Including references to the centrality of the Galicians in the struggle of the Jewish students in Wien University for the acknowledge of the Jews as a national group.
Including values of around 30 authors from Galicia and Bucovina who wrote in Canada: Shalom Baruch Ullmann, Eliezer Unger, Shlomo Grundlinger, Moshe Leib Halpern, Dov Hirschtal, Pinchas Hirschprung, Jacob Joshua Herzig, Hirsch Hershman, Chaim Jonas Waldmann, Ruth Weiss, Abe Joseph Zusman, Leon Chasanowich, Artur Lermer, Loti Malakh-Fidler, Meir Joshua Nirnberger, Feivel Simkin, Jacob Egit, Israel Platner, Abraham Feier, Shalom Zahler, Abraham Moshe Zimmermann, Rachel H. Korn, Nathan Kaufman, Joseph Rogel, Melech Ravitch, Moshe Mordechai Shaffir, Aaron Joseph Schmerler, and Jonas Schechter.
Including references to immigrants from Galicia to Poland (46-48), and among them Rabbi Dov Berush Meisels (46-47) and doctors Marcin Rosenfeld (47) and Leon Schönbrunn (47-48) who emigrated from Krakow to Warsaw.
Including about Elazar Roke'ah of Tzfat who arrived in Galicia around 1883 (43-44), about Reuben Asher Braudes who arrived in Galicia in 1885 (44), about the periodical 'HaOr', founded by Hirsch Lazar Teller and David Isaiah Silberbusch in the beginning of 1882 in Botosani (first appeard in Pressburg) and in 1883 was moved to Lemberg (44), about the Poets of Zion, the brothers Israel Teller and Hirsch Lazar Teller (51-52).
Including efforts to establish a rabbinical seminary in Galicia and the status of people from Galicia in Vienna's rabbinical seminaryas teachers and students; the people referenced: Naphtaliz Herz Homberg (715), Joseph Perl (716-718), Solomon Judah Rapoport, Mordechai Bernstein (from Brody, in Odessa), Elazar Kalir (maskil from Brody) , Nachman Krochmal (716), Jehiel Michael Kritstianpoller (717), Rabbis ZeviHirsch Chajes, Shmuel Deitsch of Sambur (719), Zevi Hirsch Ornstein, Shimon Schreiber-Sofer, and Joshua Roke'ah (724), Joshua Heschel Schorr, faculty of the institution: Zevi Perez Chajes (726, 729), David Heinrich Mueller (727-728), Victor Aptowitzer (727-728, 729, 730), Leon Kellner, Saul Raphael Landau (728), and Benjamin Murmelstein (730), and the students Salo Wittmayer Baron, Judah Bergman, Abraham Jacob Brawer, Michael Berkowitz, Solomon Gandz, Haim Z'ew Hirschberg, Bernhard Wachstein, Abraham Weiss, Zevi Perez Chajes, Naphtali Herz Tur-Sinai, Judah Leo Landau, Leo Aryeh Mayer, Moses Schorr, as well as Benjamin Menachem Klar and Alexander Sperber of Bucovina.