Abraham Sutzkever

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Abraham Sutzkever (July 15, 1913 - ) is a Yiddish poet and Holocaust-era partisan.

(Alternate English spellings: Avrom Sutzkever, Avrohom Sutzkever,[1], Avrom Sutskever [used by Encyclopaedia Britannica])

Sutzkever was born in Smarhon, Belarus. During the First World War his family fled to seek refuge in Siberia, then in 1922 migrated to Vilna (at that time, Wilno, Poland. He studied in cheder and attended gymnasium (academic high school), and in 1930 joined the Bee Yiddish scouting movement.

Sutzkever was among the Modernist writers and artists in the "Young Vilna" group in the early 1930s. He published his first poem in 1934 in a literary journal.

Under the Nazi occupation beginning in June 1941, Sutzkever was interned in the Vilna Ghetto. On September 12, 1943, along with his wife, he escaped to the forests, and together with fellow Yiddish poet Shmerke Kaczerginsky, fought against the Nazis as a partisan. During the Nazi era, Sutzkever wrote over 80 poems, whose manuscripts he managed to save for postwar publication.

After the war he lived in Moscow, then Łódź, and emigrated to Israel. He now resides in Tel Aviv.

Contents

[edit] Works in English translation

  • Burnt Pearls : Ghetto Poems of Abraham Sutzkever, translated from the Yiddish by Seymour Mayne; introduction by Ruth R. Wisse. Oakville, Ont.: Mosaic Press, 1981. ISBN 0-88962-142-X
  • The Fiddle Rose: Poems, 1970-1972, Abraham Sutzkever; selected and translated by Ruth Whitman; drawings by Marc Chagall; introduction by Ruth R. Wisse. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-8143-2001-5
  • A. Sutzkever: Selected Poetry and Prose, translated from the Yiddish by Barbara and Benjamin Harshav; with an introduction by Benjamin Harshav. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991. ISBN 0-520-06539-5
  • Laughter Beneath the Forest : Poems from Old and Recent Manuscripts by Abraham Sutzkever; translated from the Yiddish by Barnett Zumoff; with an introductory essay by Emanuel S. Goldsmith. Hoboken, NJ: KTAV Publishing, 1996. ISBN 0-88125-555-6

[edit] Recordings

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]Web page titled "The Poetry of Avrom Sutzkever, the Vilno Poet" at The Jewish Store Web site, accessed March 4, 2007

[edit] Links


In other languages