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re> logoshin
#belarus
Gene Warech <operawriter@...>
This interests me because my mother grew up in Lahishyn. for which
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
alternate spellings of Logushin, Logashin, Logichin, Logishyn, and Lohiszym are listed at jewishgen.org/belarus/shtetls/slogishinpm.htm. With all of those variants, and the town (about 15 miles NNW of Pinsk) is listed as Lahisyn on maps. This is the first I've heard of Telehany. However since reading your e-mail, I have already seen references to some one moving >from Telekhany to Lahisyn, of Telekhany having been destroyed during WW I (in which there was a battle of Lahisyn), and even a hint of equivalence. Not so by the way my mother moved to Lahisyn sometime before that war with her mother and siblings, after her father died in his thirties, to live with her maternal grandparents. My mother's name was Miriam Snowsky, she changed to Mary Snow when she came to the US in 1924. I have no idea of what her grandfather's name was. Gene Warech operawriter@mac.com
On Nov 18, 2003, at 10:00 PM, Belarus SIG digest wrote:
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Re: Need Help Reading A Postcard
#romania
Vivian Kahn
Henry,
Your postcard is written in Hungarian. I suggest that you send your inquiry to the Hungarian SIG. Our subscribers include quite a few folks who are fluent in Hungarian. Vivian Kahn, H-SIG coordinator
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Belarus SIG #Belarus re> logoshin
#belarus
Gene Warech <operawriter@...>
This interests me because my mother grew up in Lahishyn. for which
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
alternate spellings of Logushin, Logashin, Logichin, Logishyn, and Lohiszym are listed at jewishgen.org/belarus/shtetls/slogishinpm.htm. With all of those variants, and the town (about 15 miles NNW of Pinsk) is listed as Lahisyn on maps. This is the first I've heard of Telehany. However since reading your e-mail, I have already seen references to some one moving >from Telekhany to Lahisyn, of Telekhany having been destroyed during WW I (in which there was a battle of Lahisyn), and even a hint of equivalence. Not so by the way my mother moved to Lahisyn sometime before that war with her mother and siblings, after her father died in his thirties, to live with her maternal grandparents. My mother's name was Miriam Snowsky, she changed to Mary Snow when she came to the US in 1924. I have no idea of what her grandfather's name was. Gene Warech operawriter@mac.com
On Nov 18, 2003, at 10:00 PM, Belarus SIG digest wrote:
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Romania SIG #Romania Re: Need Help Reading A Postcard
#romania
Vivian Kahn
Henry,
Your postcard is written in Hungarian. I suggest that you send your inquiry to the Hungarian SIG. Our subscribers include quite a few folks who are fluent in Hungarian. Vivian Kahn, H-SIG coordinator
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Re: which Kamenetz?
#belarus
Jenni Buch
RE Albert Singer's post about his grandparents coming >from Kamenetz.
Is its Kamenetz-Podolsk or just Kamenetz? My father's family came >from a town 25 miles north of Brest-Litovsk in Belarus.... it was called Kamenetz-Litovsk, now it is just Kamenetz, Belarus. If your family came >from Kamenetz-Podolsk(that means of Podolia) than that is in the Ukraine south west of Kiev and not part of the Belarus SIG ... however, there was a famous Kamenetzer Rabbi and Shul in New York which was transferred >from Kamenetz Litovsk, Belarus. So maybe this is the Kamenetz you are referring to... i can give you a bit of info about this town - my special interest being Kamenetz. However, you have to determine which Kamenetz it was. If you go into the jewishgen Yizkor book site, you will find the Kamenetz Yizkor Book which includes an article about the Kamenetzer Shul and it's Rabbi in New York.. Jenni Buch, Melbourne Australia
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Belarus SIG #Belarus Re: which Kamenetz?
#belarus
Jenni Buch
RE Albert Singer's post about his grandparents coming >from Kamenetz.
Is its Kamenetz-Podolsk or just Kamenetz? My father's family came >from a town 25 miles north of Brest-Litovsk in Belarus.... it was called Kamenetz-Litovsk, now it is just Kamenetz, Belarus. If your family came >from Kamenetz-Podolsk(that means of Podolia) than that is in the Ukraine south west of Kiev and not part of the Belarus SIG ... however, there was a famous Kamenetzer Rabbi and Shul in New York which was transferred >from Kamenetz Litovsk, Belarus. So maybe this is the Kamenetz you are referring to... i can give you a bit of info about this town - my special interest being Kamenetz. However, you have to determine which Kamenetz it was. If you go into the jewishgen Yizkor book site, you will find the Kamenetz Yizkor Book which includes an article about the Kamenetzer Shul and it's Rabbi in New York.. Jenni Buch, Melbourne Australia
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Re: AUERBACH from Krotoszyn
#rabbinic
Neil@...
See my book "Avnei Zikaron" for full detalson the Auerbach family
you seek. His ancestry and also a copy of his epitaph. The book includes a CD. Dr. Neil Rosenstein Elizabeth, N.J. mailto:neil@tali.com
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Rabbinic Genealogy SIG #Rabbinic Re: AUERBACH from Krotoszyn
#rabbinic
Neil@...
See my book "Avnei Zikaron" for full detalson the Auerbach family
you seek. His ancestry and also a copy of his epitaph. The book includes a CD. Dr. Neil Rosenstein Elizabeth, N.J. mailto:neil@tali.com
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Re: Snitkov/Snitkovo/Snitko
#ukraine
David T Mason <dave_mason@...>
1. Snitkov / Snitkowo / Snitko - ShtetLinks Page in Process! This is a really wonderful idea! Bring everything for one town into a single website. And if material can be translated back and forth between Ukrainian and English, it's an ongoing link between the town and its "alumni". Hope this idea spreads to other towns. Dave Mason
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Ukraine SIG #Ukraine Re: Snitkov/Snitkovo/Snitko
#ukraine
David T Mason <dave_mason@...>
1. Snitkov / Snitkowo / Snitko - ShtetLinks Page in Process! This is a really wonderful idea! Bring everything for one town into a single website. And if material can be translated back and forth between Ukrainian and English, it's an ongoing link between the town and its "alumni". Hope this idea spreads to other towns. Dave Mason
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Fishbein-Weinberg Family Web Site Live: 17 Town Sites
#ukraine
Fishbein Associates, Inc.
Dear family and friends:
With this e-mail we would like to formally announce the on-line premier of the Fishbein-Weinberg Family web site. The site can be accessed at the following URL: www.familyroots.us. We are excited that finally, after nearly two years of work, our family's remarkable journey through history can finally be brought to life through pictures, anecdotes, documents and maps. The ancestral towns featured, or to be featured, on this site include: Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Augustow, Poland Chernivtsi, Ukraine Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.A. Klishkivtsi, Ukraine (formerly Bessarabia) Khotin, Ukraine (formerly Bessarabia) Manchester, England New York, N.Y., U.S.A. Miskolc, Hungary Novoselitsa, Ukraine Shilovtsi, Ukraine Suwalki, Poland Uscie Biskupie (Galicia) Ukraine Warsaw, Poland Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Zhvanets, Ukraine This site is very much a work in progress. It is the beginning of a project that we hope will be taken up by succeeding generations. In the months and years ahead it is our goal to bring to light additional material detailing the lives of our ancestors and the towns and societies in which they lived. For ours is a story rich in texture and meaning. It also is a story punctuated by tragedy. Wars, revolutions and the Holocaust have all played a part in shaping our family destiny. In the sweep of our history can be seen the broad contours of the modern Jewish experience. It is an experience >from which we have drawn inspiration and hope even as the dark clouds of Fascism, Communism and anti-Semitism brought devastation to Europe and the World. The Fishbein-Weinberg Family web site is organized around the seventeen principal towns and villages in which our ancestors lived. Each section follows the same format with pages devoted to a town's history, community life, burial sites, maps and pictures. There also is a section detailing the landsmanshaften (immigrant groups organized around families or their towns of origin), established by the two branches of our family when they reached America. We invite all visitors to our site to contact us with suggestions on how it might be improved. Similarly, we encourage anyone with family information, photographs or documentation of general interest to contribute them to the site. We would be delighted to consider new material for inclusion on the web site as well as in the extensive Family Tree Maker data base which we maintain and continually update. Our goal is to acquire at least one picture of each family member and as much life cycle data as we can gather. This would include such information as birth and death dates, occupation, other life cycle dates, educational background, military service, marital status, children, immigration, and home life. We also invite non-family members to contribute to the ancestral town portion of the site. We are pleased to include material that highlights the central role Jews played in the lives of these communities. Most of this site is open to the public and is searchable on the web. However, material related to specific family members, to include the presentation of specific descendent trees, will be eventually uploaded to the site. That new material will be password protected and only accessible to family members. We invite all visitors to the Fishbein-Weinberg Family Web site to sign the guest book by clicking on the appropriate button bar. All comments and suggestions are welcome. Please note that that a small box labeled "Change Detection" is located at the bottom of the site's home page. If you type your e-mail address in this box you will be notified automatically in your e-mail every time the family web site is updated. To all those who view this web site, we hope it serves as an inspiration to preserve their family history and to take pride in their Jewish identity; for both comprise the essence of who we are. Sincerely, Rand and Julie Fishbein Potomac, Maryland www.familyroots.us
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Ukraine SIG #Ukraine Fishbein-Weinberg Family Web Site Live: 17 Town Sites
#ukraine
Fishbein Associates, Inc.
Dear family and friends:
With this e-mail we would like to formally announce the on-line premier of the Fishbein-Weinberg Family web site. The site can be accessed at the following URL: www.familyroots.us. We are excited that finally, after nearly two years of work, our family's remarkable journey through history can finally be brought to life through pictures, anecdotes, documents and maps. The ancestral towns featured, or to be featured, on this site include: Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Augustow, Poland Chernivtsi, Ukraine Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.A. Klishkivtsi, Ukraine (formerly Bessarabia) Khotin, Ukraine (formerly Bessarabia) Manchester, England New York, N.Y., U.S.A. Miskolc, Hungary Novoselitsa, Ukraine Shilovtsi, Ukraine Suwalki, Poland Uscie Biskupie (Galicia) Ukraine Warsaw, Poland Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Zhvanets, Ukraine This site is very much a work in progress. It is the beginning of a project that we hope will be taken up by succeeding generations. In the months and years ahead it is our goal to bring to light additional material detailing the lives of our ancestors and the towns and societies in which they lived. For ours is a story rich in texture and meaning. It also is a story punctuated by tragedy. Wars, revolutions and the Holocaust have all played a part in shaping our family destiny. In the sweep of our history can be seen the broad contours of the modern Jewish experience. It is an experience >from which we have drawn inspiration and hope even as the dark clouds of Fascism, Communism and anti-Semitism brought devastation to Europe and the World. The Fishbein-Weinberg Family web site is organized around the seventeen principal towns and villages in which our ancestors lived. Each section follows the same format with pages devoted to a town's history, community life, burial sites, maps and pictures. There also is a section detailing the landsmanshaften (immigrant groups organized around families or their towns of origin), established by the two branches of our family when they reached America. We invite all visitors to our site to contact us with suggestions on how it might be improved. Similarly, we encourage anyone with family information, photographs or documentation of general interest to contribute them to the site. We would be delighted to consider new material for inclusion on the web site as well as in the extensive Family Tree Maker data base which we maintain and continually update. Our goal is to acquire at least one picture of each family member and as much life cycle data as we can gather. This would include such information as birth and death dates, occupation, other life cycle dates, educational background, military service, marital status, children, immigration, and home life. We also invite non-family members to contribute to the ancestral town portion of the site. We are pleased to include material that highlights the central role Jews played in the lives of these communities. Most of this site is open to the public and is searchable on the web. However, material related to specific family members, to include the presentation of specific descendent trees, will be eventually uploaded to the site. That new material will be password protected and only accessible to family members. We invite all visitors to the Fishbein-Weinberg Family Web site to sign the guest book by clicking on the appropriate button bar. All comments and suggestions are welcome. Please note that that a small box labeled "Change Detection" is located at the bottom of the site's home page. If you type your e-mail address in this box you will be notified automatically in your e-mail every time the family web site is updated. To all those who view this web site, we hope it serves as an inspiration to preserve their family history and to take pride in their Jewish identity; for both comprise the essence of who we are. Sincerely, Rand and Julie Fishbein Potomac, Maryland www.familyroots.us
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Need Help Reading A Postcard
#ukraine
Henry <henry@...>
Hi All,
I would greatly appreciate if anyone can read the postcard (below, click on link) and type it in as it appears in the letter. If you are able to translated the letter into English please translated it for me as well. http://www.glitterygifts.com/pictures.html Thank You Henry Schwartz www.geocities.com/schwartzfamilytree Reaserching: SCHWARTZ - Nyiregyhaza [Hu] - Sarospatak [Hu](Saros-Kis-Patak, Saros-Nagy-Patak) MARKOVICS - Csabanyivka [Ukr](Bacso, Bacovo, Bacsava, Batchive, Chabanivka, Csabanyivka) - Kljacsanovo [Ukr] (Klacsano, Klacana, Klitshanif) BECKERMAN - Lublin [Po] FRUCHTER - Borsa - Bukavina [Ro] STEINBRECHER - Edeleny [Hu] IZSAK - Bacsava [Ukr](Bacso, Bacovo, Chabanivka, Batchive, Csabanyivka) POLACK - <Near Satmer> MARMORSTIEN - Cluj-Napoca [Ro] (Klausenburg, Klausenberg, Kluyzenburg, Kluzh, Kolozhvar, Kolozsvar) GLUCK - Kemecse [Hu]- Bokony [Hu]- Papa [Hu] KLAFTER - Bartfa [Slovakia] ( Bardejov, Bartfeld, Bartfeldt) BENOVICS - Koritnyani [Ukr] (Kereknye, Koreknya) KATZ - Kljucsarki [Ukr] (Klucsarka, Varkulcsa) ROSENFELD SAMAT HELMAN STECKEL GUTTMANN - Nyiregyhaza [Hu] RUBIN FRIEDMAN MOSKOP - Krajnya-Martinka [Ukr] (Martinka, Vegmartonka) STOBER EYBSHUTZ EDELSTEIN FRIEDRICH - Humenne [Slovkia] (Homonna, Homne) ORENSTEIN - Lviv [Ukr] (Lemberg, Leopol, Lwow) GOLD EPSTIEN ELFERMAN FRIED ROTA - Papa [Hu] FISCH - Nagykallo [Hu] HOROWITZ
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Identifying towns in Ukraine
#ukraine
Stepak
The Israel Genealogical Society is working on a project to document all of
the memorials to communities destroyed in the Holocaust which may be found in Israel, as part of our preparations for the 2004 IAJGS (International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies) Conference. This project is called MVC, for Memorials to Vanished Communities. We are nearing completion of this project, and I would like the help of you mavens in locating towns. For each town, we are recording the correct official modern spelling in Latin letters, as well as other names, where they exist. Some of the names on the list may be incorrect, as they are a result of transcription >from Hebrew without vowels. We also give a description of the location, such as NNE of Wlodawa. This is a challenge for people with special knowledge, believe me, as I have identified hundreds of towns using maps, JewishGen Shtetlfinder, and WOWW, so I don’t want anyone wasting their time just retracing my well-trodden footsteps. So that this letter will not be extremely long, I will begin with towns known to be in Ukraine: Butsria near Dragovo Goref/Horef? near Dragovo Imshat? near Dragovo Lezem? near Dragovo Krinikov near Chust and Dragovo Chomlyov near Chust Nankov near Chust Sudavni near Chernivtsi Sechov near Rokitno Sinkovstanits near Radekhow/Lopatyn Skrigolov, I have found in Shtetlinks but not on a map Ellen Stepak Ramat Gan, Israel Researching: GOLDENBERG >from Sosnivka and Belozerka near Kremenets KRUKSTEIN >from the same region Hoping to see you in Jerusalem! July 4-9, 2004 www.jewishgen.org/jerusalem2004
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Ukraine SIG #Ukraine Need Help Reading A Postcard
#ukraine
Henry <henry@...>
Hi All,
I would greatly appreciate if anyone can read the postcard (below, click on link) and type it in as it appears in the letter. If you are able to translated the letter into English please translated it for me as well. http://www.glitterygifts.com/pictures.html Thank You Henry Schwartz www.geocities.com/schwartzfamilytree Reaserching: SCHWARTZ - Nyiregyhaza [Hu] - Sarospatak [Hu](Saros-Kis-Patak, Saros-Nagy-Patak) MARKOVICS - Csabanyivka [Ukr](Bacso, Bacovo, Bacsava, Batchive, Chabanivka, Csabanyivka) - Kljacsanovo [Ukr] (Klacsano, Klacana, Klitshanif) BECKERMAN - Lublin [Po] FRUCHTER - Borsa - Bukavina [Ro] STEINBRECHER - Edeleny [Hu] IZSAK - Bacsava [Ukr](Bacso, Bacovo, Chabanivka, Batchive, Csabanyivka) POLACK - <Near Satmer> MARMORSTIEN - Cluj-Napoca [Ro] (Klausenburg, Klausenberg, Kluyzenburg, Kluzh, Kolozhvar, Kolozsvar) GLUCK - Kemecse [Hu]- Bokony [Hu]- Papa [Hu] KLAFTER - Bartfa [Slovakia] ( Bardejov, Bartfeld, Bartfeldt) BENOVICS - Koritnyani [Ukr] (Kereknye, Koreknya) KATZ - Kljucsarki [Ukr] (Klucsarka, Varkulcsa) ROSENFELD SAMAT HELMAN STECKEL GUTTMANN - Nyiregyhaza [Hu] RUBIN FRIEDMAN MOSKOP - Krajnya-Martinka [Ukr] (Martinka, Vegmartonka) STOBER EYBSHUTZ EDELSTEIN FRIEDRICH - Humenne [Slovkia] (Homonna, Homne) ORENSTEIN - Lviv [Ukr] (Lemberg, Leopol, Lwow) GOLD EPSTIEN ELFERMAN FRIED ROTA - Papa [Hu] FISCH - Nagykallo [Hu] HOROWITZ
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Ukraine SIG #Ukraine Identifying towns in Ukraine
#ukraine
Stepak
The Israel Genealogical Society is working on a project to document all of
the memorials to communities destroyed in the Holocaust which may be found in Israel, as part of our preparations for the 2004 IAJGS (International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies) Conference. This project is called MVC, for Memorials to Vanished Communities. We are nearing completion of this project, and I would like the help of you mavens in locating towns. For each town, we are recording the correct official modern spelling in Latin letters, as well as other names, where they exist. Some of the names on the list may be incorrect, as they are a result of transcription >from Hebrew without vowels. We also give a description of the location, such as NNE of Wlodawa. This is a challenge for people with special knowledge, believe me, as I have identified hundreds of towns using maps, JewishGen Shtetlfinder, and WOWW, so I don’t want anyone wasting their time just retracing my well-trodden footsteps. So that this letter will not be extremely long, I will begin with towns known to be in Ukraine: Butsria near Dragovo Goref/Horef? near Dragovo Imshat? near Dragovo Lezem? near Dragovo Krinikov near Chust and Dragovo Chomlyov near Chust Nankov near Chust Sudavni near Chernivtsi Sechov near Rokitno Sinkovstanits near Radekhow/Lopatyn Skrigolov, I have found in Shtetlinks but not on a map Ellen Stepak Ramat Gan, Israel Researching: GOLDENBERG >from Sosnivka and Belozerka near Kremenets KRUKSTEIN >from the same region Hoping to see you in Jerusalem! July 4-9, 2004 www.jewishgen.org/jerusalem2004
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JGS-Denmark
#ukraine
Elsebeth Paikin
I am pleased to inform you that a new Jewish Genealogical Society
- JGS-Denmark - has been formed: The website is hosted by JewishGen and found at the URL: http://www.jewishgen.org/jgs-denmark/ At present the website is only in Danish, but it will be translated into English as soon as possible. JGS-Denmark is an independent society but will, naturally, cooperate closely with JewishGen's Scandinavia SIG (Denmark): http://www.jewishgen.org/Scandinavia/denmark.htm Best regards Elsebeth Paikin JGS-Denmark http://www.jewishgen.org/jgs-denmark/ mailto:jgsdk_ep@hotmail.com
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Ukraine SIG #Ukraine JGS-Denmark
#ukraine
Elsebeth Paikin
I am pleased to inform you that a new Jewish Genealogical Society
- JGS-Denmark - has been formed: The website is hosted by JewishGen and found at the URL: http://www.jewishgen.org/jgs-denmark/ At present the website is only in Danish, but it will be translated into English as soon as possible. JGS-Denmark is an independent society but will, naturally, cooperate closely with JewishGen's Scandinavia SIG (Denmark): http://www.jewishgen.org/Scandinavia/denmark.htm Best regards Elsebeth Paikin JGS-Denmark http://www.jewishgen.org/jgs-denmark/ mailto:jgsdk_ep@hotmail.com
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INTRO- Seek Eugenia BOSSAK b. 1890 m. Markus GRUNWALD >Berlin 1920
#germany
p.compoint@...
Dear Genners,
I'm looking for the children of Eugenia BOSSAK (born at Konin, Poland in 1890) and Markus GRUNWALD. They married at Poznan ( Poland) in 1920 and they left Poland to Berlin (Germany). I need to know if they had children alive today. In advance, thank you if someone can help me. It's a very important file for me. Antoine Djikpa Paris, France p.compoint@add-genealogie.com
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German SIG #Germany INTRO- Seek Eugenia BOSSAK b. 1890 m. Markus GRUNWALD >Berlin 1920
#germany
p.compoint@...
Dear Genners,
I'm looking for the children of Eugenia BOSSAK (born at Konin, Poland in 1890) and Markus GRUNWALD. They married at Poznan ( Poland) in 1920 and they left Poland to Berlin (Germany). I need to know if they had children alive today. In advance, thank you if someone can help me. It's a very important file for me. Antoine Djikpa Paris, France p.compoint@add-genealogie.com
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