Isaac Meyer Dik

ca. 1807–1893

Considered the first popular writer of Yiddish fiction, Isaac (Ayzik) Meyer Dik (also known by the acronym Amad) was born in Vilna. A maskil who encouraged Jewish educational and sartorial reform and admired Tsar Alexander II for his liberalism, Dik observed Jewish practice throughout his life. He initially began writing in Hebrew around 1838 but later wrote exclusively in Yiddish. His stories have a direct, unadorned, and sometimes heavily didactic style, yet his descriptive power and sense of humor made them enormously popular. “The Panic, or The Town of Hérres” (hérres meaning “havoc” in Hebrew) describes the tumult when an “evil” decree prohibiting child marriages hits the town and the parents rush to avert it by marrying off all their children at once. His more than three hundred widely circulated stories and short novels (generally issued by Vilna’s Romm publishing house) were designed both to entertain readers and to instruct them in moral values and the teachings of the Haskalah, often through parody, satire, sentimentality, and melodrama. Despite their wide circulation and influence on later Yiddish writers, many of his works have not survived.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

The Women Shopkeepers, or, Golde-Mine, the Abandoned Wife of Brod

Restricted
Text
In short, in addition to being affluent, our Reb Hoshea Heffler was also steeped in the holy books. He was a traditional Jew, who could not abide the maskilim, the enlightened ones. He always used to…

Primary Source

The Panic, or, The Town of Hérres

Restricted
Text
In the year 5594 (1834) it was the Ninth of Av, the holy day commemorating the Destruction of the Temple. In the morning, when the worshipers were lamenting at the…

Primary Source

The Black Rooster

Public Access
Text
This story admittedly took place a long time ago and furthermore in a far-off land—in England, in fact. Yet in spite of everything, it is still important and worthy of being…