No. Jewish people may have the surname Bochenek, but it not a "Jewish" name. There are a few truly "Jewish" names, for example the forms of Cohen ( from the Hebrew word meaning a priest). But most so-called Jewish names are simply Germanic or Slavic geographic or trade designations like Blumenthal ( flower valley ) or Bronfman (brandy-maker).
It is a Croat last name. As most Croats are Catholic, it is not likely a Jewish last name.
probably not, but a Jewish person can have any last name.
No
Jewish
jewish
Krystyna Bochenek was born in 1953.
Krystyna Bochenek died in 2010.
It is a Croat last name. As most Croats are Catholic, it is not likely a Jewish last name.
probably not, but a Jewish person can have any last name.
That is their last name.
Ziegler is a German and Jewish (Ashkenazi) last name.
It's an English last name. In the past, Jewish people sometimes changed their last name to a non-Jewish name so that they wouldn't be discriminated against or even killed. So a Jewish person could possibly have the last name Chandler.
No, the last name Christakos is of Greek origin. However, it is possible that someone who is Jewish and has Greek ancestry has this last name.
Dorota Bochenek was born on April 3, 1962, in Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland.
Yes it is. The Jewish side of my family have the last name Sharman.
Answer 1Yes it is!Answer 2Probably Not. There is no reason why a Jew would not have the last name "Jara" but it is not primarily or commonly seen as a Jewish last name (unlike Goldstein).
NO.