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The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language has been assembled on the basis of inclusiveness—that is to say, as a dictionary which attempts to record and include all the words of the Yiddish language…
Contributor:
Yudl Mark, Judah A. Joffe
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1961
Categories:
Public Access
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Places:
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
(St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1903
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In this volume I have made a selection of religious and holiday songs.
Actually, they constitute a single group, since in reality it is hard to draw a sharp dividing line between the first group and…
Contributor:
Noah Pryłucki
Places:
Warsaw, Russian Empire
(Warsaw, Poland)
Date:
1910–1911
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Honored Conference:
Three liberating moments in Jewish history created our movement.
I don’t want to be a prophet, and to proclaim that we are now experiencing a new historical moment, that we are…
Contributor:
Y. L. Peretz
Places:
Date:
1908
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In the past there were no children among Jews, only “little Jews without beards,” so neither was there any children’s literature. Boys in the traditional heder used to read Ḥumesh [The Pentateuch]…
Contributor:
Shmuel Niger
Places:
Vilna, Russian Empire
(Vilnius, Lithuania)
Date:
1913
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The Jewish intelligentsia, the Jewish art patrons showed no sign of attention to Yiddish theater. A sickly weakling, it was born in southern Russia forty years ago, and has remained anemic and weak to…
Contributor:
Mark Rivesman
Places:
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
(St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1918–1919
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Public Access
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Subscription for the Year 1903 to the First Daily Zhargon (Yiddish) Newspaper in Russia, Der fraynd
Published in Saint Petersburg by Sh. Ginzburg and Sh. Rapaport [S. An-ski]
Contributor:
Peysakh Marek
Places:
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
(St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1903
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The Jewish theme in Ru.Shtetl is a metaphor. The closest mainstream parallel explaining the essence of what Patrick Lisidze conceived of is Siniavskii’s pseudonym, Abram Terts. Terts’s Jewishness was…
Contributor:
Psoy Korolenko
Places:
Moscow, Russia
Date:
2003
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We take Jewish secular culture here in its modern shape, its language form, Yiddish. It is not the first expression of worldly or secular Jewish culture. In ancient times almost the entire cultural…
Contributor:
Chaim Zhitlowsky
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1927
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The very lack of a self-contained territory that has so far disqualified the study of Yiddish from NDEA [the National Defense Education Act] support endows Ashkenazic Jewry with exemplary value for a…
Contributor:
Uriel Weinreich
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1963