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(Created page with "2 for his great accomplishment; and I may add, Bregstone lead us into the heretofore unknown chambers of Jewish life in Chicago.")
 
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for his great accomplishment; and I may add, Bregstone
for his great accomplishment; and I may add, Bregstone
lead us into the heretofore unknown chambers of Jewish life
lead us into the heretofore unknown chambers of Jewish life
in Chicago.
in Chicago.  The seeds of the Jewish Chicago have blossomed
forth, and Bregstone made the firs beginning of (to gather)
the harvest, he gathered the scattered knowledge of its
past, the Echoes of the first sounds and together with his own
experience and research he succeeded to bring his offering
of its first fruit: his work "Chicago and Its Jews."
The book is composed of more than four hundred
pages of reading matter, written in a splendid style.  There
are pages that charm the reader; pages with poetic movement,
lyrical sweetness and [[unclear]] immensely fine diction.  Often
intertwined of motives and [[etudes?]] and yet, one feels how
the yesterday, and the today, the immediate past and the
presence cross each other.  They interweave with each other
and [[meter?]] the Jewish life of Chicago in a harmonious com-
pleteness.
The book is divided in four parts and each part in sepa-
rate chapters and every chapter is complete in itself.  Every-
where the author endeavors to reveal the spiritual to the surface.
Particularly can this be observed when he discusses persons who
[[though?]] occupy a prominent (part) position for the contributions
they made to philanthropy, yet he treats them with little love because
they lack culture, or because of their tendencies towards assimilation.

Latest revision as of 18:30, 15 April 2020

2 for his great accomplishment; and I may add, Bregstone lead us into the heretofore unknown chambers of Jewish life in Chicago. The seeds of the Jewish Chicago have blossomed forth, and Bregstone made the firs beginning of (to gather) the harvest, he gathered the scattered knowledge of its past, the Echoes of the first sounds and together with his own experience and research he succeeded to bring his offering of its first fruit: his work "Chicago and Its Jews." The book is composed of more than four hundred pages of reading matter, written in a splendid style. There are pages that charm the reader; pages with poetic movement, lyrical sweetness and unclear immensely fine diction. Often intertwined of motives and etudes? and yet, one feels how the yesterday, and the today, the immediate past and the presence cross each other. They interweave with each other and meter? the Jewish life of Chicago in a harmonious com- pleteness.

The book is divided in four parts and each part in sepa-

rate chapters and every chapter is complete in itself. Every- where the author endeavors to reveal the spiritual to the surface. Particularly can this be observed when he discusses persons who though? occupy a prominent (part) position for the contributions they made to philanthropy, yet he treats them with little love because they lack culture, or because of their tendencies towards assimilation.