![Rabbiválasztás Jeruzsálemben (tanulmány)](/api/image/getissuecoverimage?id=picture_1992_9916.jpg)
We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.
Júlia Vajda and Andor Tooth Gábor’s work (“Our Holocaust”, “Your Holocaust”, “Their Holocaust” and Responding with the Strength of Art. Waldsee 1944) analyses the visual reception of the 60th anniversary of the Hungarian Holocaust. Three Hungarian Jewish women living in Israel (and belonging to three generations) discuss the Holocaust from a women’s perspective.
More...
Sára Reuveni, a senior member of staff at the Yad Vashem seeks to understand why more women than men took part in actions to rescue Jews and offers a portrayal of two women that assisted such actions.
More...
András Mayer’s pictorial report titled Jollification on the Ruins shows there is public interest for endowing the Jewish quarter with a contemporary content.
More...
Andor Tooth Gábor’s work analyses the visual reception of the 60th anniversary of the Hungarian Holocaust. Three Hungarian Jewish women living in Israel (and belonging to three generations) discuss the Holocaust from a women’s perspective.
More...
Ágnes Heller’s essay Postscript to the Irresolvable Nature of the “Jewish Question” continues her thoughts (presented in the previous volume) on Jewish time and space in history, seeking an answer to the new but familiar problems of Jews in the third millennium. (Anti-Semitism, dependence on “global” changes in the world, Israel’s threatened existence, and preserving the identity of Jews)
More...
Hava Pinchas-Cohen, the Israeli poet and chief editor of the quarterly magazine Dimuj, narrates a rather odd journey to Auschwitz, the joint “great journey” of Israeli Arabs and Jews, with the second intifada in the background.
More...
The anthropologist Ilana Rosen, a professor of Beer Sheva University, examines the special women’s features of remembering the Holocaust and lays down the foundations for a new scientific approach.
More...