Showing Results 11 - 16 of 16
Restricted
Text
Through the large portal of “The Jewish Gauchos,” one of the most moving literary tributes to the Republic in the first hundred years after the May Revolution of 1810, Dr. Noé Yarcho, the “miracle…
Contributor:
Pablo Schvartzman
Places:
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Date:
1963
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The filthy train lurched along the tracks, jolting my spine through the slats of the wooden seat.
I was thoughtful, my happiness mixed with vague regrets. Happiness? No, a deserter’s sense of hard-won…
Contributor:
José Chudnovsky
Places:
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Date:
1964
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Now whatever else may be involved in a nondeliberate change of accent, one thing is clear: it bespeaks a very high degree of detachment from the ethos of one’s immediate surroundings. It is…
Contributor:
Norman Podhoretz
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1967
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Egyptian Jewish American author André Aciman describes celebrating his last Seder in Egypt with his bags packed to leave his homeland for good.
Contributor:
André Aciman
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1994
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
I have a lovely period photo, sepia coloured, with all the characters in a row, and their gentle trusting faces, photograph faces that nobody ever looks at now. They are the shifbrider, the ship…
Contributor:
Margo Glantz
Places:
Mexico City, Mexico
Date:
1981
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
It is April 1959, I’m standing at the railing of the Batory’s upper deck, and I feel that my life is ending. I’m looking out at the crowd that has gathered on the shore to see the ship’s departure…
Contributor:
Eva Hoffman
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1989