Shemaryahu Levin

Shemaryahu Levin
שמריהו לוין (סופר ומנהיג ציוני, על-שמו כפר שמריהו)
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(והירמש רפכ ומש-לע ,ינויצ גיהנמו רפוס) ןיול והירמש

English-Hebrew dictionary. . 2013.

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  • LEVIN, SHMARYA — (Shemaryahu; 1867–1935), Zionist leader, Hebrew and Yiddish author. Born in Svisloch, Belorussia, Levin joined Ḥibbat Zion in his youth, was one of Aḥad Ha Am s adherents, becoming a member of the benei moshe society. Levin studied at Berlin… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Shemaryahu — n. last name; Shemaryahu Levin (1867 1935), Zionist leader and author, namesake for Kfar Shemaryahu in Israel …   English contemporary dictionary

  • KEFAR SHEMARYAHU — (Heb. כְּפַר שְׁמַרְיָהוּ), semi rural Israeli settlement with municipal council status in the southern Sharon. Kefar Shemaryahu is named after shemaryahu levin . Founded in 1937 as a middle class moshav by immigrants from Germany, from the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Levin, Shemaryahu — (1867 1935)    Russian Zionist leader and author. He was born in Svisloch, Belorussia. He served as a rabbi in Grodno (1896 7) and Yekaterinoslav (1898 1904) and a preacher in Vilna (1904 6). At the Sixth Zionist Congress he was one of the… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • ZIONISM — This article is arranged according to the following outline: the word and its meaning forerunners ḤIBBAT ZION ROOTS OF ḤIBBAT ZION background to the emergence of the movement the beginnings of the movement PINSKER S AUTOEMANCIPATION settlement… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • DNEPROPETROVSK — (Yekaterinoslav until 1926), city and industrial center situated on the River Dnieper in Ukraine. Jews first settled there shortly after its foundation in 1778, and in 1804 the town was included in the pale of settlement . The community numbered… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ZIONIST CONGRESSES — ZIONIST CONGRESSES, the highest authority in the Zionist Organization; created by theodor herzl . None of the previous attempts to convene general assemblies of the Jewish national movement, some of which were successful and some abortive,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • DUMA — DUMA, Imperial Russian legislature, in existence between 1906 and 1917. The electoral law establishing the First Duma included no specific restrictions on the Jewish franchise. Although the Jewish socialist parties, and primarily the bund ,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • DVIR — DVIR, Hebrew publishing house, founded in 1922 in Berlin by Ḥayyim Naḥman Bialik , Shemaryahu Levin, and yehoshua hana rawnitzki as a successor to the moriah publishing firm of Odessa. Bialik expressed Dvir s program as: Not just books, but basic …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • KEREN HAYESOD — (Palestine Foundation Fund), the financial arm of the world zionist organization , founded at the Zionist conference held in London in July 1920. Two basic views were expressed on the problem of how the World Zionist Organization should finance… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • LURIE, JOSEPH — (1871–1937), Zionist leader and Hebrew educator. Born in Pumpenai, Lithuania, Lurie studied at the University of Berlin, where, together with leo motzkin and shemaryahu levin , he established the first Russian Jewish students group (1889) and… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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