Chaim Lieberman

1890–1963

Born in Ukraine, Chaim Lieberman was a prolific Yiddish essayist and literary critic. Lieberman wrote a regular column in the Yiddish daily Yiddishes tageblat and, as an active Labor Zionist, was a leading figure in the establishment of the secular Yiddish schools of the Jewish National Worker’s Alliance (Yidish-natsyonaler arbeter farband) in the United States. In the 1930s, Lieberman become an Orthodox Jew and joined the religious Zionist movement, from which vantage point he began to attack left-wing Yiddish writers. He was a prominent critic of Sholem Asch’s trilogy of Christological novels, which caused controversy in the American Jewish community.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

In the Valley of Death

Restricted
Text
Human wisdom has limits—stupidity has none. God created a world with gifts and blessings for all: earth and water, sun and air in plenty, rye and wheat in abundance, a potato for everyone, a roof…