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The cover of Far folk un heymland features a red flag and Yiddish writing in which the letter qof has been stylized to resemble a hammer and sickle. The book was published when World War II was still…
Contributor:
A. Geftera
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Date:
1943
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Frontispiece of Anshel of Kraków’s Merkeves ha-mishne (The Second Chariot), a Hebrew-Yiddish dictionary of biblical words. The earliest Yiddish book printed in Poland, it was published in 1534 in…
Contributor:
Anshel of Kraków, Szmuel, Aszer, and Eljakim Helicz
Places:
Kraków, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Kraków, Poland)
Date:
1534
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This page is from a manuscript containing stories in Yiddish. It was copied and illustrated in Tannhausen, Germany between 1580 and 1600, for the Ulma family, who owned a number of important…
Contributor:
Isaac bar Yuda Reutlingen
Places:
Holy Roman Empire (Germany)
Date:
1580–1600
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Der pinkes (The Book of Records, or The Annals) appropriated the term for the old-fashioned record book of a Jewish community or institution to name a very new phenomenon: the first “annual for the…
Contributor:
Shmuel Niger
Places:
Vilna, Russian Empire (Vilnius, Lithuania)
Date:
1913
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This bilingual Yiddish-English cover of a program for a variety show at Irving Music Hall on New York City’s Lower East Side advertises “high class Jewish vaudeville” and bills itself as “the finest…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1905
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This full-page advertisement for a benefit lunch, to be held that day, December 14, 1898, at the Thalia Theater in New York City, with the famed Yiddish actress Bertha Kalich (ca. 1872–1939), includes…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1898
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The Russian Revolution initially lifted restrictions on Jewish publishing, sparking a burst of creativity among Jewish writers and artists. Jewish theater companies experimented with modernist…
Contributor:
Robert Falk
Places:
Moscow, USSR (Moscow, Russia)
Date:
ca. 1924
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Sholem Aleichem’s grotesque story “The Haunted Tailor” tells of a poor, witless tailor who is sent on a mission to buy a milk-giving goat, who turns out to be possessed. In the Soviet Union, it was…
Contributor:
Hersh (Grigory) Inger
Places:
USSR (Soviet Union)
Date:
1968
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Yitzhak Katzenelson (1885–1944) was a Hebrew and Yiddish poet from Łódź who was imprisoned in the Warsaw Ghetto, where he was extraordinarily prolific as a poet, playwright, translator and public…
Contributor:
Lea Lilienblum
Places:
Date:
1943
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This manuscript page of Deuteronomy 1:1–7 is from a translation of the Hebrew Bible into Yiddish, from Italy. It is decorated with two storks and an ornate chapter heading with the opening word of the…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Date:
16th Century