Jean Jérôme (other)
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Jean Jérôme (other)
Jean Jérôme (1906—1990) was a Polish Jew-French communist activist and Resistance member. Jean Jérôme or Jean-Jérôme may also refer to: * Jean-Jérôme Adam (1904–1981), French Roman Catholic archbishop *Jean Jérôme Hamer (1916–1996), Belgian Cardinal *Jean-René Jérôme Jean-René Jérôme (1942–1991) was a Haitian painter and considered one of Haiti's greatest artists. Born in Petit-Goâve on March 17, 1942, Jean-René Jérôme moved to Port-Au-Prince where he attended the "Petit Séminaire Collège St-Mar ... (1942–1991), Haitian painter * Jean-Robens Jerome (born 1983), Haitian footballer See also * Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824–1904), French painter and sculptor {{hndis, Jerome, Jean ...
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Jean Jérôme
Jean Jérôme (1906–1990) was a French communist activist and Resistance member. Born as Michał Feintuch (in French Mikhaël or Michel), he took the pseudonym Jean Jérôme in 1940, until his death. Biography Born in Solotvyn, Galicia (part of Austria-Hungary) as one of the seven children of a vendor, he received a religious education in the local yeshiva (Jewish school), and spoke both Hebrew and Yiddish. He started work in menial jobs at a very young age, and he became a communist after Galicia was taken over by Poland at the end of World War I. Feintuch attended meetings of the newly formed and clandestine Communist Party of Poland at the age of sixteen, and he joined a trade union. After two successive arrests, he could no longer find employment, and he ultimately fled Poland in order to elude military service. He lived in Belgium after 1927, working in a steel plant. He also attended lectures at the University of Liège at about the same time. His political ...
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Jean-Jérôme Adam
Jean-Jérôme Adam (8 June 1904 – 11 July 1981) was the French Roman Catholic archbishop of Libreville, Gabon, and an accomplished linguist who studied several of the languages of Gabon. He was born at Wittenheim in Alsace and educated in the seminaries of the Holy Ghost Fathers. He arrived in Gabon on 29 September 1929, and spent the next 18 years as a missionary in the Haut-Ogooué Province. During that time he prepared grammars for the Mbédé, Ndumu, and Duma languages. In 1947, Adam was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Libreville and bishop of the titular see of Rhinocorura; he became bishop of Libreville when it was elevated to a diocese in 1955, and he was made archbishop of the see in 1958. He retired in 1969 and moved to Franceville Franceville is one of the four largest cities in Gabon, with a population of 110,568 at the 2013 census. It lies on the Mpassa River and at the end of the Trans-Gabon Railway and the N3 road. It grew from a village named Masuku ...
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Jean Jérôme Hamer
Jean Jérôme Hamer, O.P., S.T.D. (1 June 1916 – 2 December 1996) was a Belgian Cardinal who was Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life from 1985 until 1992. Biography He was born in Brussels and joined the Dominican Order in 1934 taking the name of Jérôme. He received his religious training at La Sarte, a Dominican Study house near Huy (Belgium), and Louvain University. He did his military service and, during the Second World War, spent 3 months of 1940 as a prisoner. He was ordained on 3 August 1941. He continued his studies at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland, where he earned his doctorate in theology. He was on the teaching staff of the '' Pontificium Athenaeum Internationale Angelicum'' for the academic year of 1952–53. He had been a staff member at the University of Fribourg since 1944, where he then returned and taught until 1962. Episcopate He was appointed secretary of the party in 1958 Secret ...
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Jean-René Jérôme
Jean-René Jérôme (1942–1991) was a Haitian painter and considered one of Haiti's greatest artists. Born in Petit-Goâve on March 17, 1942, Jean-René Jérôme moved to Port-Au-Prince where he attended the "Petit Séminaire Collège St-Martial" and later the "Collège Moderne”. His family is a part of the elite of Haitian society, which enabled him to engage in a variety of artistic activities that interested him such as dance, theatre, drawing, voice and painting. He was able to study drawing and painting at the School of Fine Arts (Haiti), School of Fine Arts. In 1965, he won first prize at the Esso Salon Competition. He later decided to devote himself entirely to painting and opened a studio in Port-Au-Prince in 1968. Jérôme is best known for the originality of his paintings, particularly those of nude females. He was awarded an art scholarship by the US government in 1970 and stayed for four months, studying and working with Bernard Séjourne. In 1973 he returned to ...
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Jean-Robens Jerome
Jean-Robens Jerome (born July 23, 1983) is a Haitian soccer player whose last known club was Olimpia Bălţi in the Moldovan National Division. Career Jerome has spent much of his professional career bouncing between the United States and Moldova; he has had three stints playing for the Pittsburgh Riverhounds in the USL Second Division, making 31 appearances and scoring 5 goals during his tenure there. Jerome has also played for Tiligul-Tiras Tiraspol in the Moldovan National Division, and returned to Moldova in 2009 to play for Olimpia Bălţi. International Jerome made his debut for the Haiti national football team in 2009, scored his first international goal on May 25, 2009, in a 1–1 tie with Jamaica, and was part of the Haiti squad at the 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup The 2009 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the tenth edition of the CONCACAF Gold Cup competition, and the twentieth soccer championship of North America, Central America and the Caribbean (CONCACAF). It was played fr ...
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