- bavegung
- bavegung(en)(f.) movement, cause
Yiddish-English dictionary (in roman letters). 2013.
Yiddish-English dictionary (in roman letters). 2013.
BUND — (abbr. of Algemeyner Yidisher Arbeter Bund in Lite, Poyln un Rusland; General Jewish Workers Union in Lithuania, Poland and Russia ), Jewish socialist party founded in Russia in 1897; after a certain ideological development it came to be… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
NEW YORK CITY — NEW YORK CITY, foremost city of the Western Hemisphere and largest urban Jewish community in history; pop. 7,771,730 (1970), est. Jewish pop. 1,836,000 (1968); metropolitan area 11,448,480 (1970), metropolitan area Jewish (1968), 2,381,000… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
PO'ALEI ZION — PO ALEI ZION, movement that tried to base itself upon the Jewish proletariat whose ideology consisted of a combination of Zionism and socialism. Attempts to combine Jewish nationalism and Zionism with socialism were made by zhitlovsky and syrkin… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Pierre Anctil — (2010) Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Prix et bourses … Wikipédia en Français
Puah Rakovsky — (1865 1955) née à Bialystok en Pologne et décédée en Israël est une révolutionnaire. Femme éduquée dans la tradition juive, plurilingue (yiddish, russe, polonais, allemand et français), elle reprend des études à 20 ans alors qu elle est mariée et … Wikipédia en Français
Max Bedacht — im November 1922 Max Bedacht Sr (* 13. Oktober 1883; † 4. Juli 1972) war ein US amerikanischer kommunistischer Politiker und einer der Mitbegründer von Vorgängerorganisationen der US amerikanischen Kommunistischen Partei und der CPUSA selbst … Deutsch Wikipedia
Zosa Szajkowski — (né Yehoshua ou Shayke[1] Frydman[2]) (10 janvier 1911, Pologne 1978) est un historien franco américain juif d origine polonaise, qui a une importance dans l historiographie juive, le transfert d archives juives vers les États Unis, et qui a été… … Wikipédia en Français
ABTSHUK, AVRAHAM — (Avrom; 1897–1937), Soviet Yiddish writer and critic. Born in Lutsk, Volhynia, he lived in Kiev after 1921. In the late 1920s and 1930s he was associated with the Jewish Research Institute of the Ukrainian Academy of Science in Kiev. In 1926 he… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AGURSKY, SAMUEL — (1884–c. 1948), Communist author. Agursky, who was born in Grodno, joined the Bund and fled Russia in 1905 because of his involvement in revolutionary activities. He eventually went to the United States and contributed to the Jewish anarchist… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AM OLAM — AM OLAM, Russian Jewish society formed to establish agricultural colonies in the United States. The organization took its name from perez smolenskin s famous Hebrew essay Am Olam, ( The Eternal People ), and was founded in Odessa in 1881 by two… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ANTISEMITISM — ANTISEMITISM, a term coined in 1879, from the Greek ἁντί = anti, and Σημ = Semite by the German agitator wilhelm marr to designate the then current anti Jewish campaigns in Europe. Antisemitism soon came into general use as a term denoting all… … Encyclopedia of Judaism