Jewry in South Africa index / Judentum in Südafrika Index (Moses fantasy Jewry - Moses-Fantasie-Judentum) von / by Michael Palomino
-- Moses (12 tribes - a dozen)
did not exist: book: The
Bible Unearthed)
--
Jesus (12 disciples - a dozen) did not exist
(and 33 is the highest Freemason's code=number
of vertebra of human spine) - link
--
Muhammad did not exist either (until the year
800, Arab Peninsula was Christian with a Fantasy
Jesus - book: Good
bye Mohammed)
--
Moses+Jesus+Muhammad are an invented trilogy for
world domination applying fantasies and
damnifications
-- The solution:
Mother Earth is healing (link),
Human Rights are the way of life, and a
healthy Buddha without big belly is the model
for yoga and brain yoga. Prosecution services
of the world are not ready yet...
Michael Palomino, Sep.16, 2020Juden in Südafrika / Jews in South Africa 1. Jews in South Africa 01: Immigration movements (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971) ![]() The first places of White
settlement since 1652 - religious tolerance since 1803 -
immigration before and after 1880 - immigration test
since 1902 - quota system since 1930 - German Jews since
1933
2. Jews in South Africa 02: Status questions (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Emancipation with the
Whites - the black and native peoples are never
mentioned
3. Jews in South Africa 03: Economy (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Buildup of the South
Africa of the Whites - Jewish immigration waves -
professions and industry - diamonds and gold mines - the
blacks and slavery are not mentioned
4. Jews in South Africa04: Communal structures (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Synagogues - board of
deputies - Jewish religious institutions - Jewish
charity institutions - integration of immigrants and
women work
5. Jews in South Africa 05: Community life (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Religious developments -
Yiddish decline - Jews between English and Afrikaans
6. Jews in South Africa 06: Jewish schooling (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971)
Board of Jewish Education
since 1928 - Jewish day schools since 1948 - "national"
tradition
7. Jews in South Africa 07: Jews in public life (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971) ![]() Jewish cultural places -
activities and positions - cultural work
8. Jews in South Africa 08: The Herzl Zionist movement (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971) ![]() Strong Herzl Zionism in
South Africa - fund raising channels - projects in Herzl
Israel - students in Herzl Israel - non-Jewish support
from South Africa for Herzl Zionism and Herzl Israel
9. Jews in South Africa 09: Jews in the army (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971) ![]() Jews in the South African
forces - Jews from South Africa in the Jewish army of
Herzl Israel
10. Jews in South Africa 10: Relations with Herzl Free Mason CIA Israel (Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971) ![]() Congratulations 1948 -
economic relationship - apartheid questions - Jewish
racism not mentioned
<Bibliography (from: South Africa; In: Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 15) -- G. Saron and L. Hotz (eds.): Jews in South Africa (1955), incl. bibl. -- L. Feldberg (ed.): South African Jewry (1965, 1968), includes a "Who's Who" and communal directories -- F. Sichel: From Refugee to Citizen (1966) -- L. Feldman: Yidn in Johannesburg (1956); -- Jewish Affairs, 15 (1960) -- Republic of South Africa: Population Census, 3 (1960), s.v. Religion -- South African Jewish Board of Deputies: Report ... (1925- ); -- Zionist Record (March 21, 1961) -- idem: Jewish Affairs, vol. 15 no. 5 (May, 1960) -- B. Litvinoff: A Peculiar People (1969), 178-94 -- L. Herrmann: History of the Jews in South Africa (1930) -- M. Gitlin: Vision Amazing (1950); South African Jewish Year Book (1929, includes a "Who's Who" and communal directories -- S.E. Aschheim, in: JJS 12, 2 (Dec. 1970), 201-31> (col. 207) |
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