Putting Modernism All Over the Map – Jacobin magazine
Posted By admin on January 2, 2020
Today, the word Bauhaus evokes clearheaded, functional design with a vague whiff of revolutionary modernism. In countless ways, the relatively short-lived school gave form to the modern experience from the shapes of the letters we read to the arrangement of the cities we inhabit.
A straight line of influence, as the architect and critic Mark Wigley has argued, connects the Bauhaus to the smartphones that now mediate and organize many of our lives. Wigley did not mean this as a compliment. While an iPhones minimalist, intuitive form gives an impression of deadpan honesty, that same form can help obscure social realities: mining, sweatshops, limitless surveillance. Such contradictions were just as characteristic of the Bauhaus as its clean lines and primary colors.
The Bauhaus had three periods: first, it was a multidisciplinary school of art and craft in Weimar (191925), then a production-oriented Institute of Design in Dessau (192532); finally it was a private architecture school in Berlin (193233). During the Bauhauss brief and turbulent lifespan, interpretations of the institutions politics varied widely. The eclectically progressive directorship of Walter Gropius in Weimar gave way to a more politically neutral Dessau period.
During the final, crisis-wracked years in Dessau and then Berlin, the Bauhaus swung from an overt engagement with Marxism under Hannes Meyer to a coexistence with National Socialism, under the direction of Mies van der Rohe. But even when the Bauhaus was most compliant to right-wing pressure, its approach to design met passionate resistance. Flat roofs, bare industrial materials, and sans-serif typography were read by nationalist commentators as irredeemably internationalist and un-German or, in the more extreme version of the critique, inherently Jewish and cultural-Bolshevist.
The Bauhaus was chased across three cities by a metastasizing fascist movement, and the last options for negotiation evaporated in spring 1933 when the Gestapo occupied the Berlin campus and shut down the school. On the centenary of its founding, the legend of the Bauhaus remains overshadowed by the circumstances of its closure. Due to its long struggle with threats from the Right, the school is often remembered as a left-leaning and utopian project which was snuffed out by an enemy that was always external. But a closer look at the political alignments of Bauhaus professors and students reveals a much messier picture itself characteristic of the ideological chaos that reigned during Germanys interwar period.
In the fragile early years of the Weimar Republic, nationalist and proto-fascist sentiment was on the rise. Rightists blamed the Social Democrats for Germanys humiliation in World War I. This resentment blended into paranoid fantasies about communists, Jews, and foreigners conspiring to stab the nation in the back.
Although the Bauhaus would ultimately become synonymous with rootless internationalism in Germany, the dominant atmosphere of nationalism played an important role in the schools founding. When the Belgian architect Henry van de Velde, director of the Weimar School of Arts and Crafts, was forced to resign amid mounting anti-foreigner sentiment in 1914, he named the young architect Walter Gropius as a potential successor. Weimars Academy of Fine Art also had their eye on Gropius, who had recently distinguished himself with the Fagus shoe-last factory in Alfeld the first building with a multi-story curtain wall of glass supported by a subtle grid of steel.
While a soldier at the front, Gropius drew up plans for a new type of school, and he received approval for a merger of the two institutions in 1919. Typical of the Bauhauss vaunted minimalism, its name was whittled out of the much more cumbersome State School of Building [Staatliches Bauhuas] in Weimar, United former Grand-Ducal Saxon Academy of Fine Art and former Grand-Ducal Saxon School of Arts and Crafts.
The orientation of the Weimar Bauhaus was initially more artisanal than futurist. Gropius was heavily influenced by the English Arts and Crafts movement, an early confrontation with industrial capitalism that called for the reform of everyday objects and spaces. The cover of the Bauhauss founding manifesto carried Lyonel Feiningers woodcut of a cathedral rising into a turbulent sky, beset by shafts of light.
In the writings of Arts and Crafts theorists like John Ruskin and William Morris, the Gothic cathedral had represented the integration of art, labor, and life in the pre-capitalist world. Bauhaus pedagogy reimagined the structure the medieval guilds: apprentices worked under a master of form (normally a painter) and a master of craft (a skilled artisan). Students who passed the initial coursework became journeymen eligible for waged work in the workshops. Many later became young masters junior teachers themselves.
The Bauhaus Manifesto promised to raze the arrogant wall between artist and artisan through a dual education that would form a new type of producer. This mission was undoubtedly successful. Bauhaus students would go on to transform the profession of architecture and to occupy wholly new job descriptions in the furniture, textile, and printing industries.
It is our duty, Gropius wrote, to enlist powerful, famous personalities wherever possible, even if we do not yet fully understand them.
The first masters of form were drawn from an international cohort of expressionist painters. The US-born Feininger was hired in 1919 and Paul Klee, from Switzerland, followed in 1920. Wassily Kandinsky joined the following year. Already a renowned painter and theorist, Kandinsky had recently left the USSR after his idiosyncratic, spiritual approach came into conflict with the materialist emphases of post-revolutionary art.
But it was the Swiss artist Johannes Itten who provided the strongest initial influence on Bauhaus pedagogy.
Among a cast of characters that all upheld eccentric theories on the magic of form, Itten gives the strongest impression of the Weimar Bauhaus as a kind of avant-garde Hogwarts. His classes opened with movement and breathing exercises, and his teaching ranged across color theory, art history, and mysticism all aimed at developing an individualized sensitivity to materials.
He kept his head shaved and wore a monk-like outfit; his most devoted students wore matching robes. At Ittens request, the Bauhaus canteen expressly served what one visitor described as uncooked mush in garlic. A disciple of the Mazdaznan sect, Itten practiced strict sexual and dietary discipline, and he was nearly successful in making his spiritual practice an official component of the schools pedagogy.
According to former Bauhaus Archive curator Magdalena Droste, Itten was not the only master in whom a nostalgia for individual artistic production blended with ideas of natural racial hierarchy: in one essay, he depicted the white race as the pinnacle of human civilization. The Bauhaus, argues Droste, was constituted in a volatile matrix of conflicting ideas.
At the beginning, German nationalists and anti-Jewish students tried to gain the upper hand. Messianic visionarieswere allowed to speak and Itten and Muche to canvass for their vegetarian Mazdaznan beliefs. Anarchist, socialist, conservationist, life-reformist, and esoteric schools of thought all found support at the Bauhaus.
Admission to the Bauhaus reflected the Weimar governments progress on equality of access to education and training. But while the first class of students boasted an unprecedented gender parity, all of the women were shunted into a weaving workshop later the home of the Bauhauss only female master, Gunta Stlzl.
As Droste points out, this gendered division of labor proved to be one of the Bauhauss deepest ironies. Textile production integrated long traditions of craft knowledge with a rigorously mechanized work process. Far from a marginal adjunct to the real, male world of architecture, the activity of the weaving workshop would establish a clear model for the industrial focus of the Dessau period.
Anni Alberss striking textile designs, for example, were also technically innovative: one fabric, utilizing unfamiliar materials that included cellophane, was engineered to reflect light on one side while absorbing sound on the other.
Gropius publicly affirmed gender equality, but privately commented that the masters should not undertake unnecessary experiments with the fairer sex. The Bauhaus would never produce a woman architect. In the broader area of student life, however, access was more even. Dance, theater, and sports were co-ed. Sexual morality was generally relaxed and bohemian.
As Elizabeth Otto documents in her recent book Haunted Bauhaus: Occult Spirituality, Gender Fluidity, Queer Identities, and Radical Politics, feminist critique and queer expression were also common, though these currents mostly flew under the radar of official production. Right-wing pressure on the schools existence was fueled, in part, by provincial shock at the non-traditional lifestyles of the students. Fittingly, many of these objections would crystallize around a single piece of furniture.
In 1922, apprentice Peter Keler designed a baby cradle using the elementary forms that had become de rigueur in Kandinskys course. A suspended platform on rockers was formed from three interlocking shapes: a yellow triangle, a red rectangle, and a blue circle. When the crib appeared in the Bauhauss inaugural exhibition of 1923, a story began to spread that it had been produced as a gift to a pregnant student.
A contemporaneous newspaper editorial seized upon this apparent celebration of a fallen girl as evidence for the destructive methods of teaching and education practiced at the Bauhaus. Others contended that the cradles heavy-handed geometry constituted child abuse in and of itself.
Aside from their origins in Bauhaus coursework, the basic shapes of Kelers cradle also reflected a turn toward design for mass production. The 1923 exhibition opened at the height of Germanys postwar inflation, and many of its displays were explicitly framed as solutions to housing and materials shortages.
The schools own finances, meanwhile, were in dire shape: the exhibition itself had been the stipulation of a loan agreement. Bauhaus theatre director Oskar Schlemmer remarked in 1921 that the schools dominant spirit was split between Indian cult and Americanism the latter a shorthand for a fascination with assembly lines and automation.
As the schools focus moved away from the individual artwork and toward partnerships with industry, Itten prepared to resign. His courses were divided between the young master Josef Albers and the Hungarian artist Lszl Moholy-Nagy, newly hired to run the metals workshop. Gropius had, in the meantime, revised the schools motto: A Unity of Art and Handicraft became Art and Technology a New Unity.
With a rightist electoral victory in 1924, the Bauhauss funding was immediately slashed in half. In response, the masters preemptively closed the school and weighed their options.
Among many offers for a new location, Gropius chose the manufacturing center of Dessau, home to large factories for IG Farben and the engineering firm Junkers. Just as importantly, Social Democrats were in power in Dessau, and they were receptive to Gropiuss plans for standardized developments of workers housing.
The Dessau campus itself would become a proving ground for the Bauhaus approach to space. Discrete structures for workshops, studios, apartments, and offices were linked by a floor that gathered collective activities: meals, performances, and intricately-conceptualized parties. The structures literalized pedagogical ideals of transparency, openness, and collaboration.
Observing the enormous curtain wall that ran the length of the workshop wing, the art theorist Rudolf Arnheim marveled that every object displays its construction, no screw is concealed, no decorative chasing hides the material being worked. It is very tempting to see this architectural honesty as moral, too.
Bauhaus pedagogy and production underwent several important transformations in Dessau. Bauhaus GmbH was founded as a limited company to market the products of the workshops, which were increasingly pitched as industrial prototypes: Marcel Breuers tubular steel chairs, for example, were adapted for airplane seating at the Junkers aviation factory.
Under young master Herbert Bayers leadership, the printing workshop increasingly left behind the art print and embraced typesetting and advertising design; it soon became a kind of public relations office for the school and its wares. The guild-era categories were mostly dropped: masters and apprentices were now referred to as professors and students. Finally, though the Bauhaus was planned with building Bau at its center, Gropius was only able to start an architecture department in 1927.
Years of political wrangling had delayed many of Gropiuss plans, but the institution seemed to be on secure footing when he abruptly announced his departure in 1928. Gropius offered the directorship to Hannes Meyer, hired the previous year to head the architecture department. While still a professor, Meyer had lampooned the schools bogus-advertising-theatricalness; after assuming the directorship, he announced a new functional-collectivist-constructive direction. The Bauhaus would now be oriented toward necessities rather than luxuries, centering the needs of the proletariat. Design problems would take their cues less from formal exercises directed by painters, and more from current research in the natural and social sciences.
Departing from the official position that the Bauhaus was engaged in objective, entirely non-political cultural work, Meyer was open in his communist sympathies. He rearranged the class schedule to more closely approximate an industrial workday and happily reported that increased cohesion and cooperation during his directorship signaled an undeniable degree of proletarianization. Under Meyer, a growing body of communist students came to understand the Marxist worldview as the only consistent outcome of a Bauhaus education.
Trade union facilities and workers housing completed under Meyer, after all, had clear precedents in projects initiated by Gropius who once defended his own generous masters quarters by saying, what we today consider luxury will tomorrow be the norm! In the background, however, Gropius, Kandinsky, and Josef Albers were already plotting Meyers dismissal.
Meyers political sympathies naturally attracted controversy. Bauhaus students were overheard singing communist songs at a 1930 party, which produced a feeding frenzy in the right-wing press. Later, it came to light that Meyer and a Bauhaus student group had each donated money to a Communist-led miners strike.
Attempting to stem the formation of a fully-fledged communist cell at the Bauhaus, the masters dismissed twenty students in a move that made Meyer himself a target of student anger. Nonetheless, the liberal mayor of Dessau encouraged by Gropius and the old masters (with the exception of Klee) demanded his resignation.
A few months later, Meyer boarded a train to Moscow with several of his closest students. Stalinist policy on design and architecture, however, would prove hostile to Meyer, who rounded out the rest of his career as a city planner in Mexico. Over the next decades, Gropius and the remaining masters would construct a canonical version of the Bauhaus that erased Meyers contributions altogether.
Gropius had meanwhile contacted the talented and rigorously apolitical architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Though Miess Bauhaus directorship is mostly remembered for his series of increasingly desperate efforts to keep the school open, his first order of business was in fact to shut it down. Bauhaus students had called a strike in response to the lack of transparency in Meyers ousting, and a Communist student paper ran a searing indictment of Gropius and Kandinskys roles in particular.
When the masters demanded the names of its authors, they were met with silence. Backed by the mayor, van der Rohe responded with police raids that ejected a total of twenty students.
The first to go were five of Meyers remaining foreign students, who were accompanied to the train station in a procession of red banners. The next month, students were ordered to apply for readmission. This involved signing a new constitution that affirmed a more purely aesthetic program of study, ended shared governance by students and professors, and even banned smoking. In an attempt to reduce expenditures, Mies increased tuition even as he slashed support for the workshops that provided advanced students with a wage.
The onset of a global depression in 1929, followed by a substantial electoral breakthrough for the Nazis in 1930, signaled the beginning of the end for the Dessau Bauhaus. Local National Socialists circulated a flyer ahead of the 1931 elections demanding an immediate cessation of its funding; the cover of a protest against frivolous spending was belied by an accompanying demand to immediately destroy Gropiuss campus. (The Nazis would later convert it into a home economics school for women.)
During the last days in Weimar, Social-Democratic and Communist politicians had been united in attempts to defend the school. But this time, the Social Democrats abstained in the final vote. Mies rented a telephone factory in Berlin, and the Bauhaus began its final incarnation as a small private school.
On his arrival in 1931, one Bauhaus student noted that only a handful of his classmates did not identify as communists; a year later in Berlin, he wrote that the balance had completely flipped. By 1933, the anticommunist contingent included a number of Nazi Party members, including the professor Friedrich Engemann. None of this stopped the Gestapo from locking the school down for three months.
Students pleaded to Joseph Goebbels in personal letters; among Miess many entreaties, he argued that the Bauhauss closure would affect people with almost exclusively nationalist beliefs. In the end, the state canceled its obligations to pay professor salaries and presented a list of demands including the dismissal of Kandinsky that van der Rohe found unworkable. With an informal vote and a champagne toast, the Bauhaus closed for good on July 19, 1933.
The Bauhaus inspires enduring interest due in part to the unbelievable personal trajectories of many of its alumni. Bauhaus professors and students with Jewish heritage or leftist affiliations had begun to emigrate even before the schools closure, but its final end accelerated the globalization of modernist forms and concepts.
In the US, Anni and Josef Albers found a home at North Carolinas Black Mountain College, where they taught alongside John Cage and Willem de Kooning. Moholy-Nagy continued his work at Chicagos New Bauhaus later the IIT Institute of Design with support of the industrialist (and ardent Bauhaus fan) Walter Paepke.
In Ulm, West Germany, Bauhaus alumnus Max Bill helped to establish another successor institution in 1953. Co-founder Inge Aicher-Scholl dedicated the Ulm School of Design to the memory of her siblings Sophie and Hans Scholl, executed ten years earlier for their work with the resistance group White Rose.
There were many who never got out of Germany. Textile workshop alumni Otti Berger and Hedwig Dlberg-Arnheim, metalworker Lotte Mentzel, and book artist Friedl Dicker-Brandeis all died at Auschwitz where crematoriums and gas chambers had been designed by their classmate, Waffen-SS officer Fritz Ertl.
In a perverse betrayal of his education at Dessau, Ertl pleaded ignorance of the buildings precise function in a 1972 trial and was acquitted. Outside of Germany, graphic designer Moses Bahelfer forged identification papers for the French Resistance, while photographer Irena Blhov published underground newspapers from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. These extremes paint a picture of the late Bauhaus as a microcosm of broader social forces that were then tearing the world order to shreds.
The careers of three prominent Bauhaus masters awkwardly straddled these extremes.
One of the most controversial projects of the Weimar period was the Monument to the March Dead a memorial to workers killed in the 1920 Kapp Putsch, an attempted right-wing coup. Commissioned by the local trade union syndicate, the jagged concrete bolt was a project of Gropiuss architecture studio, built with the assistance of the Bauhaus workshops.
By 1933, Gropius was compiling an exhaustive proposal for the German Reichsbank, which married the open geometry of the Dessau complex to the monumental style increasingly favored by the Nazis. Though he was a finalist for the project, Gropius could see the writing on the wall; it would soon be a matter of Nazi policy to denounce anything connected to the Bauhaus as a degenerate, Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy.
Gropius quietly emigrated to the UK in 1934 but, as Jonathan Petropoulos documents in Artists Under Hitler: Collaboration and Survival in Nazi Germany, he still hesitated to burn bridges. In 1936, he requested permission from Goebbels to accept a position at Harvard, in a letter that argued for the propaganda value of his teaching work in the US. Though Gropius spent the remainder of his career obscuring the details of his Berlin years, he also made several attempts to secure visas for endangered architects and designers.
In 1926, Mies van der Rohe designed a monument to Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht: an asymmetrical construction of rough brick evoking the walls against which countless socialist martyrs had been shot. Luxemburg and Liebknecht were victims of the Social Democratic Partys haphazard policy of appeasing the far right, only to be betrayed in turn a pattern which repeated itself, albeit less dramatically, in the final throes of the Bauhaus on Miess own watch.
In 1933, Mies, like Gropius, was a finalist for the Reichsbank competition; a submission for the Third Reichs pavilion at the Brussels Worlds Fair followed in 1935. As the architecture critic Tom Dyckhoff has suggested, it is easy to picture Miess hesitation as he added a stone eagle and swastika flags to his sketches less for their content than for their status as external embellishments, mere decorations.
In 1937 he emigrated to the UShaving realized, Dyckhoff writes, that
his future patron would be no government, no political system, but the economic system that was emerging triumphant in the US. Modernismwould succeed as the landscape not of communism, bolshevism or nazism, but of international capitalism.
Researcher and curator Patrick Rssler has uncovered, in the case of Herbert Bayer, an exceptionally high degree of collaboration by a Bauhaus alumnus with no known Nazi sympathies. Bayer left the Bauhaus with Gropius in 1928 and established a successful advertising practice in Berlin.
Despite the danger faced by his many Jewish friends (including his estranged wife Irene Hecht), he stayed on well after the Nazi takeover. Bayer contributed design and illustration to three highly-visible propaganda exhibitions between 1934 and 1936; in the case of German People, German Work, he was joined Gropius and Mies. But even Bayers 1936 design for a pamphlet on the Hitler Youth provided insufficient cover for his links to the Bauhaus; he fled the next year when one of his paintings was included in the anti-modernist Degenerate Art exhibition.
In the 1940s and 50s, he would play a central role in the consolidation of corporate modernism in the United States. Bayer joined New Bauhaus patron Walter Paepke in founding the International Design Conference in Aspen a meeting-ground for design and management which would become the model for TED (Technology, Entertainment, and Design).
The political zig-zags of these former masters were not uncommon in a period of capitalist crisis met by rising challenges from the Left and the Right. However, the incoherent commitments of its most prominent alumni underline the ambiguity of the Bauhauss politics of form. A century since its founding, it is commonplace to say that the Bauhaus was neither a school nor a style, but a utopian ideology.
In its investigations of modern productive capacities and its rejection of waste and want, the Bauhaus was utopian in the positive sense of that word. But just as often, it was utopian in the negative sense. The Bauhaus idea convinced a number of influential designers that their practice had an inherent life-reforming potential one which could be actualized above or beyond the existing relations of social power.
But since they nonetheless remained entangled in those relations, they frequently stumbled into affirming and even intensifying them. Gropius, Mies, and Bayers pioneering design ideas proved compatible with anyone be they revolutionaries, dictators, or capitalists that flattered this sense of world-historical importance.
Original post:
Putting Modernism All Over the Map - Jacobin magazine
- Mike Colle Statement re Jewish Heritage Month 4 10 14 - Video [Last Updated On: April 12th, 2014] [Originally Added On: April 12th, 2014]
- Israel Independence Day 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: May 9th, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 9th, 2014]
- BOL Celebrates Jewish Heritage Month 2014 - Video [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2014] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2014]
- Jewish Heritage Month : CUPE Local 79 [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2014] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2014]
- Rangel Honors Jewish American Heritage Month | Congressman ... [Last Updated On: May 16th, 2015] [Originally Added On: May 16th, 2015]
- Why Does No One Care About Jewish Heritage Month ... [Last Updated On: May 30th, 2015] [Originally Added On: May 30th, 2015]
- Jewish Heritage Month [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2015] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2015]
- Why Did Canada Nix Jewish Heritage Month? - Opinion ... [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2015] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2015]
- Video: The Holocaust | Watch The War Online | PBS Video [Last Updated On: October 28th, 2015] [Originally Added On: October 28th, 2015]
- Jewish Heritage Month -- National Register of Historic ... [Last Updated On: February 10th, 2016] [Originally Added On: February 10th, 2016]
- How May became Jewish American Heritage Month - The Times of Israel [Last Updated On: May 15th, 2017] [Originally Added On: May 15th, 2017]
- May is Jewish American Heritage Month. Here's why you didn't know that. - Jewish Post [Last Updated On: May 17th, 2017] [Originally Added On: May 17th, 2017]
- Did you know that May is Jewish American Heritage Month ... - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: May 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: May 19th, 2017]
- The case for Jewish Heritage Month - Canadian Jewish News (blog) [Last Updated On: May 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: May 19th, 2017]
- Palestinians Launch Fresh UNESCO Bid to Deny Jewish Ties to ... - Algemeiner [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2017]
- A trove of Nazi-era objects in Argentina stuns investigators - Jewish Telegraphic Agency [Last Updated On: June 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 21st, 2017]
- Given that June is both Gay Pride and Immigrant Heritage Month, it's fitting that the Tenement Museum last week ... - Tablet Magazine [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2017]
- Ontario Jewish Heritage Month Calendar | UJA Federation of ... [Last Updated On: June 22nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 22nd, 2017]
- A French Jew's killing provides a test for the new Macron administration - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 23rd, 2017]
- Fun Shabbats planned at Congregation Beth Am this summer - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 23rd, 2017]
- My special-needs daughter's tallit is her superhero cape - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 23rd, 2017]
- Citrus Club 'Happy Hour' unites support for Jewish Pavilion - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 23rd, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 23rd, 2017]
- Higher health risks for Israeli Ethiopian immigrants - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2017]
- WATCH: Indian Jews bring Bollywood flair to Jerusalem - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2017]
- The 'reward' of every Temple Mount rioter: 4,500 shekels a month ... - Arutz Sheva [Last Updated On: June 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 25th, 2017]
- Women and Tales in Jerusalem Jewish Orthodox style - eTurboNews [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2017]
- More Americans Support Same-Sex Marriage Than Ever - Reason (blog) [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2017]
- Israel's Western Wall Crisis: Why Jews Are Fighting With Each Other Over the Jewish Holy Site, Explained - Haaretz [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2017]
- News Transcript Datebook, June 28 - centraljersey.com [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2017]
- Bringing People Together in Montgomery County - Virginia Connection Newspapers [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2017]
- Corsicana receives $25k grant to maintain Temple Beth-El - Corsicana Daily Sun [Last Updated On: June 27th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 27th, 2017]
- Housefather celebrates Jewish Canadian contributions - The Suburban Newspaper [Last Updated On: June 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 28th, 2017]
- What's Goin On July | SD JEWISH JOURNAL - San Diego Jewish Journal [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2017]
- Palestinians Hope to List Hebron As UNESCO World Heritage Site - The Media Line [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2017]
- A trove of Nazi-era objects in Argentina stuns investigators - thejewishchronicle.net [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2017]
- How Jewish women have shaped our nation - Canadian Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2017]
- Building in Beachwood | Destination | clevelandjewishnews.com - Cleveland Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2017]
- Tidbits from the Sandwich Generation - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2017]
- International Jewish athletes 'return' to Jerusalem for 20th Maccabiah Games - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2017]
- New and improved Jewish tradition - Heritage Florida Jewish News - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2017] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2017]
- Over 200 North Americans become Israelis as first aliya flight of the summer arrives - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: July 5th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 5th, 2017]
- The Secret Jewish History Of A Violent New Zealand Cult - Forward [Last Updated On: July 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 6th, 2017]
- Clayton native re-engineers Sriracha sauce - St. Louis Jewish Light [Last Updated On: July 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 6th, 2017]
- Hungarian Jews ask PM Orban to end 'bad dream' of antisemitism - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: July 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 6th, 2017]
- 'PM's gifts from Kerala to his Israeli counterpart reflect our Jewish heritage' - Times of India [Last Updated On: July 6th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 6th, 2017]
- Kochi jews in israel seek a monumental protection- The New Indian ... - The New Indian Express [Last Updated On: July 7th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 7th, 2017]
- Days out while school's out - Jewish Chronicle [Last Updated On: July 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 10th, 2017]
- Is Hungary's anti-Soros campaign antisemitic? Even Israelis can't ... - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: July 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 10th, 2017]
- After UNESCO vote, Netanyahu reads from Bible to prove Jewish ties to Hebron - Jewish Telegraphic Agency [Last Updated On: July 10th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 10th, 2017]
- After UNESCO Vote, Netanyahu Reads From Bible To Prove Jewish Ties To Hebron - Jewish Week [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2017]
- Anti-Soros Campaign In Hungary Dogging Bibi's Trip - Jewish Week [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2017]
- This 2016 Donald Trump Jr. interview about Russia is now downright cringeworthy - Washington Post [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2017]
- Belated Bar Mitzvahs for Five College Students in Vienna - Chabad.org [Last Updated On: July 12th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 12th, 2017]
- How a Portuguese King Found Solace in the Psalms of His Ancestors - Chabad.org [Last Updated On: July 13th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 13th, 2017]
- How a Korean-Jewish entrepreneur uses food to empower immigrants - Jewish Post [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2017]
- How Gaza's electricity crisis could spell trouble for Israel - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: July 14th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 14th, 2017]
- Knesset bloc unveils peace plan: Total Palestinian surrender - jewishpresstampa [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2017]
- Hungarian PM to Netanyahu: We Cooperated With Nazis Instead of Protecting Jews, Won't Happen Again - Haaretz [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2017]
- First Read For July 18 - Jewish Week [Last Updated On: July 18th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 18th, 2017]
- Albany Beat - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2017]
- Calendar July 21, 2017 - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2017]
- Leah Koenig - Tablet Magazine [Last Updated On: July 19th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 19th, 2017]
- Group travels to Israel to connect with Jewish heritage - Florida Times-Union [Last Updated On: July 20th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 20th, 2017]
- 5 students celebrate belated bar mitzvah - Arutz Sheva [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2017]
- Holocaust Rhymes And Lamborghinis, A Jewish Rapper Breaks Taboos In Germany - Worldcrunch [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2017]
- Cool off with Shabbat Sababa at Ohev Shalom - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: July 21st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 21st, 2017]
- At least 15 Jewish families move into disputed West Bank building - Jewish Telegraphic Agency [Last Updated On: July 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 25th, 2017]
- A new generation of Jewish farmers sees a fertile future in South Jersey - Philly.com [Last Updated On: July 25th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 25th, 2017]
- At 30, YJLC Rafting Weekend Now Competing with Technology - Jewish Exponent [Last Updated On: July 26th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 26th, 2017]
- Begin breaks ranks to oppose Jewish nation-state bill | The Times of ... - The Times of Israel [Last Updated On: July 26th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 26th, 2017]
- Anti-Semitism Claims Hound Party Led by Darling of U.K. Left - 41 NBC News [Last Updated On: July 26th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 26th, 2017]
- In trip to Lodz, Poland, East Bay group sees dark past, hopeful future - Jweekly.com [Last Updated On: July 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 28th, 2017]
- Scene Around - Heritage Florida Jewish News [Last Updated On: July 28th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 28th, 2017]
- "Shared struggles" forum to tackle faiths' differences, similarities - Charleston Post Courier [Last Updated On: July 30th, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 30th, 2017]
- Temple Mount or Haram Al-Sharif? We've been here before - i24NEWS [Last Updated On: July 31st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 31st, 2017]
- Around Newton - Wicked Local Newton [Last Updated On: July 31st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 31st, 2017]
- SlutWalk Chicago, in reversal, will allow marchers carrying Jewish and Zionist symbols - Jewish Telegraphic Agency [Last Updated On: July 31st, 2017] [Originally Added On: July 31st, 2017]
- Cave Of Dreams - Jewish Week [Last Updated On: August 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: August 2nd, 2017]
- Grapevine: When age doesn't matter - The Jerusalem Post [Last Updated On: August 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: August 2nd, 2017]
- SlutWalk Chicago, In Reversal, Will Allow Marchers Carrying Jewish ... - Jewish Week [Last Updated On: August 2nd, 2017] [Originally Added On: August 2nd, 2017]
Comments