Hi Julian, ,I was born in Czernowitz, once upon the time, when this town was
austrian...we lived in my youth near the ep. Residence I was a very curious
girl, and when the laundry was brought , from the washing room, in the
cellar, up , to the "Dachboden, I was the first, who stand on a chair, to
look f rom the window on the roof aound on the other roofs and to the
Residence... I saw the glissering roofs of the Residance, some bricks were
red, others aranged in geometric forms, some the star of David.I remember,
after 85 yaers, how they glissered in the sun, such impressions are
unfogettable, , I asked my mother and she told me that the rich jewish
factories owners geve monnay for the building, and this was the recompense
for them...
Excuse my bad english...
Best reguards Hedwig Brenner
----- Original Message -----
From: "Julian Rubin" <julianrubin2000_at_yahoo.com>
To: <w.a.t-r_at_athenaeum.se>; <Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu>
Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2010 8:12 PM
Subject: [Cz-L] Fw: Star of David, University of Chernivtsi
To all group members,
This is a forwarded message to the PR department of the university of Cz.
regarding the enigma of the Stars of David ornamenting one of their domes.
By now I didn't get any answer. Maybe somebody has a good explanation for
this.
Julian
--- On Thu, 9/9/10, Julian Rubin <julianrubin2000_at_yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Julian Rubin <julianrubin2000_at_yahoo.com>
Subject: Star of David, University of Chernivtsi
To: office_at_chnu.edu.ua
Date: Thursday, September 9, 2010, 8:23 PM
Dear Madam / Sir,
This summer I visited the University of Chernivtsi and was surprised by the
Star of David ornaments on one of the domes.
Some say that this is out of respect that the university’s architect felt
toward the local rabbi or maybe the building was financed by Jews. But this
is doubtful since the university as a Christian orthodox institute was
probably not willing to endorse a Jewish symbol by any cost.
The other explanation, supplied by one of your guides, speaks about the idea
that the Star of David is not necessarily a Jewish symbol but rather a
universal one, used by different religions and cultures, including
Christianity, during history. But even if that’s the case, it does not make
sense since the Star of David is so strongly associated with Judaism from
the 16th century onwards.
What’s really the truth?
Julian Rubin
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Received on 2010-09-27 04:54:32
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