Literatura académica sobre el tema "Jewish Committee on Scouting"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Jewish Committee on Scouting"
Andrew, Lucy. "“Be Prepared!” (But Not Too Prepared)". Boyhood Studies 11, n.º 1 (1 de marzo de 2018): 47–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/bhs.2018.110104.
Texto completoKaufman, Menahem. "The American Jewish committee and Jewish statehood, 1947–1948". Studies in Zionism 7, n.º 2 (septiembre de 1986): 259–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13531048608575903.
Texto completoGrzybowski, Romuald. "Odradzanie się harcerstwa polskiego po 1956 r. i próby włączenia go w struktury systemu wychowawczego szkoły". Biuletyn Historii Wychowania, n.º 23 (11 de marzo de 2019): 35–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/bhw.2007.23.3.
Texto completoLebowitz, Arieh. "The Jewish Labor Committee: Past and Present". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 12, n.º 3 (1994): 96–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/sho.1994.0040.
Texto completoGreenbaum, Avraham. "Rehabilitation of the Jewish anti‐fascist committee". Soviet Jewish Affairs 19, n.º 2 (junio de 1989): 60–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13501678908577637.
Texto completoSimon, Art. "Broadcasting Jewish Americanism: The American Jewish Committee and Live Television in the 1950s". American Jewish History 105, n.º 4 (octubre de 2021): 535–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ajh.2021.0064.
Texto completoWierzbieniec, Wacław. "The Consequences of the Lviv Pogrom on November 22–23, 1918, in Light of the Findings and Actions of the Jewish Rescue Committee". Scripta Judaica Cracoviensia 18 (2021): 33–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20843925sj.20.003.13871.
Texto completoLebowitz, Arieh, Gail Malmgreen y Robert F. Wagner. "The Jewish Labor Committee: A Resource for Researchers". Journal of Holocaust Education 6, n.º 2 (septiembre de 1997): 110–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17504902.1997.11087046.
Texto completoNgai, Mae M. "The Strange Career of the Illegal Alien: Immigration Restriction and Deportation Policy in the United States, 1921–1965". Law and History Review 21, n.º 1 (2003): 69–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3595069.
Texto completoInna N., Mamkina. "Jewish Education State Policy in the First Half of the XIXth Century". Humanitarian Vector 17, n.º 3 (octubre de 2022): 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.21209/1996-7853-2022-17-3-27-36.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Jewish Committee on Scouting"
Laffer, Dennis Ross. "Jewish Trail of Tears II: Children Refugee Bills of 1939 and 1940". Scholar Commons, 2018. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7186.
Texto completoLaffer, Dennis Ross. "The Jewish Trail of Tears The Evian Conference of July 1938". Scholar Commons, 2011. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/3195.
Texto completoPâris, de Bollardière Constance. ""La pérennité de notre peuple" : une aide socialiste juive américaine dans la diaspora yiddish, le Jewish Labor Committee en France (1944-1948)". Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017EHES0024.
Texto completoIn the aftermath of the Holocaust, the material aid and moral support provided by the Jews of the United States played a considerable role in the reconstruction of European Jewry. This wide philanthropic undertaking was implemented through several completementary channels: the major, inclusive and unified relief of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee was supplemented by smaller networks of aid. If communal action was indeed necessary and efficient, each part of the Jewish world of the United States was willing to rescue its kin and to act independently to ensure the continuance of its own meaning of Jewishness. Within this frame, American Jewish Socialists of the Jewish Labor Committee, an anti-Nazi organizaton created in New York in 1934, supported the survivors of the non-Communist Yiddish world. Thousands of Holocaust survivors headed to Paris in the late 1940s, many staying in transit before leaving for their final destinations overseas. At that time, this European metropolis represented a place of hope for the fulfilment of their minority culture. The Jewish Labor Committee thus significantly concentrated on those survivors settled in France, who for the most part lived in or around the French capital. This study of the Jewish Labor Committee in France from 1944 to 1948 describes the concerns Bundists and Jewish Socialists of Yiddish culture faced in the aftermath of the genocide and the early Cold War period. Focusing on the inner circles of those actors as well as their interaction with the different Jewish and political groups which surrounded them, I question how they responded to the stakes of the postwar years and how they worked to perpetuate their political and cultural project outside of their communities of origin in Eastern Europe. The action of the Jewish Labor Committee in postwar France required considerable exchanges: of letters, information, people, material goods and money. These exchanges provide the resources for an analysis of the interaction of immigrants settled in two centers of a divergent migration. Inspired by research on transnationalism among first-generation immigrants, this study explores the movement of ideas and people across frontiers and the negotiation between two national contexts. If such questions are usually applied to migrants’ connections to their country of origin, I adapt them in the context of connections of migrants with another center of their diaspora. In the case of this encounter between Jewish Socialists in the United States and France, such a transnational approach leads me to evaluate the degrees of proximity between these two centers of the « Yiddish diaspora » in the aftermath of destruction
Sanzenbacher, Carolyn. "The International Committee on the Christian Approach to the Jews and its role in ecumenical Protestant understanding of Antisemitism and the Jewish problem during the Hitler years". Thesis, University of Southampton, 2016. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/402372/.
Texto completoHobson, Faure Laura. "Un plan Marshall juif : la présence juive américaine en France aprés la Shoah, 1944-1954". Paris, EHESS, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009EHES0023.
Texto completoFrom 1944 through 1954, American Jews channeled over 27 million dollars to the Jews of France: 1 to help rebuild Jewish life after the Shoah. This dissertation questions the nature and reception of this aid by the Jews of France, and in particular, asks how it influenced French Jewish life in the years following the war. This study contributes to our understanding of the "Americanization" of Europe after World War II, highlighting an area of activity that has received little scholarly attention: the social sector. American Jewish organizations, in particular, the American Joint Distribution Committee (the JOC), served as "vectors" in this process. In France, the JOC supported 72% of the expenses of Jewish welfare organizations in 1946, 54. 5% of these costs in 1949, and 40% 1 in 1952. It is estimated that the JDC aided 26,000 individuals in France in 1944 alone, which represents between 13 and 15% of the estimated Jewish population at this time. The activities of other American and international Jewish organizations, including the Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant Aid Society, the American Jewish Committee, the National Council of Jewish Women, the Jewish Labor Committee, the World Jewish Congress and the World Union for Progressive Judaism are also explored. The sources that have been used to construct our knowledge of the American Jewish presence in France reflects the histoire croisée method; public and private archives in France, Israel and the United States, in addition to sixty oral history interviews, help us understand the American Jewish presence in its complexity, through a variety of perspectives
Biesse, Cindy. "Les Justes parmi les Nations de la région Rhône-Alpes : étude prosopographique". Thesis, Lyon 3, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015LYO30046.
Texto completoWhat a heterogeneous population that the Righteous among the nations of Rhône-Alpes and, by this way, little comprehensible! If they don’t embody all the situations of the rescue, the Righteous enlighten, only because they do exist, a piece of the civilian Resistance under the Occupation. These people belong to an unusual region, as fated for the welcome. Its various landscapes led to the experiment of all the types of tourism. This practicing country is also the ground of new religious experiences and the cradle of the Christian democracy. The appeal of this crossroads strengthens under the Occupation with the arrival of exiles, Jews in particular, who try to take back their former life. The raids of the summer 1942 make suddenly the help to the pursued people a question of survival. Moved by common values, encouraged by the clerics who surround them, people mobilize. Thus real networks of support arise, transforming villages into sanctuaries, common people into heroes
Altar, Sylvie. "Etre juif à Lyon de l'avant-guerre à la libération". Thesis, Lyon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LYSE2095.
Texto completoThe global framework of the Jew's persecutions in France as well as the mechanisms of the Shoah are widely known. 80 000 Jews out of the 330 000 who were living in France in 1940 have been the victims of state persecutions and deportations. On this side of this national history, Andre Kaspi was surprised in 1991 at seeing that cities as populated as Lyon, Toulouse or Grenoble had not been given an active and scientific consideration (Les Juifs pendant l'Occupation, Édition du seuil, 1991, 150 p.). Local research have since then enabled to address this lack. However, the daily course of operations, as close as possible to each individual, still deserves to be submitted to new investigations, without losing sight of the diversity of situations on both sides of the line of demarcation. The city of Lyon, which was within the unoccupied zone until November 1942, is not to be compared with the city of Paris which had been occupied from June 1940.In this essay, we kept wondering about the causes related to the specificities of the city of Lyon. On the whole, the fate of the Jews in the capital of the Gauls was almost the same as for their co-religionists in the south zone. Nevertheless, writing about the history of the Jews in Lyon from the pre-war years to the Liberation comes down to taking an interest in different journeys though life and survival within a city which has its own features.Besides tackling the Shoah in the Rhone city of Lyon, the history of the Jews in Lyon from the pre-war years to the Liberation, also aims at telling about the shock waves experienced by individuals in a Europe in war and perceiving what was happening to them. By paying more attention to the fabric of daily life seen in its individual diversity, we thereby intend to reconstruct the human dimension of a world which was once on the brink of the abyss
Zelin, Richard David. "Ethnic and religious group politics in the United States the case of the American Jewish Committee, 1982-1987 /". 1992. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/27039309.html.
Texto completoLibros sobre el tema "Jewish Committee on Scouting"
America, Boy Scouts of, ed. Activities and civic service committee guide. Irving, Tex: Boy Scouts of America, 1999.
Buscar texto completoSybil, Milton, Bogin Frederick D y American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee., eds. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York. New York: Garland, 1995.
Buscar texto completoAmerican Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York. New York: Garland Pub., 1995.
Buscar texto completoSybil, Milton, Bogin Frederick D y American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee., eds. American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, New York. New York: Garland, 1995.
Buscar texto completoAlfredo, Glaser, Cytrynowicz Roney 1964-, Zuquim Judith y Congregação Israelita Paulista (São Paulo, Brazil), eds. 60 anos de escotismo e judaísmo: Uma história do Grupo Escoteiro e Distrito Bandeirante Avanhandava, 1938-1998. São Paulo: Congregação Israelita Paulista, 1999.
Buscar texto completoMendelsohn, John. Jewish emigration, 1938-1940, Rublee negotiations, and Intergovernmental Committee. Clark, NJ: Lawbook Exchange, 2009.
Buscar texto completoMendelsohn, John. Jewish emigration, 1938-1940, Rublee negotiations, and Intergovernmental Committee. Editado por Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees. Clark, NJ: Lawbook Exchange, 2009.
Buscar texto completoMendelsohn, John. Jewish emigration, 1938-1940, Rublee negotiations, and Intergovernmental Committee. Editado por Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees. Clark, NJ: Lawbook Exchange, 2009.
Buscar texto completoJohn, Mendelsohn y Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees., eds. Jewish emigration 1938-1940, Rublee negotiations, and Intergovernmental Committee. Clark, NJ: The Lawbook Exchange, 2009.
Buscar texto completoMendelsohn, John. Jewish emigration, 1938-1940, Rublee negotiations, and Intergovernmental Committee. Editado por Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees. Clark, NJ: Lawbook Exchange, 2009.
Buscar texto completoCapítulos de libros sobre el tema "Jewish Committee on Scouting"
Shlomi, Hanna. "The ‘Jewish Organising Committee’ in Moscow and the ‘Jewish Central Committee’ in Warsaw, June 1945 — February 1946: Tackling Repatriation". En Jews in Eastern Poland and the USSR, 1939–46, 240–54. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21789-2_14.
Texto completoMacher-Kroisenbrunner, Heribert. "Das American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (AJDC) in der britischen Besatzungszone Österreichs". En Nachkriegserfahrungen, 225–52. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737012843.225.
Texto completoYankelevitch, Esther. "War and Nationalism in Palestine: The Jewish Migration Committee in the Galilee During the First World War". En The Jewish Experience of the First World War, 85–109. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-54896-2_5.
Texto completoRedlich, Shimon. "The Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in the USSR: New Documentation from Soviet Archives". En Der Spätstalinismus und die "jüdische" Frage, 53–68. Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.7788/9783412304324-003.
Texto completoFelsenstein, Frank. "Ten". En No Life Without You, 83–94. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0334.10.
Texto completoFelsenstein, Frank. "Thirty". En No Life Without You, 459–512. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0334.30.
Texto completo"Editorial Committee". En A History of Jewish-Muslim Relations, 9–12. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400849130-002.
Texto completo"Appendix C The American Jewish Committee". En Jewish Life in Nazi Germany, 190–94. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781845459796-014.
Texto completoPomson, Alex. "Jewish Schools, Jewish Communities". En Jewish Day Schools, Jewish Communities, 1–28. Liverpool University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113744.003.0022.
Texto completo"Evidence Given to Palestine’s Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry, Which Visited Baghdad". En Modern Middle Eastern Jewish Thought, 138–40. Brandeis University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv102bhzm.32.
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