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Jewish Family History Foundation

A 501 (C)(3) non-profit corporation

P.O. Box 16305, Encino, CA 91416

Mail to: GDL Project 

  •    Objectives

  •    Board of Directors

  •    Advisory Board

           The Objectives of the Jewish Family History Foundation are:

  •     To identify and locate primary source historical materials relating to the study of Jewish communities and families of Eastern Europe and their descendants, with a particular emphasis on those which were influenced by “Litvak” or Lithuanian Jewish culture.

  •    To gather, organize, translate and preserve archival documents, oral and written histories and photographic documentation of the Jewish communities and families of Eastern Europe from their early history until their destruction by the Holocaust.

  •    To assist the Archives  and other repositories of Eastern Europe develop methods for restoration and preservation of these materials in order to make this information more accessible to American and international genealogists and academic scholars. Specific methods will emphasize the use of the latest technological tools including digital scanning, optical character recognition and computerizing of deteriorating documents.

  •    To disseminate this information to educational institutions and libraries and the general public by means of articles, books, documentary films, electronic media such as CD-ROMs, Internet Websites, Online searchable databases and Internet discussion groups, exhibitions and public presentations.

  •    To encourage the study of the history of Jewish families and their ancestral communities, teach research methodology, and provide assistance in the production of Family History Journals, Newsletters, and Books.

Board of Directors

David B. Hoffman, UCLA; Yale University; Ph.D., Cornell University, is the co-founder and President of the Jewish Family History Foundation. David is also on the Board of the LitvakSIG (Special Interest Group,) which he co-founded and served as past president. He organized research groups to acquire and translate Lithuanian records for the All Lithuania Database.  David is on the Board of Directors of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles. He also coordinates the Ariogala, Lithuania Shtetl Research Group, and has developed systems for indexing inheritance, court, business, and official correspondence files. David has traced his family back to the mid-1600s in Lithuania and Poland and has devoted the past ten years to the study of the historical, political and economic factors affecting the development of Jewish communities in Eastern Europe (David Hoffman's Friedland Family of Ariogala, Lithuania).  For several years he has been studying the 17th and 18th century records of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

David brings an analytical research orientation to genealogy, emphasizing that family history can only be completely understood in the context of political, economic, historical and social movements during any period.

David has spoken at International Conferences on Jewish Genealogy in Los Angeles, New York, London Las Vegas and to genealogy groups in South Africa, Israel, England and around the United States. Most recently he joined Nancy Biederman and Sonia Hoffman at the 2006 Conference in New York to present, "Recreating Ariogala, A Lithuanian Shtetl."

He has published research papers in Avotaynu: "Collection of Box Taxes in 19th Century Lithuania" (with Vitalija Gircyte) and "Researching 18th Century Census and Tax Lists from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania" (with Sonia Hoffman), Fall 2001; “18th Century Records from the Former Commonwealth of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland;” Fall 2003 and in Roots-Key, the research journal of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles, including: "Revision Lists in the New LitvakSIG Online Lithuanian Database," Spring,1999; “Official Correspondence in the Kaunas Regional Archives as a Source of Genealogical Data,” Spring 2000; "Genealogists Collaborate to Confirm Family Lore" and "Russian Archival Research: Tracking family in the Russian Empire,” Winter 2003; "Social Action, Yiddish Culture and Zionism: Leo Blass and the Eastern European Influence,” “Jews in Early Santa Monica,” Summer/Fall 2003; "The Grand Duchy of Lithuania Project: Challenges in Researching 18th Century Records," Winter 2004; "In the Air as the War Begins: A Flyers Letter Home, Introduction," "Milt Gabler, Storekeeper of the Jazz World," "Mary Kasindorf," "Sid Kasindorf and the Nazi U-Boats," Summer-Fall, 2005.“Documenting Family History Stories from 1812,”(in Napoleon and the Jews,) Summer 2006.

David is a clinical psychologist and former professor of Community Psychology and Public Health at Florida State University and the University of California at Los Angeles. At UCLA he trained health professionals as agents of health behavior change.  He worked in Israel at the Hadassah Wizo Canada Research Institute on Instrumental Enrichment, a diagnostic model used to increase learning potential.  His C.V. includes numerous citations of publications in professional journals and articles written for the public. He served as the editor of several professional journals. As a researcher he has been the principal investigator for many studies funded by the U.S. government, private foundations and the U.S. Navy.

Sonia R. Hoffman, B.A., UCLA, is co-founder and Secretary of the Jewish Family History Foundation and is the Coordinator of the Grand Duchy Project. She has served as President of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles from 2001 to 2006, and previously served as its Program Vice President. She was the Coordinator of the Bialystok Indexing Project for Jewish Records Indexing - Poland, an internet group which indexes the Jewish vital records held at the Polish State Archives. She helped to organize the Rostov Cousins group, which reunited 500 family members and is editor of the Rostov-on-Don Family History Journal. She has participated in the acquisition and translation of numerous documents from archives in Lithuania, Poland and Russia. Sonia is currently supervising all translation of the 1784 GDL census.

Sonia has published articles in Avotaynu: “Researching 18th Century Census and Tax Lists from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania,” Fall 2001, and “18th Century Records from the Former Commonwealth of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland,”  Fall 2003 (with David Hoffman). She has written many articles for Roots-Key, the research journal of the Jewish Genealogical Society Los Angeles, including: “Chaim Friedman: Lost at Sea,” Fall 2001; “Exploring the Ariogala (Lithuania) Cemetery,” Spring 2002; “18th Century Records of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth,” Spring 2003; “Migrating West” and “Leo Blass and the Eastern European Influence,” Summer/Fall special issue on the Jewish Presence in Los Angeles, and “Tracking Families in the Russian Empire” (with David Hoffman), Winter 2003;"The Grand Duchy of Lithuania Project: Challenges in Researching 18th Century Records," Winter 2004 (with David Hoffman); and "What's in a Name: Mine, That Is," Spring, 2005. Sonia's Ariogala (Eyrogola), Lithuania Headstones, and Kelme, Lithuania Jewish Cemetery Headstone Inscriptions, appear on the Jewish Family History website, June 2004.

She has spoken on genealogy to many community groups in Los Angeles, and to genealogical societies in Los Angeles, San Diego, Johannesburg, South Africa, and Jerusalem, Israel. She participated on a panel on "Publishing a Family Newsletter, Gathering and Sharing your Family History" at the 18th International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Los Angeles, in 1998 and spoke at the International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Washington, D.C. on “18th Century Records of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania/Kingdom of Poland” in 2003; at the 25th IAJGS Conference on Jewish Genealogy, in Las Vegas in 2005: "An Analysis of 18th Century Census Records for the Grand Duchy of Lithuania" (with David Hoffman, available on CD from JewishGen); at the 26th IAJGS Conference in New York in 2006:   "Re-creating Ariogala: A Lithuanian Shtetl," and "The Grand Duchy (GDL) Project: Finding Families in 18th Century Belarus, Lithuania & Poland." She has conducted research on her family, which lived in Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Poland, and Litvak roots in Volhynia, the southern most part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

N. Biederman, is a Syracuse University alum and serves as co-president and Chief Financial Officer of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles.  She previously served the Society as Recording Secretary and is a copy editor for its research journal, Roots-Key. She is Co-coordinator of the Kamen Kashirskiy Research Group and assists with data entry for the Dachau Indexing and related projects for JewishGen. She is the co-coordinator of the Ariogala Shtetl Research Group and recently spoke at the 2006 IAJGS Conference on Jewish Genealogy in New York, co-presenting, "Re-creating Ariogala: A Lithuanian Shtetl."

Nancy has assumed leadership roles in several philanthropic and educational non-profit organizations. She progressed through a fifteen-year commercial banking career culminating in responsibilities as an executive officer of an independent, commercial bank. She was responsible for all phases of daily operation including accounting and investments, regulatory reporting, bank operations and systems, human resources, purchasing and facilities. Today she holds an administrative position with a nationally affiliated financial services recruitment and consulting firm where she is responsible for finance and systems, hardware and software.

Nancy Collier Holden, B.A., University of Wisconsin, M.S., Pepperdine University in Supervision and Administration, and advanced graduate work in Clinical Psychology and Human Development. A former Administrator and Special Education teacher at the Los Angeles Child Guidance Clinic Children’s School and Administrator of the Florence Crittendon, San Francisco; SETA program, retired.

Since her retirement, Nancy has been a volunteer at the National Archives Regional Branch-Laguna Niguel, and a lecturer on Jewish Genealogy, Native American Genealogy, and Eastern European Genealogy. She is a Past-President of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles and is a Past President of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Orange County; Past Editor of Shorashim, the JGS Orange County Newsletter; the current Editor of the Svensionys Yizkor Book; the Webmaster for seven Shtetlinks websites for towns in Belarus and the Ukraine; Nancy is also the current Editor of Roots-Key, the journal of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Los Angeles.

“I grew up in New York City. I have lived in California since 1952. I have been working on my family history for 19 years and traveled for many years in the United States collecting stories, visiting cemeteries and viewing photographs as a way of filling in my family lines. I have traced my father’s line back to the 1400s; my mother’s line to the 1700s, working through the Grodno Archives, Lithuanian Archives, Latvian Archives and Odessa Archives. In the course of this search, I have had to learn to read Hebrew, Rashi script, and rudimentary Cyrillic. I have attended IAJGS conferences in Los Angeles, Boston, Salt Lake City and Washington D.C.”

Current Webmaster for:

http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Myadel

http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Svisloch

http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/kobylnik

Thomas Parry, A.B., Harvard College, has been a producer and an executive in the film industry over the past 30 years.  With senior positions at United Artists, Paramount, 20th Century Fox and MTM Productions, Tom has been involved in the production of numerous feature films.  He also served a six-year stint as an executive in the computer game industry and then as a consultant for an internet start-up.  Recently, Tom has worked as a documentary film producer on several high-profile projects slated for PBS.  Currently, he is acting as a consultant to a newly-organized film distribution and sales company. 

For the past 15 years, Tom has chaired his extended family's 450-member cousins' association, which has reunited branches of a family which immigrated from Lithuania to the U.S., Russia, Israel, Australia and South Africa. Tom dedicated himself to helping his cousins who had been trapped behind the Iron Curtain seventy years ago, immigrate to America. This involved organizing seven branches of the extended family to raise a Family Freedom Fund with the Jewish Free Loan Association, which provided support for expenses involved in resettlement and assimilation. The JFLA of Los Angeles selected this project for an award as a model program. Committed to community service, he has functioned as an elected director of the Harvard Alumni Association for a six-year term.  He was recently elected president of the Harvard Gay & Lesbian Caucus, a 3200-member association of Harvard alumni, faculty and staff.

Advisory Board
Vitalija Gircyte,
Dr. Eric L. Goldstein, Ada Green, Chaim (Keith) Freedman,
     Mark W. Halpern,
 Ambassador Neville Y. Lamdan, Neil Rosenstein, M.D.    

Vitalija Gircyte, Chief Archivist of the Kaunas Regional Archives, is a 1983 graduate of Vilnius University, where she majored in History, specializing in the archives.  After graduation she worked in the Kaunas Archives until 1988.  She taught for several years before returning to the Archives in 1994.  She started working with requests for records in Kaunas Guberniya, which were at that time not of a genealogical nature.  In 1995 when the archives started receiving genealogical requests, Vitalija knew very little about the sources of genealogical information.  In an explanation she offered in 1998 of how she began to assist scholars and genealogists conduct research in the Kaunas Regional Archives she said, "I just tried to find out which moments of human life were documented in Kaunas Guberniya, by what institution, and in what records."

Since 1995, Ms. Gircyte has become much more involved in genealogical research and is an expert on the holdings of her archives. She has translated thousands of records for online databases for JewishGen and other nonprofit groups as well as assisting in private research projects.  In 1998 she came to the 18th International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Los Angeles to present a paper on “Kaunas Archives Resources,” which also was published that Fall in Avotaynu. Vitalija spent more than a year developing a Catalog of the Holdings of the Kaunas Regional Archives, which has been periodically updated and appears online and is available to researchers who visit the Kaunas Regional Archives.

Vitalija worked with David Hoffman to develop a method for cataloging the very extensive court, business and inheritance files in the Kaunas Regional Archives, in such a way that they can be indexed online and located by individual genealogists for full translation. In 2001 she presented a paper in London to the 21st International Conference on Jewish Genealogy with Dr. Hoffman on the “Collection of Box Taxes in 19th Century Lithuania.” A version of this was published in Avotaynu, Volume XVII Number 3, Fall 2001. At the same conference she also presented a paper on, “New Sources of Genealogical Information in the Kaunas Regional Archives.”  At the 23rd International Conference in Washington, D.C., she spoke on ”Genealogical Research at the Kaunas Regional Archives: Tracing Human Lives in Official Records.” Vitalija and David Hoffman are currently involved in a comprehensive cataloging of lists, documents, manuscripts and bibliographies which have references to Jewish populations in the Grand Duchy in the 17th and 18th centuries, as the first step in selecting documents to microfilm and include in our database.

Dr. Eric L. Goldstein is Assistant Professor of History and Jewish Studies at Emory University in Atlanta. He received his Ph.D. in modern Jewish history from the University of Michigan in 2000. An expert on the history of American Jews, Dr. Goldstein has taught, written and lectured widely on topics such as Jewish immigration to the United States, American Jewish culture, Jews in American politics, American Zionism, and American Jewish women. His book, The Price of Whiteness: Jews, Race, and American Identity, which will be issued in 2005, examines the struggle of Jewish immigrants during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to fit into a culture largely defined by the categories of "black" and "white." His current project explores the emergence of a mass-circulation Yiddish print culture in the United States from the 1890s to the 1920s and charts the interrelationship of Yiddish cultural centers in Eastern Europe and America. Professor Goldstein has an extensive curriculum vitae which summarizes his numerous professional publications, affiliations and awards.

He has also extensively researched the history of the Jewish community in Darbenai (Dorbian), Lithuania, from its birth in the 1760s through its destruction in 1941. Using hundreds of documents culled from Lithuanian, Russian, American and Israeli archives, he is writing a scholarly portrait of Lithuanian shtetl life, viewed through the lens of this small community. Eric served on the LitvakSIG Board of Directors in its early years, from 1998 -1999, taking on the responsibility for first organizing dozens of shtetl research groups, and then helping bring them together into district research groups in order to pool resources to acquire and translate revision lists and other district wide records. He also served as the first coordinator of the Raseiniai District Research Group. Eric shared his knowledge of Jewish history with Litvak genealogists through his academic study and travel to Lithuanian archives.

Ada Green is a graduate of The American University in Washington, D.C. with a degree in history and Judaic Studies.  Ada is on the Board of Directors of the LitvakSIG (Special Interest Group), for which she serves as the webmaster. She has been researching her family history since early 1993, and has conducted genealogical research in Israel, Vienna, Ukrainian Galicia, Lithuania, Scotland, and South Africa, as well as in a number of U.S. States. Ada has taken five research trips to Lithuania. Using 18th century Grand Duchy of Lithuania records, Ada has been able to trace back her grandmother’s paternal line from Krakes and her grandfather’s maternal line from Vandziogala to at least 1784. 

Ada is a former member of the Executive Council of the Jewish Genealogical Society, Inc. (New York) and is Chair of its Cemetery Project, which has catalogued the names and cemetery locations of over 10,000 burial societies in the New York metropolitan area.  As a separate and independent project she has personally recorded and computer-entered the tombstone data on over 30,000 burials, including 77 landsmanshaftn plots for Lithuanian shtetls (including all known New York area burial societies for the Kaunas and Raseiniai districts) and an almost equal number of landsmanshaftn plots for Eastern Galician shtetls.  She has taken five research trips to Lithuania since 1996 and with the assistance of her guide, Regina Kopilevich, has recorded the burials in the Lithuanian Jewish Cemeteries of Kedainiai, Krakes, and Vandziogala.  Ada is the recipient of the 2006 IAJGS Achievement Award for Outstanding Contribution to Jewish Genealogy via the Internet for single-handedly cataloging over 36,000 gravestone inscriptions worldwide and for encouraging and guiding individuals and groups undertaking other transcription projects.

Ada has written articles for Avotaynu: “Lithuanian Central Civil Register Archives Revisited,” Spring 1998 (Volume XIV, Number 1), “Searching for Mumma Rocha,” Winter 2000 (Volume XVI, Number 4), “Jewish Burial Societies in the New York Metropolitan Area:  Some Pointers About Landsmanshaften Plots,” Fall 2001 (Volume XVII, Number 3).  Her articles for Dorot include: “Research in Vienna,” Spring 1996 (Volume 17, No. 3), “Pre-War Lithuanian Series in the Afrikaner Yidishe Tzeitung,” Summer 1996 (Volume 17, Number 4). Articles for The Galitzianer include: “Military Records at LDS,” Fall 1994 (Volume 2, Number 1), “Jewish Taxpayers in Nadworna,” Summer 1998 (Volume 5, No. 4). Also for the LitvakSIG On-Line Journal: “SA Landsmannschaften Records,” April 1999.

She has given numerous lectures to Jewish genealogical societies in the US, South Africa and Israel and has spoken at the international genealogical conferences in New York in 1999, London in 2001 and New York in 2006.  Ada was the LitvakSIG Kaunas uyezd research group coordinator from 2001 to 2006 and is the JRI-Poland AGAD Archives town leader for the western Ukrainian shtetl formerly known as Bialy Kamien, Galicia.

Ada is the Website author of the shtetl pages for Seta and Krakes, Lithuania, and Nadvorna, Ukraine:

http://home.att.net/~shat/ (Seta, Lithuania)
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/krakes/Krakes.htm (Krakes, Lithuania, created jointly with Trevor Tucker)
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Nadvorna/nadw.htm (Nadvorna, created jointly with David Sotkowitz)
http://www.jewishgen.org/Yizkor/Nadvornaya/Nadvornaya.html (Nadvorna, Yizkor Book)
http://home.att.net/~landsmanshaft/ (New York landsmanshaftn and other Jewish organizations)

Chaim (Keith) Freedman was born in 1947 in Melbourne, Australia to parents of eastern European origins. He was educated at Mount Scopus College in Melbourne, where he received a traditionally orthodox and secular education. In 1977, he immigrated to Israel.

A noted genealogist, he has lectured at numerous genealogical and historical conferences including The International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Jerusalem in 1984, 1994 and 2004. He has published his research in Avotaynu, Sharsheret Hadorot, Search, Roots-Key and the Journal of the Australian Jewish Historical Society.

Mr. Freedman edited Jewish Personal Names: Their Origin, Derivation and Diminutive Forms by the late Rabbi Shmuel Gorr, published in 1992 by Avotaynu.  He wrote several books about his immediate family, including Our Fathers' Harvest, a history of the Komisaruk and other families involved in Jewish agricultural colonization in the Ukraine, and The Pen and the Blade, a history of the Super family.

Chaim Freedman’s major work, Eliyahu's Branches, The Descendants of the Vilna Gaon and His Family, was published in 1997 by Avotaynu. The book is the culmination of thirty years of research of the Vilna Gaon, and includes 20,000 names with valuable biographical and historical details. He recently has written two articles which appears on this website, 18th Century Links to the Family of the Vilna Gaon, in which he uses the 18th century Grand Duchy census records to explore previously unanswered questions about the children of the Vilna Gaon, identify some additional children, and verify his inferences and
The Family of Rabbi Yosef Zundel Salanter in which he uses both the 1884 and 1765 GDL lists to expand our knowledge of Rabbi Yusef Zundel Salanter and his family.

Mr. Freedman's particular expertise in Rabbinical genealogy was published in 2001 in his book Beit Rabbanan, Sources of Rabbinical Genealogy. Much of the content of this book appears on the RavSIG website
.
He acted as a consultant to Beit Hatefutsot's exhibition on the Vilna Gaon in 1998. He provided material for Beit Hatefutsot's 1983 exhibition The Jewish Agricultural Experience in the Diaspora. His chapters on Hebrew genealogical and Rabbinical sources are included in Avotaynu's definitive 2004 Guide to Jewish Genealogy.

Mr. Freedman has lectured to the Israeli Genealogical Society in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and to the Jewish Family Research Association in Tel Aviv and Petah Tikvah. His lectures always draw a good and attentive audience who appreciate the opportunity to hear of his activities in genealogical research and learn from his wide experience in using a range of valuable sources. He has participated frequently in the JewishGen Discussion Group and has provided answers and guidelines on innumerable occasions on the Internet. Many of his compositions appear on the Internet:

http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Colonies_of_Ukraine/ (Jewish Agricultural Colonies in the Ukraine)
http://www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/ (RavSIG)
http://www.jewishgen.org/belarus/index.html (Belarus SIG 
http://www.shtetlinks.jewishgen.org/Lodz/ (Lodz Shtetlinks
)
http://community.webshots.com/user/chaimjan (Chaim Freedman's Family Photos and Documents) 

Mark W. Halpern, B.S. Engineering, Rutgers University, M.B.A. Finance, Rutgers University. Mark has been researching his family history since 1996. While on a business trip to Poland, Mark visited Bialystok, the town where his mother had been born 86 years earlier. This one-day visit propelled Mark in a search for his family as well as his volunteer efforts to support other Jewish family history researchers.

Mark has been the President of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Greater Philadelphia since 2003 and was formerly the Vice President, Membership. He is the founder and overall coordinator of BIALYGen, the Bialystok Region Jewish Genealogy Group.  Mark is a Board member of Jewish Records Indexing – Poland and is the AGAD Archives Coordinator (the Central Archives of Historical Records in Warsaw). He also coordinates indexing projects for Bialystok, Tykocin, and Eastern Galicia and is responsible for the online order processing system where researchers can order copies of Jewish vital records from the Polish State Archives. Mark also coordinates a project to index the tombstones and restore the one remaining Jewish cemetery in Bialystok. 

Mark has spoken at International Conferences on Jewish Genealogy in London, Toronto, Washington, DC., Israel, Las Vegas and New York. He has spoken to genealogy groups in Philadelphia, New Jersey, New York, and Los Angeles about research and vital records in Poland and Galicia. Mark has written many articles for The Galitzianer, the journal of Gesher Galicia and Chronicles, the journal of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Greater Philadelphia. He has also published "Mania’s Story, a Story of a Holocaust Survivor," for Avotaynu, Vol. XVIII, No. 4, Winter 2002. 

Mark is a retired Oil and Chemical Industry executive. He worked on International assignments in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tokyo, Japan, and Hong Kong and has traveled extensively for business and pleasure, always trying to learn more about the Jewish communities in those countries

Ambassador Neville Y. Lamdanis the Director, of the International Institute for Jewish Genealogy (at Jewish National and Hebrew University Library, Jerusalem) since January, 2006 http://www.iijg.org/home/index.html.  He is a Research Fellow at the Truman Institute and the Center for the Study of Christianity, both at Hebrew University and Lecturer in Diplomacy at Tel Aviv University.
 
Born in Scotland, 1938. Doctorate in Modern History from Oxford, 1965 (thesis published in book form by University of California Press, 1976, entitled "The Arabs and Zionism before World War I"). British Foreign Office, 1965-71. Israeli Foreign Ministry, 1973-2003 - served inter alia as Ambassador, Vatican (2000-03); Ambassador, United Nations, Geneva (1994-98); Liaison Officer to US Congress, DC (1985-89); Diplomatic Representative, Beirut (1982).
 
Dr. Lamdan is a seasoned Jewish genealogist, active since 1978. His current research focus: "Village Jews in 19th Century Minsk Gubernya - their life and times" represented by his article on this website: The Mandels of Lechovich (Lyakhovichi) and the 1784 GDL Census.  His research experience includes three in-depth visits to various archives in Belarus (1998, 2001, 2004), plus work in many other national and private archives in Israel, UK and US. Dr. Lamdan has written several articles for Avotaynu and has contributed scholarly notes on genealogy based on specialized studies, archival inventories and translations (from Yiddish) posted on Belarus and Lyakhovichi SIG's. Most recently Dr. Lamdan spoke at the 26th IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in New York in 2006. His research languages include: English, Hebrew, Yiddish, French, Italian, German, Arabic.
 
From:  Adinah Greene, the Jerusalem Post   Oct. 3, 2006
In January the International Institute for Jewish Genealogy opened at the Jewish National and University Library at the Hebrew University's Givat Ram campus. The institute's director, Dr. Neville Y. Lamdan, and several colleagues had wanted to open such an institute for years, but it had to wait until he stepped down as ambassador to the Vatican. "We came back to the idea with a great deal of energy and with a lot of intensive work," Lamdan said. "The group nominated me to be the director and that's how I find myself involved and over my head."

Now Lamdan plans to advance Jewish genealogy so it can be taught at the university level.

"People were groping around feeling that somehow [Jewish genealogy] should be institutionalized. But what sort of institution? What would it do? The answer: engage in research and, if possible, teaching at a university level," Lamdan said.

The institute has three research projects under way, including two in conjunction with foreign universities.

The Sephardic DNA and Migration project, which the institute is performing in cooperation with the Universities of Haifa, Arizona and New York, uses DNA to tracks the male members of a family back to pre-expulsion Spain.

The institute's second project is called Rebuilding Destroyed Communities. Researchers are trying to reconstruct what community life was like in three towns in Poland and Lithuania before the Holocaust.

The Jacobi Indexing project, finally, is being carried out by Dr. Chanan Rapapport. Paul Jacobi, an eminent genealogist, left the National and University Library some 400 genealogical studies which he had done, mainly on rabbinical lineages in Germany. Most of the studies require additional research.

Rapapport shares Lamdan's desire to raise genealogy to an academic level. "It's a combination between... developing curricula and teaching aids for university level and doing research which is beyond the horizon of the individual hobbyists," Rapapport said in a phone interview. "Research that interests many, many families, not just one family."

Lamdan said he was looking ahead to new challenges.

"More and more source material which contains sources for Jewish genealogy is being uncovered," he said, and can be filmed and reproduced digitally.

"There are also other archives in certain countries, including in the Muslim world, where we know there is material. Hopefully we can negotiate access."

 
Neil Rosenstein, M.D., was born in Cape Town, South Africa in 1944. He studied medicine at the University of Cape Town and interned in Israel. He specialized in surgery at the Mt. Sinai hospitals in Cleveland and New York City, and the University of Medicine and Dentistry in Newark, New Jersey. Most recently he has published, The 1784 Census for Keidaniai Confirms the Katzenellenpogen Family Rabbinate on the Jewish Family History Foundation website.

As a result of over four decades of investigative study of rare books and manuscripts, trips to libraries and cemeteries, Dr. Neil Rosensteintravel and correspondence, Dr. Rosenstein has accumulated a vast matrix of material on Jewish genealogy, especially in the field of rabbinical dynasties for which he has become world famous  (see www.jewishgen.org/Rabbinic/ for which Neil is the chairman of the Advisory Board and Bibliography Committee and member of the Steering Committee.) His research has included travel in South Africa, Israel, U.S.A., Poland, Germany, Czechoslovakia, England, Italy, and France.

 
He founded the Jewish Genealogical Society, Inc. (New York) in 1977, first located in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and is also the founder and director of the Computer Center for Jewish Genealogy.
Neil is the author of many works on Jewish Genealogy, his magnum opus being The Unbroken Chain, biographical sketches and genealogies of illustrious Jewish families from the 15th-20th Century, first published as a single volume (1976); an expanded two-volume second edition was published (1990.)

Other noted works include Th ese Are The Generations (1969);  Latter Day Leaders Sages and Scholars, Bibliographical index of prominent Jews, rabbis, scholars, leaders, etc. during the 18th to 20th Centuries. Co-edited with Emanuel Rosenstein (1982);The Feast and the Fast  (1984); The incredible story of the Tosfos Yom Tov, (1984);The Margolis Family (1984); Saul Wahl, Polish King for a Night or Lithuanian Knight for a Lifetime (2006); The Grandees of New Jersey,(2006); The Lurie Legacy: The House of Davidic Royal Descent, (2004); Avnei Zikaron (Stones of Remembrance (1999); The Gaon of Vilna and his Cousinhood, (1997); A Rothschild Saga: From King David to Baron David (1989); HaMagid on CD-ROM (1997), a computer CD-ROM containing scanned images of HaMagid's obituaries, wills, death notices and other records. HaMagid, the first ever Hebrew newspaper appeared in Europe from 1856 to 1903.

Dr. Rosenstein has contributed more than thirty articles to various Jewish genealogical publications and The Jewish Press. He lectures frequently and has spoken many times to various Jewish genealogical societies in the United States and abroad, as well as to eleven International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies conferences; His biography is in included in Who's Who in World Jewry (1987) and is listed in Marquis' Who's Who in America (from 1997 onwards).

Dr. Rosenstein continues to both practice medicine and conduct genealogical research. He and his wife, Mavis, live in Elizabeth, New Jersey. They have five sons and 13 grandchildren.

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