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“Subscription for the Year 1903 to the First Daily Zhargon [Yiddish] Newspaper in Russia, Der fraynd.Der fraynd (The Friend) was the first Yiddish daily in the Russian Empire. Founded by Shaul…
Date:
1903
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Public Access
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Illustration of a baseball diamond in a short primer on the game of baseball published in the summer of 1909 in the Yiddish-daily Forverts (Forward). Some of the words in the picture are…
Date:
1909
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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
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Date:
1500
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With this collection, we intend to launch a particular trend in Yiddish poetry which has recently emerged in the works of a group of Yiddish poets. We have chosen to call it the Introspective…
Contributor:
Jacob Glatstein, A. Leyeles, N. Minkov
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1919
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“If God grant that the earth will be full of understanding, and everyone will speak the same language, Ashkenazic, then only (the form) Brisk will be written.” That is how Meir ben Moses Hacohen, the…
Contributor:
Solomon Birnbaum
Places:
Hamburg, Weimar Republic (Hamburg, Germany)
Date:
1925
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Public Access
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This introduction will speak about how important the person is through the Torah. One may read them, since there are many teachings with intentions inside. The teaching of the Lord is…
Contributor:
Shalom Italia, Jacob Ashkenazi of Janov
Places:
Janov, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (Janów Lubelski, Poland)
Date:
1622
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Public Access
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God, blessed be He, knew very well that the people of Israel would be scattered among the nations and that most of them would not be able to understand the holy tongue [Hebrew]. Therefore our sages…
Contributor:
Ḥayim Druker
Places:
Amsterdam, Republic of the Seven United Netherlands (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1711
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Public Access
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Should we not cry and weep that until now our scholars have not concerned themselves to provide us with a 24 [i.e., Bible] in Yiddish, arranged according to the simple meaning of the text, word for…
Contributor:
Jekutiel Blitz
Places:
Amsterdam, Republic of the Seven United Netherlands (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1676–1679
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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
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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