enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Zion Blumenthal Orphanage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zion_Blumenthal_Orphanage

    The orphanage was founded near the Bukharim quarter in 1900 [2] [3] by Rabbi Abraham Yochanan Blumenthal (1877 [4] –1966 [5]), a native of Jerusalem, [4] who led the orphanage for 50 years. [2] Blumenthal's wife, Shaina, served as a director for 40 years. [6] By 1920, the Blumenthal Orphanage was home to 85 orphans.

  3. Jewish orphans controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_orphans_controversy

    After the end of hostilities, Catholic Church officials, either Pope Pius XII or other prelates, issued instructions for the treatment and disposition of such Jewish children, some, but not all, of whom were now orphans. The rules they established, the authority that issued those rules, and their application in specific cases is the subject of ...

  4. Korczak's orphanages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korczak's_orphanages

    The orphanages run by Janusz Korczak and Stefania Wilczyńska were among the earliest democratic education institutes in the world. [1] They were two orphanages, located in Warsaw. One orphanage was established for Jewish children in 1911 and stopped working on 1942, when the SS took all its residents and workers to Treblinka extermination camp.

  5. He was orphaned in the Holocaust and never met any family ...

    www.aol.com/news/orphaned-holocaust-never-met...

    Korai was taken to a Jewish boarding school in Poland, then to France and eventually to Israel in 1949. He spent 35 years working on semi-trucks. Korai had three children and eight grandchildren.

  6. Hidden children during the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidden_children_during_the...

    The Catholic Church had baptized many Jewish children during the war to hide them as Catholics, but after the war often refused to reunite the children with their Jewish relatives. In the Netherlands, the Dutch government set up a commission after World War II to decide the care of orphaned children, whom they deemed foster children.

  7. Bayit Lepletot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayit_Lepletot

    Bayit Lepletot (Hebrew: בית לפליטות, literally, "Home for Refugees"), is an Orthodox Jewish orphanage for girls in Jerusalem, Israel.Established in 1949 in the Mea Shearim neighborhood to accommodate young Holocaust refugees and orphans, the orphanage opened a second campus in north-central Jerusalem called Girls Town Jerusalem (Hebrew: קרית בנות, "Kiryat Banot") in 1973.

  8. Janusz Korczak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janusz_Korczak

    Korczak was born in Warsaw in 1878. He was unsure of his birth date, which he attributed to his father's failure to promptly acquire a birth certificate for him. [4] His parents were Józef Goldszmit, [1] a respected lawyer from a family of proponents of the haskalah, [5] and Cecylia née Gębicka, daughter of a prominent Kalisz family. [6]

  9. Hebrew Orphan Asylum of New York - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_Orphan_Asylum_of...

    The Hebrew Orphan Asylum of New York (HOA) was a Jewish orphanage in New York City. It was founded in 1860 by the Hebrew Benevolent Society. It was founded in 1860 by the Hebrew Benevolent Society. It closed in 1941, after pedagogical research concluded that children thrive better in foster care or small group homes, rather than in large ...