Date   

Re: Tiktin Family of Rabbis #poland

sydney@...
 

I am also related . The Storch Synagogue in Wroclaw might have records. Elyse Eisenberg whom i cc here also has done some research. At Storch Synagogue, contact
Bente Kahan or her Foundation.
Sydney Levine
--
Sydney J. Levine
Los Angeles CA and Berlin, Germany


SCJGS Sunday, April 18th at 1pm Pacific Standard Time- Jewish Genealogy DNA Basics and Beyond #announcements #dna #education #events

Leah Kushner
 

Santa Cruz Jewish Genealogy Society (SCJGS) invites you at 1pm Pacific Standard Time on April 18th

Jewish Genealogy DNA Basics and Beyond

with  David Ellis

 Register for ZOOM link

Non-Member $5 Donation Here

Free to Members-For membership application please email: SCJGSociety@...

Description:

Are you considering taking a DNA test? Have you taken a DNA test to learn about your ancestry?  Are you confused by the results?  This presentation covers the kinds of 
tests available, the major DNA testing services and the differences between them, and how to interpret your results to get the most out of them.  Learn about Jewish 
genealogy DNA challenges. 

Bio:

David Ellis is JGSGB Board member and leader of the Litvak and Galicia SIGs.   He discovered dozens of ancestors unknown to his relatives and initiated contact 
with distant cousins who were out of touch for many years.  He enjoys helping people research their ancestry and is writing a document describing his research.

For more information: SCJGSociety@...

Leah Kushner, President
Santa Cruz Jewish Genealogy Society (SCJGS)


Tiktin Family of Rabbis #poland

KAREN SAUNDERS
 

Hello, I am wondering if anyone has access to records which may provide info./details on the parents of my ggggrandfather Abraham ben Gedaliah Tiktin
With many thanks.
Karen Saunders
- researching Tiktin, Wallerstein, Horowitz, Davidow, Stern, Frank
 
Abraham ben Gedaliah Tiktin
Prussian rabbi
 

Main results

Description

Born: 24 December 1764, Swarzędz, Poland
Died: 27 December 1820, Wrocław, Poland

--
Hello. I would like to join to research info about my 4 x g grandfather Abraham ben Gedaliah Tiktin 1764 - 1820. With thx.


Re: Are "Muni" and "Munya" nicknames? For what name? #names

Gary
 

Now that we're wandering a bit further afield on names, I am reminded the same ggp who had the sister named Manya (or Maria) had another sister (Ida) whose husband apparently was killed in WWII serving in the Russian Army. Ida gave his name as "Musia" (or at least the name was translated that way) in the set of post-war letters I have. Wondering what Musia could be a nickname or variant of, as that might help me look up Ida's husband in the Russian Army databases.

Thanks,
Gary

--
Gary Ehrlich
Rockville, MD
SCVIRSCI, Zhivotov, Ukraine; WASHLIKOVSKY/WASHALKOWSKY, SATER, Bialystock, Poland;
LIFSHITS/LIFSHITZ, GOROVITZ, HOROVITZ, Lvov, Ukraine; Ufa and Moscow, Russia
YAGUDA, Albany, NY


Re: Seeking male descendants of Jean GOLDKETTE #dna #unitedkingdom

David Ziants
 

In my post, I should have suggested to see:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Philip,_Duke_of_Edinburgh

to understand why this is relevant to  Constantine I , King of the Greeks.

--
David Ziants

Ma'aleh Adumim, Israel


Re: Jews with Christian names #names

Dr. Ruth Leiserowitz
 

In Prussia, until 1850, it was forbidden by the state to give Jews names such as "Friedrich" and "Wilhelm" (names of Prussian kings), as well as distinctly Christian names such as Peter, Paul, Christian, Maria, etc. In later decades, these strict regulations no longer applied.

Ruth Leiserowitz
Berlin / Warsaw


April 13: CJH Genealogy Coffee Break #events #announcements #usa

Moriah Amit
 

Tomorrow (4/13) at 3:30 pm Eastern Time, tune into the Center for Jewish History's Facebook page for the next episode of Genealogy Coffee Break. We'll teach you how to search for your immigrant ancestors in the records of the Industrial Removal Office and the Baron de Hirsch Fund. We welcome you to pose your questions to our librarians during the live broadcast. There is no registration or log in. To join the live webinar, click "Follow" or "Like" on the top of the Center's Facebook page and a notification will pop up on your screen when the webinar goes live. Note: If the notification doesn't appear or if you don't have a Facebook account, you can still watch the webinar on our Facebook videos page once it goes live. Catch up on the entire series here.
--
Moriah Amit
Senior Genealogy Librarian, Center for Jewish History
New York, NY
mamit@...


Re: August 1882 Prienai Pogrom: Any Documents from the Trial? #lithuania #poland

Dr. Ruth Leiserowitz
 

The following article (DARIUS STALIŪNAS (2004) Anti-Jewish disturbances in the North-Western provinces in the early 1880s, East European Jewish Affairs, 34:2, 119-138, DOI: 10.1080/1350167052000340913  ) elaborates among others on the events in Prienai, citing a Russian dossier as a source.But the article give no names. The author, Dr. Darius Staliunas, is a researcher at the Institute of History of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences.   

Ruth Leiserowitz
Berlin / Warsaw


Ludza - Town Manager? #latvia #general

Steven Granek
 

Is there a JewishGen “town manager” for Ludza (name in present day Latvia)??
 
Thank you -
 
Steve Granek


Barcelona Entry Document? #records

Steven Granek
 

Can anyone make sense of what this below document actually is and tells one?  I have a Joseph Granek in my family tree - the brother of my Grandfather - no resolution as to what became of him -one of those ‘black holes’ so far.   He lived - I THINK in Lodz but perhaps in Kalisz or even Pabianice.
 
Here’s the document
 

 
 
Steve Granek


Help in translation of gravestone #translation

Enid Rose
 

Assistance needed to translate Hebrew on family gravestone.
EnidRose
 
Paramus NJ
 
 
to translate Hebrew on family gravestone


Help needed tracing descendants of Hannah WEISS GELLER us citizen last location New York #usa

Cynthia Hollinsworth
 

I am trying to trace descendants of Hannah Weiss Geller who was married to my Uncle Wolf (William) Geller from Tarnow, Galicia, Poland.

Hannah was a US citizen and the passenger list of the Ship Batory shows that on 24 August 1939 at age 28 she left the Polish port of Gdynia on the Batory, one week before the Nazis invaded Poland on 1 Sept 1939. She arrived New York on 5 Sept 1939.   (She became a naturalised US citizen in September 1935). The ship manifest showed an address in Brooklyn.

 

My Uncle Wolf died in the Shoah.

--
Cynthia Hollinsworth Cornwall


R' Meir Who Taught GRA Kabbalah in Ciechonowiec #rabbinic #poland #lithuania

Adam Cherson
 

According to the Ciechanowiec YB, the GRA wrote this: “In my youth I arrived during my wanderings and strayings at the hamlet of Ciechanowiec which is full of scribes and sages. The rabbi there, R' Meir was my instructor in the secret Kabbalistic studies, and he was my comrade in the open rabbinic studies.” https://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/ciechanowiec/cie003e.html#Page7

I estimate the year to be around 1740, at which time the GRA was about 20 years old. R' Meir (referred to as 'the' rather than 'a' rabbi) was probably a venerated rabbi by that time of an estimated age of 60 (so born circa 1680). R' Meir may have been the chief rabbi at Ciechanowiec at this time.

Does anyone know who R' Meir was with any more detail?
--
Appreicated,
Adam Cherson


Northeast Indiana Synagogues - Virtual Program on Sunday #jgs-iajgs #announcements

bgephart@...
 

The Northeast Indiana Jewish Genealogy Society is thrilled to welcome Dr. Wendy Soltz on Sunday, April 18th at 2:00 p.m. for a program of “Northeast Indiana Historic Synagogues and Influential Families.”  Soltz will speak on three historic synagogues: 1889 Ahavath Sholom in Ligonier, 1914 B'nai Jacob in Fort Wayne, and 1936/7 Sinai Temple in Marion and highlight some of the families who helped to build them and create sacred spaces for their communities. During the presentation, she will also discuss the larger Indiana Synagogue Mapping Project which she started in 2018 with the Indiana Jewish Historical Society (IJHS). This project uses ArcGIS mapping technology to pinpoint and describe over 90 Indiana synagogues.

Dr. Soltz is currently an Assistant Professor of History and the Director of the Public History Program at Ball State University. Previously, Soltz was Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and History at Defiance College in Defiance, Ohio, and Executive Director of the IJHS. Soltz received her PhD in Modern Jewish, 19th- and 20th- century US, and public history in 2016 from the Ohio State University.

Registration is required to attend this free virtual program.  The link can be found at the NEIJGS website at www.NEIndianaJGS.org/upcoming-events/.

Additional information about the NEIJGS can be found on our website at www.NEIndianaJGS.org, or our Facebook Page, https://www.facebook.com/NEIndianaJGS/.   Contact Betsy Gephart at vp@... for more information.

 

Hope to see you on Sunday!

Sincerely,

Betsy Thal Gephart, vp

Northeast Indiana Jewish Genealogy Society


JGS Toronto. Free Virtual Meeting. EXPLORING CITY DIRECTORIES. Sunny Jane Morton. Wednesday, 28 April 2021, 7:30 p.m.. ET. #announcements #jgs-iajgs

Jerry Scherer
 

JEWISH GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF TORONTO

 

EXPLORING CITY DIRECTORIES

A Family Tree Magazine Webinar

 

Followed by Questions and Answers

with Sunny Jane Morton


VIRTUAL MEETING: View from home


Wednesday, 28 April 2021, 7:30 p.m. ET.

 

Sunny Jane Morton is a contributing editor at Family Tree Magazine, contributing editor at YourDNAGuide.com, editor of Ohio Genealogy News and a blogger for FamilySearch.org.

 

City directories are indispensable locating tools for genealogists, but they go far beyond connecting an ancestor to a certain place in time. They lead to a multitude of sources, contain information of genealogical value beyond the individual listings, and present a fuller picture of our ancestors’ lives.

 

Although the webinar is focused on U.S. city directories, many of the same principles apply in Canada. A PDF with links to major online Canadian city directories will be made available to all attendees.

 

 

To register, please go to

 

https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMvcOiuqD8iH9e9xuJFNMBFf9kvEs5V-EJC

 

Please keep the acknowledgement email when you receive it as it contains your personalized link to join the Zoom meeting.  

 

To our guests, consider joining our membership for only $40.00 per year by Clicking Here or consider a donation by Clicking Here to assist us in continuing our mission providing a forum for the exchange of genealogical knowledge and information. (Canadians receive a CRA tax receipt.)

 

info@...             www.jgstoronto.ca           Tel:  647-247-6414

twitter: jgsoftoronto        facebook: Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto

 

 

Jerry Scherer

Vice President, Communications

jscherer@...

 

 

 

 

 


Re: Assistance Needed to translate the Hebrew on Family Gravestones #translation

Schonfeld.family@...
 

I agree with Keith Osher Phillip's father was indeed Shmuel.
However R' is the equivalent for Mr.

Jacob Shayzaf 


Re: Searching for a relative who escaped to USA from Nazi Germany during WWII #germany #usa #belarus

jbonline1111@...
 

I wonder if you have the year when he came to the United States or any information about where in the United States he lived.  Do you know if he became a US citizen? Was he an adult when he escaped or still a child?  Any such facts might help us in helping you.  
--
Barbara Sloan
Conway, SC


RECHT family of Poland research #poland

Colleen Knol
 

Hi, thanks for accepting my application to join.  I am researching  my RECHT family, from Poland, specifically, Jack (Jakob Gedalia), and his father, Yechiel Altar RECHT.  Jack changed his surname to Rich when he immigrated to the U.S. I've been trying to find birth certificates for them, but can't find anywhere. I'm wondering if someone can help me with info on this?  Thank you, Colleen Knol
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada


database of Hungarian-speaking Jews in Europe during World War II #hungary

John Hoenig
 

I would like to call your attention to a new, searchable database of interest to those with Hungarian-speaking relatives in Europe during World War II. 

 

In 1944, three non-governmental organizations in New York, the World Jewish Congress, the Zionist Organization of America, and the International Rescue and Relief Committee, compiled lists of people in Hungary and Hungarian-speaking lands that wanted to immigrate to Palestine. The lists are comprised of nearly 9,400 people in about 2600 families from Hungarian-speaking lands in present-day Hungary, Romania, Ukraine, Slovakia and Serbia. About a third of the people lived in Budapest, a third in the rest of present-day Hungary, and a third in territory occupied by Hungary.

The lists identify families and contain names, ages, and towns. In many cases, they also contain detailed descriptions of extended families (cousins, in-laws, etc.) and street addresses. Early lists were sent directly to the Jewish Agency for Palestine. After the creation of the US Government’s War Refugee Board, the lists were sent to the Board for forwarding to the representative of the Jewish Agency in Istanbul. The lists are in the records of the War Refugee Board at the F.D. Roosevelt Presidential Library in Hyde Park, New York, and appear online in three pdf files as follows:

http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/_resources/images/wrb/wrb0460.pdf (folder 1)
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/_resources/images/wrb/wrb0461.pdf (folder 2)
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/_resources/images/wrb/wrb0462.pdf (folder 3). 

 

The database is described in a recent article available at: 

 

http://fluke.vims.edu/hoenig/Hoenig_Gyemant_Olosz2020.pdf  

 

and It can be searched online at  

 

https://www.ushmm.org/online/hsv/source_view.php?SourceId=49494 

 

If you request a copy of the original document, you will receive one of the three pdf files listed above. Note that the pdfs are searchable so, if the typing in the original is clear, you should be able to find the record of interest easily. Otherwise, the online database gives the page number and you can flip through the file to the appropriate page.  

 

I had wanted to donate this database to JewishGen but, for reasons that are unfathomable to me, JewishGen was uninterested. The next issue of AVOTAYNU will contain an article in which I describe the holdings of additional relief agency archives which contain Holocaust-related records of interest to genealogists and family historians. Unfortunately, most of those records are not indexed. 

 

John Hoenig, Williamsburg, VA 

Searching HONIG/HONIG (Transylvania), PELLER (Jablonow, Kolomea, Stanislaw), FITZER (Radauti, Stanislaw, Brzezany) 

 
________________________________________________________

John M. Hoenig

Professor of Marine Science | Department of Fisheries Science

Virginia Institute of Marine Science | PO Box 1346 (1375 Greate Rd), Gloucester Pt., VA 23062

 

my webpage:              http://www.vims.edu/people/hoenig_jm/

pdf's of my papers:      http://fluke.vims.edu/hoenig/professor.html

Google Scholar profile: http://scholar.google.com/citations?user=T105G_oAAAAJ&hl=en


Description: cid:1594B4CA-9176-4289-8A7F-09C9F800329E


Re: Jews with Christian names #names

Max Heffler
 

I do not think Berman is goyish. All Berman's I have known were Jewish.

Max Heffler
Houston, TX


From: main@... <main@...> on behalf of Emily Olson via groups.jewishgen.org <gardyloo1=gmail.com@...>
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2021 10:41 AM
To: main@... <main@...>
Subject: Re: [JewishGen.org] Jews with Christian names #names #general
 
I can think offhand of three famous-ish Jews named Christopher. You can’t get more goyish than that. Christopher Berman, Christopher Wallace and Christopher Guest.

--

Max Heffler
Houston, TX
max@...
HEFFLER(Ukraine)/TIRAS(Poland)/WASSEMAN(Lithuania)/MOORE(Poland)/ZLOT(Lithuania)
GORENSTEIN(Ukraine)/FLEISCHMAN(Latvia)/GOLDEN(Lithuania)