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  2. Daughters of Zion Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daughters_of_Zion_Cemetery

    Daughters of Zion Cemetery, also known as Zion Cemetery, Society Cemetery, and Old Oakwood Section, is a historic African-American cemetery located at Charlottesville, Virginia, United States. It was established in 1873, and contains an estimated 300 burial sites with 152 of the burials commemorated with 136 surviving grave markers.

  3. Hadassah Women's Zionist Organization of America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadassah_Women's_Zionist...

    Because the meeting was held around the time of Purim, the women called themselves "The Hadassah chapter of the Daughters of Zion," adopting the Hebrew name of Queen Esther. Henrietta Szold became the first president. Within a year, Hadassah had five growing chapters in New York, Baltimore, Cleveland, Chicago and Boston.

  4. Sarah Azariahu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Azariahu

    In the early 1890s, Azariahu began to get more connected to Zionists in Dinaburg, but did not find a common ground with the movement's businessmen in the city. In 1892, with a friend, she began to add women to the national movement, founding the "Daughters of Zion" Union.

  5. Zion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zion

    Zion (1903), Ephraim Moses Lilien. Zion (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן, romanized: Ṣīyyōn; [a] Biblical Greek: Σιών) is a placename in the Tanakh, often used as a synonym for Jerusalem [3] [4] as well as for the Land of Israel as a whole. The name is found in 2 Samuel , one of the books of the Tanakh dated to approximately the mid-6th century BCE.

  6. African Methodist Episcopal women preachers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_Methodist...

    Four years later, the Daughters of Zion also petitioned to do so. Both of these proposals were rejected. [6] Other proposals were rejected in 1852 and 1864. [3] [2] There was a, perhaps incorrect, belief that women had created an underground network that organized local preaching assignments.

  7. Christians United for Israel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christians_United_for_Israel

    Daughters for Zion is a Christian prayer ministry that is part of the Christians United for Israel Organization (CUFI), a national association for every church, organization, christian ministry, or individual in the United States who wants to speak and act in support of the State of Israel.

  8. Isaiah 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaiah_3

    Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes some fragments among Dead Sea Scrolls, such as the Isaiah Scroll (1Qlsa a; 356-100 BCE; [3] all verses) and 4QIsa b (4Q56; with extant verses 14–22); [4] [5] as well as codices, such as Codex Cairensis (895 CE), the Petersburg Codex of the Prophets (916), Aleppo Codex ...

  9. Miriam Freund-Rosenthal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miriam_Freund-Rosenthal

    Freund-Rosenthal was born in Brooklyn on January 1, 1906, [contradictory] and reared in Harlem and Perth Amboy, New Jersey. [1] The child of Harry Kottler and Rebecca Zindler, a member of the first Zionist women’s group on the East Side, the Daughters of Zion. [2]