Aharon Kushnirov

1890–1949

Aharon (Arn) Kushnirov was a prolific Soviet Yiddish poet, prose writer, playwright, literary translator, and editor. Born in Boyarka, Ukraine, and active in the Yiddish literary scene in Kiev, Kushnirov first wrote poetry that was full of youthful vigor and a desire for a revolutionary mass culture. The editor of influential literary journals throughout the interwar period and early postwar years—including the Moscow-based Der shtrom, the Minsk-based Der shtern, and the Moscow literary almanacs Sovetish and Heymland—Kushnirov was attracted to proletarian writing and culture, and enthusiastically participated in its production. Some of his most memorable works in this regard include the play Hirsh Lekert (1928), later translated into Russian by Eduard Bagritsky, and his writing on the settlement of Birobidzhan and other new industrial centers. A member of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee, Kushnirov was a victim of the repression of Soviet Yiddish culture and was killed in September 1949.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Memorial for the Dead

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A Gift to Hofshteyn

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A Letter to Feffer

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From other friends—poets, creators, who are dear to me always, I step away today, Feffer, and turn to you! The battles still rage on our literary planet but it’s time to consider the creative…

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Friends of My Age!

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Friends of my age, My happy generation, We strode, pained-pleased, Through the wreckage of whole worlds. Before the living and the dead fell on our portion Inherited old skins of ourselves—and…