Broadside or poster that has been placed in a public place in an Orthodox Jewish community
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A pashkevil (Yiddish: פּאַשקעוויל; Hebrew: פשקוויל pl. pashkevilim פשקווילים) is a broadside or poster that has been situated on a public wall or location in an Orthodox Jewish community, and most commonly within Hareidi enclaves.[1][2] Pashkevilim are sometimes distributed anonymously; however, many are posted with rabbinic endorsements or the name of an activist group appended to the bottom.
^Nurit Stadler (1 January 2009). Yeshiva Fundamentalism: Piety, Gender, and Resistance in the Ultra-Orthodox World. NYU Press. pp. 100–. ISBN 978-0-8147-4114-6.
^Raz Yosef; Boaz Hagin (6 June 2013). Deeper than Oblivion: Trauma and Memory in Israeli Cinema. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-4411-9926-3.
A pashkevil (Yiddish: פּאַשקעוויל; Hebrew: פשקוויל pl. pashkevilim פשקווילים) is a broadside or poster that has been situated on a public wall or location...
by consternation, particularly against the shal garment. An anonymous pashkevil condemning the "cult" of "epikoros" women was posted in Jerusalem in September...
grand nation", according to Qiu Xiaolong. Big-character poster Kōsatsu Pashkevil Wochenspruch der NSDAP "Placard Newspapers", Russian Review, vol. 3, no...
piano solo piece by Louis Moreau Gottschalk. The Yiddish and Hebrew term Pashkevil is the generic name of the posters put up on the walls of Ultra-Orthodox...