Israel:The Leo Baeck Institute in Jerusalem: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus goethe.de
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche
(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „© Goethe-Institut The Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) is named after the symbolic figure of German-speaking J…“)
 
(More)
Zeile 5: Zeile 5:
 
The Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) is named after the symbolic figure of German-speaking Jewry in the 20th century: the prominent Reform rabbi and scholar (1873 – 1956), who also assisted the prisoners after he was deported and brought to Theresienstadt concentration camp. As well as the main institute in Jerusalem there are also centres in New York and London, as well as an academic community in Germany. {{#newBox:listbox}}
 
The Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) is named after the symbolic figure of German-speaking Jewry in the 20th century: the prominent Reform rabbi and scholar (1873 – 1956), who also assisted the prisoners after he was deported and brought to Theresienstadt concentration camp. As well as the main institute in Jerusalem there are also centres in New York and London, as well as an academic community in Germany. {{#newBox:listbox}}
 
==More==
 
==More==
* [[What has actually survived after the crisis and catastrophe?]]{{#newBox:listbox}}
+
* [[Israel:What has actually survived after the crisis and catastrophe? | What has actually survived after the crisis and catastrophe?]]{{#newBox:listbox}}
 +
 
 
==Related links==
 
==Related links==
 
* [http://en.leobaeck.org/ Leo Baeck Institute Jerusalem for the study of German and Central European Jewry (en.leobaeck.org)]
 
* [http://en.leobaeck.org/ Leo Baeck Institute Jerusalem for the study of German and Central European Jewry (en.leobaeck.org)]

Version vom 27. November 2012, 16:45 Uhr

© Goethe-Institut

The Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) is named after the symbolic figure of German-speaking Jewry in the 20th century: the prominent Reform rabbi and scholar (1873 – 1956), who also assisted the prisoners after he was deported and brought to Theresienstadt concentration camp. As well as the main institute in Jerusalem there are also centres in New York and London, as well as an academic community in Germany.

© Goethe-Institut
The Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) is named after the symbolic figure of German-speaking Jewry in the 20th century: the prominent Reform rabbi and scholar (1873 – 1956), who also assisted the prisoners after he was deported and brought to Theresienstadt concentration camp. As well as the main institute in Jerusalem there are also centres in New York and London, as well as an academic community in Germany.

German Traces in Israel

A project by the Goethe-Institut Israel

Author: Gisela Dachs

Photos: Noa Ben-Shalom