-
Moshe Leib
Lilienblum (Yiddish: משה לייב לילינבלום;
October 22, 1843, in Keidany,
Kovno Governorate –
February 12, 1910, in Odesa) was a
Jewish scholar...
- el-Haiyeh. In 1914 the
village was
renamed into Kfar
Malal after Moshe Leib
Lilienblum, an
early leader of the
Hovevei Zion movement,
whose acronym in Hebrew...
- theater. He
first presented plays by N.M.
Sheikevitch and
Moshe Leib
Lilienblum, then was the
first to
present classic European theater in Yiddish, translating...
-
beyond doubt and has no need for
farfetched proofs.' Others, such as
Lilienblum, did not even
think it
necessary to
dwell on this matter." "When faced...
-
national conference was held in
Druskininkai led by Leon
Pinsker and
Moses Lilienblum which discussed ideas that pla**** an
important role in the development...
-
Avrohom Eliyahu Kaplan (1890–1924),
prominent Orthodox rabbi.
Moshe Leib
Lilienblum,
Jewish scholar and
author Viktoras Muntianas,
Lithuanian politician,...
-
establish a settlement. On
April 2, 1922, two
wagons left the
corner of
Lilienblum and
Herzl Streets in Tel Aviv
carrying four "Ahuza" members,
three laborers...
- from
Dizengoff House.
Within a year, Herzl, Ahad Ha'am,
Yehuda Halevi,
Lilienblum, and
Rothschild streets were built; a
water system was installed; and...
- Ma'asit (Hebrew: ציונות מעשית),
Practical Zionism was led by
Moshe Leib
Lilienblum and Leon
Pinsker and
molded by the
Hovevei Zion organization. This approach...
- (1870–1943),
Polish lawyer,
journalist and
Zionist activist Moshe Leib
Lilienblum (1843–1910), born in the
Russian Empire (Lithuania) scholar,
early advocate...