Skip to main content

JGSGB Dutch & Sephardi SIG - June 21st 2020 2pm – with Ruth Badley – Where are the Grown-Ups?

Our next meeting in the JGSGB Virtual Meeting Programme is from the JGSGB Dutch & Sephardi Special Interest Group (D&S SIG) by Zoom.

Date: June 21st 2020
Time: 14:00 London
Title:
"Where are the Grown-Ups?"
Speaker:
Ruth Badley

Description: How Ruth uncovered details about the death of her maternal grandmother.


After the talk, there will be an opportunity for Q&A on the talk.


Please email chairman@jgsgb.org.uk if you’d like to join, so that we get an idea of numbers. The invitation is below, but please keep it to yourself!


 

==============================================================

Leigh Dworkin is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

 

Topic: D&S SIG: "Where are the Grown-Ups?" by Ruth Badley

Time: Jun 21, 2020 02:00 PM London

 

Join Zoom Meeting (this link should be all you need)

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86243784084?pwd=cC9wbU95MkJqRGdNVVhYY1hleEFWZz09

 

Meeting ID: 862 4378 4084

Password: sephardi

 

(only for those without a microphone attached to their computer)

One tap mobile

+441314601196,,86243784084#,,,,0#,,061221# United Kingdom

+442030512874,,86243784084#,,,,0#,,061221# United Kingdom

 

Dial by your location

        +44 131 460 1196 United Kingdom

        +44 203 051 2874 United Kingdom

        +44 203 481 5237 United Kingdom

        +44 203 481 5240 United Kingdom

Meeting ID: 862 4378 4084

Password: 061221

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kb90H7t4M0

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Jewish Religious Life in Poland since 1750 - Conference 11 Jan 2021

ONE-DAY ONLINE CONFERENCE TO LAUNCH VOLUME 33 OF POLIN: STUDIES IN POLISH JEWRY  Jewish Religious Life in Poland since 1750      Published by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization/Liverpool University Press   Monday January 11th 2021 10am-3.30pm Organised by the Institute for Polish-Jewish Studies and the Institute of Jewish Studies, UCL with JW3 London. Co-organised and supported by the Polish Cultural Institute, London This event honours the memory of Ada Rapoport-Albert, who edited the volume with Marcin Wodziński. Following tremendous advances in recent years in the study of religious belief, this volume adopts a fresh understanding of Jewish religious life in Poland. The contemporary reassessments, with their awareness of emerging techniques that have the potential to extract fresh insights from source materials both old and new, show how our understanding of what it means to be Jewish is continuing to expand.  Conference convenors: Dr F...

JewishGen announcement: Dr. Dan Hirschberg - Kraków Collection

JewishGen announcement: "We are pleased to announce a partnership between JewishGen.org and Dr. Dan Hirschberg, resulting in the Dr. Dan Hirschberg - Kraków Collection.   As a result of this agreement, records that have been transcribed and compiled by Dr. Hirschberg will be made freely available to JewishGen researchers.   All of the records are from Kraków, Poland (in the Austrian province of Galicia before WWI), including Kazimierz and Podgórze (today, districts of Kraków). Thus far, more than 160,000 records have been uploaded, which include census records, vital records, marriage intentions/banns records, along with progressive and religious marriage records.   Images of most of the records are available online, although search results do not currently link to the images. Prof. Hirschberg's website ( https://www.ics.uci.edu/~dan/genealogy/Krakow ) contains many images and links to images on other websites. Vital records can also be viewed on the Polis...

New database for Cardiff’s Highfield Road Orthodox Jewish Cemetery

From David Shulman: What better way to start the New Year other than with a brand new database! A newly-created searchable database, hosted by JCR-UK, is now up and running. The database, relating to burials at Cardiff’s Highfield Road Orthodox Jewish Cemetery, covers the period 1852 through July 2020 and contains nearly 1,800 burial records, with some 1,470 headstone images. It can be accessed at: https://www.jewishgen.org/jcr-uk/Cemeteries/Cardiff/Highfield_Road_Cemetery/Cemetery_Menu.htm Search results also include coordinates for each individual grave (accurate to about one metre) together with a link to a Google satellite image of the cemetery showing the location of the grave. The creation of the database is part of a project to digitalise the records of all Jewish cemeteries in South Wales and complements a major project by the Jewish History Association of South Wales to collect reminiscences and artefacts and physical items from the numerous Jewish communities in South Wales (...