Erev Explained

EREV
Title Orig:ערב
Author:Eli Schechtman
Country:Israel
Language:Yiddish
Publisher:Farlag Yisroel-bukh Tel Aviv
Release Date:1983
Pages:1222
EREV first edition
Title Orig:Yiddish: ערעוו
Author:Eli Schechtman
Country:USSR
Language:Yiddish
Publisher:Sovetski Pisatel
Release Date:1965
Pages:236

Erev (Yiddish: ערעוו||eve) is a 1983 novel by Eli Schechtman. The first edition of Erev is the beginning of Eli Schechtman's novel written in the Soviet Union and contained four books. The novel was published in the Sovetish Heymland magazine from 1961 to 1968 and in book form in 1965. It describes the life of Russian Jews of the early twentieth century. The "full Erev," which was written and published in Israel in 1983, contains seven books and describes the life of Russian Jews in the early twentieth century until the end of World War II.

Overview and publication history

Erev is central Schechtman's literary work and was the first Yiddish-language novel published in the Soviet Union after the Stalin death.[1] [2] The first four parts of the novel were serialised in Sovetish Heymland from 1961 up to 1968.[3] [4] and only two parts were published in censored form as a book in Moscow in 1965.In 1964 first two books of the novel were translated into French by Rachel Ertel under name À la vielle de.... In 1967 the same two books of novel were translated into English by Joseph Singer[5] under name Erev, where author has been compared in stature to Fyodor Dostoevsky and Anton Chekhov.[6] Four books were translated in Hebrew in Israel in 1975 by Zvi Arad under name Beterem.[1] [7]

Started after Eli Schechtman released from prison in 1953, the full text of Erev novel, consisting of seven books, was completed after thirty years in 1983 and published in Israel. The novel was translated into Russian by Alma Shin and appeared in 2005. A French translation by appeared in 2018.[8]

Plot summary

The novel tells the story of a Jewish family in Eastern Europe over four centuries, from its escape from a blood libel in medieval Germany to Russia in the early twentieth century.[9] On the example of the Boyar's family history, author tells us about the fate of Jewish people throughout the 20th century – from the end of the Russo-Japanese War until the end of World War II and the creation of Israel|the state of Israel. The novel paints a rich and intricate gallery of characters facing consistent persecution, while ideology ranges from Tsarist autocracy to Stalinism and Nazism. The Boyar family, although it suffered heavy losses in the brutal upheavals of the era, never stopped fighting for its spiritual and physical survival.

Critical reception

Professor Shlomo Bikel has said: "Erev is one of the most important works that Soviet-Yiddish literature has given us."[10] Gennady Estraikh has described Erev as "one of the most accomplished novels in postwar Yiddish literature".[7] Writing in the Jewish Quarterly in 1978, Elias Schulman argued that "If Soviet Yiddish literature could still produce a novel of the stature and quality ofErev and [Nathan] Zabare's two-part masterpiece [''Unter der heyser zun fun Provans'' and its sequel ''S'iz nokh groys der tog''], we can assuredly assume that Russian Jewry has not yet exhausted its resources, and that Soviet Yiddish culture can yet be revived."[11] \

Translations of novel Erev

Eli Schechtman

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Shekhtman, Eli. The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Gennady. Estraikh. 17 January 2020.
  2. Shekhtman, Elye. Encyclopaedia Judaica. Jerold C.. Frakes. 17 January 2020.
  3. Web site: Soweṭiš heimland: Liṭerariš-kinsṭlerišer choideš žšurnal (1967).
  4. Web site: Soweṭiš heimland: Liṭerariš-kinsṭlerišer choideš žšurnal (1968).
  5. Joseph Singer is son of Israel Joshua Singer and nephew of Isaac Bashevis Singer
  6. Erev translated by Joseph Singer, [New York],1967, Book cover
  7. Book: Estraikh, Gennady. Yiddish in the Cold War. Modern Humanities Research Association and Routledge. 2008. 95.
  8. Web site: The Latest Yiddish Translations, 2018. Maia. Evrona. Jessica. Kirzane. Daniel. Kennedy. . 14 January 2019. 17 January 2020.
  9. Book: Rokanski, Rachel. Yiddish in Israel: A History. 259. Indiana University Press. 2020. 9780253045188.
  10. Erev, translated by Joseph Singer, [New York],1967, Book cover
  11. Elias. Schulman. 35. Can Soviet-Yiddish Culture Be Revived?. Jewish Quarterly. 26. 1. 1978. 10.1080/0449010X.1978.10703477. 31 January 2024.