Hi, Maurice,

Your question reminds me: I reaiize now that, because I pasted the 
copied announcement into the e-mail in plain text, it removed the hot link.

One may register by going to this link:

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_WryXPwO9Rg-LEb3mI-dKZA?utm_campaign=Archives&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=130723581&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_OQ9zRGGpuZbj1mUwsMkzir98XJKZUiUjdPAt7wzEA8WsdkweELmaS-gstyvI9k3B4MBtkcEE8gW46u4oz8VpfaRVEdA&utm_content=129959712&utm_source=hs_email


Jim

On 01/06/2021 18:08, Maurice Linker wrote:
> HI JIM
> Yes I want to participate to this webinar
> I an ex Chernovitz.
>
>
>
> Sent from myMail for iOS
>
>
> Wednesday, 2 June 2021, 6:47 am +1000 from Jim Wald <jw...@hampshire.edu>:
>
>     The JDC Archives invites you to a webinar
>     Mela Iancu: A Holocaust Heroine in Romania
>     Sylvia Hershcovitz
>     Tuesday, June 22, 2021
>     12:00pm - 1:30pm (EDT)
>     ZOOM (Webinar)
>     RSVP
>
>     In 1939, Mela Iancu, a Romanian Jewish leader, established the Jewish
>     Center for the Protection of Mothers and Children. With branches
>     throughout Romania, the center contributed to the salvation of
>     hundreds
>     of women and children during the Holocaust period, providing Jewish
>     children with shelter, food, and medical care and aiding orphans who
>     returned from Transnistria. With financial assistance from JDC and
>     other
>     international organizations, the center helped many children
>     during this
>     period of danger and uncertainty for the Jewish people. Sylvia
>     Hershcovitz will present this narrative from a Jewish, Zionist, and
>     feminist perspective.
>
>     Sylvia Hershcovitz is a PhD candidate in the Department of Jewish
>     History at Bar Ilan University in Israel. She is a Spiegel Fellow
>     in The
>     Arnold and Leona Finkler Institute for Holocaust Research and a
>     recipient of the Fred and Ellen Lewis/ JDC Archives Fellowship. Her
>     dissertation and her research in the JDC Archives focus on the
>     quotidian
>     lives of Jewish women and their organizations in Romania in the early
>     20th century.
>     RSVP
>
>
>     The views and opinions expressed in the public program are those
>     of the
>     presenters and do not necessarily reflect the position of the JDC.
>
>     The JDC Archives houses one of the world’s most significant
>     collections
>     of modern Jewish history. Comprising the organizational records of
>     the
>     American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), the world’s
>     leading
>     Jewish humanitarian organization, the archives includes over 3
>     miles of
>     text documents, 100,000 photographs, a research library of more than
>     6,000 books, 1,100 audio recordings including oral histories, and a
>     video collection.
>
>
>
>     With records of activity in more than 90 countries dating from
>     1914 to
>     the present, the JDC Archives is located in two centers, New York
>     City
>     and Jerusalem, and is open to the public by appointment. For more
>     information, visit archives.jdc.org. For more information on JDC
>     Archives Fellowships, visit the Fellowships page.
>
>
>
>     You are receiving this email because at one time you indicated an
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>
>     The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee   220 East 42nd
>     Street    New York  New York   10017
>
>     
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This moderated discussion group is for information exchange on the subject of  
 Czernowitz and Sadagora Jewish History and Genealogy. The opinions expressed
 in these posts are the opinions of the original poster only and not necessarily
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 or entities connected with this mailing list. The Czernowitz-L list has 
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