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Program for Yehadut instruction, I. L. Arlan, Brooklyn 1946

פראגראם פונ'ם יהדות לימוד פאר די בית יעקב שולען - Women

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Details
  • Lot Number 54048
  • Title (English) Program for Yehadut instruction in Beth Jacob schools
  • Title (Hebrew) פראגראם פונ'ם יהדות לימוד פאר די בית יעקב שולען
  • Note Women
  • Author I. L. Arlan
  • City Brooklyn
  • Publisher Shulsinger Bros.
  • Publication Date 1946
  • Estimated Price - Low 200
  • Estimated Price - High 500

  • Item # 2518896
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description
40 pp., quarto, 232:155 mm., extra wide margins, light age and use staining. A very good copy bound in the original extra title wrappers.

 

Detailed Description

Program for religion to be taught at Beth Jacob Schools.

Beth Jacob Schools is a network of religious schools for girls organized in Poland in the post-World War I era with the aid of Agudat Israel, an ultra-Orthodox organization whose schools for boys were to be found in every community. While the boys' schools were of the old traditional type, the newly formed schools for girls combined Jewish traditional studies and industrial training.

The first school was founded in Cracow in 1917 by Sara Schnirer. The school in Cracow had an enrollment of only 30 pupils, but the success of this early venture in imparting religious Jewish studies, some secular learning, and vocational training led to the formation of a large number of schools in a number of countries. By 1929 there were 147 such schools in Poland, and 20 schools in Lithuania, Latvia, and Austria. The Beth Jacob school system included teachers' training institutes founded in 1931 and post-graduate courses (1933). Two periodicals were published: Beth Jacob Journal and Der Kindergarten.

With the invasion of Austria, Poland, Lithuania and Latvia by the Nazis and subsequently by the Russians, the activities of the Beth Jacob schools were discontinued. At the end of World War II Beth Jacob schools were opened in Israel, England, Switzerland, Belgium, France, Uruguay, Argentina, and the United States. In Israel there are 92 schools, and about 15 in other countries. In the U.S. the Beth Jacob National Council was organized in 1943. By 1947 there were eight schools under their aegis. In 1951 two teacher-training schools were established and in the late 1950s two high schools were founded.

 

Hebrew Description

 

Reference
EJ