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Word: hebrew (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Nearly every Friday night, I go to Hillel for Shabbat dinner. Though I love singing in Hebrew, I never go to services, only the meal. I go not because of any belief in God (most Jews, even the religious ones, don’t really think about God), but for the sense of community, of home away from home. I go because when I say the blessing over the challah and eat the chicken soup, I feel connected, not to the divine, but to my Jewish peers. When I kibbutz with friends I haven’t seen all week...

Author: By David Weinfeld, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Why I Run (Naked) | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

Eating falafels, listening to contemporary Hebrew music, and making Hebrew name bracelets, students gathered outside the Science Center yesterday afternoon to celebrate the third annual Israel Fest...

Author: By Anne E. Bensson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students Celebrate Israel Fest | 5/4/2005 | See Source »

Rosenblum reacted to the potential space conflict by agreeing to turn off Israel Fest’s upbeat Hebrew pop music during the rally and by encouraging members of Hillel to attend both events. Wearing a pink bandanna herself, she chose to prominently display a relevant informational poster about gay rights in Israel at the front of the Israel Fest tent...

Author: By Anne E. Bensson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students Celebrate Israel Fest | 5/4/2005 | See Source »

...were all recognizably Jewish. These 80 American Jews had already been segregated into a separate barracks at the POW camp, despite the attempts by some of them to destroy their dog tags—which the U.S. Army had engraved with an “H” for Hebrew. Many lied about their “race” when interrogated. In one instance, a soldier buried his Army-issue Jewish prayer book in the dirt of Germany...

Author: By Alexandra B. Moss, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: BOOKENDS: GIs Passed Over by History | 4/20/2005 | See Source »

...documentary, comprising no archival footage, only interviews with death-camp survivors and chillingly bucolic vistas of the camp sites today, is likely to raise apprehensions and even yawns. We have seen all that too many times before; next atrocity, please. And in fact the testimony in Shoah (a Hebrew word for cataclysm) does not justify either the film's extraordinary length or French Director Claude Lanzmann's relentless badgering of some of the victims. Still and all, it is salutary to be confronted, hour after hour after hour, with memories horrifying enough to fill a dozen movies. Subjecting oneself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Horror and the Pity SHOAH | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

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