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Az előfizetők (de csak a Belső kör és Közösség csomagok tulajdonosai!) már szombat hajnalban hozzájutnak legfrissebb epizódunk teljes verziójához. A kedden publikált, ingyen meghallgatható verzió tíz perccel rövidebb. 00:32 Élő sold out. Angus MacLise, a Velvet Underground elvhű dobosa. A Sváb-retreat. Az egyetlen példányban készült Wu Tang Clan-lemez és Martin Shkreli. 04:43 Szájkarate Magyar Péterrel. Musk és az argentin lítium. Az argentin exportvámok. A Deutsche Welle riportja. Bede Márton Milei-cikke. 07:23 Milei három ígérete. Az argentin Bokros-csomag. Milei és Xi Jinping. 11:40 Társadalmi türelem vs. sokkterápia. Milei vs. Aerolíneas Argentinas. Milei vs. foci. Chiqui Tapia, a szakszerveti vezető. Julio Grondona, akit még az FBI sem tudott lecsukni. Chuck Blazer macskájának lakása. 15:54 Eredményhirdetés az Oktogon kínai éttermeinek körmérkőzésében. 20:07 Winkler Róbert cikke a Mike Tyson-Jake Paul meccsről. Boxmeccsek, amiket nem láttunk, illetve meg sem történtek. 23:59 A mérlegelés, mint önálló sportág. Tyson titka. Be van-é téve a profi box kapuja? Linda McMahont a ringben. Trump a ringben. 28:07 Jack London: Egy szelet sült. Az ember, akinek a műveiben az erősebb kutya baszik. Küzdősport és munkásosztály. Puskás, Nyilasi és Törőcsik származása. 34:08 Johnny Weissmüller Soltész Rezsője. Duke Kahanamoku tényleg nemesi származású volt, de nem ezért hívták Duke-nak. Ki regisztrálta az anulufakardocskaja@gmail.com-ot? 36:24 Limuzinsofőrök tuti tippjei seggizzadás ellen. Ergonomic bamboo car seat pad. Sebváltó lótetűvel. 40:06 A panoráma jelentősége lakásvásárlásnál. Szép kilátás panelból. Kádárista teqball. 42:51 Leghosszabb dinasztiák a magyar Wikipedián. Molnár Ferenc és a Trabant. 45:36 Galla László csodálatos élete. A Centropa adatbázisa zsidó életútinterjúkból. 47:52 A fingóverseny.hu hiteles története. Tolbuhin körút a Google Mapsen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Amazing Story of the Jews of Urfa and their place in Israel's story. For a virtual tour of Abraham's cave in Urfa: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Vz5RGw9H_I For the full interview of Harun Bozo from Centropa's Library of Rescued memories: https://www.centropa.org/en/biography/harun-bozo
Narrated by Edward Serotta Moldova became an independent country when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Well more than 65,000 Jews were registered then and over the next two decades, the overwhelming majority emigrated to Israel. The community stands at less than 5,000 today but provides its members with kindergartens, youth clubs, sports teams and care for seniors. Centropa conducted two dozen interviews in Moldova and we have chosen two of those stories for this podcast season.
Besides remembering what is long gone, decimated by the Holocaust of World War II, the CENTROPA organization is dedicated to recapturing the vibrant Jewish life of the early 20th century on the European continent. Their operation is based in headquarters in Vienna, Austria; Budapest, Hungary; and Hamburg, Germany. The organization's full name is Central Europe Center for Research and Documentation. The motto for CENTROPA is “Preserving Jewish Memory, Bringing History to Life”. It is a daunting task given the great diversity and variety of the Jewish way of life from 1900 to the 1930s, which was often integrated into every layer of European society. In this podcast program episode, listen to Lauren Granite, Centropa United States Education Director, describe the ways they accomplish their goals. It includes the development of educational programs for schools, award-winning films, food recipes from former Jewish kitchens, photos from the Balkan Sephardic communities, and most of all through the archives of interviews and story telling. It is a noble mission that CENTROPA has and poignant because the more European Jewish history of the 20th Century is brought to life, the value of what has been lost is more profoundly understood. TO CONTACT: www.centropa.org Granite@centropa.org for educational resources and materials
narrated by Annita Mordechai I grew up Jewish and Greek, the granddaughter of a woman who survived the Holocaust hiding with her parents and sisters in a friend's apartment. In 2005, I joined a team of Centropa interviewers led by the historian Rena Molho and our goal was to ask elderly Jews born in Thessaloniki to share with us their personal stories—from the 1920s until the early 2000s. We highlight three of those interviews in this podcast season and you can find links to the interviews, as well as book recommendations, in the shownotes. Thanks for listening
Few Jews live in Dorcol today but this quiet corner of Belgrade still evokes its past, when Jewish shops stood cheek by jowl and families scurried off on Friday evenings to synagogue. Ida Labudovic interviewed Vera Amar and Avram Mosic for us in 2002, and both describe what Dorcol was like in its last years. Jilly Bond, who reads Vera Amar, is a regular performer on BBC's The Archers and has read more than 40 audio books.David Horovitch. With 100 screen credits to his name, David Horovitch has performed Shakespeare on stage and in film, was recently seen in Mike Leigh's Mr Turner and is currently starring in the HBO Max series House of the Dragons. Additional reading of Ernst Pavel's memoir by Mikael Gemeda-Breka of Carnegie Mellon University. Special thanks to Jaehee Cho of the Entertainment Technology Center of CMU and Tijana Zherajikj of Centropa. narrated by David Horovitch Jilly Bond
narrated by Henry Goodman Peter Rabtsevich describes what it was like for Jews in Kyiv, and in the Soviet Union, in the decades after the Second World War. Thousands would stand in front of Kyiv's only synagogue on the High Holidays. “They came to remember their heritage, to remember their murdered families, and to remember that they were Jews.”
narrated by Allan Corduner Before he was 20 years old, Hertz Rogovoy had fought in three of the war's major battles: the defense of Moscow, in Stalingrad, and at Orel, where a sniper shot him. Twice. After a year in the hospital, Hertz decided he, too, would become a doctor. And he practiced well into his 80s.
narrated by Stephen Greif In this short episode, we learn about growing up in a shtetl, fleeing a pogrom, and what it was like living on a collective farm.
narrated by Jeni Barnett One of our most colorful storytellers, Sophie tells us how one day, when her mother was walking on the street in Kamenets Podolskii, a handsome young man, an actor, asked for directions.
narrated by Janet Suzman Perhaps as many as 4 million Ukrainians starved to death during Stalin's enforced famine of 1832/1933. Sarah Kaplan tells us how, even though she was but 16 years old, her mother married her off to a cousin from Moscow, just to get her out of Ukraine.
narrated by David Horovitch Aron's father was sure the Germans and the Romanians would never take Odesa. And he went off to enlist to help make sure they wouldn't. Meanwhile, 16-year-old Aron insisted to his mother they flee on one of the last ships out. The rest of the family remained.
narrated by Sara Kestelman A story with the wallop of a 19th century novel. When the Germans were closing in on Kyiv, Sasha Goldberg took his fiancé, Hana Gehtman, and her sister Dora, to a train headed east. As winter set in, Hana became sick and died. Sasha kept writing her from the front line, and Dora answered, pretending to be Hana.
narrated by Jan Goodman Lilya Finberg paints a picture of postwar Jewish life in Kyiv, from the days of the ‘anti- cosmopolitan campaign' to the infamous doctor's plot. But Lilya watched society change, especially after Ukraine's independence in 1991, and was thrilled when her son Leonid became one of Ukraine's leading Jewish intellectuals.
narrated by Jane Bertish Jakob Shapiro was a highly decorated Army officer who railed against Jews leaving their motherland for Israel. A construction engineer, he worked on building sites until he was 86. In his final years, Jakob Shapiro mused, “I'll bet I would have done well there,” he said. “Guess I should have gone, too.”
narrated by: Allan Corduner Samuel Birger tells the harrowing story of what it was like for his family to flee from their shtetl of Jonava as the Germans sped through the country, and more than a few Lithuanians joined in what would become an orgy of killing. The Birger family fled by horse and wagon, by foot, and then by train—until weeks later, they arrived in Tatarstan. Living in wretched poverty, Samuel's grandmother starved to death while he and his three younger brothers foraged for jobs and food on collective farms. You can read Samuel's Centropa biography and see his family pictures here.
narrated by: Sara Kestelman Isaac Aizman was a neurosurgeon in Riga. His wife Tobe-Leya remained at home raising four children. When war came, Dr Aizman was conscriopted into the Soviet Army. He told his wife to flee eastward. She hesitated. And that would cost them all. Read Feiga Kil's Centropa biography and see her pictures here.
narrated by: Wendy Goldman Historian Wendy Goldman of Carnegie Mellon on the Soviet Union and the home front during the war. Read Feiga Kil's Centropa biography and see her pictures here.
Edward Serotta founded Centropa in 2000 to preserve memories of Jewish life before, during, and after the Holocaust. Centropa has trained thousands of schoolteachers to bring this material into classrooms from Gastonia, North Carolina, to Vilnius, Lithuania. A strong believer in the power of personal narrative, Serotta hopes that Centropa stories will resonate with new generations, who may never have the opportunity to engage with a survivor in person.
In the midst of one of the worst genocides of our time, a group of Jews, Catholics and Muslims Serbs, Croats and Bosnians joined forces to provide humanitarian relief to anyone in need in Sarajevo. Journalist Ed Serotta, director of Centropa, describes La Benovolencia the extraordinary community that he witnessed in action, and covered, during the Bosnian War.
1492 - El Otro Camino
Eliezer Papo gives a lecture about the Jews, the Balkans and history.
Eliezer Papo gives a lecture about the Jews, the Balkans and history.
Eliezer Papo gives a lecture about the Jews, the Balkans and history.
Eliezer Papo gives a lecture about the Jews, the Balkans and history.
Edyta Gawron gives an overview of the history of the Jewish Community of Krakow
Emily Greble gives an overview of the history of the Sefardic Jewish Community of Sarajevo
EParallel history and shared history. Konstanty Gebert breaks down the mechanisms that lead to different interpretations of history.
Yariv Lapid gives an overview of The Mauthausen Memorial
A Book Store in Six Chapters - Renee Molho