Chiune sugihara biography of albert einstein
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Publishing History
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Biography, World War, , Jews, Righteous Gentiles in the Holocaust, Diplomats, Rescue, Holocaust, Jewish (), Persecutions, Juvenile literature, Description and travel, Diplomats' spouses, Causes, Foreign relations, Righteous gentiles in the holocaust, History, Holocaust, Jewish () fast (OCoLC)fst, Holocaust, jewish (), Holocaust, jewish (), juvenile literature, Japan, biography, Jews rescue ( : World War) fast (OCoLC)fstPeople
Yukiko Sugihara (), Albert Einstein (), Anne Frank (), Aristides de Sousa Mendes (), Charles Darwin (), Charlie Chaplin (), Chiune Sugihara, Frank Foley (), Hannah Senesh (), Irene Gut Opdy•
Major Project: Jews and Science ()
The following essay about Jews and Science was written by Gabriel Brazil, a middle schooler, enrolled in City Congregation’s Bar/Bat Mitzvah program. Students spend a year and a half researching their heritage, values and beliefs, and write on a Jewish subject of their choice, their major project; an example of this last component can be seen below. The process improves both the student’s writing and critical thinking skills, as well as his/her self confidence and overall maturity.
What is a scientist? A scientist is someone who asks questions, makes observations, and thinks logically about the universe. In the big picture, 90% of all scientists who have ever lived are alive today. This is because experimental science is relatively new.
Many people have observed that Jews are overrepresented in science. I wanted to learn more about the work of Jewish scientists who have made important contributions to the world and explore the questi
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MILLION SURVIVORS OWE LIVES TO djärv DIPLOS U.N. REUNION CELEBRATES HOLOCAUST HEROES SACRIFICE
MASHA LEON remembers many little miracles that helped her survive her perilous flygning from the Nazis taking her from Warsaw to freedom in the United States at the height of the Holocaust.
She vividly remembers the day when, as an 8-year-old, she and dozens of other Jews were lined up outside a Gestapo headquarters and were given numbers by sadistic officers.
Those with odd numbers were shot dead. Those with even numbers were let go. Little Masha had No. 4.
Six decades later, as she looks back on her incredible ordeal, Leon, 69, says despite all she went through, shes most grateful for Chiune Sugihara, an obscure Japanese diplomat in Kaunas, Lithuania.
He saved my life. Without Sugihara, I would have been one of the 6 million, said Leon, referring to the number of Jews who died during the Holocaust.
Leon and her mother, who later ended up trapped