Menachem Mendl Dolitzki

1856–1931

The novelist and poet Menachem Mendl Dolitzki was born in Białystok in the Russian Empire (today in Poland). After finishing his traditional education, Dolitzki married (at age seventeen) and began reading maskilic literature. This inspired him to visit the writer Peretz Smolenskin in Vienna who published Dolitzki’s first Hebrew narrative poem in 1878. That meeting encouraged Dolitzki to work as a Hebrew tutor and writer. In 1882, he moved to Moscow, where he flourished as a Hebrew poet, essayist, and novelist. The 1891 expulsion of Moscow’s Jews drove him to emigrate and settle in New York. Distant from his fellow Ḥibat Tsiyon activists and and increasingly out of fashion, his writing was less well received in America. Nonetheless, Dolitzki continued to write novels, plays, and poems in Hebrew and Yiddish under the pseudonym M. Volfovich.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

If I Forget Thee (Tsiyon tamati)

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Text
Zion my innocent one, Zion my desired, To thee my soul yearns from far away; May I forget my right hand should I forget thee, my beauty, Until my grave is sealed upon me . . . May my tongue cleave…