Daily Podcasts Video Research

100 years after its founding, can a Yiddish institute serve a people who don’t speak the language?

JL;DR SUMMARY YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, celebrating its centennial in 2025, has played a crucial role in preserving Eastern European Jewish culture and the Yiddish language since its founding in Vilna. A way out west there was a fella, fella I want to tell you about, fella by the name of Jeff Lebowski. At least, that was the handle his lovin' parents gave him, but he never had much use for it himself. This Lebowski, he called himself the Dude. Now, Dude, that's a name no one would self-apply where I come from. But then, there was a lot about the Dude that didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. And a lot about where he lived, likewise. But then again, maybe that's why I found the place s'durned innarestin'.

JL;DR members get full summaries of all articles in the archive, including this one. Donate & start reading »

Tags

Yiddish LanguageJewish HistoryVilnaDiasporaYivoCultural AssimilationPreservationArchivesPaper BrigadeEastern European Jewry

Places mentioned

Vilnius, Vilnius County, Lithuania
"YIVO, which turns 100 this month, is forever associated with Vilna (modern day Vilnius, Lithuania) and Eastern Europe, but it was originally supposed to be based in Berlin."
Rivne, Rivnenshchyna, Ukraine
"It was Nokhem Shtif, a fanatical scholar from Rovno (now Rivne, in Western Ukraine), who first proposed an institute for Jewish research in an October 1924 memorandum."
New York City, New York, United States
"The library, originally that of the Central Jewish Library, was first located in the HIAS building on Lafayette Street, in what is now the Public Theatre."
Berlin, Germany
"Shtif believed wealthier, intellectual Jews in Berlin, where he was then based, would support a Yiddish institute and library."
Kyiv, Ukraine
"In his office, Brent was eager to show me images from the Vernadsky Library in Ukraine, artifacts from the author S. Anskys expeditions to shtetls in the 1910s."
Warsaw, Mazovia, Poland
"Brent recently went to wartime Ukraine through Warsaw on an 18-hour drive with YIVOs chief of staff, Shelly Freeman, to view the collection, which they plan to help digitize."

Support this source

This item was indexed and curated by Cairo, JL;DR's web crawler.
Cairo Item ID 47231
Cairo Source ID 35
Retrieved 2025-03-23 05:31:09 UTC
Curated 2025-03-23 08:30:23 UTC