Ohel Moshe (Jerusalem)
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Ohel Moshe (Jerusalem)
Ohel Moshe ( he, אהל משה, "Tent of Moses") may refer to: * Ohel Moshe (former neighborhood in Tel Aviv) *Ohel Moshe (neighborhood in Jerusalem), today part of Nachlaot *Ohel Moshe Synagogue, today the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum The Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum is a museum commemorating the Jewish refugees who lived in Shanghai during World War II after fleeing Europe to escape the Holocaust. It is located at the former Ohel Moshe or Moishe Synagogue, in the Tilanqiao ... * Yeshiva Ohel Moshe is a school in Bensonhurst (Brooklyn, NY) {{Disamb ...
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Ohel Moshe (neighborhood)
Ohel Moshe was a Jewish neighborhood which located Eastern-Northern to Jaffa, established in 1906. it was founded by Moshe Asulin, Moshe Elbaz and Moshe Attia, therefore its name. The neighborhood was inhabited mainly by Maghrebi Jews, with small numbers of Ashkenazi Jews and Yemenite Jews. It grew quickly and by 1922 its population was 936 inhabitants, living in 82 houses. In the 1920s, it has merged with Tel Aviv municipality. See also *Neighborhoods of Tel Aviv This list of the neighborhoods of Tel Aviv, is arranged geographically from north to south, then from west to east. Northwest Residential * Azorei Hen (אזורי חן), ''Areas of Grace'' * Kokhav HaTzafon (כוכב הצפון), '' Northern Sta ... References Ashkenazi Jewish culture in Tel Aviv Neighborhoods of Tel Aviv History of Tel Aviv 1906 establishments in Ottoman Syria North African-Jewish culture in Israel Yemeni-Jewish culture in Israel {{TelAviv-stub ...
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Nachlaot
Nachlaot ( he, נחלאות, also ''Naḥlaʾoth'') is a cluster of 23 courtyard neighborhoods in central Jerusalem surrounding the Mahane Yehuda Market. It is known for its narrow, winding lanes, old-style housing, hidden courtyards and many small synagogues. Neighborhoods in Nachlaot (plural of ''nachala'', lit. "homestead") include Batei Broide, Batei Goral, Batei Minsk, Batei Munkacs, Batei Rand, Bet Ya'acov, Even Yisrael (neighborhood), Even Yisrael (built in 1875 it is the oldest of the group), Knesset Yisrael, Mahane Yehuda (neighborhood), Mahane Yehuda, Mazkeret Moshe, Mishkenot Yisrael, Nahalat Ahim, Nahalat Zion, Neve Bezalel, Neve Shalom (Jerusalem), Neve Shalom, Ohel Moshe (Jerusalem), Ohel Moshe, Shevet Ahim, Sukkat Shalom, Shevet Zedek, Sukkat Shalom, Zikhron Tuvya, Zikhron Ya'acov, and Zikhron Yosef. Name ''Nahala'', plural ''nahlaot'' (with different ways of transliterating/spelling it), is a Hebrew word for either heritage or estate. File:NahlaotJerusalemNov1120 ...
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Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum
The Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum is a museum commemorating the Jewish refugees who lived in Shanghai during World War II after fleeing Europe to escape the Holocaust. It is located at the former Ohel Moshe or Moishe Synagogue, in the Tilanqiao Historic Area of Hongkou district, Shanghai, China. The museum features documents, photographs, films, and personal items documenting the lives of some of the more than 20,000 Jewish residents of the Restricted Sector for Stateless Refugees, better known as the Shanghai Ghetto, during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai. Background The museum is situated in what was once the Jewish Quarter of Shanghai, which had had a Jewish community since the late 19th century, in Hongkou District (formerly rendered as "Hongkew"). After the 1937 Battle of Shanghai, Japan occupied the Chinese sections of Shanghai, but the foreign concessions—the Shanghai International Settlement and the Shanghai French Concession—were still under the control of the ...
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Yeshiva Ohel Moshe
Yeshiva Ohel Moshe is a Bensonhurst-based, Orthodox Jewish day school and shul (synagogue) founded in 1927. Since 1949, the school and the synagogue, both referred to as Yeshivah Ohel Moshe, have been housed in the same building at 7914 Bay Parkway in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. It was led by Rabbi Eliyahu Machlis until his death in 1980. The Yeshivah Yeshivah Ohel Moshe was founded as a school for boys in the Sons of Israel building in Brooklyn, eventually moving to the Jewish Community House with Dr Zuckerbrau as principal. In 1933, Rabbi Moshe Berman took over responsibility for the school. It obtained a New York State Regents charter in 1935. In 1949, Yeshivah Ohel Moshe relocated as a school and synagogue to a new structure at 7914 Bay Parkway in Bensonhurst. Upon completion it was led by Eliyahu Machlis. Graduates include Saul Kassin and Shimon Eider Shimon D. Eider (December 2, 1938 - September 28, 2007) was an Orthodox Jewish Rabbi and a po ...
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