Re: (Italy) Database of Foreign Jews Interned in Italy During World War II
#general
Sal & Ellen Barbieri <elsal@...>
http://annapizzuti.it/
Under Regioni & Provencie and Area Download- Internati-- Anna P. has 2 lists for Ferramonti with 1807 and 3280 internees. She also has lists throughout other Italian provinces & I think other places. Bierman's book- Ship Pentcho left Bratislavia for Palestine with 500, has some info on fate of people who left boat in Greece as well as those who wound up in Ferramonti. Ellen Barbieri San Diego CA Researcher # 8286 --- Tom Klein wrote: From: tomk@... Date: Wed, 12 Jul 2017 10:31:20 -0400 The US Holocaust Memorial Museum also has the list of Jews >from Rhodes interned at Ferramonti, 533 names, and it can be browsed: https://www.ushmm.org/online/hsv/person_advance_search.php?SourceId=20882
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JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen Re: (Italy) Database of Foreign Jews Interned in Italy During World War II
#general
Sal & Ellen Barbieri <elsal@...>
http://annapizzuti.it/
Under Regioni & Provencie and Area Download- Internati-- Anna P. has 2 lists for Ferramonti with 1807 and 3280 internees. She also has lists throughout other Italian provinces & I think other places. Bierman's book- Ship Pentcho left Bratislavia for Palestine with 500, has some info on fate of people who left boat in Greece as well as those who wound up in Ferramonti. Ellen Barbieri San Diego CA Researcher # 8286 --- Tom Klein wrote: From: tomk@... Date: Wed, 12 Jul 2017 10:31:20 -0400 The US Holocaust Memorial Museum also has the list of Jews >from Rhodes interned at Ferramonti, 533 names, and it can be browsed: https://www.ushmm.org/online/hsv/person_advance_search.php?SourceId=20882
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Looking for the Shrager Family in Philadelphia
#general
WALTER SPECTOR
Dear Genners,
I have picture >from Ida Shrager Becker's, my aunt, 60th birthday party in 1955 at the Golden Slipper Club. The families attending are Becker and Shrager. I can identify all the Becker related people. There are four unidentified people who I think are related Shragers. Are they Ida's brothers and their wives or her sister? I am looking for members of the extended Shrager family to identify the unknown Shragers. A July 7, 1956 obituary for Israel Shrager lists the following survivors: Wife: Lena Children: Harry, Albert, Nathan Philip, Frances Hecht Brother to: Jonah, Ida Becker, Sarah Chadiker The family lived on the 4900 Block of N 7th St. Your assistance to complete this family story is greatly appreciated. Regards Walter Spector Philadelphia Searching: SPECTOR- Zaslov (Izyaslov) Volhynia Gub. Ukraine-Woodbine NJ-Phila. PA; EBY/Glaymen (AB) Rushany, Grodno Gub. Belarus-Woodbine NJ- Phila.PA; BECKER- Klevan, Rovno Phila. PA Brooklyn NY: GREENSTEIN-Boston MA: SELTZER(ZELTZER)Rovno, Klevan, Alexandria; Poland-Brooklyn NY LONDE, LANDAU,LONDON, LANDER, Proskrov- Phila. PA BOGATIN Lida, Belarus Philadelphia, Atlantic City NJ PITKOWSKI Rushany, Grodno Gub.
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ViewMate translation request - Polish
#general
Asher Vardi
I've posted a vital record in Polish for which I need a translation.
It is on ViewMate at the following address ... http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM56943 Please respond via the form provided in the ViewMate application. Thank you very much. Asher Vardi
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JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen ViewMate translation request - Polish
#general
Asher Vardi
I've posted a vital record in Polish for which I need a translation.
It is on ViewMate at the following address ... http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM56943 Please respond via the form provided in the ViewMate application. Thank you very much. Asher Vardi
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JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen Looking for the Shrager Family in Philadelphia
#general
WALTER SPECTOR
Dear Genners,
I have picture >from Ida Shrager Becker's, my aunt, 60th birthday party in 1955 at the Golden Slipper Club. The families attending are Becker and Shrager. I can identify all the Becker related people. There are four unidentified people who I think are related Shragers. Are they Ida's brothers and their wives or her sister? I am looking for members of the extended Shrager family to identify the unknown Shragers. A July 7, 1956 obituary for Israel Shrager lists the following survivors: Wife: Lena Children: Harry, Albert, Nathan Philip, Frances Hecht Brother to: Jonah, Ida Becker, Sarah Chadiker The family lived on the 4900 Block of N 7th St. Your assistance to complete this family story is greatly appreciated. Regards Walter Spector Philadelphia Searching: SPECTOR- Zaslov (Izyaslov) Volhynia Gub. Ukraine-Woodbine NJ-Phila. PA; EBY/Glaymen (AB) Rushany, Grodno Gub. Belarus-Woodbine NJ- Phila.PA; BECKER- Klevan, Rovno Phila. PA Brooklyn NY: GREENSTEIN-Boston MA: SELTZER(ZELTZER)Rovno, Klevan, Alexandria; Poland-Brooklyn NY LONDE, LANDAU,LONDON, LANDER, Proskrov- Phila. PA BOGATIN Lida, Belarus Philadelphia, Atlantic City NJ PITKOWSKI Rushany, Grodno Gub.
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Russian Archives
#general
David Goldman
One of the problems dealing with Russian archives is that they seem to be be
strict about insisting on proof of relationships through documentation. For example, I cannot prove with actual documentation my relationship to my mother's mother's mother's sister and her son (i.e. my maternal grandmother's aunt and her first cousin). The archives in Ukraine do not seem to be strict like this (for the moment anyway). David Goldman NYC
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JewishGen Discussion Group #JewishGen Russian Archives
#general
David Goldman
One of the problems dealing with Russian archives is that they seem to be be
strict about insisting on proof of relationships through documentation. For example, I cannot prove with actual documentation my relationship to my mother's mother's mother's sister and her son (i.e. my maternal grandmother's aunt and her first cousin). The archives in Ukraine do not seem to be strict like this (for the moment anyway). David Goldman NYC
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New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#poland
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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BialyGen: Bialystok Region #Bialystok #Poland New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#poland
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#lithuania
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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Lithuania SIG #Lithuania New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#lithuania
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#poland
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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JRI Poland #Poland New York Jewish Genealogy Course begins August 4
#poland
Phyllis Kramer
Did your family live in New York? There are many interesting research
possibilities in the Big Apple! JewishGen's Intermediate Course, Breaking Brick Walls in the United States, will focus on New York Resources. This course will be especially useful to those who visit NY; we'll have suggestions on where to research, where to wander and how to get there. If, despite basic online research (census >from familysearch & ancestry, vital records >from italiangen) you have not yet found the Hebrew names, birth year or town for your U.S. immigrant ancestors consider this course as it focuses on the more esoteric documents our ancestors generated, including naturalization, military and governmental records, death records (probate, obituaries, cemeteries), and local archival research. We are proud to feature a personal mentoring program; students use our online FORUM, post an ancestral branch, set goals for research, and work one on one with the instructor. Eight text lessons can be downloaded to read at your own pace and an optional field trip to a New York archive will be scheduled. This course is open for enrollment. PLEASE read the course descriptions and requirements (8-10 hours per week) on www.jewishgen.org/education/description.asp?course=40088 and email any questions. I look forward to interfacing with every student. Phyllis Kramer, New York City VP Education www.jewishgen.org/education
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Viewmate Russian translation request
#poland
Mike Paneth <mike.paneth@...>
Can somebody please translate the following record in Russian for me.
They are on ViewMate at the following address ... http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM56892 Thank you very much. Mike Paneth Melbourne Australia Researching: Paneth (Bielitz-Tarcal-Desz), Szydlo (Warsaw), Rozenryter (Bedzin), Margules (Bedzin), Rothstein (Jaraslow) families
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JRI Poland #Poland Viewmate Russian translation request
#poland
Mike Paneth <mike.paneth@...>
Can somebody please translate the following record in Russian for me.
They are on ViewMate at the following address ... http://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM56892 Thank you very much. Mike Paneth Melbourne Australia Researching: Paneth (Bielitz-Tarcal-Desz), Szydlo (Warsaw), Rozenryter (Bedzin), Margules (Bedzin), Rothstein (Jaraslow) families
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younger Jewish Cemetery Eisenstadt
#austria-czech
Traude Triebel
Since the beginning of 2017 Johannes Reiss (Austrian Jewish Museum) has been
working on a digital edition of the younger Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt. http://www.ojm.at/blog/friedhof-eisenstadt-jung/archiv/ As was the case with the edition of the older Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt and the edition of the Jewish cemetery of Mattersdorf/Mattersburg, all the Hebrew headstone inscriptions are transcribed and all graves are collected by name. As a new feature of this project, translations of all the Hebrew headstone inscriptions are provided; moreover, the focus of work is now on extended biographical data which are checked against the communal registers (Matriken). Currently, the project is a work in progress. As always, comments with genealogical information would be greatly appreciated. This digital edition of the younger Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt is thus a completely revised, enhanced and extended edition of Johannes Reiss, book from 1995:"Hier in der heiligen juedischen Gemeinde. Die Grabinschriften des juengeren juedischen Friedhofs von Eisenstadt". Traude Triebel A-2700 Wr.Neustadt
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Austria-Czech SIG #Austria-Czech younger Jewish Cemetery Eisenstadt
#austria-czech
Traude Triebel
Since the beginning of 2017 Johannes Reiss (Austrian Jewish Museum) has been
working on a digital edition of the younger Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt. http://www.ojm.at/blog/friedhof-eisenstadt-jung/archiv/ As was the case with the edition of the older Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt and the edition of the Jewish cemetery of Mattersdorf/Mattersburg, all the Hebrew headstone inscriptions are transcribed and all graves are collected by name. As a new feature of this project, translations of all the Hebrew headstone inscriptions are provided; moreover, the focus of work is now on extended biographical data which are checked against the communal registers (Matriken). Currently, the project is a work in progress. As always, comments with genealogical information would be greatly appreciated. This digital edition of the younger Jewish cemetery of Eisenstadt is thus a completely revised, enhanced and extended edition of Johannes Reiss, book from 1995:"Hier in der heiligen juedischen Gemeinde. Die Grabinschriften des juengeren juedischen Friedhofs von Eisenstadt". Traude Triebel A-2700 Wr.Neustadt
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