Dressing up Hasidic Making Fun? Ask the Rabbi Live with Rabbi Mintz – Video
richards | April 5, 2014
Dressing up Hasidic Making Fun?
richards | April 5, 2014
Dressing up Hasidic Making Fun?
richards | April 5, 2014
karate motti samobor 2014 By: motti ashkenazi
richards | April 5, 2014
Scientists made the discovery using hair from a brush that belonged to her DNA included particular sequence strongly associated with Jewish people Many Jews in Germany converted to Catholicism before 19th Century Tests were made for C4 show Dead Famous DNA, to be shown next week Published: 17:56 EST, 4 April 2014 | Updated: 17:59 EST, 4 April 2014 Couple: Adolf Hitler with Eva Braun, who may have been descended from a Jewish family When they committed suicide in his bunker at the end of the Second World War, Eva Braun had been Adolf Hitlers mistress for more than 12 years and his wife for a mere 40 hours. It seems, however, that despite their time together, she may have kept a crucial family secret from the Fuhrer
richards | April 5, 2014
3:49am, Sat 5 Apr 2014 Last updated Sat 5 Apr 2014 Eva Braun, who married Nazi leader Adolf Hitler hours before the pair committed suicide in 1945, was of Jewish descent, according to DNA analysis conducted for a TV documentary. The Dead Famous DNA film - to be screened on Channel 4 on Wednesday - will claim that tests on hair samples said to have come from a monogrammed hairbrush used by Braun, show she was possibly of Jewish ancestry. A team of scientists examined the hair and found a particular sequence within the DNA, which had been passed down the maternal line - the haplogroup N1b1 - which the channel said was "strongly associated" with Ashkenazi Jews, who make up around 80% of the global Jewish population.
richards | April 5, 2014
A documentary series on Britains Channel 4 reveals that Adolf Hitlers wife, Eva Braun, had Jewish ancestry, a conclusion drawn from DNA samples the show Dead Famous DNA believes to be Brauns. They tested hair samples from a brush that was apparently used by Braun, and the DNA sample they examined revealed a striking similarity to a sequence strongly associated with Ashkenazi Jews. However, there is a twist.