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
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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
list of all jews sent from Salonica to camps
#holocaust
ramnoham@...
Hi,
Looking for the list of all jews sent to death from Salonica and those who servived. Ram Israel
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Re: Is the first name Marx a shortened version of Mordecai
#names
Jeffrey Knisbacher
Marx occurs as a first name in Bedford, England records of my TISINBOM family from Botosan, Romania. Presumably from an original Mordecai. Jeff Knisbacher, Bradenton, Florida
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ViewMate Translation Request - Russian
#translation
paulmoverman@...
I've posted a vital record in Russian for which I need a translation. It is on ViewMate at the following address ... http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM83249 Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. Thank you very much.
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Re: 𝗔𝗡𝗦𝗖𝗛𝗘𝗥 [𝗮𝗸𝗮 𝗔𝗻𝘀𝘇𝗲𝗿], 𝗔𝗯𝗿𝗮𝗺 (𝗯. 𝟭𝟴𝟰𝟱) , 𝗠𝗮𝗿𝗶𝗮𝗺𝗽𝗼𝗹, 𝗦𝘂𝘄𝗮𝗹𝗸𝗶 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗖𝗵𝗶𝗰𝗮𝗴𝗼
#lithuania
#poland
Jill Whitehead
This seems a huge amount of money to pay for memoirs. My great grand uncle Abraham Simon Guttenberg (b 1873, Hull,UK) lived in South Africa from the age of 18 until the outbreak of WW1 in 1914, revisiting again a number of times after WW1, and he also wrote his memoirs whilst there. He met people like Mahatma Ghandi, and people who were looking for gold and diamonds (including the main Jewish families around Johannesburg). When he died, he donated his memoirs to Sheffield Public Library and anyone can read them there, for free. Part of his memoirs (not the S. African part) were made into a radio programme by the BBC a few years ago. So you do not need to pay lots of money for memoirs.
Jill Whitehead, Surrey, UK
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Re: Kansas City Lithuania Jews
#lithuania
#usa
Todd Cohn
Your best best is to take a look at the book by Joseph P. Schultz, Mid-America's Promise: A Profile of Kansas City Jewry.
Good luck! -Todd Cohn Boca Raton, FL
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Re: Is the first name Marx a shortened version of Mordecai
#names
Jill Whitehead
My great great grandfather was Mordecai Serwianski from Sejny in Suwalki gubernia in NE Poland, on the borders with Kovno in Lithuania. He had several grandsons called Marks which was then anglicised to Max or Maxwell. Some of the family emigrated from Liverpool to Chicago in 1905 (having been in Liverpool for 30 years) and called themselves Maxwell, reverting to the patronymic of Mordecai. (NB Serwianski was named after Lake Serwy).
Jill Whitehead, Surrey, UK
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Re: DNA and Gedmatch
#dna
Jeffrey Herrmann
Roberta Estes reported on her blog that the fraudulent emails are coming from “MyHeritaqe,” — that’s a q where there should be a g — not from MyHeritage.
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Re: military notbook
#bessarabia
Adrian Koifman
Hi Erika, thank you for your email.
It´s True, it es fascinating document. If you see the stamp there you may think that this document was used as a passport. There is an inscrpition on the back cover showing ¨Vapor Honades Zeelandia¨ I think it is the boat that my grandfather came from Europe to Buenos Aires, Argentina. On page 16 are two stamps that I understand would be customs (1911 and 1912) written in Russian I think. Adrian Koifman Buenos Aires
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S.geller@...
thanks so much for the info, will check that & see what I can find. Best regards
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Re: Is the first name Marx a shortened version of Mordecai
#names
My ggreat grandfather Mordechai Schoenberg was also known as “Max” on his children’s marriage certificates, etc. I don’t think it would be a stretch for someone to refer to him as Marx but I would think Markus/Marcus would be a better match. However, one never knows with diminutives.
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Re: family name meanings
#names
Eva Lawrence
The literal translation of your name is simply true (wahr) speaker (Sager), ie. teller of truth. Soothsayer is merely a secondary or implied meaning.
-- Eva Lawrence St Albans, UK.
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Re: Seeking Fritz BUKOFZER, film producer- Paris > Switzerland
#france
David Lewin
At 18:06 22/07/2020, Sherri Bobish wrote:
Hi David, Hi Sherri , you do not quote the message to which you respond. Which David is it you address? Do you still have the incoming message? Thanks and be safe David Lewin London
Search & Unite attempt to help locate people who, despite the passage
of so many years since World War II, may still exist "out
there".
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Help in translating a German document dated 1939
#translation
Jugend Gilberto
It is on ViewMate at the following address ...
http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM83245 Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. Thank you very much, Sibila Brummer - Israel
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Re: Family Tree Maker Exposes Data on 60,000 Users
#announcements
#general
Bruce Brown
On Wed, Jul 22, 2020 at 12:59 PM, Jan Meisels Allen wrote:
Family Tree Maker had a data breach leaking 25 GB of data linked to users of the Family Tree Maker software.The mention of a "data breach" may be wrongly interpreted by many that their user data was actually stolen by some bad guy or group. This was not stated as such in the referenced source articles. This was a "white hat" (good guy) exercise to look for weaknesses in the FTM database. The team found the weaknesses and supposedly the vendor corrected problem. These sort of white hat attacks are extremely useful and helpful in improving database security. Is it possible that some bad guy stole the data before the fix? Yes, but that was not stated or proven in the articles. Bruce Brown Falls Church, VA
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Re: military notbook
#bessarabia
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Re: Help with Bessarabia Birth Index
#bessarabia
Rodney Eisfelder
Fran,
Using the record number (M91), and the date, (24-Shevat), navigate back a few pages to frame #649 and you will find Chaim in the second record. The surname Bodner appears as part of the parents names. I hope this helps, Rodney Eisfelder Melbourne, Australia
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Re: Family Tree Maker Exposes Data on 60,000 Users
#announcements
#general
Max Heffler
Geni has 6 Jakob Borger, 2 I manage:
From: main@... [mailto:main@...]
On Behalf Of Jan Meisels Allen via groups.jewishgen.org
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2020 1:49 AM To: JewishGen Discussion Group Subject: [JewishGen.org] Family Tree Maker Exposes Data on 60,000 Users #announcements #general
According to InfoSecurity-magazine.com, Family Tree Maker had a data breach leaking 25 GB of data linked to users of the Family Tree Maker software. After being informed by WizCase the incident was remediated shortly thereafter. Among the details leaked to the public-facing internet were email addresses, geolocation data, IP addresses, system user IDs, support messages and technical details. Some 60,000 users are thought to have been exposed in this privacy snafu.
The data breach also included 25 gigabytes of data mirrored from Ancestry.com LLC.
“The leak exposed technical details about the system’s backend, which could help attackers leverage multiple cyber-attacks on Software MacKiev and its associated companies,” it was claimed.
To read more see: https://www.wizcase.com/blog/mackiev-leak-research/ and https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/genealogy-software-maker-exposes/
Jan Meisels Allen Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee
-- Web sites I manage - Personal home page, Greater Houston Jewish Genealogical Society, Woodside Civic Club, Skala, Ukraine KehilalLink, Joniskelis, Lithuania KehilaLink, and pet volunteer project - Yizkor book project: www.texsys.com/websites.html
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Re: Family Tree Maker Exposes Data on 60,000 Users
#announcements
#general
Max Heffler
And 6 Bernard Borgers, only one I manage:
From: main@... [mailto:main@...]
On Behalf Of Jan Meisels Allen via groups.jewishgen.org
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2020 1:49 AM To: JewishGen Discussion Group Subject: [JewishGen.org] Family Tree Maker Exposes Data on 60,000 Users #announcements #general
According to InfoSecurity-magazine.com, Family Tree Maker had a data breach leaking 25 GB of data linked to users of the Family Tree Maker software. After being informed by WizCase the incident was remediated shortly thereafter. Among the details leaked to the public-facing internet were email addresses, geolocation data, IP addresses, system user IDs, support messages and technical details. Some 60,000 users are thought to have been exposed in this privacy snafu.
The data breach also included 25 gigabytes of data mirrored from Ancestry.com LLC.
“The leak exposed technical details about the system’s backend, which could help attackers leverage multiple cyber-attacks on Software MacKiev and its associated companies,” it was claimed.
To read more see: https://www.wizcase.com/blog/mackiev-leak-research/ and https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/genealogy-software-maker-exposes/
Jan Meisels Allen Chairperson, IAJGS Public Records Access Monitoring Committee
-- Web sites I manage - Personal home page, Greater Houston Jewish Genealogical Society, Woodside Civic Club, Skala, Ukraine KehilalLink, Joniskelis, Lithuania KehilaLink, and pet volunteer project - Yizkor book project: www.texsys.com/websites.html
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Researching CHAMUDIS/CHAMUDES/HAMUDIS/HAMUDES.
#bessarabia
Pablo Libedinsky
My maternal grandfather was one of 12 siblings. He was born in Tatarbunar, Bessarabia in 1885. His parents and 10 children migrated to Argentina in the early 1900's.
One brother (Simon) stayed in Russia and one (Boris) came to the US. From Argentina my grandfather (Felipe) and a brother (Israel) moved to Chile when my mother and I were born. Besides genealogy information, I'd like to find out the origin of the name CHAMUDIS (and its variations). I've read that could be derived from "hamud" in Hebrew and I know what it means.
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Help Identifying 1940s Military Uniform
#general
Jeff Marx
I've posted a picture of a distant cousin in an unknown military uniform. It’s either US, British or German. If one of you has skill in this area, I would appreciate knowing in which country I should start looking for him. The ViewMate link is: Jeff Marx Researching ANSPACHER, AUGAPHEL, AUGENBLICK, BREAKSTONE, BREGSTEIN, CARLEBACH, HIEGENLICH, KUBELSKY, MARX
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