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Shloime
Shloime or Shloyme is a masculine given name, usually a nickname for Shlomo. Notable people with this name include: * Shloyme Bastomski, Russian Yiddish writer and educator * Shloime Dachs, American musician * Shloime Gertner, British singer * Shloyme Prizament, Galician composer and actor * Shloime Zionce, American journalist {{given name Masculine given names ...
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Shloime Gertner
Shloime Gertner () is a British Hasidic Jewish singer from London, England. He achieved international celebrity with his first album, ''Nissim'' (''Miracles'') in 2007. He often performs at Jewish weddings, and in concert and benefit performances with other top-billed Jewish singers. Family Gertner was born to a Hasidic Jewish family in the Hendon neighbourhood of London. He is married with six children. His second daughter, Malka, is developmentally disabled; Gertner dedicated the song "''Kodesh''" ("Holy") on his debut album to her. Career Gertner often sings at Jewish weddings and is known for his "sentimental and religious wedding songs", according to ''The Telegraph'', which says he has been called "the Hasidic Robbie Williams". Gertner has appeared in concert with many popular Jewish performers, including Mordechai Ben David, Avraham Fried, Yehuda Green, Yaakov Shwekey, Baruch Levine, and Miami Boys Choir. He was featured in the HASC 24 and 25 concerts, was one of 30 to ...
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Shloime Dachs
Shloime Dachs is an American Orthodox pop vocalist. He is also the founder of the eponymous Shloime Dachs Orchestra, which plays at weddings, concerts, and benefits. Biography Dachs was born in New York. He has one brother and one sister. His parents divorced when he was 13. He spoke publicly about being a child of divorced parents at the 88th National Convention of Agudath Israel of America in 2010. Dachs began singing at age 7Ginsberg, Rachel. "Catch a Falling Star: How do former child stars navigate life after the glitz and glitter is gone?" '' Mishpacha'', April 9, 2014, pp. 160-162. with the Yeshiva Torah Vodaas school choir and joined the three main choirs of the era: the Miami Boys Choir, Tzlil V'Zemer, and Amudai Shaish Boys Choir. He sang the solos on the first ''613 Torah Avenue'' albums. In 1996 Dachs released his debut album, ''One Day at a Time''. His introduction to the Jewish music scene precipitated many simcha and concert appearances. He released his second so ...
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Shloime Zionce
Shloime Zionce is an American Hasidic journalist who has served as the Senior White House Correspondent for ''Ami Magazine'' since 2025. Previously, he was ''Ami''s foreign correspondent and has traveled to over 40 countries. His notable travel destinations include Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Azerbaijan. Early life Zionce was born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in Toronto, Canada. He began his journalism career as a writer for ''Ami Magazine'', initially focusing on local stories in Israel. His travel writing gained attention after he wrote about a vacation in Thailand, leading to further assignments from the magazine. Career Zionce serves as a foreign correspondent for ''Ami Magazine'' and is recognized as one of the few Orthodox Jewish traveling journalists. He has a YouTube channel, where his videos have attracted millions of views. His series The Endurance of a Jew features Chabad Shluchim and their global impact, featuring communities in places su ...
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Shlomo
Shlomo or Szlomo is the English form of שְׁלֹמֹה, the Hebrew name of the Israelite King Solomon. It is a popular name among Jews, especially in Israel. As a mononym * Solomon, king of ancient Israel * Shlomo (beatboxing artist) or Simon Shlomo Kahn (born 1983) * Shlohmo or Henry Laufer, an American electronic musician As a given name Shlomo * Shlomo Amar (born 1948), former Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel and current Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem * Shlomo Argov (1929–2003), Israeli diplomat whose attempted assassination led to the 1982 Lebanon War * Shlomo Aronson (other), multiple people * Shlomo Artzi (born 1949), Israeli singer and composer * Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (1910–1995), Rosh Yeshiva of the Kol Torah yeshiva in Israel * Shlomo Aviner (born 1943), Israeli Rosh Yeshiva of the Ateret Cohanim * Shlomo Avineri (1933-2023), Professor of Political Science, Hebrew University, Jerusalem * Shlomo Bar (born 1943), Israeli musician and compos ...
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Shloyme Bastomski
Shloyme Bastomski (July 1891 – 5 March 1941, also referred to as Solomon or Shlomo) was a writer, educator, and folklorist active in the Yiddishist education movement. Biography Shylome Bastomski was born in Vilna (now Vilnius, Lithuania) in June 1891 to a poor family of locksmiths. He was orphaned at a young age. He attended school both at Talmud Torah (a Jewish religious school) and a Russian public school for Jewish children, before attending the Vilna Teachers' Seminary, from which he graduated in 1912. He became a teacher at a Jewish public school in nearby Meretsh, but later transferred to one in Dieveniškės. Following the outbreak of World War I and the German occupation of the region in 1915, Bastomski was hired as a teacher at a Yiddish secular public school established by the Khevre Mefitse Haskole ('Society for the Promotion of Enlightenment'). The school was the first such institution in Vilna. Bastomski worked as a journalist in addition to his teaching; he ...
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Shloyme Prizament
Shloyme Prizament (1889–1973) (also Shlomo or Szlojme Prizament or Szlomo Prizment), Jewish composer, actor in the Yiddish theater, and ''badkhn'', son of Moyshe Prizament (a famous badkhn known as Moyshe Hibiner / Hibnever). Early years Born in Uhniv, Galicia (Eastern Europe), Galicia, Austria-Hungary, Prizament moved to Lemberg (Lviv) as a child. When he was 16 his father died and he then supported the other 12 children in the family by becoming a badkhn himself, using his father's writings (scripts). Prizament wrote for Gershom Bader's ''Der yidisher folks-kalendar'' and began writing songs and instrumental music for Yiddish theatre. He is known as a transitional figure since he also wrote for the last of the Broder singer, broder-zingers - Salcia Weinberg, Jule Glantz, Helena Geshpas and Pepi Litman (1874–1930), characterized as "a Jewish chanteuse in Hasidic trousers", for whom he wrote ''Lomir beyde davenen fun eyn makhzer (Let’s Both Pray from One Prayer Book)''. He l ...
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