(117 results found)

Hatikvah: Conceptions, Receptions and Reflections
… culture emerged in Palestine and spread throughout the Jewish world with remarkable speed.It also shows how its practice at ceremonies of Jewish institutions, synagogues, schools and youth … the Knesset in an amendment to the “Flag and Coat-of-Arms Law” (now called “The Flag, Coat-of-Arms, and National …

Vals (LKT)
… [and a freylekhs ]... were folk-dances for adults and in-laws. The youth strutted its wares in waltzes, krakoviaks , … waltz meter, usually joyful. Waltzes were adopted from non-Jewish cultures by the Hasidic dynasties in Poland and … year was 1895... After the ceremony, as is customary in a Jewish wedding, the newlyweds were led into a private …

Tvile
… ancient tribes of Israel but in certain times also among Jewish Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine... ‘The klezmorim … behind the synagogue until the bride appeared with the in-laws [for the tvile ]. They played all the way there and …

Tish-nign (LKT)
… the march to the xupe [wedding canopy], leading the in-laws, etc.).” Beregovski 1937 [= Beregovski/Slobin 1982, p. …

Sher
… “Sher: One of the most common dance forms in the Jewish repertoire, similar to a square dance or a Russian … their weddings and celebrations, to which they invited Jewish musicians. The Ukrainian youth there danced the šer … up a sher, a polke, a beroyges-tants. This time the in-laws also danced.”[Kremenits, Poland, pre-World War II]. …

Polka
… up a sher , a polke , a beroyges-tants . This time the in-laws also danced.”[Kremenits, Poland, pre-World War II]. … in the modern era. The dance-song was preserved by the Jewish masses a long time after the social dances had …

Mazltov (LKT)
… a wedding someone greets the bride and groom and their in-laws through dancing. Everyone sits in a circle. At the … the definite form of this dance. It occurs frequently in Jewish dances, but as a phenomenon of an improvisational … part of the melody is from Meir Noy, as he heard it at Jewish weddings in Kolomeyke ( nign ‘mazl-tov’ )...” …

Marsh (LKT)
… Ukraine, 1820s-30s]. Fridkin 1925, p. 46 . “A Jewish wedding in the shtetl was a holiday... When Arish the … tunes which were usually adopted from the surrounding non-Jewish cultures. The adoption of marches by Hasidim is part … happy notes (mus. ex. 9) and accompany the guests and in-laws to the wedding-meal. Then everyone begins to eat, drink …

Krakoviak (LKT)
… [and a freylekhs ]... were folk-dances for adults and in-laws. The youth strutted its wares in waltzes, krakoviaks , … [Podalia, c. 1909].” Tshernovetski 1946, pp. 97-114 . “The Jewish folkmusic, as well as the Synagogical music, shows …

Koyletsh-tants (LKT)
… accompany the bride and groom to their house or to the in-laws house immediately after the departure from the khupe .” … to lead the couple in with music. One of the female in-laws went ahead and snatched from the hand of a watchman the … II]. Gilernt 1954, p. 387 . “After the khupe, according to Jewish custom, they led the joyful couple together on a full …