Showing posts with label Library of Congress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Library of Congress. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Holiday in New York City - Rosh Hashanna - 1900's

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)


Posted: 03 Sep 2013 06:39 PM PDT

Tashlich prayer on the Brooklyn Bridge, 1909.
The Near Year prayer is traditionally said at a body
of water where the worshipper "casts" his/her sins
Israel Daily Picture normally focuses on pictures of the Holy Land in the Library of Congress archives' American Colony collection.  

In honor of Rosh Hashanna, we present pictures of the holiday in New York City, taken in the early 1900s by George Bain and also housed in the Library of Congress archives.

Jewish boy in prayer shawl on Rosh Hashanna (1911)









Tashlich prayer on the Brooklyn bridge (1919)






Jews praying on the Jewish New Year (circa 1905)
















Rosh Hashanna worshippers (1907)











Tashlich on the Brooklyn Bridge (1909)













Going to prayers (circa 1910)








Going to synagogue (circa 1910)






Selling New Year's cards, East Side, New York City (1910)



"New Year's Parade" (1912)












Jewish New Year's nap, East Side (1912)

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The Shavuot Holiday, Celebrating the Giving of the Torah

Jews around the world commemorated the holiday
of Shavuot this week, the day on which tradition
says the Torah was given to the people of Israel
at Mt. Sinai.

Torah scrolls in the ark of the Istanbouli Synagogue in the Old City
of Jerusalem (circa 1930), "one of the oldest synagogues
in Jerusalem." The synagogues in the Old City were all
destroyed after the Jewish Quarter was captured in 1948.
(Library of Congress) 

The Torah -- also known as the Pentateuch or Five Books of Moses --
has been the foundation of the Jewish faith for 3,000 years, the basis
for the monotheistic Christian and Islamic religions, and an inspiration
for spiritual, moral and ethical values.


A Yemenite Jewish scribe and his
father, Shlomo Washadi (c 1935)



Samaritan high priest with
his sons and Pentateuch
scroll (c 1911)

The Torah scrolls are handwritten with quills by God-fearing scribes
on the parchment made of the skins of kosher animals. One skipped
or illegible letter of the 304,805 letters of the Torah makes the scroll
invalid for reading in the synagogue service. A Torah damaged
beyond repair is buried.

Doctors Herbert and David Torrance of the Scottish Mission hospital i
n Tiberias and the photographers of the American Colony
Photographic Department took several portraits of Jews and their
Torah scrolls. They were also clearly fascinated by the scrolls and
practice of the Samaritans, an ancient offshoot of Judaism who are 
not considered Jewish today.


Jewish rabbi or Samaritan priest with scroll

The Dundee Medical School archives in Scotland contains many
anatomical pictures taken by the Torrances, but also fascinating
pictures of the Galilee Jewish community. We published one photo
captioned "Rabbi and Torah scroll." After we identified the picture
as a Samaritan, the archives corrected their caption to "a Samaritan
leader with his sect’s scroll."



A desecrated synagogue in Hebron
with Torahs strewn on the floor (1929)


The Library of Congress archives also include pictures of the
Hebron Jewish community after they were decimated in a
pogrom by Arab attackers. Among the photos are pictures
of a destroyed synagogue and its Torah scrolls.


Enlargement of the scrolls on the floor

Thursday, January 10, 2013

It's Snowing in Jerusalem Today

It's Snowing in Jerusalem Today
-- A Reminder of Snows in Jerusalem almost 100 Years Ago

 
Jerusalem under blanket of snow. View from the Christian
Quarter showing the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Mosque
of Omar on the Temple Mount and Mt. of Olives. (circa 1900)
Strong rain, winds and snow storms are hitting the Middle East this week.

After several years of drought, record rains have fallen on Israel presenting the possibility that the Sea of Galilee, Israel's "national reservoir," may fill by the end of winter.  Just this week the sea rose 60 centimeters (2 feet), and many areas in the country already received one-third of their average rainfall.
British soldiers at the Western Wall (1921)

Galilee and Golan mountains are covered with snow, and Jerusalem residents anticipate a city covered in white tomorrow morning.

We present here old pictures of snow in Jerusalem from the Library of Congress collection. Some of the pictures were presented here last winter, but we've also added new ones found among the 22,000 pictures in the Library of Congress.


Children of the "American Colony" (1921). These pictures were
hand-colored and found in a family album.


Children of the "American Colony"
playing in the snow (1921)












"Snow-balling" on Jaffa Road in
Jerusalem (1942)

Australian soldiers and Arabs "snow-balling," possibly in
Bethlehem (1942)