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<title>Desicritics Comments on Fact or Superstition: Hitler's Death and the Hebrew Calendar</title>
<link>http://desicritics.org/</link>
<description>Superior South Asian bloggers on Culture, Media, Politics, Sport, Business, and Technology.</description>
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<copyright>Copyright 2006 by the authors</copyright>
<lastBuildDate>Sun, 30 Apr 2006 16:12:31 EDT</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Comment by Ruvy in Jerusalem</title>
<link>http://desicritics.org/2006/04/30/123215.php#comment-9796</link>
<description>Temporal,

That is precisely the point of the article.  Normally even Jews do not consider their own history in the light of their own calendar.

30 April has no meaning to a Jew, as a Jew.  If these events were to be extrapolated on a Moslem calendar, a lunar calendar where the months wander through the seasons, again it would have no meaning.  Sections of the Torah are not read according to the dates on the Moslem calendar.

If you can explain some other way these events would have meaning to non-Jews (or Jews) based on calendrical dates, I&#039;d be most interested.</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">9796@desicritics.org</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 30 Apr 2006 16:12:31 EDT</pubDate>
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<title>Comment by temporal</title>
<link>http://desicritics.org/2006/04/30/123215.php#comment-9784</link>
<description>ruvy:

thanks:)


the events and calendars relate from your perspective


what if the same set of events described here are extrapolated on a different calendar?</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">9784@desicritics.org</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 30 Apr 2006 12:42:44 EDT</pubDate>
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