Showing Results 21 - 30 of 90
Restricted
Text
A people that forgets its dead is condemned to decay—Jules Guesde
We will never forget our dead. They still live among us and in our thoughts.
For that reason, immediately after the Liberation, we…
Contributor:
Dovid Diamant
Places:
Date:
1946
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
I got up and stepped out of the hotel. The early-morning breeze was moist and cool—pure refreshment after a night of suffering.
Everything seemed reborn, and the small-town, good-natured Cubans…
Contributor:
Abraham Josef Dubelman
Places:
Date:
1953
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language has been assembled on the basis of inclusiveness—that is to say, as a dictionary which attempts to record and include all the words of the Yiddish language…
Contributor:
Yudl Mark, Judah A. Joffe
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1961
Categories:
Restricted
Image
This page illustrating the blowing of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah is from a Yiddish book of customs from Italy. By the sixteenth century, Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazic Jews were the largest groups of…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Date:
1500
Categories:
Restricted
Image
The Mayse-bukh (Book of Stories), a collection of more than two hundred and fifty stories in Yiddish, was popular among Jews in Western and Eastern Europe from the sixteenth to the nineteenth…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Rovere, Venice (Roverè Veronese, Italy)
Date:
1585–1590
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
I remember the moment when it dawned on me that my father did not impress the world at large as a powerful figure. We were at a camera store on the Plaza—a faux-Andalusian shopping district that…
Contributor:
Calvin Trillin
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1993
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
lemoshl: for example
di kurve the whore
a woman who acknowledges her passions
di yidene the Jewess the Jewish woman
ignorant overbearing
let’s face it: every woman is one
di yente the gossip…
Contributor:
Irena Klepfisz
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1990
Categories:
Restricted
Text
for Aaron Lebedeff (1873–1960), performer on the Yiddish stage
Bewildering clarity of tongues:
names you never heard, food
you never ate, a wild dance
you never learned, light hanging
in the sky…
Contributor:
Stephen Bluestone
Places:
Macon, United States of America
Date:
1995
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Chabibi
my vaybl
be on your guard
when you meet
a goy
he likes you nisht
be on your guard
when you meet
a goy
he likes you
be on your guard
when you meet
a yid
he smells you
chassids…
Contributor:
Esther Dischereit
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
1996
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The Jewish theme in Ru.Shtetl is a metaphor. The closest mainstream parallel explaining the essence of what Patrick Lisidze conceived of is Siniavskii’s pseudonym, Abram Terts. Terts’s Jewishness was…
Contributor:
Psoy Korolenko
Places:
Moscow, Russia
Date:
2003