Sources available online now cover all published volumes—including the biblical (through 332 BCE) and early modern to contemporary periods (1500–2005). Sign up here for free access and updates.
Unemployed Yiddish Writers
Der Tunkeler
1909
Image
Please login or register for free access to Posen Library
Born Yosef Tunkel, Der Tunkeler (“the Dark One”) received a traditional education in Bobruisk, Russian Empire (today in Belarus), where his father worked as a melamed. Tunkel attended art school in Vilna on scholarship and began a career as a cartoonist in Odessa. He began contributing short stories, poetry, and caricatures to the Yiddish press around 1901. While living in New York City from 1906 to 1909, Tunkel founded two pathbreaking and irreverent humor magazines: Der kibetser and Der kundes (later changed to Der groyser kundes). Returning to Eastern Europe, Tunkel settled in Warsaw, where he began publishing under the pen name Der Tunkeler. In addition to his career as humor editor for the second main Warsaw daily Der moment, Tunkel compiled more than thirty books, largely collections of his humorous stories and sketches. His oeuvre satirizes the gamut of Jewish social movements and identities in the Yiddish milieu of Eastern Europe, from the pious to the socialist. Tunkel died in New York City after fleeing Warsaw at the outbreak of World War II.
Riding a train doesn’t have to be dull if you manage to fall in with good company. You can meet up with merchants, men who know business, and then the time flies, or with people who have been around…
In an air-shaft so narrow that you could touch the next wall with your bare hands, Hanneh Breineh leaned out and knocked on her neighbor’s window.
“Can you loan me your wash-boiler for the clothes?”…