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Yiddishlands: A Memoir by David G. Roskies (hardcover)
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"A rich, sweeping memoir by David G. Roskies, Yiddishlands proceeds
from the premise that Yiddish culture is spread out among many
different people and geographic areas and transmitted through story,
song, study, and the family. Roskies leads readers through Yiddishlands
old and new by revisiting his personal and professional experiences and
retelling his remarkable family saga in a series of lively, irreverent,
and interwoven stories. Beginning with a flashback to his grandmother's
storybook wedding in 1878, Yiddishlands brings to life the major
debates, struggles, and triumphs of the modern Yiddish experience, and
provides readers with memorable portraits of its great writers,
cultural leaders, and educators."
Roskies's story centers around Vilna,
Lithuania, where his mother, Masha, was born in 1906 and where her
mother, Fradl Matz, ran the legendary Matz Press, a publishing house
that distributed prayer books, Bibles, and popular Yiddish literature.
After falling in love with Vilna's cabaret culture, an older man, and
finally a fellow student with elbow patches on his jacket, Masha and
her young family are forced to flee Europe for Montreal, via Lisbon and
New York. It is in Montreal that Roskies, Masha's youngest child, comes
of age, entranced by the larger-than-life stories of his mother and the
writers, artists, and performers of her social circle.
Roskies recalls
his own intellectual odyssey as a Yiddish scholar; his life in the
original Havurah religious commune in Somerville, Massachusetts, in the
1970s; his struggle with the notion of aliyah while studying in Israel;
his visit to Russia at the height of the Soviet Jewry movement; and his
confrontation with his parents'memories in a bittersweet pilgrimage to
Poland. Along the way, readers of Yiddishlands meet such prominent
figures as Isaac Bashevis Singer, Melekh Ravitch, Itsik Manger, Avrom
Sutzkever, Esther Markish, and Rachel Korn.
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