Including memoirs by Markus Braude (209-220), Abraham Jacob Brawer (303-309), and Israel Elded (310-315).
More references, according to index, to the three aforementioned, and to the followings: Marcus Ehrenpreis, Victor Aptowitzer, Salo Wittmayer Baron, Matrin Buber, Ze'ev Ben Hayyim, Osias Thon, Naphtali Herz Tur-Sinai, Meir Kristianpoller, Benjamin Murmelstein, David Heinrich Mueller, Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Levi Freund, Solomon Judah Rapoport, Joshua Heschel Schorr; and according to index of places: Tarnopol, Lwów and Stanisławów.
The article is based on a certificated work written in the University of Pardubice in 2005, and on an article that was followed and published in the periodical Židé v Čechách, 1 (2007), 3-20.
Including references to Le'a Seliger, the founder of "Histadrut Nashey Mizrachi" in Jerusalem on September 1919 (16-17), the first organization of the religious-national woman in Erez Israel, and to Tova Sanhadray, the founder and president of 1935's "Irgun HaPoalot HaDatiyot shel HaPoel HaMizrachi" ("Organization of religious working women of HaPoel HaMizrachi") (18, 21, 25).
Chiefly the part on 'Hashomer Hatzair' (pp. 20-154), and in particular, the references to the background
of the movement befor the Aliyah, mainly in Galicia (20-24).
Including a reference to the literary, journalistic and political uses in Yiddish, in Galicia and in Vienna.
In regard to the following mentioned figures: Naphtali Herz Homberg (165), Benjamin Wolf Ehrenkranz (165—166, 171), Gershom Bader (167,175), Josef Fischer (167-168), Jona Krepl (168), Herman Diamand (169), Mordecai Gebirtig (169, 170), Bruno Schultz, Józef Wittlin, Joseph Roth (170), Samuel Jacob Imber (170,175), Melech Chmelnitzki (170, 175, 176), Mendel Neugroeschel (170, 175, 176), Joseph Hillel Levi, Jacob Mestel (170,175), David Koenigsberg (170—171, 175), Melech Ravitch (171—172, 175, 176), Leon Kellner (172), Reuben Asher Braudes (173), Saul Raphael Landau, Berl Locker, Mendel Singer (174), Abraham Moshe Fuchs (Fuks), Moshe Gross-Zimerman, Ber Horowitz, David Isaiah Silberbusch, Ber Schnapper (175), and Uri Zevi Greenberg (176).