Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Many refused to come out of the tunnel, and as a result, the New York City Police Department arrested nine people. [14] Those arrested were between the ages of 19 and 22. [ 7 ] Of those arrested, five men were later arraigned in front of a Brooklyn judge on charges including criminal mischief , reckless endangerment and obstructing governmental ...
‘This was the most frightening thing I’ve ever seen in my entire life,’ said one member of the synagogue
An investigation by the city's Department of Buildings uncovered a tunnel that was 60-foot-long (18.3 meter), 8-foot-wide (2.4 meter) and 5-foot-high (1.5 meter) located underneath the global ...
The synagogue was built in the early 1900s [2] or 1910s [3] for the city's Ashkenazi Jewish population. Attendance rates declined after the establishment of Bolshevik rule in Georgia and the suppression of religion that accompanied it.
A distinction can be made between cisterns incorporated into the hiding complexes as water reservoirs, and those serving only as transit spaces and not as reservoirs, based on tunnel outlets in their walls; in the latter, tunnels were hewn in the cistern bottom rather than top, and the tunnel outlet's breach through the watertight plaster layer ...
The bombing ripped the delicate social fabric of Atlanta, which called itself the "city too busy to hate," [7] although it also elicited widespread support for Rothschild and the Temple from Jewish and non-Jewish Atlantans alike. [6] By early November 1958, the Temple had received over $12,000 in donations to its rebuilding fund. [8]
Since Oct. 7, the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust, was followed by a surge in antisemitic attacks, more Jews have begun to question their safety in this country.
Synagogues in Georgia (U.S. state) (2 C, 7 P) Pages in category "Jews and Judaism in Georgia (U.S. state)" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.