- stories.
Rokhl Brokhes was born in Minsk, in the
Belarusian region of the
Russian Empire, into a poor family. Her father, Volf
Brokhes, was a
maskil (follower...
- name include:
Rokhl Auerbakh Ester-Rokhl
Kaminska Rokhl Häring Korn
Rokhl Brokhes All
pages with
titles containing Rokhl All
pages with
titles containing...
- It is
unknown if the
remaining half
escaped successfully or not.
Rokhl Brokhes (1882–1942?),
writer Paula Fürst (1894–1942?),
educational reformer Ida...
-
fleysh un fish, Un a vays
badektn tish, Tray-lay-lay-lay-lay-lay. Kh'hob di
brokhes shoyn gemakht, Di
menoyre shaynt a prakht, Tray-lay-lay-lay-lay-lay, Toyznt...
- In Judaism, a berakhah, bracha, brokho,
brokhe (Hebrew: בְּרָכָה; pl. בְּרָכוֹת, berakhot, brokhoys; "benediction," "blessing") is a
formula of blessing...
-
knowledge of
Hebrew and
little of
Judaism (a
prompter had to
whisper to him the
brokhe (berakhah) when he was
asked to
recite it in the
Basel synagogue) and became...
-
village near Minsk, in what is now Belarus. His
parents were Zev Volf and
Brokhe Tsharni (née Hurwitz). His father, a
fervent Lubavitcher Hasid, died in...
-
drafted along with his
brother Dovid in the
summer of 1941. His
sister Brokhe was also sent to
serve in a
medical unit. In
October 1941
Arkady was wounded...
-
elender meydl oder der kamf gegn
fraye libe. New York: S. Kantrowitz, 1918.
Brokhe, a Kleyn-Shtetl****. New York: 1923. A Provints-Tsaytung. New York: 1926...
- the
Podolia Governorate of the
Russian Empire (present-day Ukraine), to
Brokhe Bas-Tsion
Rozovsky (Yiddish: ברכה בת־ציון ראָזאָװסקי) and
Abraham Aronson...