Expedition Findings on East European Jews
S. An-ski
1912–1913
July 9th
Khaye-Gite came. She is a typical grandmother. She talks to God quietly, politely. She wasn’t too keen on telling us about being a grandmother. She just told us a few things. She knows lots of incantations, but she wouldn’t share them with us. She doesn’t know any stories. We wanted to take a picture of her. “What for?” She discussed it with another woman and in the end categorically refused to be photographed. She has had a photo taken of her before, to send to her children in America, but she wouldn’t let us take a picture because she doesn’t want it to be published in a non-Jewish book. [ . . . ]
A group of older Jews agreed to have their picture taken. However, one of them left. “I don’t want my photo hanging on a wall.” Then a bunch of children joined the group of adults and wouldn’t leave us alone. In order to go where I wanted to I needed to ask [Solomon] Yudovin to pretend he was taking a picture in order to distract the children from me.
July 12th
[ . . . ] I went to see the synagogue and on my way passed by a heder. The melamed, a young man, went outside and started to talk back into the heder. The heder was a tiny, low-ceilinged room. Forty poor children were studying Hebrew there, including four or five girls. They were sitting pressed to each other, packed like herring in a barrel. The melamed was wearing an overcoat and a yarmulke, his whip over his shoulder. When I suggested taking a photo they all started to ask why, and I had to explain it in length. The melamed’s young wife, who seemed to be wearing the pants in the family, intervened and ordered him to allow only twenty children in the photo because only twenty were permitted to study in the heder. After that he also became afraid that I might be an inspector. When I finally managed to reassure him that I wasn’t, he began to work hard with the students; he yelled at the students to sit quietly and separated them. Then another melamed came. He started to boss around [the children] and called [us] into the heder to have their photo taken.
Credits
Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 7.