JewishGen.org Discussion Group FAQs
What is the JewishGen.org Discussion Group?
The JewishGen.org Discussion Group unites thousands of Jewish genealogical researchers worldwide as they research their family history, search for relatives, and share information, ideas, methods, tips, techniques, and resources. The JewishGen.org Discussion Group makes it easy, quick, and fun, to connect with others around the world.
Is it Secure?
Yes. JewishGen is using a state of the art platform with the most contemporary security standards. JewishGen will never share member information with third parties.
How is the New JewishGen.org Discussion Group better than the old one?
Our old Discussion List platform was woefully antiquated. Among its many challenges: it was not secure, it required messages to be sent in Plain Text, did not support accented characters or languages other than English, could not display links or images, and had archives that were not mobile-friendly.
This new platform that JewishGen is using is a scalable, and sustainable solution, and allows us to engage with JewishGen members throughout the world. It offers a simple and intuitive interface for both members and moderators, more powerful tools, and more secure archives (which are easily accessible on mobile devices, and which also block out personal email addresses to the public).
I am a JewishGen member, why do I have to create a separate account for the Discussion Group?
As we continue to modernize our platform, we are trying to ensure that everything meets contemporary security standards. In the future, we plan hope to have one single sign-in page.
I like how the current lists work. Will I still be able to send/receive emails of posts (and/or digests)?
Yes. In terms of functionality, the group will operate the same for people who like to participate with email. People can still send a message to an email address (in this case, main@groups.JewishGen.org), and receive a daily digest of postings, or individual emails. In addition, Members can also receive a daily summary of topics, and then choose which topics they would like to read about it. However, in addition to email, there is the additional functionality of being able to read/post messages utilizing our online forum (https://groups.jewishgen.org).
Does this new system require plain-text?
No.
Can I post images, accented characters, different colors/font sizes, non-latin characters?
Yes.
Can I categorize a message? For example, if my message is related to Polish, or Ukraine research, can I indicate as such?
Yes! Our new platform allows members to use “Hashtags.” Messages can then be sorted, and searched, based upon how they are categorized. Another advantage is that members can “mute” any conversations they are not interested in, by simply indicating they are not interested in a particular “hashtag.”
Will all posts be archived?
Yes.
Can I still search though old messages?
Yes. All the messages are accessible and searchable going back to 1998.
What if I have questions or need assistance using the new Group?
Send your questions to: support@JewishGen.org
How do I access the Group’s webpage?
Follow this link: https://groups.jewishgen.org/g/main
So just to be sure - this new group will allow us to post from our mobile phones, includes images, accented characters, and non-latin characters, and does not require plain text?
Correct!
Will there be any ads or annoying pop-ups?
No.
Will the current guidelines change?
Yes. While posts will be moderated to ensure civility, and that there is nothing posted that is inappropriate (or completely unrelated to genealogy), we will be trying to create an online community of people who regulate themselves, much as they do (very successfully) on Jewish Genealogy Portal on Facebook.
What are the new guidelines?
There are just a few simple rules & guidelines to follow, which you can read here:https://groups.jewishgen.org/g/main/guidelines
Thank you in advance for contributing to this amazing online community!
If you have any questions, or suggestions, please email support@JewishGen.org.
Sincerely,
The JewishGen.org Team
An Amazing JewishGen Success Story
#general
Meyer Denn <meyerdenn@...>
Dear Fellow JewishGenners,
Last Friday, I posted a request on this digest for assistance in locating a missing person to reconnect her with some family. Now, I am at liberty to share the back story and how this puzzle was miraculously solved after 75 years. First, get a box of tissues. This woman was left by her Jewish parents in a non-Jewish orphanage in Russia in 1941 at the age of two. In 1945, neither parent knew that the other had survived the war. The mother came back for her, but the father was locked away in a gulag in Siberia for eight years. By the time he reached the orphanage, the girl was gone. In the meantime, the mother, not knowing that the father had survived, remarried and the girl took the name of her adopted father. Eventually, they all made Aliya, settling in Karmiel in the late 1950s. The father spent the next 50 years searching aimlessly for his little girl, with only a tiny frazzled group photo of all of the children in the orphanage including his daughter. Of course, his efforts were in vain, since she had changed her name, and there was no way for the father to have known this. In 1991, the father together with his son and his grandchildren >from his second marriage, made Aliya, settling in Haifa. Meanwhile, the father continued to search for his daughter with the hope that just maybe she had made Aliyah, not knowing until his dying day in 2003, that she lived no further than a 10 minutes car ride away. This is where I enter the picture. I made Aliya in 1997, and I lived in Israel for five years. During that time, I took advantage of the Yad Vashem archives to locate family members whom I had never met, but was able to find through their Pages of Testimony. I found the father, who at that time must have been in his late 80s. I drove to Haifa to meet this new-found family. I must admit that I had very little in common with these new immigrants. I did not speak Russian, they did not speak English, neither of us spoke Hebrew that well, but the choppy English that his little 12 year-old grandson understood together with my broken Yiddish and all of our broken Hebrew, we were able to get by. The father explained to me his heartbreaking story about his daughter. He took me in his bedroom and showed me the large collage photo made >from the tiny frazzled photo that he had carried with him all those years hanging above his bed....the last thing he saw before he closed his eyes each night. I could offer little help, unfortunately. At the end of the meeting, we said goodbye and I returned to Jerusalem, never to hear >from or see them again. Fast-forward twenty years. I receive a "friend request" on Facebook from the "little" twelve year-old grandson, who is now 32 years old.He told me about the impression and impact that I left on him as a child so many years before, made him aware for the first time that he was part of a larger picture. He grew up only with his grandparents, parents, an uncle and one brother......no cousins......no extended family. He said that I made him aware that he was part of a BIG family .....a People. He went on to tell me that while some people's lives ended in Poland in 1945, he had decided to begin his new life in Poland by attending a reunion of descendants of families >from Lublin this summer with his fiancé. (I will be attending that same reunion.) He told me that his grandfather had died in 2003. Then he told me some startling news. Because of the spark I lit in him about searching for family, he made it his personal task to find the lost daughter for whom his beloved grandfather had searched for so many years. He eventually found his way to the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, where through their research they were able to discover the name of the mother's second husband, the girl's married name, and even the address in Karmiel and a phone number. The problem.....the phone number no longer worked and she was no longer at that address. This young cousin now turned to me, "You are the master.....can you work your magic? Can you help me find her?" That is when I posted my note last Friday on JewishGen digest looking for help in Karmiel, Israel. While nearly 20 people contacted me to generously offer their assistance, one of the first ones to do so on Saturday night was a very kind attorney in Karmiel, whose partner is Russian. No sooner had I provided him the information (without the entire back story....only the fact that I was looking for this lady) did he respond that not only could he help me, but this exact woman was his client whom he represented in the purchase of her flat 30 years ago, and with the sale of her flat last year. He told me that she had moved into a retirement home, and that he had already spoken with her son, who would be happy to speak with me to learn about why I was searching for her. He gave me his telephone number. I quickly picked up the phone and my fingers fumbled as I pushed the buttons. The deep voice picked up the other line. I explained that I am a genealogist, and I have been researching our mutual family lineage for about 45 years. I explained to him about how we were related through his mother's biological father, of whom he know almost nothing except for the family name. I told him that he was part of a rather large extended family of which he was unaware. We had a very warm and jovial conversation. Then I asked him if he was sitting down, and he sounded confused, "why should I sit down?" I told him....."just sit down for a moment." He replied, "ok....I'm sitting." I said, "you know your grandfather who passed away in the Shoah? The one through whom we are related? He did not die in the Shoah. He survived. He came back to the orphanage to look for your mother. She was gone. He assumed that his wife had been killed in the Shoah, but he continued to search for your mother for many decades. He made Aliya in 1991 and he lived right here in Haifa until he passed away in 2003." There was a silence on the other end of the phone....."Ma ata omer??? (What are you talking about?)," he gasped. I continued......"and your mother has two brothers that she has never met.....and they have children.....and they are all eager and anxious to meet you all and to try and build a relationship......to catch up on a lifetime of missed opportunities. It's not too late.....are you interested? Can your mother handle this news at the age of 78?" His answer was an immediate "OF COURSE.......B'VADAY!!!!!" He gave me his number and told me to have his new cousin be in touch with him as soon as possible.....there is no time to waste. I called my young cousin and told him the news.......he was speechless. Within one hour, he had already arranged a four-way conference call between himself, his father, his new cousin with whom I put him in touch, and the new cousin's sister. After a very warm and excited telephone conversation, they all agreed to convene their families together on the approaching Shabbat to all meet for the first time, and for the sister and her "little brother" whom she has never met to look at each other and marvel at this miraculous opportunity that they have been given to get to know each other at this stage in life. On Shabbat, the young cousin plans to give his aunt a very special gift ......that precious photo collage of her as a little girl that hung over his grandfather's bed for so many years. This is all due to the wonder of JewishGen, and the many kind and generous who give of their time and resources to change lives and make miracles happen. Thank you, JewishGen, and God bless you all!! Kind regards, Meyer Denn Dallas, Texas
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JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen An Amazing JewishGen Success Story
#general
Meyer Denn <meyerdenn@...>
Dear Fellow JewishGenners,
Last Friday, I posted a request on this digest for assistance in locating a missing person to reconnect her with some family. Now, I am at liberty to share the back story and how this puzzle was miraculously solved after 75 years. First, get a box of tissues. This woman was left by her Jewish parents in a non-Jewish orphanage in Russia in 1941 at the age of two. In 1945, neither parent knew that the other had survived the war. The mother came back for her, but the father was locked away in a gulag in Siberia for eight years. By the time he reached the orphanage, the girl was gone. In the meantime, the mother, not knowing that the father had survived, remarried and the girl took the name of her adopted father. Eventually, they all made Aliya, settling in Karmiel in the late 1950s. The father spent the next 50 years searching aimlessly for his little girl, with only a tiny frazzled group photo of all of the children in the orphanage including his daughter. Of course, his efforts were in vain, since she had changed her name, and there was no way for the father to have known this. In 1991, the father together with his son and his grandchildren >from his second marriage, made Aliya, settling in Haifa. Meanwhile, the father continued to search for his daughter with the hope that just maybe she had made Aliyah, not knowing until his dying day in 2003, that she lived no further than a 10 minutes car ride away. This is where I enter the picture. I made Aliya in 1997, and I lived in Israel for five years. During that time, I took advantage of the Yad Vashem archives to locate family members whom I had never met, but was able to find through their Pages of Testimony. I found the father, who at that time must have been in his late 80s. I drove to Haifa to meet this new-found family. I must admit that I had very little in common with these new immigrants. I did not speak Russian, they did not speak English, neither of us spoke Hebrew that well, but the choppy English that his little 12 year-old grandson understood together with my broken Yiddish and all of our broken Hebrew, we were able to get by. The father explained to me his heartbreaking story about his daughter. He took me in his bedroom and showed me the large collage photo made >from the tiny frazzled photo that he had carried with him all those years hanging above his bed....the last thing he saw before he closed his eyes each night. I could offer little help, unfortunately. At the end of the meeting, we said goodbye and I returned to Jerusalem, never to hear >from or see them again. Fast-forward twenty years. I receive a "friend request" on Facebook from the "little" twelve year-old grandson, who is now 32 years old.He told me about the impression and impact that I left on him as a child so many years before, made him aware for the first time that he was part of a larger picture. He grew up only with his grandparents, parents, an uncle and one brother......no cousins......no extended family. He said that I made him aware that he was part of a BIG family .....a People. He went on to tell me that while some people's lives ended in Poland in 1945, he had decided to begin his new life in Poland by attending a reunion of descendants of families >from Lublin this summer with his fiancé. (I will be attending that same reunion.) He told me that his grandfather had died in 2003. Then he told me some startling news. Because of the spark I lit in him about searching for family, he made it his personal task to find the lost daughter for whom his beloved grandfather had searched for so many years. He eventually found his way to the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, where through their research they were able to discover the name of the mother's second husband, the girl's married name, and even the address in Karmiel and a phone number. The problem.....the phone number no longer worked and she was no longer at that address. This young cousin now turned to me, "You are the master.....can you work your magic? Can you help me find her?" That is when I posted my note last Friday on JewishGen digest looking for help in Karmiel, Israel. While nearly 20 people contacted me to generously offer their assistance, one of the first ones to do so on Saturday night was a very kind attorney in Karmiel, whose partner is Russian. No sooner had I provided him the information (without the entire back story....only the fact that I was looking for this lady) did he respond that not only could he help me, but this exact woman was his client whom he represented in the purchase of her flat 30 years ago, and with the sale of her flat last year. He told me that she had moved into a retirement home, and that he had already spoken with her son, who would be happy to speak with me to learn about why I was searching for her. He gave me his telephone number. I quickly picked up the phone and my fingers fumbled as I pushed the buttons. The deep voice picked up the other line. I explained that I am a genealogist, and I have been researching our mutual family lineage for about 45 years. I explained to him about how we were related through his mother's biological father, of whom he know almost nothing except for the family name. I told him that he was part of a rather large extended family of which he was unaware. We had a very warm and jovial conversation. Then I asked him if he was sitting down, and he sounded confused, "why should I sit down?" I told him....."just sit down for a moment." He replied, "ok....I'm sitting." I said, "you know your grandfather who passed away in the Shoah? The one through whom we are related? He did not die in the Shoah. He survived. He came back to the orphanage to look for your mother. She was gone. He assumed that his wife had been killed in the Shoah, but he continued to search for your mother for many decades. He made Aliya in 1991 and he lived right here in Haifa until he passed away in 2003." There was a silence on the other end of the phone....."Ma ata omer??? (What are you talking about?)," he gasped. I continued......"and your mother has two brothers that she has never met.....and they have children.....and they are all eager and anxious to meet you all and to try and build a relationship......to catch up on a lifetime of missed opportunities. It's not too late.....are you interested? Can your mother handle this news at the age of 78?" His answer was an immediate "OF COURSE.......B'VADAY!!!!!" He gave me his number and told me to have his new cousin be in touch with him as soon as possible.....there is no time to waste. I called my young cousin and told him the news.......he was speechless. Within one hour, he had already arranged a four-way conference call between himself, his father, his new cousin with whom I put him in touch, and the new cousin's sister. After a very warm and excited telephone conversation, they all agreed to convene their families together on the approaching Shabbat to all meet for the first time, and for the sister and her "little brother" whom she has never met to look at each other and marvel at this miraculous opportunity that they have been given to get to know each other at this stage in life. On Shabbat, the young cousin plans to give his aunt a very special gift ......that precious photo collage of her as a little girl that hung over his grandfather's bed for so many years. This is all due to the wonder of JewishGen, and the many kind and generous who give of their time and resources to change lives and make miracles happen. Thank you, JewishGen, and God bless you all!! Kind regards, Meyer Denn Dallas, Texas
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JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#yizkorbooks
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#yizkorbooks
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Yizkor Books #YizkorBooks JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#yizkorbooks
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Yizkor Books #YizkorBooks Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#yizkorbooks
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#scandinavia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#scandinavia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#sephardic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#sephardic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Scandinavia SIG #Scandinavia JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#scandinavia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Scandinavia SIG #Scandinavia Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#scandinavia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Sephardic SIG #Sephardim JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#sephardic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Sephardic SIG #Sephardim Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#sephardic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#rabbinic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#rabbinic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Rabbinic Genealogy SIG #Rabbinic JOWBR Grows to Over 3.1 Million Records!
#rabbinic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update to the
JOWBR (JewishGen's Online Worldwide Burial Registry) database. The JOWBR database can be accessed at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/ If you're a new JOWBR user, we recommend that you visit our screencast page at www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/Screencasts/ and take a look at the first two explanatory screencasts. This update, adds approximately 80,000 new records and 14,000 new photos. The database is adding and/or updating 265 cemeteries. This update brings JOWBR's holdings to 3.13 million records and 535,000 photos from approximately 7,100 cemeteries / cemetery sections representing 125 countries! Once again, donors for this update include a mix of individuals, Jewish genealogical societies, historical societies and museums. We appreciate all our donor's submissions and the transliteration work done by a faithful group of JewishGen volunteers. Significant additions to the database include collections >from Belarus (courtesy of our new partnership with Chesed Shel Emet), Moldova (Bessarabia SIG), additional French and German cemetery sets, and United States new and updated sets (Veterans Administration records, Home of Eternity Cemetery (Oakland, CA) United Hebrew Bretheren Cemetery (Richfield, MN), various MA cemeteries (JGSGB). for a complete listing of all cemeteries in JOWBR, please see www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm I want to particularly thank Eric Feinstein who has been helping me to find and gain permission to add many non-US records >from Germany, France and under-represented countries. Eric's group of volunteers includes Sandra Bennett, Lineke Bos, Malka Chosnek, George Goldschmied, Ann Meddin Hellman, Maurice Kessler, Harriet Mayer, Hans Nord, Deborah Ross, Marylin Shalks, and Suzanne Tarica. In addition, a big thank you to our volunteer transliterators, led by Gilberto Jugend, without whom we would not be able to add the information >from some very difficult to read photos. We appreciate all the work our donors have done and encourage you to make additional submissions. Whether you work on a cemetery / cemetery section individually or consider a group project for your local Society, temple or other group, it's your submissions that help grow the JOWBR database and make it possible for researchers and family members to find answers they otherwise might not. Please also consider other organizations you may be affiliated with that may already have done cemetery indexing that would consider having their records included in the JOWBR database. Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Rabbinic Genealogy SIG #Rabbinic Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#rabbinic
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#galicia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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Gesher Galicia SIG #Galicia Memorial Plaques Database Grows to More Than 157,000 Records. Please help us grow!
#galicia
JewishGen is proud to announce its 2017 pre-Conference update for the
Memorial Plaques Database (MPD). The MPD database can be accessed at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/ The MPD database includes the data >from plaques and Yizkor lists >from synagogue and other organizations. Many of these sources include patronymic information. This update added approximately 21,000 records and 20,000 photos >from 22 synagogues in the United States and Canada. This update brings the Memorial Plaques holdings to 157,000 records and 115,000 photos >from approximately 250 synagogues / institutions representing 9 countries. We believe that the MPD is a good example of how users of JewishGen's databases can "give back". If you are a member of a synagogue or other organization with memorial plaques or Yizkor lists, please consider helping us to grow this database. You can find more information on submitting data at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/Submit.htm If you have additional questions, please contact me directly. For a complete listing of the institutions currently in the database, please see http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Memorial/tree/MemList.htm Nolan Altman NAltman@JewishGen.org JewishGen VP for Data Acquisition June, 2017
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