Verlag: Mount Scopus Publications
Zustand: Good. Good condition. (Russian Jews, Soviet Union, Intellectual Life, Israel) A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains.
Verlag: Scientists Committee of the Israel Council for Soviet Jewry Publications for Soviet Jewry, Jerusalem, 1984
Anbieter: Henry Hollander, Bookseller, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Softbound. Zustand: Good. Octavo, soiled endpapers, wear to the covers, 235, 13 pp., notes, English language abstracts Text is in Hebrew. Introduction by Prital. Articles are "Avraham Harman at Seventy," Don Potinkin, "Reflections on Jewish Culture in the Soviet Union," Shmuel Ettinger, "The National Re-awakening of Soviet Jewry," Yakov Ro'i, "Neither Zionism nor Antisemitism," Theodore Freidgut, "The National Existence of the Soviet Jews," Binyamin Pinkus, "Antisemitism in Russian Literature," Mikhail Heifetz, "A Perversion of Justice with Legal Sanction," Yakov Eisenstadt, "Martinov - Champion of Human Rights," Yuri Kolker, "The 'Autonomous Jewish District' Birobidzhan," Yakov Levavi, "The Beginning of the End," Yosef Kerler, "Yosef Kerler's Path to Zionism," Prital, "A Russian-Yiddish Dictionary on the Soviet Union.".
Verlag: Jerusalem, 1982
Anbieter: John Trotter Books, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 17,82
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Good.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Jerusalem : Hebrew University Magnes Press, 1982
ISBN 10: 9652234206 ISBN 13: 9789652234209
Anbieter: Joseph Burridge Books, Dagenham, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 83,16
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbSoft cover. Zustand: New. 282 pages ; 23 cm. This book presents the thoughts and aspirations of those Jewish intellectuals who in the seventies initiated a dramatic turning point in the history of Soviet Jewry the exodus of 250,000 Jews from the Soviet Union. The essays reveal the diversity behind the Jewish movement of renewal in the Soviet Union. Different sections cover the actual struggle to emigrate from various areas of the Soviet Union; the problems of cultural and self-identity faced by the Soviet Jewish intellectual both before and after emigration; debates on the role of the Soviet Jewish immigrant in the Jewish State; and the future of Jewish culture in the USSR. These analyses also suggest some of the deep-rooted reasons behind the current dropout problem.