Showing posts with label Calendar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calendar. Show all posts

17 January 2011

San Francisco: Jewish calendar made simple, January 23

Jewish genealogists must learn about the Jewish calendar to understand archival and vital records, cemetery inscriptions and more.

The San Francisco Bay Area Jewish Genealogical Society will present the famed Dr. Steve Morse in "The Jewish Calendar Demystified," on Sunday, January 23.

Doors open at 12.30pm for the 1pm program at Congregation Beth Israel Judea, 625 Brotherhood Way, in San Francisco.

The Jewish calendar is important to genealogists because Jewish vital records use Jewish dates. The calendar is both a solar and lunar calendar, with the months being synchronized to the moon and years to the sun. As such, the rules governing the calendar can be a bit daunting. This talk presents the calendar in an easy-to-understand - and sometimes tongue-in-cheek - fashion.
Now a genealogical household name, Steve Morse is the creator of the One-Step Website. He received the Lifetime Achievement Award and the Outstanding Contribution Award from IAJGS, the Award of Merit from the National Genealogical Society, the first-ever Excellence Award from the Association of Professional Genealogists, and two awards that he cannot pronounce from Polish genealogical societies.

For more information and directions, click the SFBAJGS site here

21 September 2010

Colorado: Steve Morse seminar, Oct. 10

Steve Morse will offer a full-day genealogy seminar for the Jewish Genealogical Society of Colorado on Sunday, October 10, in Denver.

Dr. Stephen Morse has received the Award of Merit from the National Genealogical Society, the Excellence Award from the Association of Professional Genealogists, and the Outstanding Contribution and Lifetime Achievement Awards from the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies. A computer professional with a doctorate in electrical engineering, he was the architect of the Intel 8086 (the granddaddy of today's Pentium processor), which sparked the PC revolution 25 years ago.

He'll present The Jewish Calendar Demystified; From DNA to Genetic Genealogy: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to ask; One-Step Webpages: A potpourri of genealogical search tools; and One-Step Webpages: A hodgepodge of lesser-known gems.

The program will run from 9am-4pm, at the Jewish Community Center, 350 S. Dahlia St.
Attendees may participate in one program or in all of them. A kosher box lunch is included and snacks will be provided during breaks. Attendance is only via advance registration (October 1 deadline) and payment. No walk-ins permitted.

Fee: JGSCO members: $18, entire day/lunch; others: $40, entire day/lunch plus a one-year JGSCO membership.

Visit the JGSCO website for more information and registration forms.

19 September 2010

Latvia: Riga Ghetto Museum opens, Sept. 21

The Riga (Latvia) Ghetto Museum opens September 21.

More than 70 000 local Jews and nearly 20 000 Jews deported from Western Europe were executed in Latvia in the World War II. The Museum is located in the historical part of the city near the borders of former ghetto.

The opening of the first exhibit includes the names of more than 70 000 Latvian Jews who faced the Holocaust, with stones from the streets of Riga Ghetto. A photo exhibit includes anti-Semitism propaganda, Holocaust in Latvia, the Resistance and the Righteous Among the Nations.

Jewish history in Latvia dates back some 450 years, and a section of the exhibit documents this history.

According to director Rabbi Menachem Barkahan:

Riga Ghetto Museum is not just a museum. I do hope that it will become the significant memento of the dreadful events that occurred in the history of Latvia and should never ever be repeated again. The Museum is becoming a center of culture and education, a source of tolerance and mutual respect.
Earlier this month - on September 1 - a new Jewish calendar was released and dedicated to the history of Jewish development during Latvia's First Republic.

There is also a database with the names of Jewish children who perished during the Holocaust in Latvia.

Click here for more information about the Jewish Culture Festival 5771 in Riga, with a video and photos.

For more information about the community organization Shamir in Riga, send an email.

13 September 2010

Colorado: Steve Morse solves a riddle

Steve Morse solves a Rosh Hashana riddle!

What a great way to remind Denver-area residents that Steve Morse will be visiting Sunday, October 10 to present a full-day seminar of four workshops from 9am-4pm at the Denver JCC, for the Jewish Genealogical Society of Colorado. See registration details below.

He is, of course, the creator of the Steve Morse One-Step website, and began his public genealogical climb to fame with the his One-Step tool to finding elusive ancestors on the Ellis Island Database soon after it went online.

The riddle story was in the Denver Post - Tracing the Tribe is slightly backlogged on Google alerts due to the holidays - right before the New Year holiday.

The Jewish calendar can be very complicated to those of us involved in Jewish genealogy. Days begin at sunset instead of midnight. Vital records written in our ancestral towns generally recorded dates of interest in both the secular and the Jewish calendars.

Many American Jews don't generally know today's date in the Jewish calendar. Most of us have Jewish calendars, which incorporate the secular calendar, hanging on our refrigerators or in our offices.

Steve, as those of us who know and love him, is a Brooklyn boy, as well as major genealogical household name. There's nothing he likes better than a good challenge. Fortunately, his passion in creating some 200 online tools has helped many of us around the world find information that was previously inaccessible.

He had problems with the complex Hebrew calendar - which is both solar and lunar - a necessity to understand historical Jewish records. Sometimes an extra month is thrown in.

When he was a teen - long before personal computers were on every desk and every pocket -he tried to calculate his grandmother's secular birthday from her known Jewish-calendar birth date. He could not find the definitive answer, although wrestled for years with this complex calendar. He finally wrote a program to convert Jewish-calendar dates into the widely used Gregorian or Western calendar.
But Morse was stuck for years trying to unravel why his computer program to convert Jewish-calendar dates into Gregorian dates kept spitting out some disparate results, including the wrong beginning of some years.

The Jewish New Year begins on the first day of the month of Tishri. And in the Book of Genesis — the first book of the Torah and the Christian Bible — it says God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh, which Jews observe from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday, their Sabbath.

Because of this, Morse said, he had naively assumed that creation and the Jewish calendar both began on a Sunday in Tishri 1 in Year 1. Yet the only way other dates converted correctly in his program was if creation, as described in Genesis, started on a Monday, not a Sunday. That would make Sunday the seventh day, or day of rest.

That didn't compute from Morse's Jewish perspective.

"The rabbis I asked didn't know about mathematics," Morse said. "My mathematician friends don't know the Jewish calendar."
Twenty years later, he finally learned the answer from a One-Step user who pointed him to Talmudic scholars who corrected his assumption.
"Creation didn't start on Tishri 1 in the Year 1, but instead, it started in the last week of Year 1, on a Sunday," Morse said.

He removed the Rosh Hashana bug from his program.
Steve is a great presenter and this all-day seminar of workshops will be a great immersion experience for those who have not heard him at conferences.

Fees include kosher lunch, annual membership (if not already a member) and all-day access: JGSCO members, $18; others, $40. Register with payment by October 1 to attend the courses at the Loup Jewish Community Center. For more information, click here. The registration form is here.

04 March 2009

Los Angeles: Steve Morse-a-thon, March 15

A Steve Morse marathon will be hosted by the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles, at Valley Beth Shalom in Encino.

I'm delighted that my former congregation is hosting this special event with one of my favorite people.

Steve will present three talks beginning at 1pm, Sunday, March 15, at VBS, 15739 Ventura Blvd.

On the agenda is "From DNA to Genetic Genealogy: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know But Were Afraid to Ask!" I first heard Steve present this talk at the Southern California Genealogical Society's Jamboree. Offered with his special humor, this sometimes hard-to-understand topic is made very simple. You'll certainly understand genes, chromosomes, DNA and much more.

"One-Step Webpages: A Hodgepodge of Lesser-Known Gems" provides information on unusual techniques for solving problems involving genealogical searches, identity theft and DNA analysis.

"The Jewish Calendar Demystified" will explain the 19-year calendar cycle, the origin of time (yes, really!), errors in the Jewish and secular calendars, and the use of Hebrew letters to represent dates on tombstones.

The indefatigable Stephen P. Morse is an amateur genealogist whose name is a household word. The recipient of the 2003 IAJGS Outstanding Contribution Award continues to work tirelessly on behalf of all genealogical researchers.

Admission: JGSLA members, no charge; others, $5.

For more information, click here.

21 October 2008

This day in Jewish history

This Day in Jewish History is an interesting blog mentioned previously on Tracing the Tribe. New readers may find it useful in understanding the impact of historical events on their families.

Compiled by Mitchell A. Levin, it is part of the adult education Jewish History Study Group at Temple Judah in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Here is a portion of the entry for October 21 :

1553 BCE (11 Cheshvan 2207): On the civil calendar, this date marked the death of Rachel, the matriarch and wife of Jacob, at the age of 36. She died during the childbirth of Benjamin, near Efrat, and is buried in Beit Lechem (Bethlehem).

1096: During the First Crusade, the Turks destroyed the portion of the Crusader army led by Peter the Hermit. Peter escaped and joined the main crusader army. The main body took Jerusalem from the Moslems in 1099. The Crusaders slaughtered the Jews of Europe as they made their way to the Holy Land. When they got to Jerusalem, the continued their bloody behavior as they slaughtered the Jews living in David’s City.

1512: In what may have been one of the most reaching decisions in the history of academia, Martin Luther joined the theological faculty of the University of Wittenberg. It would be almost five years to the day (October 31, 1517) from his appointment, that Luther would post his 95 Theses on the door of Wittenberg’s Castle. (This gives a whole new meaning to the term “publish or perish”). Seven years after his appointment (1519) “Luther denounced the doctrines” regarding the treatment of the Jews. His final view of the Jews would be codified in the 1544 pamphlet “Concerning The Jews and Their Lies” that included a call for burning synagogues and destroying the homes of Jews.

1553: Volumes of the Talmud were burned in Venice

1781: In Austria, Joseph II rescinded the law forcing Jews to war a distinctive badge. The regulation had been in effect since 1267, more then 600 years.

1833: Birthdate of Alfred Bernhard Nobel, creator of dynamite and the Nobel Prizes. As of 2005,at least 170 Jews and persons of half-Jewish ancestry have been awarded the Nobel Prize, accounting for 22% of all individual recipients worldwide between 1901 and 2005, and constituting 37% of all US recipients during the same period. In the scientific research fields of Chemistry, Economics, Medicine, and Physics, the corresponding world and U.S. percentages are 26% and 39%, respectively. (Jews currently make up approximately 0.25% of the world's population and 2% of the US population.)

· Chemistry (28 prize winners, 19% of world total, 27% of US total)
· Economics (22 prize winners, 39% of world total, 53% of US total)· Literature (13 prize winners, 13% of world total, 27% of US total)
· Physiology or Medicine (52 prize winners, 28% of world total, 42% of US total)
· Peace (9 prize winners, 10% of world total, 11% of US total)3
· Physics (46 prize winners, 26% of world total, 38% of US total)

Take a look at the site. Its entries will help place your ancestors in history and you may learn what happened in their communities during certain historical events.