Re: Father's Hebrew name - temple Beth El - Detroit #general
Stan Goodman <safeqSPAM_FOILER@...>
On Tue, 26 Aug 2003 02:31:15 UTC, bsmannlein@... (Barbara
Mannlein) opined: Carol asked for private responses, but I too am interested in thisBut that is not the question asked by the original post. For women not to have a Hebrew name has not been unusual in recent centuries. For men, it has been a rarity. Alas, our ancestors, for better or worse, knew nothing of Political Correctness. To address the original question: The only time anybody in the gentleman's synagogue would have known his Hebrew name (which he almost certainly had) would have been upon ascending to the Torah; from the question, it does not seem that this happened very often, ifat all. Historically, the graves of virtually all Jews buried under Jewish auspices would have been marked by a monument inscribed in Hebrew with the Hebrew name and patronymic of the deceased. One of the least happy developments in American Jewry has been the abandonment of this custom, for no visible reason, so that the Jewish identity (name, father's name, etc.) is lost with the memory of his survivors. That, precisely, is what makes this moment a historical one for Jewish-American genealogy: in the absence of the missing data, genealogy will become difficult or impossible in the community in only a few years. Witness the question that started this thread. -- Stan Goodman, Qiryat Tiv'on, Israel Searching: NEACHOWICZ/NOACHOWICZ, NEJMAN/NAJMAN, SURALSKI: >from Lomza Gubernia ISMACH: >from Lomza Gubernia, Galicia, and Ukraina HERTANU, ABRAMOVICI, LAUER: >from Dorohoi District, Romania GRISARU, VATARU: >from Iasi, Dorohoi, and Mileanca, Romania See my interactive family tree (requires Java 1.1.6 or better): http://www.hashkedim.com Please remove the CAPITAL LETTERS >from my address in order to send me email, and include "JEWISHGEN" in the subject line, else your message will be deleted automatically, unread. |
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