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Zikhron Moshe

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Zikhron Moshe ( Hebrew : זיכרון משה , lit. Memorial for Moses ) is a Haredi neighborhood in central Jerusalem . The neighborhood is bordered by Geula to the north, Mekor Baruch to the west, David Yellin Street to the south, and Mea Shearim to the east. Founded in 1905, its first inhabitants were secular teachers. It was one of several neighborhoods in Jerusalem named for Sir Moses Montefiore .

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5-546: The neighborhood grew up around the Simon von Lämel school , Jerusalem's third Jewish school. It was built in 1856 with funds donated by Elise Herz Lamel of Vienna, Austria in memory of her father. In 1888, management of the school was transferred to a German-Jewish philanthropic society, and in 1910, to the Hilfsverein der Deutschen Juden  [ de ] , a German-Jewish relief association established in 1901. In 1932,

10-468: Is now the southernmost part of the main Haredi part of the city, adjacent to Geula , which is the commercial heart of the Haredi city section. 31°47′15″N 35°13′00″E  /  31.787391°N 35.216669°E  / 31.787391; 35.216669 Elise Herz Elise Herz , née von Lämel (1788–1868) was a Prague -born Austrian philanthropist. There she was made an honorary member of

15-619: The Edison Theater was built on a vacant lot in Zikhron Moshe that later became Yeshayahu Street. It was named for Thomas Edison , who invented the first movie projector. The theater was the first its kind in Jerusalem. Yves Montand and other acclaimed performers appeared there, and it was the venue for concerts of the pre-state Philharmonic Orchestra . Throughout the years, the neighborhood became increasingly religious and

20-527: The 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia about a "children's asylum" refers to the school she founded in her father's memory in the Zikhron Moshe neighbourhood of the city, better known as the Simon von Lämel School or simply Lämel School . This Austrian biographical article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This biographical article about a person notable in connection with Judaism

25-568: The Jewish community. Her father was the merchant Simon von Lämel . Her home in Prague was an intellectual center; however, upon her husband's death in 1850, she moved to Vienna . Herz founded a children's asylum in Jerusalem , mainly for Jewish children, but a few Christian and Muslim children were accepted as well. Ludwig August Frankl was commissioned to organize it. This entry from

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