Tafel, angebracht an der östlichen Wand der Synagoge oder des Heimes um die Gebetsrichtung nach Jerusalem anzuzeigen.
Frankel, Giza, Migzarot Niyar: Omanut Yehudit Amamit [The Art of the Jewish Papercut]. Tel Aviv: Masada, 1983.
Doleželová, Jana. “Mizrahs from the Collections of the State Jewish Museum in Prague.” Judaica Bohemiae, vol. XI, no. 1-2, 1975, pp. 14-28.
Shalom, Sabar, et al. Mizrah. Compass for the Heart. New York: Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion Museum, 1985.
Shalom, Sabar. [‘From this Direction Comes the Spirit of Life’: The Mizrah and its Design].” Видеть и помнить: Эстетика сакрального в еврейской визуальной культуре: Мизрахи, шивити, амулеты, лубки, портреты раввинов и таблицы йорцайт из коллекции Музея истории евреев в России [To See and to Remember: Sacral Aesthetics of Jewish Visual Culture: Mizrachs, Shiviti, Amulets, Popular Prints, Portraits of Rabbis and Yahrzeit Tables in the Collection of the Museum of the Jewish History in Russia], ed. Kazovsky, Hillel (Gregory), et al., Moscow: Museum of the Jewish History in Russia, 2012, pp. 10-53.
Yaniv, Bracha. “Mi-Gzirat Ha-‘Mizrach’ [The ‘Mizrach’ Papercut].” Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Folklore, vol. 3, Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies, 1982, pp. 105-12.
Wählen Sie eine Sprache aus