Friday, October 11, 2024

This Day, October 12, In Jewish History by Mitchell A and Deb Levin Z'L

OCTOBER 12

539 BCE: The Persian armies of Cyrus the Great captured Babylon.  Within the year, Cyrus would make it possible for the Jews to return to their homeland.

1129: The tombstone of Elijah ben Simon dated October 12, 1129 is among the oldest evidence of the Jewish settlement in Nuremberg goes back to the 12th century.

1285: The Jews of Munich (Germany) were caught in a claim of blood libel which resulted in the death of most the Jewish community.  When 180 Jewish survivors refused baptism, they were burned alive in their synagogue.

1366:  In Sicily, Jews were forbidden to decorate the outside of their houses of worship.

1491: During the Blood Libel tied to the Holy Child of La Guardia, inquisitors arranged for a meeting between Yucef Franco and Benitor Garcia, the two Jews accused in this event.

1492: After sailing across the Atlantic Ocean, Italian explorer Christopher Columbus sights a Bahamian island, which led him to believe he had reached East Asia. His expedition, including Hebrew speaker Luis de Torres (the translator) went ashore the same day and claimed the land for Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain, who sponsored his attempt to find a western ocean route to China, India, and the fabled gold and Spice Islands of Asia. Louis de Torres, a Marrano, was the first member of Columbus’ expedition to set foot in the Western Hemisphere. He discovered and introduced tobacco into Europe. According to one legend he saw a bird he thought to be a peacock and called it a "tuki" (Hebrew for peacock - I Kings X22). Today that bird is known as a turkey. (There are those who say that the story of the Turkey is pure fiction.  All that I can say is “Of this I do not know.”)

1504: Thirty-one-year-old John Corvinus, the pretender to the Hungarian throne who expelled the Jews from Tata where they had lived since the second of the 11th century, passed away today.

1576:  Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor passed away. Maximilian reversed the decree that had banished the Jews from Prague. Furthermore, he allowed them to return to other towns in Bohemia and to settle in Austria.  The life of the Jews in these domains was far from tranquil thanks to pressure from the Catholic Church.  But under Maximilian II it was better than it had been under his predecessor Ferdinand.

1589(2nd of Cheshvan, 5350): Rabbi Samuel ben Moses Medina (RaShDaM) passed away in Salonica.  Born in 1505, his disciples included Abraham de Boton and Joseph ibn Ezra, and his grandson was Samuel  Hayyun, author of “Bene Shemuel “

1711: Charles VI who sought to limit the number of Jews living in Austria and Hungary began his reign as Holy Roman Emperor. Among his subjects was Ḥayyim Judah Löb Ettinger, the Austian Rabbi who was the son of Eliezer ha-Levi Lichtenstein Ettinger and the brother-in-law of Chaim Cohen Rapport, who served as a rabbi in Lemberg.

1759(21st of Tishrei, 5520): Hoshanah Rabah observed for the first time since the British victory at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham which would lead to Jews being able to settle in Canada.

1764(16th of Tishrei, 5525): Second Day of Sukkot

1767: In Richmond, VA, Abigail Seixas and Hillel Judah gave birth to Gershom Seixas Judah.

1768(1st of Cheshvan, 5529): Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan

1769: In Savannah, GA, Frances Hart and Mordecai Sheftall gave birth to Moses Sheftall.

1770(23rd of Tishrei, 5531): Simchat Torah

1772(15th of Tishrei, 5533): First Day of Sukkoth

1773: Birthdate of Wallerstein, Bavaria native Sarah Weil, the husband of Isaac Ottenheimer with whom she had nine children.

1775(18th of Tishrei, 5536): Fourth Day of Sukkoth observed on the same day during the American Revolution that General George Washington wrote from his headquarters at Cambridge to John Hancock concerning plans for providing for the Continental Army during the upcoming winter.

1776(29th of Tishrei, 5537): Parashat Bereshit observed on the same day during the American Revolution that “the British landed at Throgs Neck, New York to trap General George Washington's Continental Army on Manhattan Island.”

1778(21st of Tishrei, 5539): Hoshana Raba

1778: In Denmark, Philip Hartvig Rée and Hanna Hartvig von Essen gave birth to Hartvig Philip Ree.

1781: Birthdate of Ludvig Mariboe, one of a small number of Jewish converts to Christianity who had settled in Norway in the first decade of the 19th century when Jews were not accepted as citizens.

1783(16th of Tishrei, 5544): Second Day of Sukkoth

1783: Rachel Pinto, a Loyalist who had taken the oath allegiance sought “to attempt to obtain indemnification from the British government” for having billeted the King’s troops in her home.

1784(27th of Tishrei, 5545): Gershom Siexas, the Newport, RI born son of Joachbed Levy and Moses Mendes Seixas passed away today after less than two weeks of life.

1789(22nd of Tishrei, 5550): Shemini Atzeret is observed for the first time during the Presidency of George Washington.

1791(14th of Tishrei, 5552): Erev Sukkoth

1793:  The cornerstone of Old East the oldest state university building in the United States is laid on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  This is an important date in Jewish history because my sister, Judy Sharon (Levin) Rosenstein, of blessed memory was a Tar Heel Grad.  She met her husband, Larry Rosenstein, of blessed memory, at Chapel Hill.  All three of their sons are also Carolina grads. Of such moments are real Jewish history made.

1795: In Charleston, SC, Rebecca Moses and Solomon Harby gave birth to “Samuel Dacosta Harby.”

1795(29th of Tishrei, 5556): Thirty-one-year-old Sarah Judah, the daughter of Samuel Judah and the wife of Samuel Meyers whom she had married in 1794 passed away today.

1796(10th of Tishrei, 5557): Yom Kippur is observed for the last time during the Presidency of George Washington.

1796: Birthdate of “educator, poet and mathematician” Jacob Eichenbaum, the native of Galicia who was “one of the pioneers of modern education among the Russian Jews.”

1796: Birthdate of Savannah, GA, native Moses Sheftall , the son of Mordecai Sheftall, who practiced medicine in his hometown, while also serving variously as a state legislator and “judge of the county court.

https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13530-sheftall-sheftail

1796: Israel Baer Kursheedt observed Yom Kippur as the only Jew aboard an American sloop sailing to the United States from Hamburg.

1797(22nd of Tishrei, 5558): Shemini Atzeret

1797: In Charleston, SC, Solomon and Rebecca Moses Harby gave birth to George Washington Harby, “a writer and teacher like his older brother Isaac,” the founder of “a boy’s school in New Orleans” and the husband of Mary Olivia Lucas and then the husband of New Orleanian  Marie Ulaine Pouillott.

1800(23rd of Tishrei, 5561): Jews celebrate Simchat Torah for the first time in the 19th century and for the last time during the Presidency of John Adams.

1802(16th of Tishrei, 5563): Second Day of Sukkot

1802: Simon Magruder Levy graduated from West Point today, making the second person and the first Jew to graduate from U.S. Military Academy.

1805(19th of Tishrei, 5566): Shabbat Shel Sukkoth

1807(10th of Tishrei, 5568): Yom Kippur

1808(21st of Tishrei, 5569): Hoshana Raba observed for the last time during the Presidency of Thomas Jefferson.

1810(14th of Tishrei, 5571): Erev Sukkot

1810: Today’s marriage of Crown Prince Ludwig and Princess Therese of Bavaria marked the start of the first Oktoberfest.

http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/244365/oktoberfest-was-invented-by-jews

1812(24th of Tishrei, 5572): Parashat Bereshit read for the first time during the War of 1812

1813(18th of Tishrei, 5574): Fourth Day of Sukkot observed on the same day that former President Jefferson wrote to former President Adams on matters of philosophy in one of the examples of how these two political opponents rekindled their friendship in their twilight years.

1814: Peter Simeon married Sarah Rees at the Great Synagogue today.

1816(20th of Tishrei, 5577): Shabbat Shel Sukkoth

1819(23rd of Tishrei, 5580): Simchat Torah

1820: Birthdate of Odessa native and German poet and essayist Wilhelm Wolfsohn, German poet and essayist who declined professorship in Russia because he would have had to convert and settled in Dresden “where he continued his literary activity.

1822: Birthdate of Seligman Solomon, the German born American businessman and philanthropist best known for his support of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum in New York City

1824(20th of Tishrei, 5585): Sixth Day of Sukkoth observed for the last time during the Presidency of James Monroe.

1826: In Kingston, Jamaica, Rebecca Cohen and David Alexander gave birth to Frederick Alexander.

1827(2st of Tishrei, 5588): Hoshana Raba

1829(15th of Tishrei, 5590): First Day of Sukkoth

1830: Birthdate of Antony Mayer de Worms, a London born descendant of Amschel Moses Rothschild and Schoenche Lechnich

1831: Joel Coleman Joel married Sophia Samuel at the Great Synagogue today.

1834(9th of Tishrei, 5595): Erev Yom Kippur; Kol Nidre

1837(13th of Tishrei, 5598): Seventy-five-year-old Talmudist, interpreter of Halacha and moel Rabbi Akiva Eger passed away today in Poznan

http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/112047/jewish/Rabbi-Akiba-Eger.htm

1838(23rd of Tishrei, 5599): Simchat Torah

1839: In Worms, Germany, Nathan and Wilhelmina Mindel Blum gave birth to Amanda Anna Rothschild, the wife of Frank Rothschild and “mother of Simon Frank Rothschild; Elias Rothschild; Alfred Redgis; Maurice Patsy Rothschild; Harry Rothschild; Louis Frank Rothschild and Minnie R Frauenthal.”

1842: In Reckendorf, Bavaria, Nathan and Rosa Walter gave birth to Moritz Walter the husband of Sophie Walter.

1842: Birthdate of London native Rose Nelson, the wife of Louis Allen and the mother of Nancy, Samuel, Sylvia, Rachel, Leah, John and Nathaniel Allen.

1843: Abdallah Ben Cassan married Mary Ann Talbot in London today.

1845: Abraham Einstein and Helene Moos gave birth to Heinrich Einstein one of the six siblings of Albert Einstein.

1845: In Galena, IL, Alexander Lewis, the Charleston born son of David and Rachel Benjamin Lewis and his wife Rebecca Lewis gave birth to Catherine Jacobs, the mother of Henry Jacobs.

1846(22nd of Tishrei, 5607) Shmini Atzeret observed for the first time since the start of the Mexican-American War.

1846: Birthdate of Bohemia native and American photo-chemist Louis Edward Levy, “a pioneer in the engraving industry” and “inventor of a process of photo-chemical engraving which has enabled newspapers to print half-tone pictures directly from the stereotype plate who “was a founder and president of the Association for Relief and Protection of Jewish Immigrants” and the author of the pamphlet “The Russian Jewish Refugees in America”

https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/9897-levy-louis-edward

1847(2nd of Cheshvan, 5608): Israel Jacobs, the Dutch born son of Ravel Beer Jacobs and Eva Israel de Jongh and brother of Mathilde Jacobs passed away today.

1847: In Germany, Gussie Daniels and Jacob Sarua gave birth to Annie Joseph, “the Chairman of the House Committee of the Home of the Daughters of Jacob” starting in 1897 and the wife of Samuel Joseph.

1848(15th of Tishrei, 5609): First Day of Sukkoth observed for the last time during the Presidency of James K. Polk.

1852: In Minsk, Joseph Dubov and his wife gave birth to Marcus H. Dubov who served congregations in Grodno, Russia; Graudenz, Prussia; Sioux City, Iowa; and Canton, Ohio before becoming Rabbi of Congregation B’nai Moshe in Evansville, Indiana

1853(10th of Tishrei, 5614): Yom Kippur

1853: Rabbi Raphall led services today at the Greene Street Synagogue in New York.

1854(20th of Tishrei, 5615): Sixth Day of Sukkoth

1854: Birthdate of Ida Kuhn, the daughter of Clara Regina Kuhn who became Ida Cohen after marrying Eduard Cohen

1856: In Poznan, Simon Baruch Schefftel, the Breslau born son of Alexander Baruch Schefftel and Roeschen Scheffte and his wife Henriette (Gitel) Schefftel gave birth to Renate Schefttel.

1859(14th of Tishrei, 5620): Erev Sukkoth observed on the same day that San Francisco businessman Joshua Norton, “the self-proclaimed Emperor Norton “issued edicts abolishing the U.S. Congress.

1859: In Hannover, Germany, Anna and Louis Oppenheimer gave birth to Dr. of Jurisprudence Ernst Oppenheimer, the husband of Clara Amalie Oppenheimer.

1861(8th of Cheshvan, 5622): Parashat Bereshit

1861(8th of Cheshvan, 5622):  Seventy-six-year-old Hartwig Cohen, the  Wartha, Poland born son of Fishel and Sarah Cohen, the husband of Deborah Marks Cohen with whom he had two children – Fishel and Sarah –  and the Ashkenazi who served as Hazan at Beth Elohim in Charleston for five years before being replaced “by Selomoh Cohen Peixotto, a native of Curaçao, where he had served as ribi (teacher) and shohet (kosher butcher)” passed away today in Winnsboro, SC.

1862: In Yanceyville, NC, Bavarian native Susannah Fels and her husband Lazarus Fels gave birth to Rosena Fels.

1863: Ninety-one-year-old to John Singleton Copley, the 1st Baron Lyndhurst who in 1852, as a member of the House of Lords favored a bill design to remove the disabilities imposed upon persons refusing to take the “oaths of abjuration” which kept Jews from serving in the House of Commons passed away today.

1863: In Pennsylvania, Rudoph H. Kauffman, the Creswell, PA born son Anna and Isaac Kaufman, and his second wife Anna Kaufman gave birth to Abraham Kauffman

1863(29th of Tishrei, 5624): Lydia Bauman, the infant daughter of Sarah and David Bauman passed away today after which she was buried in the Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.

1864: The General News column reported today, Wednesday, that Monday’s livestock market was fairly active despite “the absence of the Hebrews, who” were “observing the Day of the Atonement, one of their principal fasts.” Tuesday’s market was more active than usual, in part, because “on account of the numbers of Jews present.”

1864: In Iowa, “a dozen raiders disguised as Union soldiers terrorized Davis County, where they looted residences and kidnapped and murdered three Iowans near Bloomfield.”

1865: In a column styled “Our London Correspondence,” The New York Times reported that, “If you want a present proof that Mammon rules here, take the fact that yesterday Mr. PHILLIPS, a gentleman of the Hebrew persuasion, was elected Lord Mayor of London. Not that a Jew has not teeth, hands, organs, dimensions, and all that, as well as any other man; but, in the face of English prejudice, money and money alone could make a man who is a Jew by birth and religion, member of Parliament or Lord Mayor.” “Mr. Phillips” referred to Benjamin Samuel Phillips, a prominent British citizen and leader of the Anglo-Jewish community who had been elected Lord Mayor in September of 1865.  He served with such distinction that Queen Victoria knighted him for his service. Phillips was the second the Jew to hold the post; the first being David Salomons.  His son, Sir George, would also serve as Lord Mayor. The level of anti-Semitism displayed in this items stands in stark contrast with the detailed and sympathetic description of Jewish holidays that this paper was publishing in the 19th century.

1865(22nd of Tishrei, 5626): Shmini Atzeret

1865: Sarah Naar Cardozo, the New York born daughter of Dr. Daniel Moses Levy Maduro Peixotto and Rachel Lopes Mendes Peixotto and her husband Abraham Hart Cardozo gave birth to William Benjamin Cardozo, the husband of Jennie Douglas Furst and the father of Mildred Rosalie Furst.

1866: Birthdate of Morris Aaron who would be buried in the Jewish Cemetery in Natchitoches, LA when he passed away in 1943.

1870: Henry Mosler was a German-born Jewish “painter who documented American life, including colonial themes, Civil War illustrations, and portraits of men and women of society” and his wife Sarah Cahn Mosler gave birth “Arthur Rembrandt Mosler, an engineer who married the famous soprano and voice teacher Estelle Liebling.”

1872(10th of Tishrei, 5633): Yom Kippur

1873(21st of Tishrei, 5634): Hoshanah Rabah observed for the first time during an economic downturn known as the Panic of 1873.

1873: Mary Plonsky Falk and William Louis Bendel gave birth to Rose Benel who became Rose Bendel Kahh when she married Sigmund Kahn in 1893.

1873: In Paris, Gustave Ollendorff, the son of Prof. Hermann G. Ollendorff and Dorothea Ollendorff who was the president of the Union Fracasie de la Jeunesse and his wife Marie Virginie Virginie Joséphine Ollendorff gave birth to Jeanne Berthe Maria Bloch, the wife of Maruice-Meyer Bloch.

1873: “Curiosities of Superstition” published today traces the history of “host desecration” including a description of the 38 Jews who were burned to death in 1510 “because they had tortured the consecrated host until bled.”

1874: In Galicia, Esther Seitelbach and Philip Brill gave birth to CCNY and NYU graduate, Dr. Abraham Arden Brill, the Columbia trained medical doctor and husband of K. Rose Owen who was a protégé of Sigmund Freud for whom he translated documents  and who was “a member of the psychiatric department at Columbia while “serving as chief of clinic of psychiatry at NYU Medical School .

https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ajp.163.3.386

1875: In Latvia, Mendel Morein and Beilo Rochel Mendelson gave birth to Yaakov Ben Zion Morein who gained famed as Rabbi Yaakov Ben Zion HaCohen Mendelsohn who served a congregation in Glasgow, Scotland before settling in the United States where he founded “his own shul, Congregation Beis Hamedrash Hagadol.”

1876: Two days after he had passed away, Augustus Davis, the son of Henry Davis and the former Ellen Lewis and the husband of “Ann (Annie) Davis” with whom he had two children was buried today at the “Balls Pond Road Jewish Cemetery.”

1877: An application was made to Judge Barrett on behalf of the two children of the late Abraham Weisberg to order the Public Administrator to turn the two hundred dollars that constituted his estates to Rabbi Ash of the Ludlow-Street Synagogue so that he could send the money to the children living in Poland.  Weisberg was a Jewish peddler who had been murdered two years ago in New York’s Westchester Country.  The judge denied the application saying a guardian for the minor children would have to be appointed before going forward with the dispersal of funds.

1878(15th of Tishrei, 5639):First Day of  Sukkoth

1878(15th of Tishrei, 5639): S. S. Man.Maximilien, Baron von Königswarter, the Dutch born French banker who supported Napoleon III passed away today.

1878: The strict anti-Socialist legislation passed today outlawed, for all practical purposes, the German Socialist Democratic Party whose leaders included Eduard Bernstein

1879: “Fish in Morocco” published today which was devoted to describing the rich variety of shell-fish used by cooks in Morocco pointed out that these are “utterly tabooed” when it comes to the local Jewish population.

1880: Today, in Cincinnati, OH, William Ornstein, the German born son of Helene Levy and Hart Ornstein and President of Ornstein and Rice  who was also a member of B’nai Yeshurun Temple married Caroline Winkler.

1881: At Beth Elohim, Rabbi David Levy officiated at the marriage of Herman Leidloff, of Berlin and Selna Davega of Charleston, SC.

1882: It was reported today that the Prime Minister told members of the Hungarian Chamber of Deputies, that the recent anti-Jewish riots in Pressburg “might …degenerate into” an event “of a socialistic character.” He declared that he would not tolerate “such excesses.”   

1884(23rd of Tishrei, 5645): Simchat Torah

1884: In San Francisco, Minnie Thalhimer, the New York City born daughter f Rabbi Dr. Aaron Albert Siegfried Bettelheim and Anna Henrietta (Yetta) Bettelheim and her husband Jacob E. Thalhimer gave birth to William M. Thalhimer, M.D., the husband of Carlin Thalhimer

1884: As the effects of the sever economic recession, which has necessitated the closing of many major employers, including the Falls Cotton Mills, grip New England, it is reported that the Polish Jews living in Baltic, a city 8 miles north of Norwich, Conn, are reduced to begging from door to door.

1884: Roderick Waters, who is Christian and Michael Hauman, who is Jewish nearly came to blows today as they vied for the affections of a Jewish widow living in St. Mark’s Place.

1884: “News of the World” published today described the change in fortunes for Mahmoud Pasha, aka Jacob Freund   The Sultan has brought him back from the Island of Rhodes where he had been living in exile since 1876 and restored him to his former position of prominence.  Mahmoud Pasha was a Polish born Jew named Jacob Freund who had fled Hungary after the revolution there failed and, after converting, became “the ablest of Turkish Generals.

1885: David J. Seligman and Adelaide (Addie) Seligman gave birth to Gladys Seligman who, after she married Henri Wertheim became Gladys Wertheim.

1885: “The Only One In America” published today described the opening of the first and only “Hebrew-Christian Church” in the United States.  Located in New York, it is the only congregation that has been established by Jewish converts to Christianity. (Editor’s note – Jews for Jesus type movements are obviously note a creation of the late 20th century.)

1886: In Pittsburgh, PA, “Maria and Salomon Stossel” gave birth to Jeno Stossel who gained fame as Jacob Stacel, “one of four Jews named to sit as judges of the Cleveland Municipal Court…by Governor Cooper in December of 1930” who was the husband of Minnie W. Stacel.

1886: “The Anchroia’s Long Trip” described the perilous ocean crossing of a steamer that that had its propeller shaft brake causing havoc among the crew and passengers. Fortunately, only two passengers died in the chaos, one of whom was an unnamed Polish Jew who was buried at sea.

1887: In Munich, “Isidor Landauer and Josephine Pepi Guggenhimer” gave birth to “Dr. Karl Elias Landuer, a colleague of Sigmund Freud, who after seeking refuge from the Nazis in Sweden and the Netherlands ended up being murdered at Bergen-Belsen just months before the end of WW II

1888: Birthdate of Moscow native and Harvard undergraduate Mark Edward Evarts who in 1889 came to the United States where he attended George Washington University, practiced law and work in the U.S. Patent Office

1888(7th of Cheshvan, 5649): Just two months before his 76th birthday, Joseph Moses Levy, the English newspaper editor and publisher whose properties included The Daily Telegraph passed away.

1888: “The Fifteenth Season” published today described the first event of 1888-1889 season sponsored by the Young Men’s Hebrew Association.  Among those who addressed those attending the gala at Chickering Hall was Chauncey M. Depew. (Depew was not Jewish. He was an attorney who became President of the New York Central Railroad and U.S. Senator from New York. His willingness to speak at the YMHA gathering gives an indication of the importance of the organization.)  The speeches were followed by an evening of choral music with violin accompaniment.

1889(17th of Tishrei, 5650): Shabbat shel Sukkoth

1889: Max Maretzek, the Moravian born American opera conductor and composer, celebrated his Golden Jubilee

1889: Birthdate of Providence, RI native and Boston University trained attorney William W. Bearman who served as “assistant city attorney” in Los Angeles.

1890: “Russia’s Milling Industry” published today attributed the decline in the country’s grain milling industry and the decline in the price of corn to “the persecution of the Jews.”

1891(10th of Tishrei, 5652): Yom Kippur

1891: Birthdate of Boston native Jennie Loitman the Boston University trained lawyer and jurist who when she married attorney Samuel Barron, Jr. became Jennie Loitman Barron, the name under which she broke legal ground in numerous arenas including being the first woman to serve as a Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court.

https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/barron-jennie-loitman

1891:  Several “temporary places of worships have been established” in New York city “public halls” to accommodate the large number of people attending services, especially on the Lower East Side.

1891: In Columbus, GA, more than fifty Jewish owned stores closed because of the Day of Atonement.

http://columbusjudaism.org/contact-u/

1891: In Brooklyn, Sophie and Pincus Weinberg gave birth to Sidney James Weinberg

http://www.anb.org/articles/10/10-02276.html

1891: An Indictment of Russia” published today described the view of the Jews that Nicholas I who reigned from 1825 to 1855 was “a Second Haman” whose 30 year reign “was filled with special hardship for” them. Much to their surprise, the reign of Alexander III has proved to be even worse.

1891:  Birthdate of Edith Stein the convert to Catholicism who became a nun taking  the name "Teresia Benedicta ac Cruce."  Sister Teresia left Germany for Holland after the Nazis came to power.  In 1942, the Nazis ordered the arrest of Catholics of Jewish origin living in Holland.  This included clergy like Sister Teresia.  Sister Teresia was once again Edith Stein.  She died in Auschwitz in August of 1942.  If people who converted to Catholicism are really Catholics it is hard to understand how the Pope gave up these members of his flock. Eventually, Edith Stein would be made Saint.  Cynics would say that in one respect the Church has remained consistent.  It loves Jews, as long as they are dead. The fate of Edith Stein gave those studying in Cedar Rapids something to discuss when they studied the Papal response to Hitler and the Holocaust.

1891: Today, Jews in Missouri are upset by the recent attack John T. Blake the manager for William Warner, the Republican candidate for governor has made on Mr. Isaac Isaacs, Secretary of the Republican clubs that included a “roast of the Jews.”

1892(21st of Tishrei, 5653): Hoshana Rabah

1892: In New York, a conference of Orthodox rabbis which has dealt with changes espoused by the Reform including doing away requiring circumcision as part of the conversion ceremony, is scheduled to come to an end

1892: Carlos Pellegrini, who has a German-Jewish brother-in-law, completed his term of office as President of Argentina during which he expressed his support for Baron Hirsch’s plan to settle a half a million Russian Jews in the Argentine Republic.

http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9A02EEDB1E3BE533A25754C0A9649D94619ED7CF

1892: A part of the 400th anniversary of Columbus’ voyage, a celebration which Jewish communities participated, “school children recite the original ‘Pledge of Allegiance” which did not contain the phrase “under God” – a phrase that was added in the 1950’s as a measure designed to “defeat” the Soviets during the Cold War.

1892: In Kiev, Bessie Mozzor and Benjamin Gerson gave birth to Tufts and U of Chicago trained social worker Samuel Gerson who finally settled in Omaha, Nebraska where he was Superintendent of the Jewish Welfare Administration and the executive director of the Omaha Y.M. and Y.W.H.A a should not be confused with his contemporary Benjamin Norton Gerson, the Ukraine born, University of Pennsylvania silver medal winning wrestler.

1893: Julius Bien, the President of B’Nai B’rith is scheduled to address the opening session of a three day affair marking the Golden Anniversary of the Jewish fraternal organization.

1893: In Austria, Lena and Hyman Rome gave birth to New Yorker Sigmund Jacob Rome the husband of Bluma Fine whom he married in 1919.

1893: Birthdate of Telsea, Russia native Herman Ilson who in 1907 came to Brooklyn after which he served in WW I, became “a retail clothing merchant and a trustee of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum while raising a daughter with his wife Minnie.

1894: Alfred Gobert, “the handwriting expert from the Bank of France,” was summoned to the rue Saint-Dominique where he spent the day examining the treasonous documents supposedly written by Captain Dreyfus.(For more see The Dreyfus Affair by Piers Paul Read)

1894: Two days after she had passed away. Fanny Goldberg, the “wife of Abraham Goldberg” was buried at the “West Ham Jewish Cemetery on Buckingham Road.”

1894: This evening, General de Boisdeffre told Commandant du Paty de Calm that “he had been chosen to arrest Dreyfus.”  Du Paty tried to avoid the task, but the general insisted.

1895: Birthdate Pilsa, Russia native, Philip Lehrman who in 1905 came to the United States where he graduated from Fordham University Medical School,  after which her married Wanda Scheps with whom he raised two children – Howard and Marilyn.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/psychology/dictionaries-thesauruses-pictures-and-press-releases/lehrman-philip-r-1895-1958

1895(24th of Tishrei, 5656): Parashat Beretshit

1895(24th of Tishrei, 5656): Seventy-eight-year-old German politician and jurist Isaac Wolffson, the son of “businessman Meyer Wolffson” and the father Albert Wolffson who served in the Hamburg Parliament for thirty years, passed away today.

https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/14994-wolffson-isaac

1895 The Louisiana Section of the National Council of Jewish Women, which has sent money to the St. Louis Shoe Fund and the Chicago Jewish Training School was formed today.

1896: Birthdate of Lodz, Poland native Victor Jeremy Jerome the American Communist who was convicted under the Smith Act and whose interests were varied enough that he edited the works of Lenin and started writing a novel based on the life of Jewish philosopher and outcast Baruch Spinoza.

https://spartacus-educational.com/Victor_Jerome.htm

1896: Medical College of Ohio trained physician Henry Wald Bettman, the Cincinnati, OH born son of Matilda Wald and Bernard Bettmann married Rose Grace Kauffman after which he pursued a career as a pathologist and gastro-endourologist that included served as chief of medical service at the Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati and serving as a professor of medicine at Cincinnati Medical College.

1897(16th of Tishrei, 5658): Second Day of Sukkot

1897: Birthdate of Aleppo, Syria native Joseph Ashear, the founder, in the United States, of Ashear Brothers, a firm manufacturing and importing handkerchiefs who was the founder and first President of the Magen David Community Center in Brooklyn, the division chairman of the UJA for seven years and the recipient of numerous leadership award including the UJA’s Masada Medal.

1897: In Kansas City, clothing store owner Jacob Epstein and his wife gave birth to Jane Epstein, the future wife Goodman Ace who became half of the comedy team known as “Easy Aces.”

1897: Expenses estimates submitted at today’s meeting of the Board of Estimate and Apportionment included: Aguilar Free Library $41, 500; Maimonides Free Library $5,000; Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asylum $324,992; Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society $89,000; Sanitarium for Hebrew Children $5,500; Mt. Sinai Hospital $26,000

1899: One day after he had passed away, “Solomon Shock” was buried at the “Plashet Jewish Cemetery in London.”

1899: In Louisville, KY, Max Lee Bear, the Greenville, AL born son of Henrietta and Louis Bear and Pensacola, FL wholesale grocer who was President of Congregation Beth EL married Bella Rosenau today after which they three daughters – Leonia, Elise and Maxine.

1899: In Ardmore, OK, Julius and Rebecca (Meyer) Kan gave birth to O.U. and NYU educated WW I veteran Simon Stiefel Kahn an engineer for Ford Motor Company and holder of numerous patents who was the husband of Frances Solomon with whom he had two daughters.

1900(19th of Tishrei, 5661): Fifth Day of Sukkoth and on the Jewish calendar yahrzeit of Solomon Judah Leib, the historian and poet who passed away in 1867.

1900: USS Holland (SS-1) the United States Navy's first modern commissioned submarine which was built by the Electric Company under its president, German-Jewish born American businessman Issac Leopold Rice was commissioned today

1900: Birthdate of New York native Solomon Joffee, the husband of Mary Chafetz with whom he had one child.

1901(29th of Tishrei, 5662): Parashat Bereshit

1902: The Zola Literary and Benevolent Association held a memorial meeting tonight at Saltzman’s Hall where the chairman said that “we are gathered to hear the deeds of” Zola “the champion of the Jews” and whom Jacob Sebolsky said, “No Hebrew, no matter where he can be found can ever resist to offer his services or money in extolling the name of Zola.”

1903(21st of Tishrei, 5664): Hoshana Rabah

1903: Birthdate of Walter Jurmann the “Austrian born composer” who moved to France after the Nazis came to power and then to the United States where Louis B. Mayer employed him at MGM.

1904: The Board of Directors of the Hebrew Infant Asylum announced that it has completed the purchase of a plot of about eighty lots at King’s Bridge Road, Aqueduct Avenue and Tee Taw Avenue” on which it  intends to erect three buildings at a cost of $125,00 which will accommodate from between 400 and 500 infants.

1904: Rabbi Moses H. Goldberg, the Bialystok born son of Elka Kriviansky and Zeb Hirsh Goldberg who began serving as the spiritual leader of Congregation Anshe Sfard in New Orleans in 1905 married Miriam Rubin today.

1904: Birthdate of Samuel Zimelman, who served as the “cantor of Hochshule Synagogue in his native Łomazy, Poland who in 1946 came to the United States where he served as the chazzan at Congregation Shaarey Tphiloh in Portland Maine and who is the father of Cantor Solomon “Sol” Zim.

1905: “Czar Aids Jewish Students” published today reported that the “Emperor Nicholas has decided to turn over to the National Assembly the final settlement of the question of the admission without restriction of Jews to the universities and other general legislation relative to the status of the Jews.”

1906(23rd of Tishrei, 5667): Simchat Torah

1906: In Australia, Sir Isaac Alfred Isaacs began serving as Puisne Justice of the High Court of Australia.

1907: Birthdate of Chicago native Phil “Mickey” Weinbtraub the outfielder and first baseman who began his career with Loyola Univesity, went on to a record shattering season with the minor league Nashville Vols before playing in the majors with the Giants, Cards, Reds and Phillies.

1907: The Tennessee Volunteers coached by Izzy Levene defeated the football team from the University of Georgia for the second straight victory of the season.

1908(17th of Tishrei, 5669): Chol Hamoded Sukkoth

1908(17th of Tishrei, 5669): Fifty-seven-year-old Isaac Asher Isaacs, the “son of Asher and Esther Isaacs” and husband of “Hannah (Annie) Zyberlast Isaacs with whom he had six children and who had been presented with a “Testimonial from the Manchester Congregation of British Jews” in February of 1908 “in recognition of her service as secretary for twenty seven years” passed away today.

http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/7ee4f634-b9e4-48fc-86ca-c19433b7543e

1909: The Bible Class which had studied the Book of Genesis at Temple Beth Ahabah is scheduled to meet this afternoon to study the Book of Exodus

1909: Mrs. Sam Cohen, the President Ladies’ Hebrew Benevolent Association (LHBA) is scheduled to chair a fund raising meeting today.

1910(9th of Tishrei, 5671): Erev Yom Kippur

1910: Birthdate of Canadian screenwriter Ben Barzman who fell afoul of HUAC and ended up on one of its infamous blacklists.

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0059553/

1911(20th of Tishrei, 5672): Sixth Day of Sukkot

1911(20th of Tishrei, 5672): Ninety-one-year-old Hannah Kuttner, the widow of Rabbi Henry Kuttner who “served United Hebrew Congregation, St. Louis, Missouri as senior rabbi for over 10 years” passed away today in St. Louis after which she was buried in the United Hebrew Cemetery.

1911: Multiple telegrams were received in London from Malta, Gabes and Djerba, appealing for help for the many thousands of Jewish refugees who had come from Tripoli. 

1912: Birthdate of Elizabeth H. Friedman, the wife of Sylvan N. Friedman, the Jewish political leader who served in both houses of the Louisiana state legislature.

1912: While playing Center for Georgia Tech led the Yellow Jackets to a 20-3 upset victory over Alabama despite the fact that he broke three fingers in the game which proved to be an inspiration to his underdog teammates.

1912: Harry Fleishman Affelder, the Pittsburgh, PA, born son of Jacob Isadore Affelder and Catherine "Kate" Affelder, married Catherine “Kate” Affelder with whom he had two children – Ruth and Lewis.

1913(12th of Tishrei, 5674): Mrs. Beile Weinberg passed away today.

1913: Birthdate of Landstuhl, Germany native Annelise Abraham.

1914(22nd of Tishrei, 5675): Shemini Atzeret

1914: “Turkey Gathers Troops” published today reported that the Turks “are showing much energy” in several of its Middle Eastern territories including “Palestine where they are concentrating troops at a number of points and fortifying important places on the coast and on routes to the interior.”

1914: Sir Mathew Nathan, “the second of businessman of Jonah and Miriam Jacob Nathan and the brother of Colonel Sir Frederick Nathan and Sir Nathanial Nathan, began serving as the Under-Secretary for Ireland.

1914: “The Committee on Foreign Relations this morning ordered a favorable report to the Senate of the peace treaty with Russia” even though “the committee has received no word from the Department of State indicating that any progress has been made toward negotiating a new treaty of commerce with Russia to take the place of the treaty of 1832 abrogated by the United States because of Russia’s treatment of American Jews.”

1914: Birthdate of Mauricio Leib Lasansky, “an Argentine-born master printmaker who was equally well known for a series of drawings depicting the horrors of Nazism…” (As reported by Margalit Fox)

1915: Assistant Under-Secretary of State Bertam Cubitt wrote to General Sir John Maxwell “that to grant the ZMC (Zion Mule Corps) pensions that would be granted to enlisted British soldiers would be unduly liberal” as they were only “temporary employees” – a status he ascribed to men who wore the uniform of His Majesty’s forces and many of whom “permanently gave their lives” under fire at Gallipoli.

1915: Edith Louisa Caviell, the British nurse who in addition to providing medical aid to battlefield casualties regardless of their nationality, was executed today by the Germans today for helping Allied soldiers escape after a court martial in which she had been represented by Sadi Kirschen whose Jewish family would be forced to flee Belgium 25 years later when the Nazis came to power.

1915:  “More Rioting In Russia” published today described fighting in the streets of Moscow which has included civilians building barricades in the city and which the “aristocracy and merchants “attribute to the disloyalty of the Jews and the granting to them of the rights of suffrage” – a condition that they will cure by returning to “the customs of the ancient Muscovite Empire” making it “once more a land of orthodox Slavs.

1915: Birthdate of New York native Leonard “Len” Maidman the NYU all-star basketball player, 1940 graduate of NYU Med School “who served as a Captain in the Medical Corps” during WW II after which he practiced medicine in Connecticut for forty years.

1915: Alexei Khvostoff, the new Russian Minister of the Interior was reported to believe that “the step already taken to extend the rights of the Jews must be followed up” and that “the only restriction that should be maintained with regard to the Jews after the war is the prohibition of the purchase of real estate.”

1915: As of today, according to Professor R.J. H. Gottheil, the Temporary Chairman of the University Zionist Society, Eugene Meyer, Jr. is the society’s new president and E.L. Thurman is the society’s new Secretary.

1916(15th of Tishrei, 5677): Sukkoth

1916: During the Punitive Expedition into Mexico led by General Pershing “Rabbis sent to the Mexican border for the holidays by the Army and Navy Committee and by the Central Conference of American Rabbis” are scheduled to Sukkoth services in Texas “at McAllen, El Paso, San Antonio, Brownsville, Laredo and Eagle Pass” while “elsewhere along the…border Succoth will be observed out of doors or in tenets which will prove peculiarly appropriate in view of the fact that Succoth celebrations are held whenever possible in out-of-door booths in token of the harvest origin of the holiday.”

1916: Dr. J.L. Magnes, a Brooklyn born member of the American Jewish Relief Committee arrived in Warsaw where he will be distributing “funds collected in the United States” to “the poor Jews in Poland.”

1916: During tonight’s Columbus Day celebration at Carnegie Hall sponsored by the New York Chapter of the Knights of Columbus former Assemblyman Aaron J. Levy delivered a speech in which he said “When I was invited to take part in these exercise, I had some doubt of my right to be here but when I recalled that five members of Columbus’s crew were Jews and that another Jew prominent at the” Spanish Court “financed that famous expedition of discovery by contributing $250,000” leading me to “believe that I have the best right to be here.”

1917: “For the Tsar and Holy Russia,” “a new reactionary organization” conducted a “vigorous anti-Jewish campaign” and distributed millions of copies of circulars urging anti-Jewish uprisings.”

1917: In Tsaritsin, “Bankers and Trust Companies establish a company to sell insurance again casualties and losses resulting from pogroms.”

1917: In Lubashevka, “peasant women attack Jewish shops demanding food at lower prices” followed by looting of the shops with the goods being taken by force.

1917: Three hundred more Jewish refugees are expected to arrive shortly in New York from Palestine which can be added to the total of 91 saved souls who arrived yesterday after having been driven from their homes in Jaffa and Jerusalem.

1918: Thirty-one-year-old Boston University and University of Pennsylvania educated Bernhard Ostrolenk, the Warsaw born son of Abraham A. and Roaslia (Cherniakow) Ostrolenk and director of the National Farm School in Pennsylvania married Esther A. Weinstein.

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/ostrolenk-bernhard

1918: Dr. Madisen Clinton Peters, the former pastor of the Bloomingdale Church and author whose works included Justice to the Jew, The Jews as Patriot, The Wit Wisdom of the Talmud, The Jews in America and the Jews Who Stood by Washington, passed away after losing his week-long fight with Spanish Influenza.

1918: Upon hearing that the German government had accepted President Wilson’s condition for negotiation, “the German born Zionist Arthur Ruppin noted in his diary how he ‘went for a long walk and continuously repeated to myself the one word: Peace! How much it means.’” Ruppin’s joy was premature, and it would be another month before Peace would become a reality.

1919: The New York Times includes a review of Past and Present: A Collection of Essays by Dr. Israel Friedlander, a noted member of the faculty of the Jewish Theological Seminary and an author of several volumes on Jewish history.

1919: “Poet, essayist, thinker, satirist” and “collateral descent of Benedict (Baruch) Spinoza, Benjamin de Casseres, the Philadelphia born son of Charlotte Davis and David de Casseres married Bio Terrill after which he pursued a varied career that included serving on the staff of the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation and contriubintg articles to the NY Times, Herald Tribune and the Jewish Exponent.

1920: The Kane Street Temple, one of the oldest congregations in Brooklyn is scheduled to host the opening night of its Bazar and Fair at the 23rd Regiment Armory.

1921(10th of Tishrei, 5682): Yom Kippur

1921: In New York City, attorney Allen Blaustein and his wife the former Rose Brickman gave birth to law professor and “constitution drafter Albert P. Blaustein.

http://www.nytimes.com/1994/08/23/obituaries/albert-p-blaustein-a-drafter-of-constitutions-dies-at-72.html

1921: According to New York City political leaders yesterday's drop in voter registration, as compared with both the first day's registration and that of last year was mainly due to the fact that the Jewish holiday, Yom Kippur began yesterday evening.  “In many instances Jewish registration inspectors left their booths at sundown” which delayed registration for those waiting in line.  “The Jewish holiday kept the registration down on the East side of Harlem” and other East side locations because Jews did not come out to register on the eve of Yom Kippur.  The importance of observing Yom Kippur was a universal factor among Jews regardless of affiliation as can be sen by the fact that Jacob Schiff, who was serving as Chairman of one of the registration boards and a co-religionist serving on the board “quit work at sunset.”  When Schiff was challenged by waiting voters he replied, “We are sorry, but you observe your holidays and we must observe ours.”  The Board of Elections admitted that it had not even considered the disruption that would take place when voter registration coincided with the most important holiday on the Jewish calendar.

1922(20th of Tishrei, 5683): As Europe endures Fascist violence in Italy and Greeks and Armenians flee from the Turks taking control of Thrace, Jews observe Sixth Day of Sukkoth

1922: Indianapolis, IN, banker Sol S. Kiser, the Ft. Recovery, OH, born son of Fannie Steinfeld and Gottlieb Kiser married Kate Weis today in Cleveland after the death of his first wife Dina Salzenstein in 1917.

1923: In Brooklyn, David Slutsky, a cab driver and Mae Rodin Slutsky, a manicurist gave birth to Jean Evelyn Slutksy who gained fame as Jean Nidetch, founder of Weight Watchers. “The story of the establishment of Weight Watchers International begins with the personal story of a New York housewife who wanted to succeed at losing weight. In 1963, Mrs. Jean Nidetch , a Jewish woman in her forties, who had experienced many failed attempts at losing weight and gaining weight, decided to lose weight forever.”  So begins the saga as described by the Weight Watchers Program.  There are those who say the program is very Jewish.  Like Moses, Ms. Nidetch started with a list of foods you could not eat and book.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/30/business/jean-nidetch-dies-at-91-co-founder-of-weight-watchers-and-dynamic-speaker.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well

1923: “Solomon Golub gave a recital of his own compositions” this “evening at Town Hall” where the Yiddish songs that he sang “had its own complete story…reflecting various aspects of Jewish life.”

1924: Birthdate of Erich Gruenberg, the Austrian born violinist who studied at the Jerusalem Conservatory and “led the Palestine Broadcasting Corporation Orchestra from 1938 to 1945.

1925: Birthdate of Julius Bronstein, a 34 for year veteran of the Chicago Police Department

1925: In what will be one of the few glory moments in the history of the Washington Senators, the Nats with Buddy Myer at 2nd base take a three games to lead over the Pirates in the World Series.

1925: Birthdate of Alan Howard Abelson, the New York native who became an editor of Barron’s magazine where he wrote “a pugnacious, sagacious stock market column that denounced Wall Street hucksterism and routinely rocked share prices (As reported by Douglas Martin)

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/11/business/media/alan-abelson-barrons-columnist-and-editor-dies-at-87.html?hpw&_r=0

1925(24th of Tishrei, 5685):  Thirty-two-year-old Polish born circus performer Siegmund Breitbart known as the “Strongest Man in the World” passed away today in Berlin after having injured himself during a performance.

1926: In the Bronx, William Schlesinger, “a pants salesman” and his wife Lillian who was “a milliner gave birth to “printer, historian, composer and printer Carl Tobias Schlesinger.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/17/business/media/carl-schlesinger-88-dies-helped-usher-out-hot-type-.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0

1926: Birthdate of Polish native Chajm Marcczak, the Holocaust survivor who spent part of the war in Liege.

1926: Birthdate of Dr. Ruth L. Kirschstein, a National Institutes of Health pathologist who helped develop and refine tests to ensure the safety of vaccines for polio and measles, organized the NIH response to the AIDS epidemic, and became the first woman appointed director of an NIH institute.”

1927(16th of Tishrei, 5688): Second Day of Sukkoth

1927: Anna Boudin, Mrs. Jacob Panken and Florence Dolowitz organized the first meeting of the Women's American ORT (WAO). Originally founded in Tsarist Russia in the 1880s, ORT (the Russian acronym stands for Organization for the Distribution of Artisanal and Agricultural Skills) was organized to provide vocational training to help impoverished Russian Jews become more economically self-sufficient. The American arm of ORT, founded in 1922, was only open to men. Dolowitz and Boudin, who were married to ORT officers, founded WAO to assist in funding ORT programs intended to help Eastern European Jews devastated by World War I. Starting with fundraising concerts and bazaars, WAO grew in response to the rise of Nazism and the plight of Jewish refugees. Women's American ORT became an independent organization in 1940, helping to fund International ORT's growing number of vocational high schools in Europe, India, Israel, and North Africa. Today WAO focuses primarily on fundraising for ORT schools and programs around the world, including schools in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. These programs assist disadvantaged individuals and communities to be self- sufficient by providing education and training in employment skills. The organization also maintains a public policy platform advocating for quality public education, increased literacy and women's rights, the separation of church and state, the elimination of anti-Semitism, and the fostering of Jewish communities worldwide. (As reported by the Jewish Women’s Archives)

1927: It was reported today that Justice Jacob Panken has rejected the endorsement of the Communist Party because, the Communists “believe in dictatorship and ridicule and denounce the principles and practices of social democracy, while the Socialist Party believed that whatever “changes are to be made in the United States must the result of education and the intelligent use of the ballot”

1928: On the 33rd anniversary of his death, a bust of Jurist Isaac Wolffson was placed “in the vestibule of the Court of Appeals Building” in Hamburg.

1929: The British High Commissioner sends a telegram to the government in London warning that the Arabs of Palestine had recently obtained a considerable number of arms from Transjordan and the Hedjaz which they intended to use in attacks on the Jewish population.

1930(20th of Tishrei, 5691): Sixth Day of Sukkoth

1930: Birthdate of New Rochelle native Jack Gottlieb, a noted composer who “served as President of the ASJM for a number of years.”

http://www.jewish-theatre.com/visitor/article_display.aspx?articleID=3548

1931: “Count Helldorf, charged with having been the leader of anti-Semitic rioting in the Kurfersten-Damn on September 12 which was allegedly staged by National Socialists, and he co-defendant Ernst, obtained a change of venue today and were remanded for trial sine die.”

1931: It was reported today that “resolutions protesting further restriction of immigration and against discrimination in colleges and other educational institutions, were adopted at a meeting of representatives from several hundred Jewish organizations in the Hotel Pennsylvania where delegates were chosen for the ninth annual session of the American Jewish Congress.

1932: “The Flag Lieutenant,” a British made WW I movie featuring Abraham Sofaer as “Meheti Salos” was released in the United Kingdom today by Woolf and Freedman.

1933(22nd of Tishrei, 5694): Shmini Atzeret

1933: In Los Angeles, garment workers, most of whom were “Mexicans” began a strike organized by Rose Posetta (Rakhel Peisoty) of the ILGWU who believed that “Mexican garment workers” could be the backbone of a West Coast organizing movement.

1933: William E. Dodd, FDR’s newly appointed Ambassador to Germany, defied the conventional wisdom and gave a speech to the American Chamber of Commerce in Berlin in which he was highly critical of the Nazi regime.  Among the high-ranking Nazis in attendance were Goebbels and Alfred Rosenberg.

1934: In Newark, NJ, “Carolyn (Kaltenbacher) and Jerome Meier, a wholesale wine and liquor salesman gave birth to “the oldest of their three sons” Cornell University trained architect Richard Meier, the winner of 1984 Prtizker Architecture Prize.

1934: In Salem, Massachusetts, Jacob Joseph Kekst, a Hebrew school teach from Lithuania and his Palestinian born wife Hannah gave birth to Gershon Kekst, the founder Kekst and Company.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/24/business/dealbook/gershon-kekst-dead-public-relations-executive.html?ribbon-ad-idx=3&rref=obituaries&module=Ribbon&version=origin&region=Header&action=click&contentCollection=Obituaries&pgtype=article

http://www.jtsa.edu/the-gershon-kekst-graduate-school

1934: U.S. premiere of “The Gay Divorcee,” a musical directed by Mark Sandrich with a score by Max Steiner and filmed by cinematographer David Abel.

1935(15th of Tishrei, 5695): Sukkoth

1935: “Jubilee,” “a musical comedy with a book by Moss Hart premiered on Broadway tonight at the Imperial Theatre

1935: Birthdate of “historian and biographer” John Cooper, , whose works included A Social History of Jewish Food  and The Life Cycle of the Baghdadi Jews of India that he wrote with his wife, psychoanalyst Judy Cooper.

1936: Thanks to the efforts of the “Arab Kings of Iraq, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia and the Emir of Transjordan, the general strike being conducted by the Arabs in Palestine which has been marked by death violence has been called off without resolving their attempts to put an end to Jewish immigration and land purchases.

1936: It was reported today that during the first six months of this year, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee had provided assistance to “2,047 Jews long resident in Germany but natives of other lands” including 700 from Poland who were forced to “return home” by the Nazi regime as well as assistance to “1,993 people to leave small towns and villages for larger German cities because residence in the smaller communities was no longer possible for them.”

1936: It was reported today that philosopher and historian Dr. William Durant said “I trust that before my days are end, I shall the Germany of Lessing, Kant, Goethe and Schiller restored to the moral fellowship of the nations; and the Jewish people living once more in peace and honor with Germans in Germany and with Arabs in Palestine.”

1937: “Green Fields, an “American comedy-drama Yiddish film directed by Edgar G. Ulmer and Jacob Ben-Ami” was released today in the United States.

1937(7th of Cheshvan, 5698): Fifty-four-year-old dentist Charles D. Jaffee the Russian born son of Helen New Newmark and Salomon Jaffee and the husband of Katherine Weisbord who in 1905 came to the United States where he manufactured clothing, and was a member of Temple Emanuel and Union Temple in Brooklyn passed away today in New York.

https://www.nytimes.com/1937/10/13/archives/charles-d-jaffee-clothiers-official-president-of-manufacturers.html

1937(7th of Cheshvan, 5698): Seventy-eight-year-old Geroge da Madouro Peixotto, the Cleveland born son of Hannah and Benjamin Franklin Peixotto passed away today in White Plains, NY.

1938(17th of Tishrei, 5699): Third Day of Sukkoth

1938: “Secretary of State Cordell Hull said today that the United States Government was giving careful attention to all phases of the Palestine question and that he might be in a position to make a statement in the near future.”

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1938/10/13/98200052.html?pageNumber=16

1938: “Ten Representatives in Congress from Illinois joined today to protest against a plan, now reported being considered by the British Government to abandon the policy of establishing a Jewish national home in Palestine.”

1939: The first Jewish deportees left Vienna and Bohemia.

1939: Today, on his 32nd birthday, rare book dealer Hans P. Kraus “arrived with the 1494 Vérard Columbus letter gaining him his first piece of publicity as a bookdealer in America: a newspaper column on the Columbus letter arriving on Columbus Day.”

1939: Hans Frank is appointed governor-general of Occupied Poland.

1940(10th of Tishrei, 5701): Yom Kippur; it is also Shabbat.

http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/exhibitions/this_month/october/05.asp

1940: Governor Lehman of New York missed the celebration of Columbus Day “for the first time in ten or twelve years because” today was “the holiest of the Jewish religion and he was attending to religious duties and abstaining from public appearances.

1940: All soldiers who had received a furlough starting yesterday at noon so they could observe Yom Kippur were required to return by the sounding of taps this evening.

1940: For the first time in 940 years, non-Christian religious services were held in Iceland. Approximately twenty five Jewish soldiers from England, Scotland and Canada gathered with eight Jewish refugees and Hendrik Ottósson, who had married a Jewish woman to observe Yom Kippur. Ottósson, served as their Shammash. The Icelandic authorities offered a chapel in Reykjavík's old cemetery. Ottósson found the suggestion insulting and rented a hall of the Good Templars' Lodge. They borrowed the only Torah scroll available in town.

1940: On this Jewish Day of Atonement, German loudspeakers in Warsaw, Poland, announce that all Jews in the city must move to the Jewish ghetto by the end of the month.

1940 (10th of Tishrei, 5701): In one of those calendar quirks, Yom Kippur, Shabbat and Columbus Day all fell on the same day.  As the Nazis swept across Europe, sermons provided different ways to respond to the challenge and observe the Day of Atonement. Rabbi Stephen Wise told congregants at the Free Synagogue that it was not enough for England to resist Hitler.  The resistance to Hitler must take the form of renewed and deepened loyal to morality which “in its origins is Judeo-Christian.” Rabbi Jonah Wise asked those at Central Synagogue “how much liberty can we lose and still retain from freedom” while Rabbi David de Sola Pool told those at the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue “Our effective answer to the tyrannies of other lands is to build here a better society of free, unexploited happy men and women. It is within our power to reconstruct society and build it in the light of divine wisdom.”

1940(10th of Tishrei, 5701): The Nazis executed 3,400 Jews in Galicia.

1940: It was reported today that due to the start of Yom Kippur yesterday evening, “slaughters had reduced the kill of those classes generally dressed kosher.”

1940 Sixty-four-year-old William Henry Dieterich, the anti-Semitic and somewhat pro-German” Senator from Illinois who was opposed by his fellow Democrat Henry Horner, “the first Jewish governor of Illinois” passed away today.

1941: In Stanislawow, Eastern Galicia, all of the Jews living in the district, were driven out of their homes into the center of the town where massive graves had been dug. SS troops and Ukrainian militia commence machine gunning of the gathered populace. Estimates of the number of Jews murdered range from a low of 6,000 to a high of 12,000. For the Jews, it was Hoshanah Rabbah, (the Great Prayer day.) The Ukrainian and German killers throw a "Bloody Sunday" victory celebration.

1941: At Stanislawow, the Germans and “Local Ukrainian nationalist” murdered another 10,000 “intellectuals, professionals” and Jews two months before the Ghetto was established there.

1941: At Sabac, Yugoslavia, hundreds of Gypsies are murdered. Jews were the primary victims of genocide, but not the only victims.

1941: The head of the University of Louisville expresses his gratitude for a bequest by the late Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandies to the school’s Law Library.  About two decades ago, Justice. Brandies selected the Law School of the University of Louisville as beneficiary of specific current gifts from him because, in his judgment, this university is much less liable to political influence than institutions under complete public control.

1941(21st of Tishrei, 5702): Hoshanah Rabah

1942(1st of Cheshvan, 5703): Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan

1942: At the very moment when the Nazis and their allies are wiping out Yiddish culture, Oy Is Dus a Leben, “a musical cavalcade in two acts, opened at the Moll Picon Theatre.

1942(1st of Cheshvan, 5703): Sixty-year old Berthold Ullman, the Czech born son of Bertha and Hermann Ullman was murdered today at Auschwitz.

1942 : In Shavei Tzion, “Ruth and Reuben Lewinbuk (or Levenbuch)” gave birth to “Daliah Lewinbuk (or Levenbuch” who gained fames as “actress, singer and model” Daliah Levy, a protégé of Kirk Douglas and the wife of Charles Gans with whom she had four children – Kathy, Rouben, Alexander and Stephen.

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/05/obituaries/daliah-lavi-actress-in-both-dramas-and-spoofs-dies-at-74.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well

1942: Birthdate of Illinois native Lewis Michael Eisenberg, the holder of an MBA from Cornell the co-founder of the “equity firm Granite Capital International Group and U.S. Ambassador to Italy.

1943: A delegation of the American Zionist Emergency Council “led by Dr. Israel Goldstein, president of the ZOA” today called on the British Ambassador “to protest against the action of the Palestine Government in converting the recent trial” of “two members of the Jewish community into an international affair designed to serve as a medium to discredit the Jewish Agency for Palestine.”

1943: Today marks the first full day of a drive announced last night by Youth Aliyah in Brooklyn to raise one hundred thousand dollars which will be used to rescue Jewish youth in “Nazi-dominated countries” and settle them in Palestine.

1944: Gerda Baier was deported to Auschwitz where she was subsequently murdered.

1944(25th of Tishrei, 5705): The wife and young daughter of chess champion Salo Landau were gassed today at Auschwitz.

1945: Forty women rescued from Nazi concentration camps were the first to be sheltered in the new sixty-bed wing opened” today “at the Women’s League for Palestine home at Haifa.  In New York, “Mrs. David L. Isaacs, who head the Palestine committee of the league” described “the welcome given the group rescued from Bergen-Belsen, Buchwald and Auschwitz.”

1945: British authorities continued their search of a secret radio that was “attempting to rally Jewish resistance forces.”  Shortly before a secret radio station “that was attempting to rally Jewish resistance forces…broadcast the announcement ‘Listen to the voice of Israel!  This is not a terrorist station.  This is the station of Hebrew resistance. Never again will Jews be deported from their homeland.  Our patience is over.  No power in the world shall break our determination.”

1946: “Nobody Lives Forever” starring John Garfield (Jacob Julius Garfinkle) was released in the United States today.

1947: In Chicago Mike Wallace and Norma Kaphan gave birth FOX newsman Christopher “Christ” Wallace whose career choice begs the question of nature versus nurture since his father was the CBS news personality and his step-father was Bill Leonard, President of CBS News.

1947: Ninety-four-year-old General Sir Ian Hamilton the commander of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Forced during the Gallipoli Campaign which meant he commanded the first Jewish fighting unit since the days of Bar Kochba and who “carried out a spot inspection” of the newly formed Zion Mule Corps “and was delighted with the workman-like appearance of the Corps after so little training” passed away today.

1948(9th of Tishrei, 5709): Erev Yom Kippur; in the evening Kol Nidre is chanted for the first time in almost two thousand years in an independent Jewish state.

1948(9th of Tishrei, 5709): Eighty-year-old Alfred Kerr passed away today.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0012_0_11056.html

http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10006082

1948: Egypt, Syria and Lebanon recognize the All Palestine Government.  Jordan’s King Abdullah had already refused to grant this entity any power in territory seized by his Arab Legion.  In other words, there was to be no Palestinian control over what is now called the West Bank and the Old City section of Jerusalem.

1949(19th of Tishrei, 5710): Fifth Day of Sukkoth

1949: “Christopher Columbus” a biopic featuring Abraham Sofaer was released in the United Kingdom today.

1949: “Love Happy,” a Marx Brothers comedy that included a walk-on appearance by Marilyn Monroe was released today in San Francisco.

1949: Casper Platt who had been “nominated by President Harry S. Truman to a seat on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois” “was confirmed by the United States” today.

1950: CBS broadcast the first episode of “The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show” which was a continuation of their vaudeville act that had been a hit on radio as well.

1951(12th of Tishrei, 5712): Sixty-five-year-old English born Australian war hero and diplomat Leonard Keysor who won the Victoria Cross lost his battle with cancer today.

http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/keysor-leonard-maurice-6946

1952(23rd of Tishrei, 5713): Simchat Torah is celebrated for the last time during the Presidency of Harry S. Truman, “the godfather of Israeli independence”

1953:  The “Caine Mutiny Court Martial” opened at the Plymouth Theatre in New York.  This Broadway dramatic hit was based on the novel The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk.  Wouk has had a successful writing career dealing with both non-Jewish and Jewish themes.  More to the point, he has been successful without compromising his very strong belief in traditional Judaism and the state of Israel.

1953(3rd of Cheshvan, 5714): “Suzanne Kinyas, and her two children (3-year-old girl and a 1 and a half year old boy) were  killed today when a Palestinian Fedayeen squad infiltrated into Israel from Jordan” and “threw a grenade into a civilian house” at Yehud, a village eight mile east of Tel Aviv.  (Fedayeen was the 1950’s term for the Arab terrorists.  Over the decades, they change their names but not their murderous aims.)

1954(15th of Tishrei, 5715): Sukkoth

1954: In Philadelphia, PA, Congressman Joshua Eilberg and his wife Gladys gave birth to Amy Eilberg, the first female rabbi ordained by the Conservative movement.

1955(26th of Tishrei, 5716): Eighty-two-year-old Arthur Hammerstein, the son of Oscar Hammerstein I and uncle of Oscar Hammerstein II, who “was an opera producer and one of the writers of the song "Because of You," a major hit (#1 for 10 weeks) for Tony Bennett in 1951 passed away today. Hammerstein wrote the song in 1940. It was used in the film I Was an American Spy (1951). He was the producer of the musical comedies The Firefly (1912), and Rose Marie (1924), which he did along with his nephew. He also was the producer of the film The Lottery Bride (1930), and made an appearance as himself in an episode of the film series Popular Science in 1949. Arthur Hammerstein was born and educated in New York City. Arthur's daughter, Elaine Hammerstein was a well-known stage and film actress.”

1956: In response to a request from a very worried Jordanian King, the British government informed Israel that, in accordance with the treaties with Jordan and Iraq, Britain would go to the aid of both these countries if they were attacked by Israel.  The irony was that Israel was negotiating with France and Britain over plans to attack Egypt and seize the Suez Canal.

1957(17th of Tishrei, 5718): Shabbat Shel Sukkoth

1957: Publication of Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged which, in 2007, will be described as one of the most influential business books ever written.

1957: In Philadelphia, attorney and Maryland state legislator Joe Chasnoff and his wife, “psychologist Selina Sue Prosen” gave birth to “Oscar winning documentarian Debra Hill Chasnoff” whose death was announced to the public by “her wife, Nancy Otto.” (As reported by Sam Roberts)

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/14/obituaries/debra-chasnoff-whose-films-redefined-gay-families-dies-at-60.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=region&region=region&WT.nav=region&_r=0

1958: Fifty sticks of dynamite exploded in the entryway of Atlanta's Hebrew Benevolent Society -- the oldest and largest Reform congregation, commonly known as the Temple. Five men, all associated with white separatist groups like the National States' Rights Party, were tried and acquitted. No one was ever convicted for the crime. The bombing came as Rabbi Jacob Rothschild was becoming increasingly active in the Civil Rights movement.

1959(10th of Tishrei, 5720): Yom Kippur

1959: The Play of the Week televised David Susskind’s production of Media as its first broadcast.

1960(21st of Tishrei, 5721): Hashanah Rabah

1960: In Washington, DC, attorney and WW II veteran Ira Ressler and Dorothy Ressler gave birth Georgetown and Columbia educated businessman Antony P. Ressler, the husband of Jami Gertz whom he married in 1989 and the co-founder of equity firms Apollo Global Management and Ares Management who also owns stock in the Atlanta Haws and the Milwaukee Brewers.

1960; U.S. premiere of “Inherit the Wind,” the cinematic adaptation of the play co-authored by Jerome Lawrence, directed and produced by Stanley Kramer.

1961: “Let It Ride” a musical with lyrics and music by co-authored by Jay Livingston and starring Sam Leven opened tonight at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in New York.

1961: Today the West End production of “Do, Re Mi”  featuring the music of Jule Styne and the lyrics of Betty Comden and Adolph Green opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre where it “ran for 169 performances.

1962(14th of Tishrei, 5723): Erev Sukkoth

1962: As Jews prepare to observe Sukkoth, “Rabbi Mordecai Kirshblum, president of the Religious Zionists of America said that the festival ‘symbolizes man’s dedication to the noble principles of freedom, learning and religious truth.’”

1963: Archaeological digs began at Masada, Israel.  Masada was the site of the famous “last stand” during the “War Against Rome” that ended with the destruction of the Second Temple.  The archaeological dig was important because it gave credence to Jewish history.  Of course the debate continues to this day as to who was right – the Jews of Masada or the Jews of Yavnah.

1963: “A virulent anti-Semitic book, Judaism Without Embellishment, by Trofim Kichko was published in the USSR today.”

1964: The Men’s eight at the Games of XVIII Olympiad where the U.S. National Rowing Team was coached by Allen Rosenberg began today.

1966: Today, The Sydney Morning Herald reported that seventy-eight-year-old cellist and composer Gadal Saleski had passed away way four days ago in Los Angeles.

https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=nl&u=https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gdal_Saleski&prev=search

1966(28th of Tishrei, 5727): Seventy-three-year-old Russian born composer and convert to Catholicism  Arthur-Vincent Lourie who fled his homeland after the Communist came to power and fled Europe after the Nazis came to power passed away today in Princeton, NJ.

1967:  In discussing his latest archeological finds, Dr. Yigael Yadin, Israel's leading archeologist contends that King Solomon may have indulged a passion for building during his long reign from 960 to 922 B.C., but he did not build the stables at Megiddo

1968(20th of Tishrei, 5729): Shabbat Shel Sukkoth observed for the last time during the Presidency of Lyndon Johnson who had helped to rescue Jews clandestinely and stood by Israel during the war in 1967.

1969(30th of Tishrei, 5730): Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan

1969: The Citizens Union announced today “that it preferred Abe Stark's Liberal party rival in this fall's election for Borough President of Brooklyn, suggesting that Mr. Stark at 74 was hampered by age.”

1969(30th of Tishrei 5730): Seventy-two year old Dr. Max Schur, the friend and confidant of Sigmund Freud passed away

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3969756-freud

1970(12th of Tishrei 5731): Fifty-nine-year-old “Mrs. Diana Slavin Forman, wife of Rabbi Max L. Forman of the Hollis Hills Jewish Center, 21010 Union Turnpike, Flushing, Queens” with whom she had five children – Gayle, Cyrelle, Jane, Donna and Dr. Barr Forman – and the author, sociologist and creator of the world-famous Bible Dolls passed away today.

https://www.exploringjudaism.org/author/rabbi-max-forman/

1971(23rd of Tishrei, 5732): Simchat Torah

1972: “Lady Sings the Blues” a biopic featuring Sid Melton as “Jerry” was released in the United States today.

1972: “The King of Marvin Gardens” a drama directed by Bob Rafelson, the co-producer and co-author of the script and starring Ellen Burstyn was released in the United States today.

1973: Today, Yossi Ben Hanan was wounded for the third time, but refused to evacuate. He had led a further attack during which his tank was hit by a Sagger anti-tank missile, and Ben Hanan was wounded for the fourth time and rescued from behind enemy lines by Yonatan Netanyahu, a member of the IDF's elite Sayeret Matkal

1973: Moshe Koren safely ejected from his F-4E Phantom Jet after it fell victim to Lebanese anti-aircraft fire and was recovered by IDF forces.

1973: Ran Goren and Micha Oren were safely recovered by IDF forces after their F-4E Phantom Jet was shot down by an Egyptian MiG-21.

1973: A week after the Yom Kippur War began; Avraham Lanir scored his third and last aerial kill, downing a Syrian MiG-17 in the vicinity of Kuneitra while flying Mirage 5

1973: As many as 15,000 Iraqi troops had reached the Syrian front and were prepared to attack Israeli forces. The Israelis lucked out and spotted a lead contingent of fifty Iraqi tanks. When the Iraqis reached to within three yards of the outnumbered Israelis, the IDF tanks opened fire destroying 17 tanks and halting the assault The Soviets completed a twenty-four-hour air lift during which eighty large Soviet transport planes landed in Syria filled with a wide variety of arms that more than compensated for the Syrian losses during the first week of fighting. On the southern front, Egyptian tanks and troops continued to pour across the Suez Canal posing a new threat to the Israelis. 

1973:  In the midst of the perilous first week of the Yom Kippur War a dispute broke out between the Sephardic Chief Rabbi and his Ashkenazi counterpart.  October 12, 1973 was a Friday.  As the sun was setting the Sephardic Rabbi announced that it was a sin to bake bread on Shabbat, even in war time.  The Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, Shlomo Goren, the man who had been chief rabbi of the IDF in the 1967 war said that it was perfectly permissible to break the rules of Shabbat and bake bread during war time.  Doesn’t this remind you of Jerusalem during the Roman Siege?

1974: Ten people participated in the second of two demonstrations that took place in Moscow today during which demands were made for the granting of exit visas.

1975: Birthdate of Aharon Mordechai Rokeach the only child and heir of the current Rebbe of Belz, Rabbi Yissachar Dov Rokeach. Born in Jerusalem, Israel, he was named after his father's uncle, Rabbi Aharon Rokeach, the fourth Belzer Rebbe, and his father's father, Rabbi Mordechai of Bilgorai.

1976: Yorkshire Television broadcast the third episode of “Dickens of London” with music by Monty Norman

1977(30th of Tishrei, 5738): Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan

1977(30th of Tishrei, 5738): Seventy-seven-year-old CCNY and NYU Law School graduate Lewis E. Zorn, the former “president of the Brucks Division of the American Hospital Supply Company” and “a founder of the American Friends of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem” who was the husband of Lillian Zorn with whom he had one son, Richard, passed away today in Mount Vernon, NY.

https://www.nytimes.com/1977/10/13/archives/lewis-e-zorn-77-retired-president-of-uniform-manufacturing-concern.html

1978: Representatives of Israel and Egypt opened peace talks in Washington, D.C.

1978: First baseman and designated hitter Ron Blomberg who began his career with the Yankees played his last major league game with the Chicago White Sox.

1980(2nd of Cheshvan, 5741): Sixty-seven-year-old New York native and George Washington University trained attorney Arthur Weissman, “a prominent authority on medical economics where served as a senior executive of the Kaiser-Permanente Medical Program” who two sons, Ronald and David, with his wife Louise, passed away today.

https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1980/10/14/111300139.pdf?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0

1981: Yuli Edelstein, Victor Fulmacht, Alexander Kholmianskii, Vladimir Kuravsky, Vladimir Magarik and   Boris Teplitsky were among the “more than a hundred Moscow Hebrew teachers and their students who wrote a letter of protest to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on the systematic and continuous KGB persecution of refuseniks engaged in studying and teaching the Hebrew language.”

1982(25th of Tishrei, 5743): Eighty-two-year-old publisher Robert Paul Michel Calmann-Levy the son of Gaston Michel Calmann-Lévy and Hélène Koenigswarter  passed away today.

1984: It was reported today that memoirs of Jaroslav Seifert, the newly named Nobel Prize winner in Literature, contain a “selection, titled 'Russian Bliny,' is about Roman Jakobson, a Russian born Jewish scholar who emigrated to Czechoslovakia after World War I and came to the United States during World War II.”

1984: “Garbo Talks” a comedy directed by Sidney Lumet, produced by Elliot Kastner, with music by Cy Coleman and cos-starring Ron Silver, Steven Hill, Howard Da Silva and Harvey Fierstein was released in the United States by MGM/UA.

1984: A month after having been released in the United States “Blood Simple” a crime file “written, edited, produced, and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen which was the directorial debut of the Coens and the first major film of cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld” was screened today at the Toronto International Film Festival.

1985(27th of Tishrei, 5746): In Cincinnati, Ohio, ninety-year-old Betty Fabe, the daughter of Max and Sara Hexter and the wife of Isadore Fabe passed away today.

1986: “3 Named Co-Winners of Jabotinsky Awards” published today reported that “a former President of Costa Rica, a former prime minister of Sweden and Soviet have named as the recipients of the Jabotinsky Prize Defend of Jerusalem Award..”

1987(20th of Tishrei, 5748): Sixth Day of Sukkoth

1987: The New Jewish Agenda (NJA) “organized a Jewish contingent and Havdallah service at today’s March on Washington for gay rights.”

1987(20th of Tishrei, 5748): Oliver Louis Zangwill an influential British neuropsychologist passed away today. Born in 1913, he was Professor of Experimental Psychology, University of Cambridge, 1952-81, then Professor Emeritus. He was the son of Israel Zangwill and the grandson of William Edward Ayrton. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1977

1988: Israel and China signed a trade agreement and made plans for establishing diplomatic relations.

1989: “Last Exit to Brooklyn’ the movie version of the novel by the same name starring Stephan Lang and Jerry Orbach and with music by Mark Knoplfer was released in West Germany today.

1989: A Syrian Air Force major flying a Soviet-made fighter-bomber landed in Israel today, stunning Israeli officials who said the pilot had asked for political asylum. Syria asserted that the MIG-23 plane had suffered mechanical problems and made an emergency landing, though the Syrian statement did not explain why the pilot had flown more than 50 miles into Israel. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin hastily left a Cabinet meeting as soon as he heard of the defection at about noon today. Joined by several other military officials, he rushed to the site of the landing, a small crop-duster air strip outside Megiddo in the central Galilee, and personally questioned the pilot. Syria is this nation's most bitter enemy and has been at a state of war with Israel since the nation was founded in 1948. Its political leaders oppose any form of accommodation with Israel. No Syrian pilot has ever defected to Israel before now. The last defection of an Arab pilot to Israel was in August 1966, when an Iraqi air force captain flew his MIG-21 to Israel. Israeli officials reported that a second MIG-23 from the same unit landed in Alexandria, Egypt, today. But the Egyptian Government denied that, and there has been no independent confirmation. Without making any mention of the report of a plane landing in Egypt, the Syrian Government said it planned to ask the International Committee of the Red Cross for help in winning the return of the plane and the pilot that landed in Israel. ''Fire and smoke were reported coming out of the plane's engine before its pilot was forced to bring it down in Israel,'' a Syrian Defense Ministry statement said. Syria intends ''to work for repatriating the pilot,'' it added. Israeli officials scoffed at the idea that either the plane or its pilot would be returned. They said the major was already cooperating with Israeli officials, who began interrogating him almost immediately. Being Held at Air Base He was identified as Maj. Adel Bassem, 34 years old. Israeli officials have not said so far whether he has explained the reason for his defection. He is being held at an air base in the northern Galilee. Military officials said that the plane was one of several on maneuver near the Golan Heights and that it and the others were being tracked by radar even before it veered west, crossing into Jordanian and then Israeli airspace and flying west on its own. A MIG-23 is capable of flying at Mach-2, twice the speed of sound, and officials said the plane probably was airborne over Israel for only three or four minutes. Once it landed, Israel Radio reported, workers at the small airstrip said the Syrian major climbed down, spread his arms and in Arabic said, ''I have no hostile intentions.'' The workers offered the pilot water, which he accepted and then told them he wanted to request political asylum. No military or security officials arrived at the airfield for more than 20 minutes, said the workers on the scene, who were quoted by the Israeli radio. The Soviet Union has supplied the MIG-23, a single-seat, swing-wing fighter known as the ''flogger'' in NATO parlance, to several Arab nations, and it remains the principal plane of the Syrian and Iraqi air forces.

1990(23rd of Tishrei, 5751): Simchat Torah

1990: “Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael” a comedy co-starring Winona Ryder, directed by Jim Abrahams and featuring Valerie Landsburg, Dinah Manoff and Stephen Tobolowsky was released in the United States today

1992(15th of Tishrei, 5753): First Day of Sukkoth observed for the last time during the Presidency of George Bush.

1994: In a letter written to Sir Martin Gilbert today, “Jack (Izrael) Unikoski” who had been one of only a thousand teenage boys liberated by the Americans at Buchenwald on April 11, said that on VE Day he felt “joy that Germany had lost the war” but he also realized that for him “the liberation had come too late and he too had lost the war, having lost his whole family” including his parents, sister and brothers including his “older brother Isser who had died of hunger in the Lodz Ghetto at the age of 19.”

1995(18th of Tishrei, 5756): Fourth Day of Sukkoth

1995(18th of Tishrei, 5756): Ninety-two-year-old, Nathan S. Fishbeing, the son of Louis and Sarah Miller Fishbeing and the husband of Evelyn L. Goldberg Fishbein passed away today after which he was buried at the Lincoln Park Cemetery in Warwick, RI.

1997: In “Neighborhood Report: Corona –New Worshipers Are Bane, Not Balm, for Old Synagogue,” Charlie Leduff describes the challenges faced at Tifereth Israel as an influx of  Bukharan Jews face the aging members of the nine decades old synagogue.

http://www.nytimes.com/1997/10/12/nyregion/neighborhood-report-corona-new-worshipers-are-bane-not-balm-for-old-synagogue.html

 

1997: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or about topics of special interest to Jews including The Myth of Rescue: Why the Democracies Could Not Have Saved More Jews From the Nazisy by William D. Rubinstein, Shtetl: The Life and Death of a Small Town and the World of Polish Jews by Eva Hoffman and God & The American Writer by Alfred Kazin.

1998(22nd of Tishrei, 5759): Shmini Atzeret

2000: Ben Weider successful body builder, businessman and a student of history who worked to prove that Napoleon had been poisoned received the French Legion of Honor. 

2000(13th of Tishrei, 5761): Vadim Nurhitz and Yossi Avrahami, two Israeli reservists who entered Ramallah by mistake were arrested by the PA. While in the custody of the PA, a mob savagely murdered them and then mutilated their bodies.

http://www.think-israel.org/freerepublic.octoberramallahlynch.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_Ramallah_lynching

2000: During the Intifada, “vandals…desecrated the building” housing the mosaic that had been part of the Shalom Al Yisrael Synagogue, Jewish house of worship that dates back “to the late 6th or early 7th century and was discovered in 1936 “by Dr. Baramki of the Antiquities Authority under the British Mandate.”

2001(25th of Tishrei, 5762): Ninety-three-year-old Philadelphia born playwright Ruth Goetz who collaborated with her husband Augustus Goetz on many of her efforts and was introduced to the theater by her father, “theatrical producer Philip Goodman” passed away today.

https://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/16/arts/ruth-goetz-93-who-co-wrote-the-heiress.html

2002: In Massachusetts, Boston College, a Catholic institution of higher learning, installed “a copy of the Torah in the worship center, where it is expected to be used” for future Friday and Saturday services.

2003: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or about topics of special interest to Jews including Madam Secretary by Madeleine Albright with Bill Woodward and Why America Slept: The Failure to Prevent 9/11 by Gerald Posner.

2004: “Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, described by aides as more angry than embarrassed over Parliament's symbolic repudiation of his term-opening speech, moved” today “to renew discussions with opposition parties to reshape his minority government.”

2004: Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York City, upholding an October tradition of civic boosterism, announced his friendly wager with Mayor Thomas M. Menino of Boston” today “over the outcome of the American League Championship Series” which was a wager pitting pastrami against Boston Cream Pie.

2005: New York Times reporter Judith Miller testified one last time before the federal grand jury before being “relieved of contempt charges” in matters related to the Scooter Libby leak case.

2005: Air Force veteran and businessman, Al Hoffman, Jr. the son of a Jewish father and “Scottish-American mother” began serving as U.S. Ambassador to Portugal.

2005(9th of Tishrei, 5766): Erev Yom Kippur: In the evening, Jews all over the world gather to hear Kol Nidre marking the start of Yom Kippur

2006(20th of Tishrei, 5767): Sixth Day of Sukkoth

2006(20th of Tishrei, 5767): Sixty-one-year-old Don Novick, loving husband of Denise Novick and father of Rochelle and Cassie Novick passed away. The son of Russian immigrant Jews, he was raised as an Orthodox Jew in Cheyenne, Wyoming.  A member of Temple Judah, he was a pillar of the Cedar Rapids, Iowa Jewish community who gave freely of his time and culinary skills to so many worthwhile events.  Among his many virtues was the ability to cook anything you wanted to perfection, including the best falafel west of Tel Aviv.  A quite man, he touched many lives and will never be forgotten.

2006(20th of Tishrei, 5767): Eighty-six-year-old Gillo Pontecorvo an Italian movie director best known for making the award winning “Battle of Algiers” whose siblings included  Bruno Pontecorvo, an internationally acclaimed physicist, Guido Pontecorvo, a geneticist and Polì [Paul] Pontecorvo, an engineer who worked on radar after WWII passed away today.

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2006/oct/14/guardianobituaries.obituaries

2006: In New York, the Albany County District Attorney acknowledged that he was investigating the hiring of a chauffeur by the Comptroller of New York, Alan Hevesi.

2006: Judy Gold’s “her one-woman show ’25 Questions for a Jewish Mother…based on a series of interviews with more than Jewish mothers in the United States” “reopened today at St. Luke’s Theatre.

2007(30th of Tishrei, 5768): Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan

2007: The film “Jewish Life in Cracow” is screened at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City

2007: Yaakov Katz the military correspondent and defense analyst for The Jerusalem Post, the Middle East's leading English daily speaks at the Hillel House at the University of Iowa 

2007: Some of the world's best klezmer musicians gathered in a New York neighborhood that was once home to poor immigrant Jews for a 10-day festival of the music rooted in their Eastern European cultures.

2008: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or about topics of special interest to Jews including My Father’s Paradise: A Son’s Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq by Ariel Sabar and The Partnership: The Making of Goldman Sachs by Charles D. Ellis.

2008: The Washington Post featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or about topics of special interest to Jews including Hitler’s Empire: How the Nazis Ruled Europe by Mark Mazower and two paperback offering: A Little History of the World by E.H. Gombrich; Translated from the German by Caroline Mustill and Just Say Nu Yiddish for Every Occasion (When English Just Won't Do) by Michael Wex.

2008: In Atlanta, members of The Temple gathered to observe the 50th anniversary of the blast that shook the congregation, recalling its terrifying aftermath and the way it changed their congregation's mission to promote racial equality.

2008: A critically acclaimed fully staged off-Broadway production of Joseph Stein’s “Enter Laughing: The Musical” came to a close at The York Theatre. It was nominated for a 2009 Lucille Lortel Award for outstanding revival.”

2008: The curtain came down the Classic Stage Company’s revival of “The Tempest” starring Mandy Pantinkin as “Prospero.”

2008: “Tsega Melaku became the first woman and first Ethiopian director of Reshet Aleph, an Israel Broadcasting Authority radio channel.”

https://jwa.org/thisweek/oct/12/2008/tsega-melaku-becomes-first-woman-and-first-ethiopian-director-reshet-aleph

2009: Time magazine published an article entitled “How Moses Shaped America” by Bruce Feiler.

http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,1927303,00.html

2009: Israel and the U.S. are scheduled to begin their biggest joint air-defense exercise today. Code named  "Juniper Cobra," the maneuvers will be overseen by Adm. Mark Fitzgerald, chief of the U.S. Navy's Sixth Fleet and are designed to test the missile interceptors that would serve as a strategic bulwark in any future showdown with Iran.

2009: As part of The New School's "Jewish Text" seminar series David Stromberg will be reading from and discussing his newest book, Baddies.

2009(24th of Tishrei, 5770): Ninety-six-year-old Mildred Cohn who overcame gender and religious discrimination to make major advances in biochemistry and who received the nation's most prestigious award in science passed away today. (As reported by Matt Schudel)

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/22/AR2009102204570.html

 2010: Joshua Sobol is scheduled talk about his novel Cut Throat Dog at program sponsored by Wesleyan University Jewish and Israel Studies program in Middleton.

2010: YIVO Institute for Jewish Research is scheduled to present “Protocols of Justice: Inside the Rabbinical Court of Metz, France (1771-1789).”

2010: After six years of construction, the American Consulate in Jerusalem is scheduled to open its new facility for consular services on Rehov David Flusser in the southern Arnona neighborhood today.

2010: British Jewish author Howard Jacobson was the surprise winner of the Man Booker Prize today for The Finkler Question, the first comedy to scoop one of the English-speaking world's most coveted literary awards.

2010(4th of Cheshvan, 5771): Ninety-five year old best-selling author Belva Plain, the graduate of Barnard College and wife of Dr. Irving Plain passed away today (As reported by Elsa Dixler)

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/18/books/18plain.html

2010: The Guardian published Shabtai Rosenne: Eminent International lawyer, teacher and Israeli diplomat” by Malcom Shaw.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/oct/12/shabtai-rosenne-obituary/print

2011(14th of Tishrei, 5772): Erev Sukkoth

2011: Today, Theo Epstein agreed to a five-year contract worth $18.5 million with the Chicago Cubs.

2011: Israeli cellist Inbal Segev is scheduled to perform at the Bulgarian Concert Evening in Carnegie Hall.

2011: David Frum, who had been “a commentator for American Public Media’s ‘Marketplace’ since 2007” made his final appearance today.

2011: Galid Shalit's parents, Noam and Aviva, arrived this evening in their home in Mitzpe Hila in northern Israel, after leaving the protest site they had been encamped at in Jerusalem.

 

2012: NFTY/HUC/AJA Teen Study Weekend is scheduled to begin in Cincinnati, Ohio.

2012: The US State Department confirmed today that it had attempted to renew peace talks between Jerusalem and Damascus in 2010, before the outbreak of violence in Syria. (As reported by Yoel Goldman and Ron Friedman)

2012: Palestinian terrorists from the Gaza Strip fired a Grad rocket towards Netivot today, causing one civilian to suffer shock symptoms, according to the Negev Police. The rocket fell in the backyard of a house, causing light damage to the building. Shrapnel from the rocket also punctured a number of rooms in the house, including one belonging to a child living.

2013: In Jerusalem, the Ensemble Millennium is scheduled to perform “Night Music,” a concert that will include works by Mozart, Schubert, Liszt and Schoenberg.

2013: Today, actor Ben Feldman married Michelle Mulitz in Gaithersburg, MD.

2013: The Hyman S & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary Festival is scheduled to present “American Savage: Insights, Slights and Fights on Faith, Sex, Love and Politics” featuring Dan Savage.

2013: Iran said it arrested three Israelis suspected of spying and attempting to recruit Iranian citizens to gather intelligence for Israel, Iranian news agency Mehr reported today.

2013: "The State should act forcefully to send a message to these people," said Monique Ofer, wife of retired IDF Colonel Seraya Ofer, 61, who was murdered in a terror attack outside his home in the northern Jordan Valley early yesterday. "He was an amazing man, and two bastards took his life," she said.  In a conversation with journalists on Saturday, Monique avoided giving details about the night of the attack as per the request of security forces, so as not to damage the investigation. "The Jordan Valley is one of the safest places according to statistics, the fewest terror acts, definitely in comparison to places like Jerusalem and Tel Aviv." (As reported by Ahiya Raved)

2014: The New York Times featured reviews of books by Jewish authors and/or of special interest to Jewish readers including The Birth of the Pill: How Four Crusaders Reinvented Sex and Launched a Revolution by Jonathan Eig

2014: “Race: Are We So Different?” is scheduled to open at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.

2014: The Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington is scheduled to host a new walking tour “Downtown Synagogues and D.C.’s Urban Evolution.”

2014: The Jewish Museum of London is scheduled to host “Zangwill’s Ghetto: An East End Story” which is a walking tour of the author’s childhood neighborhood held to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Zangwill’s birth.

2014: “The commander of the Jewish Legion, Lieutenant-Colonel John Henry Patterson, who died in 1947, was exhumed and his ashes brought to Israel, in a fulfillment of the Christian Zionist’s final wish to be buried in the Holy Land, the Prime Minister’s Office announced today.” (As reported by Marissa Newman)

2014: Onno Hoes completed his service as Chairman of the Dutch Center for Information Documentation Israel.

2014: “Israel was set today to tighten border controls on travelers from Western African countries, as part of larger efforts to prevent the Ebola virus from spreading into Israel.” (As reported by Marissa Newman)

2014: “Thousands of Israelis and Jews from around the world gathered in the Western Wall (Kotel) plaza this morning, for the traditional Birkat Hacohanim (Priestly Blessing) ceremony held on Sukkot (the Feast of the Tabernacles).

2014: In honor of Sukkoth, the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education is scheduled to host “Pita in the Hut.”

2015: The American Sephardi Federation is scheduled to present the 2nd Annual Concert for Daniel Pearl: "Building Bridges: From Bene Beraq to Baghdad."

2015: In Leeds, Dr. Lorna Waddington is scheduled to lecture on “The History of the Myth of International Jewish Conspiracy.”

2016: Today, Michael Dell’s “Dell Inc. announced its intent to acquire the enterprise software and storage company EMC Corporation” – an acquisition thought to be worth a record setting 67 billion dollars.

2015: Professor David Shneer’s “The Romance and Tragedy of Yiddish Culture” is scheduled to begin today.

http://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/events/15/10/online-course-romance-and-tragedy-soviet-yiddish-culture

2016: In Memphis, TN, a part of the afternoon Yom Kippur observance, Temple Israel’s own Daniel Kiel, a law professor, is scheduled to moderate a discussion on “Building A More Just Memphis.”

2016(10th of Tishrei, 5777): The somberness of Yom Kippur took an even darker turn with the passing of 91 year old Civil Rights champion Jack Green who among other things was the head of the NAACP Legal Defense fund for almost a quarter of a century.

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/13/us/jack-greenberg-dead.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0

2016(10th of Tishrei, 5777): Yom Kippur

G'mar Hatima Tova”

2016: “Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump claimed today that the Islamic State group would ‘take over’ the US if Hillary Clinton is elected president

2017(22nd of Tishrei, 5778): Shemini Atzeret & Yizkor; In the evening Simchat Torah celebration begins

2017: “Hamas has signed a reconciliation agreement with the Fatah party of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in order that all Palestinian forces can “work together against the Zionist enterprise,” Saleh al-Arouri, the Hamas deputy political leader, said in Cairo today.

2017: In the evening, the University of Iowa Hillel is scheduled to host Simchat Torah services followed by a festive dinner

2017: The Oxford University Jewish Society is scheduled to host a buffet meal before holding Simchat Torah Services

2018: In Jerusalem, as part of the Young Artists of the Future Generation Concert series, the Eden-Tamir Music Center is scheduled to host a Piano Recital by Alon Petrrilin.

2018: In a testament to the vitality of “small town Judaism” in Cedar Rapids Joseph Heeren, the son Amy and Michael Heeren, pillars of the Jewish community, is scheduled to begin celebrating his Bar Mitzvah weekend this evening. 

2019(13th of Tishrei, 5780): Parahsat Ha’azinu

2019: In Cotati, CA, Congregation Ner Shalom is scheduled to host the Cotati Cabaret featuring “the multi-media show called ‘Daniel Cainer’s Weird and Wonderful Jewish Midlife Crisis.’”

2019: It was reported today that in the wake of this week’s Yom Kippur synagogue shooting, that the President of Germany had said this was a time of “shame and disgrace” and Chancellor Merkle said that “antisemitism has no place in our country” and “that the state needed to use all available means to take action against hatred.

2019: Israelis and her supporters digest the view that “the abrupt withdrawal of U.S. troops from northeastern Syria and subsequent Turkish attacks on Kurdish fighters have badly rattled Israel’s national security experts, who decried President Trump’s action as a betrayal of loyal allies and evidence that Israel’s most vital supporter is a fickle friend at best.”

2020” The Jewish National Fund is scheduled to present online “Green Technology and Israel’s Sustainable Future.”

2020: Online Dr. Kamilė Rupeikaitė and Dr. Raquel Ukeles are scheduled to host “Jewish Museums in A Changing Reality: The Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum.”

2020: In New Orleans, the Jewish Community is scheduled to host a screening of “Love In Suspenders.”

2020: The Streicker Center is scheduled to host Jonathan Medved as he talks about “The Future of the Startup Nation.”

2020: Bay Area native Jason Harris, host of the podcast “Jew Oughta Know,” is scheduled to talk about the mystery of Columbus’ origins and why Jews are so interested in this question.

2020: “Prominent Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky has ordered ultra-Orthodox schools and yeshivas to open” today, “despite the coronavirus lockdown prohibiting them from opening, according to the Ynet news site.”

2021: The London School of Jewish Studies is scheduled to present the first session of Desperately Seeking Psalms with Rabbi Dr Raphael Zarum.

2021: The Jewish Film Festival at the Jacob Burns Film Center is scheduled the final screening of “Golda” and “Shiva Baby.”

2021: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is scheduled to co-host “A Voice of Conscience: Honoring the Life and Legacy of Elie Wiesel.”

2021: Foreign Minister Yair Lapid is scheduled to begin his meetings in Washington with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

2021: Mitchell Levin had knee replacement surgery today which led to the temporary suspension of the updates for This Day…In Jewish History.

2022: The Haifa Film Festival is scheduled to host screenings of “Empty Handed” and “Axiom.”

2022: The Streicker Center is scheduled to host a conversation with Gloria Steinman and Letty Cottin Pogrebin, author of Shanda: A Memoir of Shame and Secrecy.

2022: Judaism Unbound, a group that aims to engage “disaffected but hopeful” American Jews, is scheduled to a recitation of the entire Torah — all 52 portions that are read in synagogues throughout the year — during an online event that starts at 5:30 a.m. this morning; the group estimates that the reading will take more than 15 hours

2022(17th of Tishrei, 5783): Third Day of Sukkoth

2023: The Chelsea Film which “will showcase four titles directed by Israeli filmmakers” is scheduled to begin today at the Regal Theatres Union Square.

2023: Yeshiva University Museum is scheduled to host YUM’s Director Gabriel Goldstein for a guided tour of The Golden Path: Maimonides Across Eight Centuries, illuminating the life and impact of the multifaceted luminary and great Jewish sage across continents and cultures through rare manuscripts and books.

2023: JDC is scheduled a program that includes “live updates from Israelis on the ground and to learn more about efforts to aid the country’s must vulnerable on the frontlines of the conflict.”

2023: SAPIR is scheduled to host  conversation between Editor-in-Chief Bret Stephens and Reuel Marc Gerecht, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, on the threat of Iran to Israel and the region.

2023: The Streikcer Center is scheduled to host a presentation by Bret Baier author of To Rescue the Constitution.

2023: As October 12 begins in Israel, a unity government has been formed, the IDF is confronting renewed threats on the border with Lebanon “where the Israeli Army has been engaged in four consecutive days of clashes with” terrorists, rockets continue to be fired into towns and cities and the United States has to deal with the reality that at least 22 of its citizens have been murdered and another 17 are missing, some of whom are presumed to being held as hostages and threatened with death by Hamas.

 (Editor’s note: this situation is too fluid for this blog to cover so we are just providing a snapshot as of the posting at midnight Israeli time)

2024: The Weitzman is scheduled to be closed in observance of Yom Kippur

2024(10th of Tishrei, 5785): Yom Kippur

for more see Weekly Torah Reading / Weekly Torah Portion (downhomedavartorah.blogspot.com)

And https://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/

2024:Hundreds of Jewish families on Longboat Key, a barrier island off Sarasota Bay, won’t be able to observe Yom Kippur in their synagogue for the very first time in their 45-year history, said Shepard Englander, CEO of The Jewish Federation of Sarasota-Manatee” because of Hurricane Milton

2024: Rabbi Yitzchok Minkowicz a rabbi, at Chabad Lubavitch of Southwest Florida near Fort Myers who rode out Milton so that his center could provide aid to those who could not evacuate plans on holding services today if power has been restored in his area.(As reported by Mariam Fan, Giovanna Dell’Orto  and Holly Meyer)

2024: As October 12th begins in Israel, an unprecedented wave of anti-Semitism that has included Hamas supporters calling for Zionist passengers on a New York subway to raise their hands, sweeps the United States and the Hamas held hostages begin day 372 in captivity while Jerusalem braces for more rocket attacks by Hezbollah  (Editor’s note: this situation is too fluid for this blog to cover so we are just providing a snapshot as of the posting at midnight Israeli time)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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