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From the Pages of Yedies
by ROBERTA NEWMAN Elsewhere in this March 7, 2014 edition Yedies, historian Joshua Karlip discusses the Diaspora Nationalist movement in Eastern Europe and notes that the father of the movement and its ideology was the scholar Simon Dubnow. There are few more towering figures in the history of East European Jewry than ...

2014-2015 Max Weinreich Center Research Fellows
List of recipients of YIVO’s 2014-2015 faculty and graduate student fellowships.

“The Jews Have Always Been a Singing People”: YIVO Celebrates Ruth Rubin
by LEAH FALK The best parts of the Yiddish past are fragile: a yellowing installment of a serialized novel in Der tog, a barely legible handwritten letter, a fragment of song passed down from mother to daughter. Ruth Rubin, the celebrated scholar, singer, and collector of Yiddish folk music, knew how ...

YIVO in the News/Staff Notes – February 2014
A number of YIVO public programs received press coverage. YIVO’s February 14th roundtable discussion on Lithuanian-Jewish relations, “Unresolved History: Jews and Lithuanians After the Holocaust,” is reported on by Ralph Seliger in the 3-part article “Israel & Lithuania: Parallel Dueling 'Narratives',” on the Partners for Progressive Israel Blog. Part III of the article can be read here.
Watch video of the roundtable.
An article on Steven Zipperstein’s January 6 lecture at YIVO, “Rethinking Kishinev: How a Riot Changed 20th Century Jewish History,” appears on the blog Mondoweiss, where it sparked an extensive and lively exchange of comments by readers.
The Forverts reported on the February 6 Yiddish lecture by Michael Steinlauf and program moderated by Eddy Portnoy , “Y.L. Peretz in a Time of Revolution.”

Di Nyu yorkerin: Poetry and Purim Shpil – Yiddish Cultural Events in March
by SARAH PONICHTERA As the heavy monotony of all the snow begins to be broken with longer and longer stretches of sun and warmth, it’s time to emerge from the cocoon, and there are plenty of options to choose from. March starts out with Ruth Wisse’s lecture on Jacob Glatstein, “A Yiddish ...

From the Pages of Yedies
by ROBERTA NEWMAN In 1937, Yedies reported on its survey of pinkasim (Jewish communal registers), whose mission was the gathering of information about pinkasim in Jewish communities all over Poland. Over one hundred communities had responded to YIVO’s call for participation in the survey, yielding information on over 300 pinkasim, including several ...

YIVO Announces Publication of the Milstein Conference Proceedings
“New York and the American Jewish Communal Experience” (NEW YORK, February 28, 2014) – The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research is pleased to announce the publication of the Milstein Conference Proceedings, “New York and the American Jewish Communal Experience,” published with the generous support of the Howard and Abby Milstein Foundation ...

Jacob Glatstein: A Yiddish Genius in Anglicizing America
Yiddish literature and poetry took off in America on the crest of a huge Jewish immigrant wave at the beginning of the twentieth century. Yiddish writers kept ripening their talent as most other speakers of their language were swept into the English mainstream. Can individual genius flourish during its culture’s decline? Jacob Glatstein, or Yankev Glatshteyn, became an American original by turning that question into the driving force of his poetry and the concern of his prose. On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 at 7:00pm, Ruth Wisse, Martin Peretz Professor of Yiddish Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard University, will discuss Jacob Glatstein’s life and work and will read excerpts from his poetry in Yiddish.
Attend the program.
A Yiddishkayt of folk air
to prick the heart and pour
warm honey at the sight
of things that touch the cockles?
If that's the stuff we celebrate
we'd better do without.
Yiddish poets, are you bees
who close the feast
with honey-store
of song, and nothing more?From "Yiddishkayt” by Jacob Glatstein
Translation by Cynthia Ozick

Tevye's Daughters: How East European Jewish Women Confronted Modernity
On Sunday, March 2, 2014, 1:00pm, a symposium at the Center for Jewish History (jointly sponsored by YIVO and the Center for Jewish History) will explore the resourceful ways that the Jewish women in Eastern Europe navigated modernity from the late nineteenth century through the Holocaust. The event will be ...

Every Time I Come to YIVO I Learn Something That Surprises Me: Interview with Ri Turner
friends from YIVO’s
zumer-program.
by LEAH FALK
Ri Turner, a rabbinical student at Hebrew College in Boston, might hold some sort of YIVO record: she’s a zumer-program (Uriel Weinreich Summer Program in Yiddish Language, Literature, and Culture) graduate and a two-time YIVO-Bard Winter Program on Ashkenazi Civilization alum. This past January, as YIVO’s Ellen Fine scholar, she was among the few students who took four classes at once. Over email, Ri and Leah Falk discussed what brought her to YIVO, intersections between different Winter Program classes, and her “dual master’s degree.”