Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He was succeeded at this post by another Bundist, Aleksandr Zolotarev.
A member of the Bund is called a Bundist (Bundistn in the plural).
He placed less emphasis on Jewish cultural nationalism and autonomy than subsequent younger Bundist leaders like M.I. Liber.
Finally, the kehilla executive reflected the composition of the council: 7 Orthodox, 6 Zionists, 1 Folkist, 1 Bundist.
During the 1917 October Revolution and Russian Civil War, the mayor of the town was the Bundist leader D. Lipets.
The Bundist movement continued to exist as a political party in independent Poland prior to the Holocaust (the Polish Bund) when many of its members were killed.
In April 1921 Der veker, a former bundist newspaper in Minsk and later a Jewish communist organ, merged into Der shtern.
Kalisz also had an array of Jewish political parties around the turn of the 20th century: mainstream Zionist, labor Zionist, religious Zionist, and socialist Bundist.
On May 10, a Bundist member of the Polish government in exile, Szmul Zygielbojm, committed suicide in London to protest the lack of reaction from the Allied governments.
It was on the second day of the Uprising, while protecting the retreat of Edelman and other comrades, that another prominent insurgent and Bundist, Michał Klepfisz, was killed.
During the latter half of the 20th century the Bundist legacy was represented through the International Jewish Labor Bund, a federation of local Bundist groups around the world.
Grinfeld, had already established a reputation as a Bundist speaker in the prerevolutionary period, was the head of a Bundist self-defense group in Odessa during 1905 Russian Revolution.
With the assistance of Yaakov (Yankel) Pat, the international Bundist leader, Kleit went to the United States in 1927 and there worked as a teacher in the Arbeter Ring schools until his death.
Arbeiter Fragen ("Worker's Issues"; initially published under the title of Najste Arbeiter-Fragen - New Worker's Issues) was a monthly journal of the Jewish Bundist (socialist) trade unions active in Poland in the 1920s and 1930s.
The ring consisted of Pruneface (hidden from the readers, going by Boche until halfway through the storyline) and his wife, Shakey Trembly, Flattop Jones and his gang, and Frieda Smith (the professor's love interest and a secret Bundist).
In 1908, together with the Bundist dramatist A. Vayter and the Zionist essayist S. Gorelik, he founded the short-lived journal Literarishe Monatshriftn (Literary Monthly Journal) in Vilna, which is widely credited with having launched the Yiddish literary renaissance.
Mark Sameth, the rabbi of the Pleasantville Community Synagogue, said new members come from a wide spectrum of backgrounds - Jews with yeshiva backgrounds, Jews with Bundist and other leftist backgrounds, and Jews raised in standard suburban Reform and Conservative temples.