of Temple Judah “music man” Professor William S. Carson.

2019:
In Rockville, MD (suburban Washington): Liz Savage, who has committed her life
to working on behalf of individuals with disabilities is scheduled to
Congregation B’nai Israel on Jewish Disability Awareness and Inclusion Shabbat.

2019:
In Oakland, CA, the Starline Social Club is scheduled to host “vocalist Anthony
Mordechai Tzvi Russell and composer-arranger Dmitri Gaskin as they perform
original compositions of Yiddish poetry in styles from classical to disco to
hip-hop.”

2019:
In what is a timely event given the reaction to an interview with Israel’s
Foreign Minister earlier this week, in San Francisco, the Jewish Community
Library is scheduled to host a lecture by Professor Magdalena Gross as she
discusses how Polish teens learn about the Holocaust in school and through
culture.”

2020:
The New York Times features reviews
of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers
including Supreme Inequality: The Supreme Court’s Fifty-Year Battle for a
More Unjust America
by Adam Cohen and The Escape Artist by Helen
Fremont

2020:
In London, Professor Joshua Berman, the rabbi who is a guest lecturer from Bar
Ilan University and author of Ani Maamin: Biblical Criticism, Historical Truth
and the Thirteen Principles of Faith is scheduled to lecture on “Are the
accounts of the Tanach historically accurate?”

2020:
In San Francisco, the Contemporary Jewish Museum is scheduled to host “Family
ArtBash Sunday” held “in conjunction with the Levi Strauss exhibit,” it
“includes a hands-on denim art lab, a family heritage project, gallery games
and “Jewgrass” music by Isaac Zones.”

2020:
The Sacramento Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to host screenings of “There
Are No Lions in Tel Aviv” and “The Albanian Code” which tells “the true story
of an Albanian Jewish woman, Annie Altaratz, now living in Israel, whose family
was saved by Albanian people and their government during World War II.

2020:
The Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to host a screening of
“Broken Mirrors” directed by Aviad Givon.

2021:
The Park Synagogue in Cleveland Heights and Pepper Pike is scheduled to host a
discussion of contemporary views on the news by Rabbi Joshua Skoff by “Fun with
Yiddish” hosted by Anabelle Weiss and Debbie Scolnick.

2021:
The Boston-Area Jewish Education Program is scheduled to present online the
“Purim Spiel Pop-Up.”

2021:
The Contra Costa JCC, Congregation B’nai Shalom and Jewish Book Council are
scheduled to present “former New York Times writer Howard Blum as he
talks about Night of the Assassins, his recently published book,
subtitled “The Untold Story of Hitler’s Plot to Kill FDR, Churchill, and
Stalin.”

2021:
The Jewish Family Experience is scheduled to “hold its Young Professionals
Purim game show ‘Social Distancing the Virtual Game Show’ hosted by Avi Frier.”

2021:
The Atlanta Jewish Film Festival is scheduled to host a virtual screening of
“Asia,” the Israel Academy Award winning fil about “a rebellious teen dealing
with a progressive illness…”

2021:
“Bad Dates” starring Andréa Burns,directed by her husband, Peter Flynn with
choreography by her son Hudson Flynn, a production of the George Street
Playhouse is scheduled to begin streaming today. (As reported by the Crescent
City Jewish News owned and edited by Alan Smason)

2021:
The Tikvah Fund is scheduled to present the second lecture in the series “The
Artiest In Modern Jewish Literature” with author Dora Horn.

2021:
The London School of Jewish Studies is scheduled to present Dr. Erica Brown as
she explores the book of Esther.

2021:
In association with The Jewish News, ORT UK is scheduled to present a virtual
business event “Back to the Future: Innovating the Way We Work.”

2021:
The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to hold a second of hearings for
Merrick Garland, the nominee for Attorney General.

2022:
The Sir Martin Gilbert Learning Center is scheduled to host a lecture by Lee
Pollock on “Churchill and the Royals.”

2022:
LSJS is scheduled to host a lecture by Rabbi Alan Haber on “The Year of
Shemita: From Biblical Revolution to Modern Solution.”

2022:
As President Putin continues his moves to annex some or all of Ukraine,  “Israel’ diplomatic staff in Ukraine has
moved to from Kiev to Lviv. (As reported by TOI)

2022:
In Columbus, OH, Congregation Tifereth Israel is scheduled to host a triple
header via Zoom, the Rabbis Study Circle, followed by the Short Story Group and
the grand finale of a Lunch and Learn featuring a study of “The Shema” with
Rabbi Braver.

2023:
In Metairie, LA, Chabad is scheduled to host a monthly event for women.

2023:
In Coralville, IA, Congregation Agudas Achim is scheduled to host its Senior
Citizen Brunch.

2023:
Jewish foodie Joel Haber is scheduled to discuss “Jews and Alcohol, Israeli
Food” in Palm Beach Gardens, FL.

2023:
Temple Judea is scheduled to host an in-person and livestream morning minyan
with Rabbi Feivel and Canto Abbie followed by a Mussar Class.

2023:
“The U.N. exhibit that remembers when the world turns its back o stateless
Jewish refugees” is scheduled to come to an end today.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/un-exhibit-remembers-when-the-world-turned-its-back-on-stateless-jewish-refugees/

 

2023:
Weitzman Museum CEO Dr. Misha Galperin is scheduled to join journalist
Vladislav Davidzon to discuss the contemporary Jewish history of Ukraine,
Jewish stories of the past year’s war, and the future of the Jewish community
in Ukraine.

2023:
The Center for Jewish History is scheduled to present a lecture by Serafim
Velkovich on “Family History Today: Polish Jewish in the USSR During WW II.”

2023
In collaboration with students from Mannes College of Music, the musicians of
the Exilarte Center in Vienna are scheduled to provide a concert of the music
of composers labeled ‘degenerate by the Nazis” including
Julius Bürger, Hals Gál, Andre Singer, Gustav Lewi,
Walter Arlen, Vally Weigl and Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

2023: “The defense
establishment is preparing for possible revenge attacks and rocket fire from
the Gaza Strip after 10 Palestinians were killed and over 100 others were
injured in armed clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces in Nablus.”
(As reported by Tzvi Joffre)

2024: Representative Ritchie
Torres who is “Israel’s staunchest defender in the House of Representatives”
and who is neither Jewish nor desperate for Jewish votes since his district is
heavily African American and Latino is scheduled to speak at Friday Night
Services at Temple Emanu-El in New York.

2024: Chabad Lubavitch of
Arkansas, led by Rabbi Pinchas Ciment, the lamplighter par excellence, is scheduled
to host an Oneg Shabbat which means “A warm and engaging Shabbat meal complete
with “delicious food with song, story and great friendship.”

2024: Kan Kol Hamusika is
scheduled to broadcast a Young Artists Concert featuring “outstanding young
soloists and ensembles.”

2024: At Temple Judea, Rabbi
Yaron and Cantor Abbie are scheduled to lead two Friday night services, the
second o which will be followed by an Dessert Oneg,

2024: The Museum at Eldridge
Street is scheduled to host a walking tour of the Bowery.

2024: As
February 23rd begins in Israel, the Hamas
held hostages begin day 140 in captivity
.  (Editor’s note: this situation is too fluid
for this blog to cover so we are just providing a snapshot as of the posting at
midnight Israeli time.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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