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Kurt’s Cinema Show: When Sophia Loren Came to Israel to Be “Judith”

Towards the middle of the 1960’s, a new kibbutz was established at Tel Avdon in the Western Galilee. A lot of effort went into building it, but no trace remains – besides on the movie screen. The kibbutz was established so that Sophia Loren, who at the time was at the height of her beauty and charm not long after winning the Oscar for Best Actress, could wiggle her hips there while wearing short shorts and a blue shirt. The gorgeous Italian movie star landed in Israel on July 29, 1964. She toured the country for ten days before starting[]

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Jewish Kolkhozes: The Jewish Settlement in Southern Ukraine That Ended in Tragedy

In the first years following the October Revolution, the new Soviet State was suffering from a famine. The attempt to contain a ‘new economic policy’ was a big failure, and people living in cities and villages were forced to stand in line for hours to buy basic commodities such as bread, salt, matches and heating oil. And if they were lucky, they would also get a bit of herring. Despite the famine, the communist regime continued to export grain to other countries, hoping to convey to the outside world that it was a success story. One of those images of[]

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“Ezra forgot his Tefillin and Tallit. He was found slaughtered, drowning in his own blood”: 77 Years After the Tripoli Pogroms

“In our home, we didn’t talk about anything related to the Holocaust or the pogroms,” recounts Ilana Bar-Gil from Modi’in. “I was in shock when my mother began receiving reparations from Germany. And then, little by little, she started telling us what had happened. In 1945, my mother, Dina, was nine years old, the middle child of six siblings. She doesn’t remember a lot about the pogroms, but does remember being hungry all the time. They would rummage through garbage cans for food. One day, she found a piece of bread covered with rat droppings. But because she was so[]

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A Bad Jewish Girl of America: Roseanne Barr is 70

Roseanne Barr has just turned 70. It’s an excellent opportunity to take a close look at the high-profile, complicated and volatile Judaism of one of the most influential, controversial and oftentimes successful women in the American television and entertainment industry. Despite the broad-based consensus regarding her importance in the world of American comedy, as well as the brilliance of the good seasons of the trailblazing sitcom Roseanne – somewhere around the end of the 1980’s and early 1990’s – taking her seriously was a thing that was hard to take seriously. Yet, even when her remarks were confused, not always[]

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Superman and Other Guests: The Jewish Artists Who Used Comics to Paint the Modern-Day Ushpizin in Bright Colors

During Sukkot, ushpizin – Aramaic for guests – are invited to the sukkah. According to the Jewish faith, the spirits of exalted ushpizin come to the sukkah on each day of the seven days of the holiday. One of them heads the ‘delegation’ and the others accompany him. The order of the ushpizin visits varies somewhat between Ashkenazi and Sephardi traditions. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are always the first three guests, and that protocol is not up for debate. But after them, the order of the visits of Joseph, Moses, Aaron and David can vary between the Ashkenazi custom which[]

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How the Inquisition Contributed to Documenting the Yom Kippur Rituals of Jewish Conversos

From 1502 to 1504, the Inquisition in Cordoba conducted an investigation against Juan de Cordoba Membreque, a judge and one of the city’s elders. Those titles were of no use to him when forced to contest a serious allegation that reflected the spirit of the time. He was accused of observing the “fast of the Jews” in his home and, to make matters worse, in the company of other people. The charges relied on testimony provided by a Muslim female servant who worked in the judge’s home. She testified that the master of the house and his guests bathed, put[]

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Moscow 1948, Rosh Hashanah Eve, the Great Synagogue. Golda Meir Arrives. The Rest is History

She had plenty of reasons not to go to Moscow. Israel was less than a month old, the War of Independence was raging, and she was in the middle of a fundraising campaign in the United States. She had left Kiev when it was still part of the Russian Empire. She was 8 years old when her family emigrated to the United States in search of livelihood and a new life. She didn’t even speak Russian. And, in general, there was finally an independent Jewish state and she wanted to be in Israel. On the other hand, she was an[]

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The Morning After: The Jewish Connection of the Birth Control Pill Invention

In the midst of the uproar surrounding the ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States that overturned a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion, many have tried to assess what actual impact the Court’s decision will have. The optimistic interpretation offered by abortion opponents is that the overturning of Roe v. Wade will lead a reduction of about 20 percent in the number of abortions that are performed. But the invention that lowered the abortion rate most dramatically was the birth control pill. So, this time we will talk about three Jewish scientists who were among its inventors.[]

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Koret Foundation Grants $10 Million to Establish the Koret Center for Jewish Civilization at Tel Aviv University in Partnership with ANU – Museum of the Jewish People

Koret Foundation’s $10 Million Grant to Establish the Koret Center for Jewish Civilization at Tel Aviv University in Partnership with ANU – Museum of the Jewish People. To establish a groundbreaking new global education, leadership and research collaborative between Tel Aviv University, ANU – Museum of the Jewish People, and the Koret Foundation The Koret Foundation announced today a $10 million grant to establish the Koret Center for Jewish Civilization, a partnership between the foundation, Tel Aviv University (TAU) and ANU – Museum of the Jewish People (ANU) which will employ a unique educational and cross-disciplinary approach to the challenges[]

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Fact or Legend – Did the Nazis Plan to Open a Museum of an Extinct [Jewish] Race?

In 2014, I went to Bosnia to do a story on the rescue of the Sarajevo Haggadah, which is one of the oldest Jewish books in the world. It was rescued by Muslim curators in two different wars – in the Second World War and in the war in the Balkans. The story was told to me by Enver Imamovic, who salvaged the Haggadah in the 1990’s. According to him, in World War II the librarian, Dr. Dervis Korkut, rescued it from the clutches of the Nazi criminal, Johann Hans Fortner, who was sent to Sarajevo to seize the Haggadah[]

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