8001. 20 OCT 2021 13:20:42 GMT -0500, “Fichier des décès en France, 1970-2020,” MyHeritage, Collection, 10823.
Le nombre de décès signalés et contenus dans cette collection pour les années 1970 et 1971 est bien en deçà des dénombrements attendus et cela est probablement dû à une montée en charge de la conformité des bureaux locaux français signalant des décès à l'Insee au cours de ces deux années. Dans cette collection, le nombre de décès signalés pour 1970 ne semble être que d'environ8% du nombre réel et pour 1971, le nombre est d'environ 50% du nombre réel. En 1972, un rapport presque complet a été réalisé sur la France et ses territoires.</p></p>Alors que la plupart des lieux de naissance et de décès se trouvent en France, il y a plus de 2,5 millions d'enregistrements dans cette collection de personnes nées ou décédées dans d'autrespays - avec des pays voisins et voisins (comme la Belgique, l'Allemagne, l'Espagne, l'Italie et Pologne) et les pays qui étaient d'anciennes colonies françaises (comme l'Algérie, le Maroc, la Tunisie, Madagascar et le Vietnam) étant les plus courants.</p></p> Cette collection sera mise à jour régulièrement à mesure que des enregistrements supplémentaires seront publiés.
Joab FARHI&lt;br&gt;Sexe : Homme&lt;br&gt;Naissance : 3 mar 1910 - Smyrne, Turkey&lt;br&gt;Décès : 20 sept 2000 - Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France&lt;br&gt;Numéro du certificat : 4043 Record 10823:13898691-:
8002. “Joab Farhi,” Oct 2021, Antoine Andreoletti.
8019. “Major Arthur M Sassoon MC OBE former Chairman of West London Synagogue,” Westminster Quarterly, 1 April 2014, WW1 Centenary Edition, page 7, Volume V No 2.
8025. “(HouS2518) Marriage certificate Anthony John Abrahams and Cynthia Leah Sassoon (1950 Mar Marylebone 5d 785).”
8026. Michel Strauss, Pictures, Passions and Eye - A Life at Sotheby’s, 2010, Halban Publishers Limited, London, ISBN 978 1 905559 21 3.
8027. Max Hastings, Das Reich: March of the 2nd SS Panzer Division through France, June 1944.
8028. “Scribe Updates,” Leanne Minny, Alain Farhi, www.farhi.org, Alain Farhi, Jan 08, Apr 08, “TITLE,” Michael & Leanne Minny.
TYPE Gedcom FileDATE Jan 08SUBM Leanne Minny
8029. “Import from Les Fleurs,” 10 November 2012 - July 2013, Alain Farhi.
8030. “(JCS1062) The Sassoon Family, Jewish Chronicle, 30 October 1896, page 10.”
8045. “National Probate Calendar, Sassoon Joseph Sassoon,” 1922.
8046. “(HouS2454) 1901 England Census, Joseph S Sassoon and Louise Sassoon, RD Chertsey SRD Walton ED 01 schedule 158, RG 13 piece 587 folio 16 page 24.”
8047. “Bookplate - ExLibris Vera Roas Katherine Henriette v. Rosenberg.”
8048. “(HouS2144) Death certificate Vera Rosa Katharina Henriette Sassoon (1973 Dec St Pancras 5d 2437).”
8049. “(HouS2146) SRI Birth Extract, Scotland, Gabriel Jacques Sassoon, (1931 SASSOON, GABRIEL J Statutory Births 871/00 0006).”
8050. “(HouS2147) SRI Birth Extract, Scotland, Joseph Sassoon, (1927 SASSOON, JOSEPH Statutory Births 871/00 0039).”
8051. “(HouS2154) SRI Marriage Extract, Scotland, Joseph Sassoon and Betty McGowan, (1948 SASSOON, JOSEPH - MCGOWAN, BETTY Statutory Marriages 871/00 0002).”
8052. “(HouS2159) SRI Death Extract, Scotland, David Sassoon, (1979 SASSOON, DAVID Statutory Deaths 865/00 0001).”
8083. “(HouS2519) Marriage certificate Denys Miller Sutton and Cynthia Leah Abrahams nee Sassoon (1960 Jun Chelsea 5c 466).”
8084. “Ruling prevents charity from giving bequest money to needy students,” Jewish Chronicle, 24 December 1993, page 8.
8085. “Students to benefit from six-figure bequest to AJA,” Jewish Chronicle, 13 September 1991, Community Chronicle page 1.
8087. “(HouS2453) National Probate Calendar, Edward Sassoon, 1955.”
8088. “(HouS2452) National Probate Calendar, Minnie Lucy Sassoon, 1931.”
8089. “National Probate Calendar, Frederick Sassoon,” 1980.
8090. “(HouS1975) SRI Death extract, Minnie Lucy Sassoon, 1943,” “indexed as 1943, SASSOON, MINNIE LUCY, CHANNING, ARNOLD, F 48, HILLHEAD, GLASGOW CITY/LANARK 644/13 0492.”
8091. “(HouS1974) GRO Consular marriages index, Edward Sassoon and Minnie L Heseltine, Nice France, 1926-1930.”
8092. “(HouS2461) UK, Incoming Passenger Lists, Edward Sassoon and Mrs Minnie Sassoon, Southampton from Batavia, Indonesia, 21 Jun 1939.”
8093. “(HouS2460) UK, Incoming Passenger Lists, Edward Sassoon and Minnie L Sassoon, London from New York, 6 Apr 1937.”
8094. “(HouS2459) California, Passenger and Crew Lists, Edward Sassoon and Minnie Lucy Sassoon, San Francisco, California from Shanghai, China, 26 Feb 1937.”
8095. “(HouS2458) UK, Outward Passenger Lists, Edward Sassoon and Minnie Sassoon, London to Hong Kong, 29 Oct 1936.”
8096. “(HouS2457) UK, Outward Passenger Lists, Edward Sassoon and Minnie Sassoon, London to Marseilles, 4 May 1934.”
8097. “(HouS2456) UK, Outward Passenger Lists, Edward Sassoon and Minnie Lucy Sassoon, Southampton to Marseilles, 22 Aug 1930.”
8098. “(JCS1208) Wedding report, Miss Rachel Sassoon and Mr David E D J Ezra, Jewish Chronicle, 8 November 1912, pages 12 and 13.”
8099. “Will and Probate, Elias Meyer, 1925.”
8100. “(HouS859) Marriage certificate Elias Meyer and Flora Ezekiel (1893 Sept Brighton 2b 533).”
8101. “(HouS860) Death certificate Elias Meyer (1925 Jun St George Hanover Square 1a 429).”
8102. “National Probate Calendar, Elias Meyer, 1925.”
8103. “JWOBR record, Flora Meyer.”
8104. JWOBR record, Elias Meyer.
8105. “1911 England census, Elias and Flora Meyer,” RG14; Piece: 419 RD St George, Hanover Square 5 SRD Mayfair and Knights Bridge ED 5.
8106. Michael & Leanne Minny, Australia, Alain Farhi, www.farhi.org, May 05, Jul 07, Nov 07, Jan 08, Aug 08, Dec 08, Jan 09 to Present.
8107. Jewish Encyclopedia, “GÜNZBURG, HORACE, BARON,” http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/6950-gunzburg-horace-baron, 11 September 2015. By: Herman Rosenthal, Max Rosenthal Russian philanthropist; born Feb. 8, 1833, in Zvenigorodka, government of Kiev, Russia, where he received his education. After the Crimean war his father, Joseph Günzburg, then a wealthy merchant and army contractor, settled with his family in St. Petersburg. Horace first came before the public in 1863 as one of the founders of the Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the Jews of Russia, the only society of the kind in Russia. He was one of the charter members of the society, and after the death of his father in 1878 succeeded him in the presidency, which office he still holds. He was the largest contributor to its support and one of its most energetic workers. The work which made him so widely popular among the Jews was his unremitting effort, in which frequent appeals to the Russian government were involved, toward the improvement of the legal status of his coreligionists, and for the securing by legislation, as well as by other means, of their economic and moral welfare.
Horace Günzburg. In the year 1870 he was summoned as an expert before the commission on the "Jewish question," which met under the auspices of the Ministry of the Interior. He was chairman of the Jewish congress which, by permission of the government, assembled in St. Petersburg in 1882. In 1887 he was invited to participate in the discussions of the high commission on the Jewish question, under the presidency of Count Pahlen. In 1880 he became a member of the board of governors of the temporary commission for the organization of a society for the purpose of encouraging Russian Jews to engage in agriculture and trades. Since 1893 he has been chairman of the central committee of the Jewish Agricultural Society. One of the colonies in Argentine is named in honor of Baron Günzburg. In 1890 he was elected president of the Hygienic and Low-House-Rent Society of St. Petersburg. In 1901 he became president of the board of directors of the Jewish Agricultural Farms in Minsk, and director of the Jewish Agricultural School in Novo-Poltavka. The Jewish community of St. Petersburg is also under obligation to Baron Günzburg for its synagogue, of which he is president. He is also the head of the new school erected in honor of the wedding of Czar Nicholas II. This institution is non-sectarian. Baron Günzburg is also closely identified with other institutions of a non-sectarian character. He has been an honorary member of the committee of the Prince Oldenburg Infant Asylum since 1863, and honorary member of the Society for Improving the Condition of Poor Children of St. Petersburg since 1876. Between 1868 and 1872 he was consul-general of Hesse-Darmstadt. In 1871 the title "baron" was bestowed upon him by the Grand Duke of Hesse-Darmstadt, permission being given by the czar to accept that title of nobility. In 1880, 1884, and 1888 he received successively the titles of "counselof commerce," "secretary of state," and "member of the council of commerce of the Treasury Department." For many years he was an alderman of St. Petersburg, but, upon the passage of a statute prohibiting the election of Jewish aldermen, vacated that office. Baron Günzburg was repeatedly elected trustee of the charitable affairs of the Stock Exchange of St. Petersburg and member of the council of the Stock Exchange Hospital. He contributed heavily to the erection of the latter institution. In 1898 he was elected member of the committee of the Society for the Dissemination of Commercial Knowledge, and in the same year became chairman of the house committee of the Women's Sewing-School of the Czarina Maria Alexandrovna. In 1899 he was made trustee of the School of Commerce of Czar Nicholas II. In 1900 he was chosen a member of the committee of the Russian Society for the Protection of Women. He is (1903) a member of the board of the Treasury Department of the Stock Exchange, and a member of the executive board of the St. Petersburg Archeological Institute. Even at his present advanced age he is often invited by the government to sit on commissions for the revision of general legislation. Very recently (1895, 1900-01) he has been associated with such imperial commissions for the amendment of the laws governing the Stock Exchange, stock companies, corporations, and mining companies. The seventieth birthday of Baron Günzburg, which was coincident with the fortieth anniversary of his entry upon an educational career, was celebrated all over Europe and also in New York and many other cities of the United States. On this occasion the Russian government conferred on the baron the medal of St. Anne (1st class). In New York a Baron de Günzburg Fund has been started, the interest of which will be given periodically as a premium for the best work on Jewish history and literature.
8112. RootsWeb, “Jane Austen (tree of Francis Hubback from Catherine Anne Austen).”
8113. “(JCS1586) Article, Dances, Lady Sassoon for granddaughters, Jewish Chronicle, 15 June 1934, page 10,” “and Bucking Palace Presentations (Esther Laski etc),” “and Golden wedding Sir Meyer and Lady Spielman.”
In this episode, Philip and Fiona investigate a highly desirable Venetian view. It was inherited by owner Nick Hopkinson from his great-grandfather, Meyer Spielman. Nick grew up with the painting and has always loved it, but there’s a mystery about it that he would love to solve. On the back of the painting there are two labels from the Royal Academy – one names the artist as Marieschi and the other as Guardi. Nick has long wondered whose hand was behind one of his most treasured belongings, and how he has contacted the Fake or Fortune? team for help. Francesco Guardi and Michele Marieschi are both known for their paintings of Venetian views and were contemporaries in the 18th century of the most famous view painter of them all, Canaletto. But there’s a big difference in value between them: if Nick’s painting is a Marieschi it could be worth £500,000, but if it’s a Guardi it could be worth up to £10 million. With such high stakes, Philip and Fiona get to work. On a trip to Venice they learn that when it comes to attribution, even in the 18th century confusion reigned. There was such a huge demand for Venetian views that artists churned them out, often from workshops with apprentices or other artists filling in details such as the figures, and they rarely signed their paintings. At the Art Academy archives in Venice, Fiona and Nick look at a document that details a sort of 18th-century version of Fake or Fortune? A committee tried to establish who painted a picture, with some familiar names being debated – Canaletto is mentioned, as are Marieschi and Guardi. At that time, Guardi was still alive and so was brought in to verify the identity of the painting. Centuries later, Fiona and Philip will have to follow the clues in the painting itself to solve this mystery. Back in London, Philip compares Nick’s painting to other known works by both Marieschi and Guardi and decides that stylistically, it’s far closer to Marieschi than Guardi. On the provenance trail, Fiona and Nick head to the Royal Academy to see if they can find out any more about the labels on the back of the painting. There, they make a shocking discovery that puts an even bigger question mark over Guardi’s name. It’s the first of several family stories that Nick discovers aren’t quite as he thought. With Guardi in doubt, the team turn their attention to Marieschi. The view in the picture is one that Marieschi often depicted, which is encouraging, but it does also raise the possibility that this is a copy. The demand for these highly desirable Venetian views was so high that in the late 18th and 19th centuries the market was flooded with fakes and copies. A factory was even opened in London churning out what were known as ‘Canaletti’. We are entering murky waters and there’s a worrying prospect that Nick’s picture could turn out to be neither a Guardi nor a Marieschi but a fake, so the picture is analysed using a revolutionary new piece of imaging technology called Artmyn. A scanner takes 20,000 photographs, mapping the surface of the picture and revealing in minute detail how the paint has been applied. Such insights could be crucial in distinguishing a genuine Marieschi from a copy. There is one more lead to follow up – an intriguing seal on the back of the painting that says ‘Firenze’. Could this place the painting in Italy in the 18th and 19th century and rule out the possibility of it being an English fake?
8116. “(HouS1135) 1881 England census, Edward L Raphael and Helene Raphael, Queens Hotel, Esplanade Promenade Penzance, RG11 Piece 2347 Folio 22 Page 38, RD Penzance ED 4.”
8117. “1871 England census, George C Raphael and Charlotte H Raphael,” RD Kensigton SRD St John Paddington ED 20a schedule 165 RG10 piece 25 folio 47 page 45.
8118. “Will and Probate, Edward Esmond.”
8119. “(HouS2448) National Probate Calendar, Denys Miller Sutton, 1991.”
8120. “Brazil immigration card, Lucy Jeanne de Gunzburg,” 1937.
8132. “Companies House/Director reports (England and Wales).”
Companies House/Director reports
8134. Lydia Collins, The Sephardim of Manchester, Pedigrees and Pioneers, Lydia Collins, Shaare Hayim Congregation, 2006, page 269 - Sasson / Sassoon (Syria), page 313 - Tchira (Syria), Shaare Hayim Congregation, 2006.
Sources: June Churba and Maurice Mesrie, Manchester; Simon Tabbush; Joyce and Lucien Gubbay, London Chira, Robert. From Aleppo to America. The Story of Two Families , (New York, Rivercross Publishing Inc, 1994)
8137. “Archives d'Etat de Genève, Refugees list (D) (Personnes enregistrées à la frontière genevoise durant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale),” ftp://ftp.ge.ch/archives/refugies/listes/d.pdf.
8138. Erwin Lachman, “Our family tree with comments,” March 1983, 1. Lachman family history by Erwin Lachman.pdf.
8139. “Paris and Vicinity Marriage banns (1860-1902, ancestry.com), Marie Louise Kahn to Jules Strauss, 5 January 1897.”
8140. “Paris and Vicinity Marriage banns (1860-1902, ancestry.com), Jules Strauss to Marie Louise Kahn, 3 January 1897.”
8141. “Franklin Tree, Descendants of Menachem Mendel FRANCKEL,” Neil Piwovar, menachemmendelFRANCKEL.ged, 4 Nov 2015.
8142. “Death notice, Fl Lt Michael I Massy,” Andrews newspaper index cards, 2 Sept 1944.
8149. “Andrews newspaper index cards, son to Capt Ralph Pilcher and Beatrice nee Sassoon,” 8 january 1948.
8150. “(HouS2449) 192.com electoral roll search, Ralph C Pilcher and Beatrice N Pilcher, 2002-2003.”
8152. “England marriage records, Charles Thomas Murray and Bertha Watson.”
8153. “National Probate Calendar, Ralph Cecil Horace Pilcher,” 8 March 2004. Surname First name Date of probate Probate number Date of death Document type Registry
PILCHER RALPH CECIL HORACE 08 March 2004 1463323 20 December 2003 Grant and will Winchester
8155. “National Probate Calendar, Martin Ralph Cecil Pilcher, 1992.”
8156. “(HouS1669) National Probate Calendar, Honourable Charlotte Louisa Adela Evelina Behrens, 1948,” “National Probate Calendar, Cecilia Esther Behrens, 1948.”
8157. “(HouS2235) National Probate Calendar, Walter Francis Raphael Castle, 1926.”
8160. “National Probate Calendar, Michael Ingoldsby Massy,” 1947.
8162. “(HouS2149) SRI Birth Extract, Scotland, Louise Sassoon, (1958 SASSOON, LOUISE Statutory Births 871/00 0013).”
8166. “(HouS2156) SRI Marriage Extract, Scotland, Michael William Frost and Louise Sassoon, (1981 FROST, MICHAEL WILLIAM - SASSOON, LOUISE Statutory Marriages 865/00 0036),” “also indexed as 1981 TOSH, MICHAEL WILLIAM - SASSOON, LOUISE Statutory Marriages 865/00 0036.”
8168. “(HouS2161) SRI Death Extract, Scotland, Louise Sassoon, (2007 SASSOON, LOUISE Statutory Deaths 865/00 0063),” “indexed as 2007 SASSOON, LOUISE, BENNETT, F 49 KIRKCUDBRIGHT /KIRKCUDBRIGHT 865/00 0063.”
8171. “(HouS2451) National Probate Calendar, Philip Arnold Heseltine, 1931.”
8182. “Death notices, Brian Sedley,” Jewish Chronicle, 18 July 2003, page 31.
8183. “Death notices, Brian Sedley,” Jewish Chronicle, 11 July 2003, page 31.
8184. “Marriage announcement, Katrina Lever and Brian Sedley,” Jewish Chronicle, 1 September 2000, page 27.
8187. “Engagement announcement, Brian Martin Sedley and Gillian Anne Yagar,” Jewish Chronicle, 15 May 1964, page 10.
8188. “Engagement announcement, VICTORIA SEDLEY and DAVID PREVER,” Jewish Chronicle, 13 Jan 2006, page 32.
VICTORIA SEDLEY and DAVID PREVER Both families are delighted, excited and relieved to announce the engagement of Victoria, daughter of Gill and Brian Cohen and the late Brian Sedley, to David, son of Jeanette and Malcolm Prever.
8189. Danielle Steadman, Nov 2021.
8191. Catherine Bouskela, Dec 2021.
8193. Abraham Ben Yacov, ehudei Bavel: A History of the Jews in Iraq from the End of the Gaonic Period (1038 CE) to the Present Time,, Sivan Press, Jerusalem, Israel, 1979.
p.95, n.10,
8194. Joseph Haddad, Dec 2021, Istanbul, Turkey.
8195. Isaac Harari, Dec 2021, Mar 2022, Paris, France.
8229. “Arabian Gulf's only Jewish cemetery symbolises Bahrain's rich cultural heritage,” Article by Nuck Webster, Bahrain, Feb 6, 2022, https://www.thenationalnews.com/weekend/2022/02/04...ains-jewish-cemetery, The National News Bahrain.
At 3pm as the call to asr prayers rang out across the old town of Manama, Ebrahim Dawood Nonoo unlocked the gates to the Gulf’s only Jewish cemetery to tend to his family’s graves. %
Arabian Gulf's only Jewish cemetery in Bahrain
As president of the Association of Gulf Jewish Communities, one of Mr Nonoo’s many daily tasks is to preserve the heritage and traditions of the religion's more than 140 years in Bahrain. Just a few months ago, the cemetery, tucked behind a high, crumbling wall, was left overgrown and dishevelled as nature began to reclaim the land. Thanks to a new perpetuity fund to maintain the cemetery, the sacred land where about 80 Jews are laid to rest is now surrounded by bright pink bougainvillea, date palms and pathways laid with care. .cls-1{fill:none;}.cls-2{clip-path:url(#clip-path);}.cls-3{fill:#ffcb04;}Quote We would like to see the walls strengthened, because I’m worried they will crumble down, and the graves reset properly so they can withstand the test of time Ebrahim Dawood Nonoo, president of the Association of Gulf Jewish Communities It offers a tranquil setting for families to visit the final resting place of their loved ones. But many of the graves are unidentified, leaving unanswered questions for Mr Nonoo and Bahrain’s Jewish community of about 50. “Few people from the Iraqi Jewish community that lived here would ever go to the cemetery,” Mr Nonoo said. “Women were forbidden from going, the reasons for which we are unsure. “Because no one went it was left in a terrible state. It was like a jungle when my uncle passed away in 1992. “I realised we had to start looking after the cemetery, but it remained in a bad way for some time.
“Because of the Abraham Accords, we know we will have more expatriate Jews coming to Iive in Bahrain, so we want to make sure this is an integral part of the community.” Discovering the old and new in Manama, Bahrain Bahrain's Jews to commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day at revamped synagogue Mr Nonoo’s grandfather, Ebrahim, was born in 1897 and buried at the cemetery in 1959 and his father David was the last to be buried at the site, in 2018. The family established the first money exchange in the country, the Bahrain Banking Company, that later became the Bahrain Financing Company. A number of the graves, identified by oval mounds of earth and cement about half a metre from the ground, are of children who died from common childhood diseases, cholera or tuberculosis. Others are left in sparse areas of ground, to allow room for further family graves of the generations to come.
Respects paid to community figures One of the most prominent Jewish figures from Bahrain’s history is buried at the cemetery. Heskail Abraham Ezra (1916-1974) was a money changer who was shot dead during a botched robbery. He would work in the afternoons during Ramadan while his family were away in America.
Ebrahim Dawood Nonoo as a child in 1965, with cousin Stanley Cohen. Photo: Association of Gulf Jewish Communities It was during one of these periods when criminals entered his place of work and demanded that he open his safe. When Ezra refused he was shot and killed. Ezra’s grave is one of the few regularly attended by his family from the US when they visit Bahrain.
Another grave is that of Joseph Khedouri (1891-1982), one of three brothers who left Iraq en route to a new life in Hong Kong. Khedouri was so enamoured with Bahrain, he decided to stay and became one of the wealthiest men on the island through trading clothes from Europe in the 1930s. His politician daughter, Nancy Khedouri, has been a National Assembly of Bahrain member since 2010. Most people were buried at the site before 1960, but because there are no well-known rabbis or sages resting there it has not become a site of pilgrimage. Dawood Reuben is buried alongside his two sons, a family of traders remembered fondly by Bahrainis for their integration into local life.
Perfume and material trader Jaqoob Yadzai (1925-2015) was the son of the first Jew to arrive in Bahrain, and is also laid to rest at the cemetery. Celebrating Judaism in life and death “Unfortunately, we have lost many records of who is here,” Mr Nonoo said. “The biggest issue is how we preserve them, do we protect them with a glass frame? Otherwise they will just wither away. “We would like to see the walls strengthened — because I’m worried they will crumble down — and the graves reset properly so they can withstand the test of time. “Muslims go to their cemeteries regularly, but Jews are not as keen to do so and I don’t know why.
“There is a saying in Judaism, If you are born a Jew, you a die a Jew — and it is the same with Islam. “Because of that, we believe Jews should be buried together and having our own cemetery gives us our own identity.” Rituals run deep
Joseph Khedouri with his son, Johnny. Photo: Association of Gulf Jewish Communities Not a single Star of David adorns the walls or headstones of the graveyard, but there is a mezuzah next to a rusting gate that Mr Nonoo keeps padlocked. He touches the small artefact containing a parchment of scriptures, reminding Jews of their duty to God, each time he arrives and leaves the gates. His ritual at each visit is to wash his hands three times and don a traditional skull-cap on entry to the site. Pebbles are scattered on some of the mounds, a sign the grave has been visited by family who leave a stone after each visit. Others are left unloved, and unattended. A more unusual ritual has been costly for some, relieving them of their business, it is believed. “It is bad luck to leave a cemetery without buying something from a shop,” Mr Nonoo said. “There was a cold store opposite the cemetery that used to have a lot of custom from visiting Jews. “Being at the cemetery was considered bad luck, so buying something passed that on before going home. “The shop has been closed for a long time, so maybe the bad luck was passed on?” The 100-year-old Jewish cemetery is alongside a Christian one and across the street from a Muslim burial ground. A solitary Jewish grave lies inside the Christian graveyard, although it is unknown. Just a short walk away is a synagogue, built in 1935. It was ransacked in 1948 during anti-Jewish riots across Manama. It was left as waste ground for decades before Mr Nonoo’s father, David, rebuilt it in 1990. It was refurbished again in 2019. From the synagogue, visitors can walk to a Hindu temple, Catholic church and mosque, an example of Bahrain’s example of religious tolerance in the Gulf. At the height of Bahrain’s Jewish community, about 1947, there were about 1,500 Jews living in the kingdom, mainly Iraqi immigrants attracted to the island for trade in pearls and other commodities such as molasses, pottery, fabric and horses. “At the time when these communities moved here to work, they all lived together so there was that natural level of tolerance,” Mr Nonoo said. “They all got on well and their background didn’t matter. Their communities were intertwined and that has continued today.” Updated: February 06, 2022, 12:11 AM
8231. Rod Kukurudz, Facebook, Mar 2022.
8232. Nikki Swaab, “Sephardi Org (Australia),” Mar 2022, Sydney Australia.
8233. Menashe Semah, March 2022, Haifa, Israel.
8234. Tanya Oziel, Mar 2022, Sydney & Wellington.
8238. Herbert Abady, Mar 2022, Mar 2024.
8239. Maurice Laniado, Apr 2022, England.
8240. “Aboud Hidary Pauwen Cohen,” Apr 2022, Paul Pauwen, Danny & Herbert Abady.
8241. “Import GEDCOM file from 20 May 2019,” Numerisation, File: T Pauwen.ged.
8243. Hedy Minerbo, “Facebook,” Apr 2022.
8246. Didier Ephraim Sender, Apr 2022, Paris France.
8247. Marcella de Botton via Diego Durin, “De Botton tree,” Mar 2022, France.
Isaac and Mathilde de Botton family tree
8248. Mary Katran paper translated by Rafi Levi , “1999 interview, made by the Haifa University under a project called :"The Aliya from Syria..".,” By email April 2022, Haifa.
8303. A. M. Olof, A short history of Isaac Alfred Ailion and his family, Universiteit Leiden 2009.
Descendants chart from Len Yokaoden, Kfar Hanassi, Israel
8304. Tziporah Miriam Halperin , Oct 2022, New York, USA.
8305. 6 FEB 2015 14:31:29 GMT -0500, נעם בלטיאנסקי, “בלטיאנסקי Web Site,” Smart Matching, 182747592-1.
<p>אילן יוחסין MyHeritage.com</p><p>אתר משפחתי: בלטיאנסקי Web Site</p>אילן יוחסין: 182747592-1
6 בפבר' 2015 התווסף על ידי אישור התאמה חכמה Smart Matching 1000042
8306. 6 FEB 2015 14:31:29 GMT -0500, נעם בלטיאנסקי, “בלטיאנסקי Web Site,” Smart Matching, 182747592-1.
<p>אילן יוחסין MyHeritage.com</p><p>אתר משפחתי: בלטיאנסקי Web Site</p>אילן יוחסין: 182747592-1
6 בפבר' 2015 התווסף על ידי אישור התאמה חכמה Smart Matching 1000029
8359. Carolina Emanuel, Jun 2023, Oct 2024, USA, Carolina & Jared Emanuel, Aug 2023.
8360. David Sutton, Aleppo City of Scholars, March 2005, 172.
Based on LiKedoshim Asher Ba'aretz by Hacham David Laniado; Edited and expanded by Rabbi David Sutton; Translated by Isaac Kirzner Known since Biblical times as Aram Soba, the city of Aleppo, Syria was a scholarly and spiritual center for thousands of years. Hated, persecuted, and finally driven out of its ancestral home, this community still lives on in thriving communities in Israel, America, Mexico, and worldwide, including the great Yeshivah Porat Yosef of Jerusalem. Richly illustrated with hundreds of photos, including views of one of the oldest synagogues in the world, the vibrant heritage of Syrian Jewry comes alive in this magnificent history of Aleppo and its sages. This beautiful volume contains biographical information on several centuries of rabbis of Aleppo and Damascus - 600 of them - their ideals and teachings and their beloved pizmonim. Written by a scion of Aleppo who both cherishes and reveres the luminous Judaism of this ancient community
8361. Rachel Naimi, Jun 2023, Israel.
8362. Chris Fitzpatrick Sr, Jun 2023, USA.
8363. Sylvain Curiel, Jul 2023, Jul 2024, France.
8364. Rafi Farahat, Jul 2023, Israel.
8366. Gilles Arié, Jul 2023, France.
8367. Gilles Rodosli, Jul 2023.
8369. Diana Mishaan, Aug 2023, Sep 2023, Guatemala.
8370. Gilles Sion, Aug 2023, New York.
8371. Rose Marie Habousha, Aug 2023.
8372. John Goodhardt, Aug 2023, Paris.
8373. Dwek-Bachar tree by David Dwek Aug 2023
8374. The Dannon Family in Eretz Israel, S. Even-Or, 39-41.
8376. Vicky Cohen , Aug 2023.
8377. Mona Ambar, Sep 2023.
8380. Zakito Forte via Eddy Forte, March 2022.
8383. “Barakat Baruch Levy Tree by Dalia Rappaport,” Oct 2023, Israel.
8384. Elena Piercy, March 2023, New York, NY.
8385. “Lettre de Regina Bibas au Maire de LE4 THOLY,” 1945, Alexandrie.
8386. Samuel Jean Libman, Extraits des Mémoires de Samuel Jean LIBMANN--(écrits en 1989 – 1890)--, 1989.
8387. “Levy Families,” Nov 2023, Elena Piercy.
8388. “Ancestry Family Trees,” Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members., 1,1030::0,Ancestry.com.
8389. “U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 2,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1732::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1732::157942518
8390. “U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 2,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1732::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1732::374341340
8391. “Illinois, Federal Naturalization Records, 1856-1991,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,61196::0,Ancestry.com.
1,61196::2944859
8393. “U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 1,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1788::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1788::10038576
8406. “Geneanet Community Trees Index,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2022, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,62476::0,Ancestry.com.
<i>Geneanet Community Trees Index</i>. Paris, France: Geneanet.
8408. “New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,7488::0,Ancestry.com.
1,7488::4000583094
8411. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3872521
8412. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::4166257
8413. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3333094
8414. “Geneanet Community Trees Index,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2022, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,62476::0,Ancestry.com.
<i>Geneanet Community Trees Index</i>. Paris, France: Geneanet.
8415. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3785178
8416. “Web: France, Death Records, 1970-2018,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2020, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,62201::0,Ancestry.com.
1,62201::9807332
8417. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::142217
8418. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::4605079
8419. “Geneanet Community Trees Index,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2022, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,62476::0,Ancestry.com.
<i>Geneanet Community Trees Index</i>. Paris, France: Geneanet.
1,62476::6998322806
8420. “Global, Find A Grave Index for Non-Burials, Burials at Sea, and other Select Burial Locations, 1300s-Current,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,60541::0,Ancestry.com.
1,60541::8112096
8421. “Global, Find A Grave Index for Non-Burials, Burials at Sea, and other Select Burial Locations, 1300s-Current,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,60541::0,Ancestry.com.
1,60541::7677506
8422. “Global, Find A Grave Index for Non-Burials, Burials at Sea, and other Select Burial Locations, 1300s-Current,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,60541::0,Ancestry.com.
1,60541::8112077
8423. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::4735202
8426. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3785140
8427. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::1702500
8428. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::514657
8431. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3872440
8432. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3705322
8433. “Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,9800::0,Ancestry.com.
1,9800::3333062
8434. “Global, Find A Grave Index for Non-Burials, Burials at Sea, and other Select Burial Locations, 1300s-Current,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,60541::0,Ancestry.com.
1,60541::228417
8435. “Ancestry Family Trees,” Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members., 1,1030::0,Ancestry.com.
34295025950:1030:74427672
8436. “Geneanet Community Trees Index,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2022, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,62476::0,Ancestry.com.
<i>Geneanet Community Trees Index</i>. Paris, France: Geneanet.
1,62476::6491178298
8470. “California, Marriage Index, 1949-1959,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013, Provo, UT, USA, 1,5186::0,Ancestry.com.
1,5186::522121
8471. “U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 1,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1788::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1788::37027547
8472. “Nevada, Marriage Index, 1956-2005,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1100::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1100::4863822
8473. “Massachusetts, Birth Index, 1901-1960 and 1967-1970,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013, Provo, UT, USA, 1,3928::0,Ancestry.com.
1,3928::731148
8474. “1940 United States Federal Census,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,2442::0,Ancestry.com.
1,2442::95482760
8492. “California, County Birth, Marriage, and Death Records, 1849-1980,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2017, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,61460::0,Ancestry.com.
1,61460::250850
8493. “U.S. School Yearbooks, 1880-2012,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010, Provo, UT, USA, 1,1265::0,Ancestry.com.
1,1265::346208671
8494. “U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011, Provo, UT, USA, 1,2469::0,Ancestry.com.
1,2469::1478726130
8495. “U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011, Provo, UT, USA, 1,2469::0,Ancestry.com.
1,2469::1479778162
8496. “Ancestry Family Trees,” Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members., 1,1030::0,Ancestry.com.
230040424355:1030:101881081
8497. “1940 United States Federal Census,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,2442::0,Ancestry.com.
1,2442::74116792
8498. “California, County Birth, Marriage, and Death Records, 1849-1980,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2017, Lehi, UT, USA, 1,61460::0,Ancestry.com.
1,61460::900250850
8499. “U.S. City Directories, 1821-1989,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011, Provo, UT, USA, 1,2469::0,Ancestry.com.
1,2469::1478726129
8500. “U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current,” Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012, Provo, UT, USA, 1,60525::0,Ancestry.com.
1,60525::128323662