August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Tarja-Liisa Luukkanen,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
This article examines the antisemitic attitudes among the Lutheran clergy in Finland during the latter part of the 19th century. The Jewish question was discussed at the Finnish Diet by the estate of the clergy in order to …
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Cristina Pallini, Annalisa Riccarda Scaccabarozzi,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
Until 1944 Salonika was also known as the Jerusalem of the Balkans for its predominantly Jewish population. In August 1917 however, late Ottoman Salonika was ravaged by a great fire which destroyed most of its oldest synagogues. This article …
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Ehud Manor,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
Today, the terms “identity-politics” or “recognition-politics” enjoy an important presence in public debate, and it is widely accepted that these terms started to be important especially the 1960’s. Yet, as this …
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Dimitrios Varvaritis,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
In late August 1861 Giuseppe Nacamulli published the first issue of his bi-lingual (Greek-Italian) newspaper
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Bojan Mitrovi?,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
This article examines the life and works of Hajim S. Davi?o in the context of the history of Serbian Jews, of the “Court Jew” Davi?o family and of the Serbian and Triestine context of the late 19th and early…
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Rolf Steininger,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
The Austrian government recognized the state of Israel de facto on March 15, 1949. A year later Austria’s first diplomatic representative arrives in Tel Aviv: Consul First Class Karl Hartl, born in 1909 in Vienna and married to …
August 8, 2014, 2:00 am, Anna Baldini,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
By drawing on the literary and intellectual trajectory of the writer Primo Levi, the essay underlines the most relevant turning points in the shaping of an Italian memory of the Shoah. A contextualization of Levi’s work puts into eviden…
August 8, 2014, 1:00 am, Bojan Mitrovi?,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
This article examines the life and works of Hajim S. Davi?o in the context of the history of Serbian Jews, of the “Court Jew” Davi?o family and of the Serbian and Triestine context of the late 19th and early…
August 8, 2014, 1:00 am, Cristina Pallini, Annalisa Riccarda Scaccabarozzi,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
Until 1944 Salonika was also known as the Jerusalem of the Balkans for its predominantly Jewish population. In August 1917 however, late Ottoman Salonika was ravaged by a great fire which destroyed most of its oldest synagogues. This article …
August 8, 2014, 1:00 am, Dimitrios Varvaritis,
Issue: 7.
Abstract
In late August 1861 Giuseppe Nacamulli published the first issue of his bi-lingual (Greek-Italian) newspaper