Russian to English translation requested
#poland
#translation
#russia
Tammy
Hello Genners,
I am breaking through genealogical brick walls this week! I have posted two birth records from Lubartow on ViewMate and would greatly appreciate a full translation of each. They are both written in Cyrillic. Here are the links: https://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM89859 https://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM8986 (As I was checking the links, I noticed I accidentally typed Lomazy in the description of one of the records, but they are both from Lubartow). Thank you in advance for your help! Tammy Weingarten WAJNGARTEN, GRYNBERG, Lubartow
|
|
ViewMate translation request - Romanian
#romania
#translation
Jonah Belser
Hi all,
I've posted a vital record in Romanian for which I need a translation. The document is the birth certificate of my great-grandfather Osias Belser of Bucharest, Romania. It is on ViewMate at the following address: https://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM89827. Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out. Thank you in advance for your help, Jonah Belser Washington, D.C./New York, USA
|
|
Translation help requested
#translation
#germany
avivahpinski@verizon.net
Subj: ViewMate translation request - German I've posted a postcard in German for which I need a translation. The card is addressed to the writer's husband in the Detention Camp in Lengyel Tabor, Hungary in 1941. It is on ViewMate at the following address ... https://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM89840 Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. Thank you very much. (signature)-- Avivah R. Z. Pinski , near Philadelphia, USA
|
|
ViewMate translation request - Russian
#ukraine
#translation
Deborah Friedman
I've posted a vital record in Russian for which I need a translation. It is on ViewMate at the following address ... https://www.jewishgen.org/view Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. Thank you very much. Deborah Friedman Walnut Creek, CA
Searching for: FRIEDMAN (KOPAIGOROD UKRAINE), SHULMAN/SCHULMAN (KOPAIGOROD UKRAINE), SPECTOR, GOLOGORSKY, KANSTERIN/KANSTEROOM, LIPSON (JERUSALEM), ZASLER (JERUSALEM, ZASLOW), LEVY, GRATZ/GRATCH, EISENSTEIN (DROHITCHIN), BENIOFF (KIEV AREA), SILBERMANN/SILVERMAN (ZEIL GERMANY), DINKELSPIEL(BADEN, GERMANY), MAIER, WIEDERQUIST, HOROWITZ (KIEV AREA), HESS (NEW ORLEANS), SANGER (NEW ORLEANS AND ALSACE), MAROZ (Ignatovka, Ukraine).
|
|
Re: Seeking relative's U.S. naturalization record
#usa
Banai Lynn Feldstein
Bronx County naturalizations are not on Ancestry or FamilySearch. Last I remember hearing, the court was going to digitize them. I don't know the status of that.
FamilySearch has the index. You can search for him there to see if that's the court he's in. https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/620917 -- Banai Lynn Feldstein Professional Genealogist Salt Lake City, Utah http://idogenealogy.com/ http://geneasearch.net/
|
|
Re: Why was I told my mother's family were German Jews when they weren't?
#austria-czech
Ellen Slotoroff Zyroff
The father of a woman who married into our family claimed that he was of German Jewish descent like his wife. My grandmom and mom perceived right off the bat from his pronunciation of Yiddish that his claim was a pose and that he was a "Galicianer." My research into the documentary evidence all these decades later confirms that my mom was correct. Yes, many German Jews, the group that arrived in the U.S. a generation or two previous to the Jews from further East considered themselves culturally and educationally and behaviorally superior to the Russian/Polish/Ukrainian/Romanian/Galicianer/Bessarabian/Belarus Jews who arrived later and whom they stigmatized. I have not heard that Galician Jews felt superior to Russian Jews, but have inferred that often the opposite was true! Being a Galicianer seems to have have had a stigma attached, with stereotypes abounding! Polish and Ukrainian Jews likewise had choice stereotypes about each other. The Russians mocked the formality, snobbishness, rigidity of mindset of their German Jewish brethren. The ideal of day to day closeness and unity among all Jews seems to have been a theoretical ideal, not the reality. On Sunday, January 31, 2021, 02:29:57 PM PST, Judy Kaufman <judykaufman7@...> wrote: Growing up, I was told repeatedly that my mother's family were German Jews and my father's were Russian Jews, with the clear implication always being that German Jews were higher class. In my genealogical research, I have documented that: my mother's father came from Galicia/Austrian Empire - Sokolow Malopolski in current day Poland; my mother's maternal grandfather came from Brest in current day Belarus; I can't determine where her maternal grandmother came from but all census data says she's from Russia ("Russia Poland" in one case). My grandfather (b. 1884) from Sokolow Malopolski is listed on all the censuses as born in "Austria" - did that somehow mutate into being "German"? Was this common? Did Galician Jews feel superior to "Russian" Jews? -- Judy Leiderman Kaufman Irvine, CA judykaufman7@... ROSENBLUM (Brest) LEIDERMAN (Khashchuvatye) WEINSTEIN (Sokolow-Malopolski) RASKIN (Chernigor) -- ZOLOTOROV (Chernigov, Ukraine; Kiev, Ukraine); SLOTOROFF (Kiev, Ukraine) CHARKOVSKY or SHARKOVSKY(Ukraine); LEVINE (Ukraine and Minsk, Belarus); GLUSKIN (Ukraine) LIMON (Berestechko, Volynia, Ukraine) TESLER (Horochiv, Volynia, Ukraine) ZYRO (Zabolativ, Ukraine) TAU (Zalolativ, Ukraine) PISTERMAN (Ukraine) ROTH / ROT (Ataki, Bessarabia, Moldova) BLAUSTEIN (Chernigov, Ukraine or Minsk, Belarus)
|
|
JGS of Greater Orlando. Virtual meeting (free). How our Families Acquired Surnames in the Russian Empire. Tuesday, February 9, 7:00 pm Eastern Time. Speaker: Jeffrey Mark Paull
#announcements
#russia
dianejacobs40@...
ZOOM MEETING February 9, 2021, 7:00 PM Eastern Time
How our Families Acquired Surnames in the Russian Empire
Speaker: Dr. Jeffrey Mark Paull
Have you have had an experience finding family members who should have the same surname but don’t? Have you found people with the same surname from the same small town who are not related to you? We are accustomed to tracing family members using the surnames we find in documents created in the last century and make assumptions about the sharing of these surnames to determine relationships. But Dr. Jeffrey Paull will show you why there are times you may need to shake off those assumptions.
Join us for a deep dive into the history of surname adoption in the Russian Empire and its effect on current genealogical research. Dr. Paull will remind us that the Russian Empire at the time of surname adoption was vast and included many now-independent countries that were home to the ancestors of the majority of our Ashkenazi ancestors. He will discuss naming patterns, the origins and meanings of many surnames, and the challenges posed to genealogical research.
Dr. Jeffrey Mark Paull was born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA. His career as an environmental toxicologist and scientific expert in the field of occupational and environmental health spanned more than thirty years (1976–2008). Since that time, he has devoted himself to his twin passions for Jewish genealogical research and writing. His first book, entitled: "A Noble Heritage: The History and Legacy of the Polonsky and Paull Family in America," traced his family’s ancestry over a millennium, and discovered their lost rabbinical heritage dating back to Rashi (1040–1105 CE). It was featured on the PBS website, “Finding your Roots, with Henry Louis Gates, Jr.” His second book, "The Shpoler Zeida – The Life, Legends, and Descendants of the Grandfather of Shpola," is scheduled for publication in summer of 2021.
Registration is required for this meeting. Send an email to jgsgo.blogger@... asking to be registered. You will receive an acknowledgement of registration. A link to access the Zoom meeting will be sent to you a few days before the meeting.
|
|
Marilyn Robinson
For a long time I haven't been able to find marriage information for my maternal grandmother's older sister, Rose LURJA/LEVINE REICHMAN & Harry REICHMAN. The other day, while searching on FamilySearch I found a marriage record for a "Rosie MICHAELOWITZ" & "Herman REICHMAN" (married 30 Aug 1896, Manhattan. NY, NY City Marriage Records, 1829-1940).
Herman's parents' names were the same as those for my other relatives, but the name "Herman" wasn't familiar to me. On the marriage certificate, Rosie's parents' names were listed as "Samuel MICHAELOWITZ" & "Rebecca REICHMAN". Today, I had another thought: Herman REICHMAN was actually "my" Harry; and "Rosie MICHAELOWITZ" was "my" maternal great aunt, Rose LURJA/LEVINE (maiden name). Originally, I thought that Herman was another brother to Max, Harry, & Lewis REICHMAN.
But, I knew that:
-The maiden name of Rose's mother was Rebecca REICHMAN. -Her father was Solomon/Zalman Michalovich LURJA/LEVINE. (He would have used Michalovich as a patronym because his father was Michal.) I checked Ancestry's "Jewish Name Variations": one of the "Zalman" secular variations is "Samuel" and one for "Herman" is "Harry". In the "old country," when asked for someone's name, I believe that they used a person's first & patronym (ex. Zalman Michalovich). So, when responding to requested information, Rose must have said that her father's name was "Samuel Michaelowitz", using the Russian style of a patronym usage, and not responding Zalman or Solomon Lurja/Levine, as would be common in the U.S. Thus, "Rosie MICHAELOWITZ" appears as her maiden name, on her marriage certificate (#13990).
Further, I think that "Herman" must have eventually changed his name to "Harry" to reflect the secular use of his first name in the U.S. Does the above analysis seem possible to you?? If not, what are your thoughts? Regards, Marilyn Robinson Florida
|
|
Re: Hebrew name
#names
Harry Auerbach
It is Ber, Yiddish for bear. The Hebrew would be Dov.
Harry Auerbach
Portland, OR
|
|
Vysni Hrabonice / Felso Gereben / Hrabonicza
#ukraine
#hungary
#subcarpathia
Ozzy Bernstein
Hi all,
A large portion of my family comes from Vysni Hrabonice. It is now known, apparently as Felso Gereben. When I search for Felso Gereben I receive no results. All I know is that it was in then Bereg County in Hungary, is now in Ukraine and that it was nearby Mukacheve. Does anyone know what this town or, if it doesn't exist as a town anymore, what the area the town used to be in, is called now? Thanks in advance. Ozzy Bernstein
|
|
Re: Why was I told my mother's family were German Jews when they weren't?
#austria-czech
Peter Lebensold
The non-fiction work Our Crowd, by Stephen Birmingham (published in the 1960s) remains a fascinating study of such German-Jewish New York families as the Lehmans, the Schiffs, the Loebs, the Warburgs, the Guggenheims, the Strauses, the Goldmans, and the Sachses - including their attitude towards the later Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. There was certainly no love lost between those already established on the Upper West Side and the "teeming masses" on the Lower East Side!
|
|
Translation in Russian needed, 4 pp Viewmate
#translation
LOUISE HAJDENBERG
#s
89855 89856 89857 89858 Thank you -- Louise Hajdenberg New York
|
|
Polish translation
#translation
Ellen Trencher
Subj: ViewMate translation request - Polish
|
|
Asking help with translation from Yiddish
#translation
#yiddish
nkleitman@...
This was on a postcard from Karlsbad to my great-grandfather (Juda/Julius) from his brother Benjamin, likely around 1910 plus or minus a decade.. Can anyone read it and let me know what it was about?
Thanks in advance to all of you out there helping with these requests!! Naomi Kleitman Rockville, MD
|
|
ViewMate translation request - Polish
#translation
Sharon E Siegel
I've posted a vital record in Polish for which I need a translation. It is on ViewMate at the following address ... https://www.jewishgen.org/view Please respond via the form provided on the ViewMate image page. Thank you very much. Sharon --Sharon E. Siegel Port Jervis, NY USA
|
|
Relative ages in picture on Viewmate
#photographs
Paul Silverstone
I have posted a photograph taken about 1890 showing a couple with their
three daughters. I would like an idea of the approximate ages of the three in the picture. This is a photo of my great-grandparents Ezra & Chayaleah Chrzan who lived in Makow Mazowiecki, Russian Poland. One or two of the older girls may be married. It is on Viewmate at the following address; https://www.jewishgen.org/viewmate/viewmateview.asp?key=VM89828 -- Paul Silverstone West Vancouver, BC see: www.paulsilverstone.com
|
|
Re: Hebrew name
#names
Susan&David
Yiddish name "Ber"
(בער) was derived (cognate with "bear") which was common among
East European Jews.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
David Rosen Boston, Mass On 1/31/2021 2:56 PM, Rachelle Litt
wrote:
|
|
Why was I told my mother's family were German Jews when they weren't?
#austria-czech
Judy Kaufman <judykaufman7@...>
Growing up, I was told repeatedly that my mother's family were German Jews and my father's were Russian Jews, with the clear implication always being that German Jews were higher class. In my genealogical research, I have documented that: my mother's father came from Galicia/Austrian Empire - Sokolow Malopolski in current day Poland; my mother's maternal grandfather came from Brest in current day Belarus; I can't determine where her maternal grandmother came from but all census data says she's from Russia ("Russia Poland" in one case).
My grandfather (b. 1884) from Sokolow Malopolski is listed on all the censuses as born in "Austria" - did that somehow mutate into being "German"? Was this common? Did Galician Jews feel superior to "Russian" Jews? -- Judy Leiderman Kaufman Irvine, CA judykaufman7@... ROSENBLUM (Brest)
LEIDERMAN (Khashchuvatye)
WEINSTEIN (Sokolow-Malopolski)
RASKIN (Chernigor)
|
|
Seeking relative's U.S. naturalization record
#usa
jliebe97@...
Hello,
I'm trying to find the United States Naturalization document of a relative, Henry Lieberman, born around 1880. He may also have gone by Hillel. I have found many other documents linked to him, just not the naturalization paper. I found his wife Julia's naturalization document (attached) which says Henry was naturalized on June 9, 1925 in Bronx, NY, certificate number 2196827. I know he arrived in the U.S. in December 1904 (I've found his Ellis Island record). He was not married to Julia until 1928 so she wouldn't be listed on his naturalization paper. Does anyone know how to find Henry's naturalization paper? I've thoroughly checked Ancestry and a couple of other sites with no success. Thanks, Jason Lieberman jliebe97@...
|
|
Re: More than 3700 new records added to the All Odessa Database
#ukraine
Molly Staub
Hi, I was so excited to see the posting about the Ukraine marriage records, since I have been searching for my maternal great-grandmother's maiden name for 3 decades. However, no matter how I try to reach the All Odessa Database, I keep getting notices that it's dangerous to enter. Can someone see to this? Many thanks for all your work,
Molly Arost Staub Boca Raton, FL 561-571-6699 Searching in Ukraine: Yishea/Ovshiy Berenson (son of Yechiel Berenson), his wife Riva ? Their son ( my grandfather )Shmuel Berenson, born 1880, who later emigrated to London and married there in 1904.
|
|