#dov mizrah
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"Also, I'm getting divorced." "I'm sorry to hear that," Sadie said. "Inevitable," Dov said. "I'm fucking awful. I would never be in a relationship with me."
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin
#page 373#tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow#gabrielle zevin#fiction#video game#programming#relationship#friendship#sadie green#dov mizrah#quote#quotes#literature#book#booklr#reading#divorce#breakup#the thing that's hilarious about this#is that most dudes who would say this would mean it as a bid for pity#but dov absolutely means it#he's the worst and he knows it#it doesn't make him better but it does makes him hilarious#fave#also fun fact this wasn't even on my list originally but i added it on while skimming through bits of the book again because how could i no
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Happy 1st night of #Hanukkah for those who celebrate! 🕎
Here is an equisite paper-cut mizrah featuring a menagerie of wild, domestic, and mythical animals:

Mizrah
Israel Dov Rosenbaum
1877 (date of inscription)
Podkamen (Pidkamin, Ukraine)
Paint, ink, graphite on cut-out paper
30 1/2 × 21 in. (77.5 �� 53.3 cm)
The Jewish Museum, NYC, USA
“Included here are lions, deer, eagles, and what appears to be a pair of small leopards atop the dome of the central building. These four animals usually appear in Jewish papercuts to illustrate the saying "Be bold as a leopard, light as an eagle, swift as a deer, and strong as a lion, to do the will of your Father who is in Heaven" (Ethics of the Fathers 5:23). The doubled-headed eagle is often interpreted as a political symbol associated with the Russian Empire.”
[A number of other wild, domestic, and mythical animals can be found througout the composition, including various birds, deer, squirrel, unicorn, leviathan, etc]
#animals in art#european art#19th century art#birds in art#paper cutout#Jewish art#hannukah#Mizrah#The Jewish Museum#Ukrainian art#folk art#Israel Dov Rosenbaum#animal iconography
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I had no idea what the word meant, so I looked it up:
"an ornamental or sacred picture hung on the east wall of a house or synagogue in the direction of Jerusalem toward which Jews face when in prayer."

Object Name: Mizrah
Artist/Maker: Israel Dov Rosenbaum
Place Made: Podkamen, Ukraine
Date: 1877
Citation Via the Jewish Museum
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Mizrah by Israel Dov Rosenbaum 1877
Despite the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and the dispersion of most Jews, the Land of Israel has remained a primary focus of Jewish identity. A commonly felt, deeply rooted bond to the Land of Israel and the hope of all Jews to return eventually to it have been important unifying factors. One expression of this intense bond is found in the practice of facing toward Jerusalem during prayer. For Jews in the West, this direction is east, and the custom developed of placing a decorative plaque on the eastern walls of homes and synagogues to indicate the direction of worship. Such a sign came to be known as a mizrah, Hebrew for "east." Mizrah is also an acronym composed of the initial letters for the Hebrew phrase "from this side the spirit of life." This inscription appears in the four corners of the central panel of this papercut, indicating that it functions as a mizrah.
In Eastern Europe, mizrah plaques were often made out of cut paper, resembling the carved wood Torah arks of Polish synagogues in the intricacy of their design. As is common in many other extant examples, the composition in this papercut is symmetrical, designed on one half of a sheet of paper, folded vertically, and cut out through both halves, thus creating a mirror image revealed upon unfolding the sheet. Papercuts were usually mounted on a plain or colored paper background to provide a contrasting effect, as seen here. Although architectural features such as columns and arcades often balance the composition of papercuts, the use of an imposing building as the central element, as seen in this example, is rare. Whether the building was based on an existing or imaginary one, Israel Dov Rosenbaum, the creator of this extraordinary papercut, made sure to include a clock at its dome, possibly a hint at his profession as clockmaker to the local count in the small town of Podkamen, Ukraine. A Jewish community existed in Podkamen at least since the seventeenth century, and by the late nineteenth century, the town was home to more than a thousand Jews.
The elaborate design and the repeated use of thin connecting lines make this mizrah an exquisite example of its kind. The creatures, both mythical and real, as well as the vegetal motifs and horror vacuii of this composition, are typical of Eastern European art. Included here are lions, deer, eagles, and what appears to be a pair of small leopards atop the dome of the central building. These four animals usually appear in Jewish papercuts to illustrate the saying "Be bold as a leopard, light as an eagle, swift as a deer, and strong as a lion, to do the will of your Father who is in Heaven" (Ethics of the Fathers 5:23). The doubled-headed eagle is often interpreted as a political symbol associated with the Russian Empire. Several Eastern European artifacts in The Jewish Museum collection feature the double-headed eagle, including Torah shields and Hanukkah lamp; as well as a mold for pastries baked for the holiday of Purim.
Among the mythical beasts featured in this papercut are the leviathan (portrayed as a curled fish) and the wild ox-the legendary food of the righteous in the world to come (Leviticus Rabbah 13:3, 22:10)-depicted in the lower register, and the unicorn, seen in the outer frame. The interiors of wooden synagogues were often filled with elaborate animal and plant designs, many having symbolic meaning. Animals are also found in carved Jewish tombstones in Eastern Europe. Likely more portable or readily available sources were printed books such as Hebrew primers featuring a depiction of an animal for each letter of the Hebrew alphabet or illustrated copies of the Meshal ha-Kadmoni, a collection of animal fables written in 1281 by the Spanish Hebrew author Isaac ibn Sahula. First printed in Brescia, about 1491, the work soon gained popularity and was reprinted many times, including nine known Yiddish editions. Many of the extant copies are embellished with illustrations, mostly portraying the disputing animals, who "converse" in biblical Hebrew and are all well versed in Jewish learning: the rooster is a Bible scholar, and the deer an expert in the Talmud. Two pairs of roosters appear on the upper margin of the mizrah, flanked by a pair of birds. In one of the illustrations for the Meshal ha-Kadmoni, the rooster and a similar quail-like bird (though referred to as a hawk) are paired in "conversation."
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Mizrah, Israel Dov Rosenbaum, Podkamen, Ukraine, 1877
After the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and the dispersion of most Jews, the Land of Israel has remained a primary focus of Jewish identity. A commonly felt, deeply rooted bond to the Land of Israel and the hope of all Jews to return eventually to it have been important unifying factors. One expression of this intense bond is found in the practice of facing toward Jerusalem during prayer. For Jews in the West, this direction is east, and the custom developed of placing a decorative plaque, called a mizrah, Hebrew for "east", on the eastern walls of homes and synagogues to indicate the direction of worship. Mizrah is also an acronym composed of the initial letters for the Hebrew phrase "from this side the spirit of life."
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Mizrah, Israel Dov Rosenbaum, Podkamen, Austria-Hungary (now Pidkamin, Ukraine), 1877.
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More than 1,600 images of works in the Jewish Museum collection are now available for free high-resolution download! Visit our collection online to explore and share art in the public domain.
🔍 zoom in to examine the exquisite detail on this Ukrainian mizrah from 1877 by Israel Dov Rosenbaum. The hi-res image found on our website was inspiration for the background pattern of a portrait in the collection by contemporary artist Kehinde Wiley. As a Jewish ritual object, the papercut points east to the direction of Israel. "Mizrah" is also an acronym composed of the initial letters for the Hebrew phrase "from this side the spirit of life." This inscription appears in the four corners of the central panel of this papercut, indicating that it functions as a mizrah.
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"Next time, we fail better."
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin
#page 29#tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow#gabrielle zevin#fiction#video game#programming#relationship#friendship#dov mizrah#quote#quotes#literature#book#booklr#reading#again#bad dude but good quote#i'm not responsible for his nonsense#failure
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"We still aren't speaking." "You aren't speaking to him, you mean." "I suppose that is what I mean. "Sadie, for God's sake, why?" "Because he tricked me." But, of course, there was more to it than that. "Oh, to have the standards of Sadie Green." "Said the man who handcuffed me to his bed." "To my point, I did that, and you still have brunch with me whenever I'm in L.A.," Dov said."
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin
#page 371#tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow#gabrielle zevin#fiction#video game#programming#relationship#friendship#sam masur#sam mazer#sadie green#dov mizrah#quote#quotes#literature#book#booklr#reading#conflict#grudges#dov's not wrong sadie#it's weird that what happened with sam is ruining your closest friendship#but you're still friends with your literal abuser#i get that these things aren't rational#but also#yikes
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"Were you ever jealous when Ichigo started to take off?" "No," Dov said. "Not even a little?" "I saw you as an extension of myself," Dov said. "I have an enormous ego. Your accomplishments were my accomplishments. You'll probably think this makes me a monster." "You were a garbage boyfriend–" "Thank you. It's not a lie."
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin
#page 218#tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow#gabrielle zevin#fiction#video game#programming#relationship#friendship#sadie green#dov mizrah#quote#quotes#literature#book#booklr#reading#jealousy#ego#it's the “thank you” that took me the fuck out#i have such a love hate relationship with dov#truly#his quotes are so good#and he also gets some credit for being honest at this point in the story#the worst jiminy cricket ever
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"I don't want to see versions of my games, or any other games I've already played. I don't want to see pretty pictures without any thought behind them. I don't want to see coding that is seamless in service of worlds that are uninteresting. I hate hate hate hate hate being bored. Astonish me. Disturb me. Offend me. It's not possible to offend me."
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin
#page 26#tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow#gabrielle zevin#fiction#video game#programming#relationship#friendship#dov mizrah#offensive#quote#quotes#literature#book#booklr#reading#listen dov is a garbage human but he's a stellar character for plot and development purposes#also he says the most off the wall shit#basically all of which is excellent#he's a side character but probably a quarter of these quotes will involve him#sorry not sorry
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Object Name: Mizrah
Artist/Maker: Israel Dov Rosenbaum
Place Made: Podkamen, Ukraine
Date: 1877
Citation Via the Jewish Museum
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