Abraham Sutzkever Explained

Abraham Sutzkever
Native Name:אַבֿרהם סוצקעווער
Birth Date:15 July 1913
Birth Place:Smorgon, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire (now Smarhon, Belarus)
Death Place:Tel Aviv, Israel
Occupation:Poet
Language:Yiddish
Nationality:Israeli
Spouse:Freydke Sutzkever (died 2003)
Children:2
Awards:Israel Prize (1985)

Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: אַבֿרהם סוצקעווער|Avrom Sutskever; Hebrew: אברהם סוצקבר; July 15, 1913  - January 20, 2010) was an acclaimed Yiddish poet.[1] The New York Times wrote that Sutzkever was "the greatest poet of the Holocaust."[2]

Biography

Abraham (Avrom) Sutzkever was born on July 15, 1913, in Smorgon, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire, now Smarhon, Belarus. During World War I, his family moved to Omsk, Siberia, where his father, Hertz Sutzkever, died. In 1921, his mother, Rayne (née Fainberg), moved the family to Vilnius, where Sutzkever attended cheder.

Sutzkever attended the Polish Jewish high school Herzliah, audited university classes in Polish literature, and was introduced by a friend to Russian poetry. His earliest poems were written in Hebrew.[3]

In 1930 Sutzkever joined the Jewish scouting organization, Bin ("Bee"), in whose magazine he published his first piece. There he also met his wife Freydke.In 1933, he became part of the writers’ and artists’ group Yung-Vilne, along with fellow poets Shmerke Kaczerginski, Chaim Grade, and Leyzer Volf.[4]

He married Freydke in 1939, a day before the start of World War II.[5]

In 1941, following the Nazi occupation of Vilnius, Sutzkever and his wife were sent to the Vilna Ghetto. Sutzkever and his friends hid a diary by Theodor Herzl, drawings by Marc Chagall and Alexander Bogen, and other treasured works behind plaster and brick walls in the ghetto. His mother and newborn son were murdered by the Nazis. On September 12, 1943, he and his wife escaped to the forests, and together with fellow Yiddish poet Shmerke Kaczerginski, he fought the occupying forces as a partisan.[6] Sutzkever joined a Jewish unit and was smuggled into the Soviet Union.

Sutzkever's 1943 narrative poem, Kol Nidre, reached the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in Moscow, whose members included Ilya Ehrenburg and Solomon Mikhoels, as well as the exiled future president of Soviet Lithuania, Justas Paleckis. They implored the Kremlin to rescue him. So an aircraft located Sutzkever and Freydke in March 1944, and flew them to Moscow, where their daughter, Rina, was born.[7] In February 1946, he was called up as a witness at the Nuremberg trials, testifying against Franz Murer, the murderer of his mother and son. After a brief sojourn in Poland and Paris, he emigrated to Mandatory Palestine, arriving in Tel Aviv in 1947. Within two years, Sutzkever founded Di goldene keyt (The Golden Chain).

Sutzkever was a keen traveller, touring South American jungles and African savannahs, where the sight of elephants and the song of a Basotho chief inspired more Yiddish verse.

Belatedly, in 1985 Sutzkever became the first Yiddish writer to win the prestigious Israel Prize for his literature. An English compendium appeared in 1991.[7]

Freydke died in 2003. Abraham Sutzkever died on January 20, 2010, in Tel Aviv at the age of 96.[8] [9] Rina and another daughter, Mira, survive him, along with two grandchildren.

Literary career

Sutzkever wrote poetry from an early age, initially in Hebrew. He published his first poem in Bin, the Jewish scouts magazine. Sutzkever was among the Modernist writers and artists of the Yung Vilne ("Young Vilna") group in the early 1930s. In 1937, his first volume of Yiddish poetry, Lider (Songs), was published by the Yiddish PEN International Club;[4] a second, Valdiks (Of the Forest; 1940), appeared after he moved from Warsaw, during the interval of Lithuanian autonomy.

In Moscow, he wrote a chronicle of his experiences in the Vilna ghetto (Fun vilner geto,1946), a poetry collection Lider fun geto (1946; “Songs from the Ghetto”) and began Geheymshtot ("Secret City",1948), an epic poem about Jews hiding in the sewers of Vilna.[4] [10]

In 1949, Sutzkever founded the Yiddish literary quarterly Di goldene keyt, Israel's only Yiddish literary quarterly, which he edited until its demise in 1995. Sutzkever resuscitated the careers of Yiddish writers from Europe, the Americas, the Soviet Union and Israel. Many in the Zionist movement, however, dismissed Yiddish as a defeatist diaspora argot. "They will not uproot my tongue," he retorted. "I shall wake all generations with my roar."

Sutzkever's poetry was translated into Hebrew by Nathan Alterman, Avraham Shlonsky and Leah Goldberg. In the 1930s, his work was translated into Russian by Boris Pasternak.[11]

Works

Works in English translation

Awards and recognition

Recordings

Compositions

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Poetry of Abraham Sutzkever: The Vilno poet, reading in Yiddish. product blurb for CD, Folkways Records . https://web.archive.org/web/20060323070053/http://www.yiddishstore.com/poetofavsut.html . March 23, 2006 . The Yiddish Voice store. yiddishstore.com.
  2. News: God the Implausible Kinsman . review of David G. Roskies, Responses to Catastrophe in Modern Jewish Culture . Cohen . Arthur A. . The New York Times . 17 June 1984 . 2010-04-02 .
  3. Web site: YIVO Sutzkever, Avrom. www.yivoencyclopedia.org. en. 2018-02-08.
  4. Web site: Avrom Sutzkever. obituary . Daily Telegraph. telegraph.co.uk . February 16, 2010. 2013-01-04.
  5. Web site: Abraham Sutzkever. 2018-02-09.
  6. Web site: UC Press E-Books Collection, 1982-2004 . Escholarship.org . 2013-01-04.
  7. Web site: Abraham Sutzkever Last great Yiddish poet and a defender of his language . The Guardian. 2 March 2010 .
  8. News: Abraham Sutzkever, 96, Jewish Poet and Partisan, Dies . The New York Times . January 23, 2010 . 2010-04-10 . Joseph . Berger.
  9. News: Poet and Partisan Avrom Sutzkever Dies . The Forward . January 20, 2010 . 2010-04-10 .
  10. Web site: Zucker. Sheva. Avrom Sutzkever Israeli Writer. www.britannica.com. 12 February 2018.
  11. Web site: Mer . Benny . Abraham Sutzkever, 1913-2017 . Haaretz. haaretz.com . January 22, 2010 . 2017-02-12.
  12. Web site: thecjnadmin . 2009-11-05 . Remembering the untold stories . 2019-04-12 . The Canadian Jewish News . en-US.
  13. Muller . Adam . 2010-12-24 . Writing the Holocaust for Children: On the Representation of Unimaginable Atrocity . Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures . en . 2 . 2 . 147–164 . 10.1353/jeu.2010.0033 . 1920-261X . 190694146.
  14. Web site: Siberia: A Poem . Unesco.org . 2013-01-04.
  15. Web site: Israel Prize Official Site - Recipients in 1985 (in Hebrew).
  16. Web site: Sela . Maya . An ambassador of the Yiddish language . Haaretz. haaretz.com . January 28, 2010 . 2017-02-12.
  17. Web site: Chamber Music Society of Southwest Florida Presents Works by Lori Laitman . Chamber Music Society of Southwest Florida . https://web.archive.org/web/20081011042222/http://www.chambersociety.org/jan.html . 2008-10-11.
  18. http://www.artsongs.com artsongs.com
  19. Web site: musicofremembrance.org . musicofremembrance.org . 2013-01-04.
  20. Web site: chambersociety.org . chambersociety.org . 2013-01-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130529081101/http://chambersociety.org/ . 2013-05-29 . dead .
  21. Web site: Vertex Media . janellemccoy.com . janellemccoy.com . 2013-01-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130609112621/http://janellemccoy.com/ . 2013-06-09 .
  22. http://www.adamsatinsky.com/index.php
  23. Web site: Weiser. Alex. Work Description. Official Website. 6 May 2018.