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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York : Yiddish House
    UID:
    kobvindex_JMB00091915
    Format: 65 Seiten , Ill.
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    Uniform Title: One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish yid
    Content: One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish is a 1960 children's book by Dr. Seuss. It is a simple rhyming book for beginning readers, with a freewheeling plot about a boy and a girl and the many amazing creatures they have for friends and pets.
    Language: Yiddish
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB15244023
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (100 Min.) : s/w , NTSC , DVD-R
    Edition: 1
    ISBN: 1585872148
    Content: A wager between God and Satan has dire consequences in this allegory based on the play by Jacob Gordin about the material world's false promises. Beware when money sounds sweeter than music, it cautions; those who win lotteries stand to lose all, including their spiritual treasures, families, communities and religion. Poor, pious Torah scribe Hershele Dubrovner has a life that glorifies God until Satan, disguised as a business partner, turns him into a greedy, dishonest factory owner whose success desecrates both his religion and his community. Betrayal and abandonment replace serenity and familiarity; the instruments of good fortune become instruments of death. Not even music, previously Hershele's joy, can heal these rifts. (NCJF)
    Note: Ländercode: 0 , Orig.: USA, 1949 , Jidd., mit engl. Untertiteln
    Language: Yiddish
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB15244319
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (90 Min.) : s/w , NTSC , DVD-R
    Edition: 1
    ISBN: 1585872091
    Content: The Living Orphan is a dramatic tale of immigrant hardship that highlights some of the traumatic problems of the immigrant experience, including alcoholism, separation and poverty. The child star, Jerry Rosenberg (Ross) gives a memorable performance as the son Benny and the film introduces two European stars Fanina Rubina and Gustav Berger. The plot centers on the story of a stage couple that develops marital problems due to the demands of the theatre. The husband, whose career is failing, insists that the wife stay home to tend their young son. The subplot focuses on the plight of a woman who chooses her career over family obligations. Set in New York in the 1930's, the film contains some interesting street shots of the Lower East Side and a marvelous scene in the Bialystoker Old Folks Home. One of the best Second Avenue Yiddish theatre domestic melodramas produced in New York City just prior to World War II, the film provides a wonderful example of the sentimental dramas created to entertain and educate the immigrant community. According to the documentation of the film, the Ohio Censorship Board demanded that one scene be eliminated in which the character Lebka says, "I should go to work for whom? For Morgan? For Rockerfeller, for Henry Ford? If the capitalists will go to work, then I will work. They don't have to work, they have plenty of money." The National Center for Jewish Film owns the original nitrate negative and all the rights and copyrights to the property. This film, together with pieces of 30 feature film titles was acquired in 1976 from the family of Joseph Seiden. (NCJF)
    Note: Ländercode: 0 , Orig.: USA, 1937 , Jidd., mit engl. Untertiteln
    Language: Yiddish
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  • 4
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048728582
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (101 Min.) , schwarz-weiß
    Uniform Title: Got, Mentsch un Taybl
    Content: A wager between God and Satan has dire consequences in this allegory based on the play by Jacob Gordin about the material world's false promises. Beware when money sounds sweeter than music, it cautions; those who win lotteries stand to lose all, including their spiritual treasures, families, communities and religion. Poor, pious Torah scribe Hershele Dubrovner has a life that glorifies God until Satan, disguised as a business partner, turns him into a greedy, dishonest factory owner whose success desecrates both his religion and his community. Betrayal and abandonment replace serenity and familiarity; the instruments of good fortune become instruments of death. Not even music, previously Hershele's joy, can heal these rifts. If the character of Hershele Dubrovner reminds some of Faust and others of Job, its no coincidence as "God, Man and Devil" combines elements of both stories. The wager at the center of the story is that for all his piety, the scribe can be corrupted - not by suffering (as in Job's case) or by the temptation of wealth (as in Faust's case), but by worldly good fortune itself. As the plot develops, Hershele amply confirms Satan's expectations, only to realize the gravity of his error after it is too later to rectify it. It is a simple morality play, timeless even though addressed in its specifics to a particular audience. [jewishfilm.org]
    Note: jidd. mit engl. UT
    Language: Yiddish
    Keywords: DVD-Video
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  • 5
    UID:
    b3kat_BV048728597
    Format: 1 DVD-Video (93 Min.) , schwarz-weiß
    Uniform Title: Der lebediker Yusem
    Content: "The Living Orphan" is a dramatic tale of hardship that highlights some of the traumatic problems of the immigrant experience, including alcoholism, separation and poverty. The child star, Jerry Rosenberg (Ross) gives a memorable performance as the son Benny and the film introduces two European stars Fanina Rubina and Gustav Berger. The plot centers on the story of a stage couple that develops marital problems due to the demands of the theatre. The husband, whose career is failing, insists that the wife stay home to tend their young son. The subplot focuses on the plight of a woman who chooses her career over family obligations. Set in New York in the 1930's, the film contains some interesting street shots of the Lower East Side and a marvelous scene in the Bialystoker Old Folks Home. One of the best Second Avenue Yiddish theatre domestic melodramas produced in New York City just prior to World War II, the film provides a wonderful example of the sentimental dramas created to entertain and educate the immigrant community. [jewishfilm.org]
    Note: jidd. mit engl. UT
    Language: Yiddish
    Keywords: DVD-Video
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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