Yiddish civilisation
Opis
In the 13th century Yiddish language and culture began to spread from the
Rhineland and Bavaria slowly east into Austria, Bohemia and Moravia, then
to Poland and Lithuania and finally to western Russia and the Ukraine,
becoming steadily less German and more Slav in the process. In its
late-medieval heyday the culturally vibrant, economically successful,
intellectually adventurous and largely self-ruling Yiddish society
stretched from Riga on the Baltic down to Odessa on the Black Sea. In the
1650s the Chmielnicki Massacres in the Ukraine by the Cossacks killed
100,000 Jews, forcing those that were left to spread out into the small
towns (shtetls) and villages. The break-up of Poland-Lithuania - a safe
haven for Jews in previous centuries - in the late 18th century further
disrupted Yiddish society, as did the Russian anti-Jewish pogroms from the
1880s onwards, at the very time when Yiddish was producing a rich stream of
plays, poems and novels. Paul Kriwaczek describes the development, over the
centuries, of Yiddish language, religion, occupations and social life, art,
music and literature. The book ends by describing how the Yiddish way of
life became one of the foundation stones of modern American, and therefore
of world, culture.