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Showing all 15 results Save | Export
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Athithya Paramesh N. P.; J. Amutha Monica – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2024
'Diaspora' is a term that has undergone transformation throughout history. In its original sense, it referred to the Jewish population residing outside of their native land in Palestine. In its current usage, it encompasses any dispersion of people or linguistic and cultural phenomena originating from a localized source. The transnational…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Jews, Climate, Novels
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Galia Plotkin Amrami – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2015
This article offers an ethnographic account of the professional activities of mental health practitioners, employed by the state's religious education system. I analyze various models implemented by practitioners for the purposes of preparing pupils for the state-mandated evacuation of Jewish settlers from Gaza and the West Bank. By focusing on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Therapy, Allied Health Personnel, Religious Education
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Javore, Barbara B. – Religious Education, 2015
Terezin, the gateway to Auschwitz, a town commandeered by the Nazis to serve as a "model" relocation camp to demonstrate the Third Reich's generosity and kindness toward the Jews, was an elaborate hoax. In an environment where truth was twisted beyond recognition, artists, writers, actors, and musicians used their work to revive the…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Death, European History, Jews
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Michael Bernard-Donals – College English, 2010
The position of the excluded other, it seems to the author, is the position that has characterized Jews since antiquity: exiled from the nation and dispersed to other nations, Jewish participation in civic life has been defined, even in modernity, by its marginalization and precariousness. The Jew, in other words, provides a salient example of the…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Jews, Conflict, Citizen Participation
Maher M. Kharma – Online Submission, 2010
Following wars and natural disasters, individuals and their families face displacement from their native land and relocate to a new location where they become refugees. As occupational beings, people find meaning in their environment and build their identity through engaging in meaningful occupations. The environment plays a role in shaping the…
Descriptors: Refugees, Jews, African Americans, Slavery
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Zehavit Gross – Education and Urban Society, 2008
This article describes aspects of the relocation of schools from the Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip ("Gush Katif") after implementation of the disengagement plan in summer 2005. The study describes "successful" and "unsuccessful" relocated schools in the eyes of parents and the impact of the schools' new…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Jews, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries
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Ratzoni, G.; And Others – Journal of Adolescence, 1988
Examines 12-month period in 1983-1984 when large number of Ethiopian Jews emigrated to Israel under very stressful conditions. Notes that many immigrants were adolescents who left their families behind in Ethiopia. Focuses on nine adolescent immigrants who developed psychiatric disabilities severe enough to warrant hospitalization, describing…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Jews
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Templer, Bill – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2007
Along with patterns of neo-liberal transformation spreading through Israeli higher education, a distinctive element of Israeli academe is the extent to which university staff and researchers actively or more often tacitly support the broader aims of the government and the Occupation, including its daily murders, abominations and indignities…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Politics of Education, Political Attitudes
Zenner, Walter P.; Hiller, Debra – 1983
From 1974 to 1980, Albany, New York, and other communities received an influx of Jewish immigrants from the Soviet Union. Organizations such as Jewish Family Services (JFS) have helped these new Americans to integrate into the new society. This report by the Albany JFS presents the results of a survey of resettlement efforts on behalf of Soviet…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anti Semitism, Employment Opportunities, Immigrants
Dressler, Edith – 1986
Analysis of information on Soviet Jewish immigration to the United States reveals the following: (1) the strongest motivation for emigration was anti-semitism, followed by a desire to secure one's children's future, opposition to or dissatisfaction with the political and economic system, the desire to join one's family, and the belief that there…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Cultural Isolation, Culture Conflict
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Kedar, Benjamin Z. – Journal of World History, 1996
Locates the origin and development of corporate expulsion: the permanent, government-sponsored banishment of a category of subjects beyond the physical boundaries of a political entity--in medieval Western Europe. This method of consolidating political power, creating convenient scapegoats, and eliminating perceived internal threats soon spread to…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Economic Impact, Ethnic Discrimination, Ethnic Groups
Stein, Barry N. – 1980
This report on refugee resettlement programs and techniques addresses two central issues: (1) what kinds of assistance should be made available by the Federal government to incoming refugees; and (2) which services in the public and private sectors have been most effective in helping refugees to achieve self sufficiency? Chapter I provides a brief…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Agency Role, Cubans
Gold, Stephen J. – 1990
The situation of Jews who have immigrated to the United States from the former Soviet Union is reviewed, and information is presented to help teachers of immigrant children. The onset of "glasnost" has made Soviets the largest refugee population to enter the United States in recent years. Thousands more are expected in the near future.…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Children, Educational Experience
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Seller, Maxine Schwartz – Paedagogica Historica, 1996
Recounts a little known episode of World War II: the imprisonment of 28,000 anti-Nazi Jewish refugees in Great Britain. Explores how the refugees created a rich cultural and educational life out of these circumstances. They ran internment camp education programs, put on theatrical shows, and published a camp newspaper. (MJP)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Civil Liberties, Community Development, Community Role
Alchin, Don D., Jr. – 1971
Seventh, eighth, and ninth grade students examine the many ethnic groups that make up Dade County in this elective social studies course. It focuses on the Cuban, Black, Jewish and White Anglo Saxon groups and their interaction. Following the course it is hoped that the students will be more able to empathize with others through greater…
Descriptors: American Indians, Area Studies, Blacks, Community Study