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         Jewish Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Women and Gender in Jewish Philosophy (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Hava Tirosh-Samuelson, 2004-06
  2. Paul Celan: Holograms of Darkness (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Amy Diane Colin, 1991-07
  3. Testament of Abraham (Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature) by Dale C., Jr. Allison, 2003-09
  4. Anna in the Afterlife (Library of Modern Jewish Literature) by Merrill Joan Gerber, 2002-01
  5. Lilith's Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural by Howard Schwartz, 1991-12-12
  6. Beyond the Text: A Holistic Approach to Liturgy (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Lawrence A. Hoffman, 1991-12-01
  7. Ladino Rabbinic Literature And Ottoman Sephardic Culture (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Matthias B. Lehmann, 2005-11
  8. Treasury of Jewish Love: Poems, Quotations & Proverbs : In Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino and English (Treasury of Love)
  9. Antonio's Devils: Writers of the Jewish Enlightenment and the Birth of Modern Hebrew and Yiddish Literature (Stanford Studies in Jewish History and C) by Jeremy Dauber, 2004-06-02
  10. Sentences Of Pseudo-phocylides (Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature) (Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature (Cejl)) by Walter T. Wilson, 2005-10-30
  11. 1 Enoch 91-108 (Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature) by Loren T. Stuckenbruck, 2008-04-30
  12. Fragments of Redemption: Jewish Thought and Literary Theory in Benjamin, Scholem, and Levinas (Jewish Literature and Culture) by Susan A. Handelman, 1991-11
  13. Reluctant Return: A Survivor's Journey to an Austrian Town (Jewish Literature and Culture) by David W. Weiss, 1999-10
  14. The Walled City (Library of Modern Jewish Literature) by Esther David, 2002-07

121. Books And Websites About The Holocaust For Young Adults
Eleven works of jewish Holocaust literature, annotated and presented for younger readers.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/jubo/holocaust.html
DO YOU KNOW? WILL YOU REMEMBER? Books and Websites about the Holocaust for Young Adults
Polish children imprisoned in Auschwitz look out from behind the barbed wire fence.
Approximately 40,000 Polish children were imprisoned in the camp before being transferred to Germany during the "Heuaktion" (Hay Action). The blond boy at the lower right may be Kalman Cylberszac (b.1934), the son of Rachel and Nachum Cylberszac from Lask, Poland.
Credit: Main Commission for the Investigation of Nazi War Crimes, courtesy of USHMM Photo Archives
In the United States, many school systems have a "snow day" closing schools on Yom Kippur, a Jewish High Holy day so families can attend services together. April has been declared "National Holocaust Month" and students study this time in history during that month so as "Never to Forget." Steven Spielberg made an Oscar winning film based upon Thomas Keneally's book, Schindler's List . And what does this mean to us? It means that our everyday lives exist with a certain kind of ease that I am sure none of the Holocaust victims would deny us; it is as this kind of life they had prior to World War II.
But, what they would want is for us to remember the nightmare of the Holocaust, because it can happen again. And each one of us, by knowing and remembering, will be ready so that the next time maniacal prejudicial attacks against Jews or any other people begins, such slaughter cannot happen again. There are many ways and many reasons to study and learn about the Holocaust. Everybody takes something different from the experience. The below listed websites and book summaries are just a few that I hope will not only help you to remember the Holocaust, but give you courage to speak out and stand up if another situation occurs. And it is occurring...

122. Judaic Texts
The classic compendium of everyday jewish law (Halacha) on CD! A treasury of Halachic literature, including a complete subject index.
http://www.davka.com/cgi-bin/category.cgi?category=4

123. Center For Judaic Studies
Offers an interdisciplinary program exploring the evolution of jewish civilization and its expression in history, literature, philosophy and religion.
http://www.du.edu/cjs/

124. Rabbinic Literature: Information From Answers.com
rabbinic literature Rabbinic literature , in the broadest sense, Back to the Sources Reading the Classic jewish Texts, Barry W. Holtz, (Summit Books)
http://www.answers.com/topic/rabbinic-literature
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping rabbinic literature Wikipedia rabbinic literature Rabbinic literature , in the broadest sense, can mean the entire spectrum of Judaism 's rabbinic writing/s throughout history. However, the term often used as an exact cognate of the Hebrew term Sifrut Hazal Talmudic era. The latter, more specific, sense is how the term is normally used in medieval and modern rabbinic writing (where Hazal normally refers only to the sages of the Talmudic era), and in contemporary academic writing (where "rabbinic literature" refers to Talmud, Midrash, and related writings, but hardly ever to later texts). This article discusses rabbinic literature in both senses. It begins with the classic rabbinic literature of the Talmudic era ( Sifrut Hazal ), and then adds a broad survey of rabbinic writing from later periods. The term meforshim , or parshanim is also used in modern-day yeshiva 's (i.e. Talmudical academies), denoting the "

125. Elie Wiesel Center For Judaic Studies
Offers a broadbased curriculum in jewish history, literature, and thought, in addition to Hebrew language study.
http://www.bu.edu/judaicstudies/index.html
Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies Steven T. Katz , Director The Boston University Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies coordinates and supports all academic programs relating to Jewish Studies at the University. The services and programs of the Center are available to Judaic Studies concentrators in the Department of Religion and all others interested in the subject area.
The Center seeks to coordinate all courses in Jewish Studies at Boston University. Its ambition is to provide a broad-based, academically rigorous curriculum in the most important areas of Jewish history, literature, and thought. It also supports the University teaching program in Hebrew language study. In addition, it actively works to support the enhancement of library resources in Jewish studies, and to sponsor relevant lectures, conferences, and publications in Jewish Studies. The Center is committed to the support of all types of research in Jewish Studies.
The Center hosts special events of high quality and interest in order to further the integration of Judaic Studies into the life of the University and the community. These include programs in films, theater, and music, all of which contribue to the cultural life of the University.

126. Melton Center For Jewish Studies - Ohio State University
Offers courses for all levels in Hebrew language, literature, cognate Semitic languages, Yiddish, jewish history, Rabbinics, and jewish philosophy.
http://meltoncenter.osu.edu/
The Ohio State University General Information
About the Center
Melton Center Faculty Undergraduate Major and Minor requirements
Courses in Jewish Studies
... Contact the Center Calendar of Events
2004-5 Full Calendar of Events

2005-6 Calendar of Events
coming soon
Special Programs 2004-5 Newsletter MELTON ARTS.ORG is now online!! 2004-5 High School Honors Program: Searching for Zion Jewish Music CD:
Jewish Music Between East and West
... 2003-2004 Newsletter a year-long series of musical offerings
March 13 Harts un Soul April 3: Ernest Bloch in Ohio April 17 Les Yeux Noirs May 2: Music of Korngold

127. Rabbinic Literature - Enpsychlopedia
Halakha is the jewish way of life. Notable works in this category include literature (http//www.authorama.com/chapterson-jewish-literature-1.html)
http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Rabbinic_literature
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Rabbinic literature
Rabbinic literature , in the broadest sense, can mean the entire spectrum of Judaism 's rabbinic writing/s throughout history. However, the term often used as an exact cognate of the Hebrew term Sifrut Hazal Talmudic era. The latter, more specific, sense is how the term is normally used in medieval and modern rabbinic writing (where Hazal normally refers only to the sages of the Talmudic era), and in contemporary academic writing (where "rabbinic literature" refers to Talmud, Midrash, and related writings, but hardly ever to later texts). This article discusses rabbinic literature in both senses. It begins with the classic rabbinic literature of the Talmudic era ( Sifrut Hazal ), and then adds a broad survey of rabbinic writing from later periods. The term meforshim , or parshanim is also used in modern-day yeshiva 's (i.e. Talmudical academies), denoting the " rabbinical commentaries" of the "commentators", see below for further elucidation. Contents showTocToggle("show","hide")

128. John Felstiner Co-edits Anthology On Jewish American Literature, Translates Poem
He said he knew relatively little about jewish American literature when he Uninitiated readers of jewish American literature those whose grasp of the
http://www.stanford.edu/news/report/news/february28/jewishlit-a.html
Stanford Report, February 27, 2000 Finding the right words for a literary tradition and translation
English Professor John Felstiner translates Paul Celan, co-edits anthology of American Jewish literature BY JOHN SANFORD In his introduction to the recently published Selected Poems and Prose of Paul Celan , Stanford English Professor John Felstiner poses a question that is exquisite and wrenching: "Would we, if somehow this were possible, trade Anne Frank's diary for her life, give up those salvaged pages to let her survive unscathed, in her seventies now? And would we forego Charlotte Salomon's Life or Theater? , her 1941 autobiography in 760 watercolors, if in exchange she were not to perish at Auschwitz? Would we, in effect, do without such indispensable human documents, relinquish them so as to secure the undeflected lives their creators might have lived?" The passage compels us to reflect on what it would mean to never read Frank's words, with the richness they afford our understanding of history, suffering and tenderness, even as we continue toward Felstiner's inevitable response:

129. Medieval Sourcebook: Selected Sources: Index
The Celtic Loss of Britain; Celtic Christianity; Celtic literature. Carolingians and After jewish Life. General; jewish Communities and Individuals
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook1.html
ORB Main Page Links to Other Medieval Sites Medieval Studies Course [Halsall]
Halsall Home
... Byzantine Studies Page
Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ...
Main Page
Select Sources Full Texts Saints' Lives Law Texts Maps ... Exploration There are now thousands of sources in the Internet Medieval Sourcebook , and the previous large Selected Sources Index page was crashing many browsers. As of October 10 1998, the Selected Sources section has been completely redesigned to allow for easy and rapid navigation, as well as for further expansion in the number of texts. The Selected Sources section now works as follows:
  • This Selected Sources Index page has been much extended to show all sections and sub sections. These have also been regularized in a consistent hierarchy. This should allow rapid review of where texts are. To access the sub-section pages , simply select the highlighted (white text with green background) section title on the left. In addition there are now two navigation bars on the left of each screen in the Selected Sources section.

130. Jewish Studies At Earlham
The history, religion, and literature of the jewish people form a complex, stirring, and intellectually coherent field of concentration.
http://www.earlham.edu/~jwst/
Jewish Studies Student Life The Program The Minor Course Descriptions Links of Interest Contact information
Jewish Studies
Earlham College
Richmond, Indiana 47374-4095
Phone: (765) 983-1422 or
E-mail a faculty member (right)
Links of Interest
About Jewish Studies Jewish Studies is a particularly appropriate area of study within a liberal arts education. The history, religion, and literature of the Jewish people form a complex, stirring, and intellectually coherent field of concentration. Jewish culture has been immensely influential, and familiarity with it is required for any significant understanding of Western and Middle Eastern history, Christianity, Islam, and European and American literature. The Jewish tradition of reflective and persistent questioning of the most enduring human issues offers unique challenges to Earlham students, whatever their major fields and religious backgrounds.

131. Encyclopedia Of The Jewish Story - Main Page
Last UpdateAugust 20, 2002.
http://www.biu.ac.il/js/thematology/
Last Update:August 20, 2002

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