-
Hershel of
Ostropol (Yiddish: הערשעלע אסטראפאלער, romanized: Hershele
Ostropoler,
Little Hersh of Ostropol; 1757–1811) is a
prominent figure in Jewish...
- Susanoo, Kappa, Bake-danuki, Hare of
Inaba Jewish folklore:
Hershele Ostropoler (Ashke****), Joha (Sephardic)
Kazakh folklore:
Aldar kose
Kiowa folklore:...
- back up the mountain, and
rolled the
stones back down again.
Hershele Ostropoler, also
known as
Hershel of Ostropol, was a
legendary prankster who was...
-
Pesah Ostropoli was born in
Ostropil The hero of
Jewish humor,
Hershele Ostropoler, was from that town
Grandparents of
American filmmaker James Gray V. Volodarsky...
- to discomfort,
enjoys it, even
transforms it into pleasure".
Hershele Ostropoler Nasreddin Sly
Peter Akhu Tönpa
Erich Kästner (1899–1974), one of the authors...
- but then
invented the lyre and gave it to
Apollo as payment.
Hershele Ostropoler - In Ashke****c
Jewish folklore,
based on a real
person who
lived during...
- Thyl Ulenspiegel, the
Hungarian Csalóka Péter and the
Jewish Hershele Ostropoler. In
North Macedonia, it is
thought that Itar Pejo is a
native of the region...
-
bleter ("Green leaves"), ****uriku, Sholem-Aleykhem ("****o"), and
Hershele Ostropoler ("Hershele of Ostropol"). In 1917, in
response to
antisemitic violence...
- need oats at all!". Some
jokes of
Motke Chabad are
ascribed to
Hershele Ostropoler and vice versa. "Motke Habad", by
Gershon Winer Arie Sover,
Jewish Humor:...
-
Yeshiva branch in Białystok. At the time, he was
known as Rav
Gershon Ostropoler ("of Ostropol," his hometown). He was a
friend of
Rabbi Yaakov Yisrael...