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・ "O" Is for Outlaw
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・ "Our Contemporary" regional art exhibition (Leningrad, 1975)
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・ ! (disambiguation)
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・ !Women Art Revolution


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Israel Dov Bär Frumkin : ウィキペディア英語版
Israel Dov Frumkin

Israel Dov Frumkin ((ヘブライ語:ישראל דב פרומקין); born in Dubroŭna, Russian Empire, 29 October 1850 – 1914, Jerusalem) was a pioneer of Hebrew journalism, author, and builder of Jerusalem.
==Family==
Frumkin's step grandfather was Aaron ha-Levi ben Moses of Staroselye. He emigrated to Jerusalem in 19 December 1859, at the age of nine, with his father, Alexander Sender Frumkin, mother and brother. His half brother Michael Levi, who assumed the name Rodkinson, published in New York the first translation of the Talmud to English. His sister Guishe Frumkin-Navon married Yosef Navon Bey, who built the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway. His son Abraham Frumkin (1872–1946), a prominent Jewish anarchist, was a contributor to the daily "Yiddische Welt", of New York. Another son, Gad Frumkin (1887–1960), was one of the first trained attorneys in Palestine and a member of the Supreme court during the British Mandate. Gad Frumkin's grandson—and thus Israel Dov Frumkin's great-grandson—is Karmi Gilon, who was head of the Shabak (Israeli security service).

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