Thursday, February 4, 2010

Abraham Sutzkever: In Memoriam

 

Ruth R. Wisse

It was bound to happen. Abraham Sutzkever, born July 15, 1913, in Smorgon, Lithuania, one of the great poets of the twentieth century and the last towering figure of modern Yiddish literature, died this Wednesday, January 20, in Tel Aviv, where he had lived since 1947. A descendant of rabbis, Sutzkever applied to the writing of poetry the standards of refinement that his ancestors had practiced in obedience to Jewish religious law. During World War II, when he was herded into the ghetto with the rest of Vilna Jewry, he determinedly continued composing, persuaded that "the angel of poetry" protects the creator of timeless—but only of truly timeless—work.

Continue Reading "Abraham Sutzkever: In Memoriam"  Ruth R. WisseJewish Ideas Daily.

Selected Poetry and Prose  Abraham SutzkeverCalifornia.

Siberia  Abraham Sutzkever, Marc ChagallAbelard-Schuman.

The Fiddle Rose  Abraham SutzkeverWayne State.

The Poet Reads  Abraham SutzkeverSmithsonian Folkways (Yiddish).

A Vogn Shikh (A Cartload of Shoes)  Abraham SutzkeverYouTube (Yiddish).