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How yizkor books bring the sights, sounds, and even smells and tastes of lost Jewish shtetls back to life

JL;DR SUMMARY Jane Ziegelman explores the profound role of yizkor books, chronicles composed by survivors and emigrants to memorialize the Eastern European shtetls obliterated during the Holocaust. 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'.

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Tags

HolocaustJewish FoodEastern EuropeTraditionCommunitySabbathShtetlsMemoryCulinary HistoryYizkor Books

Places mentioned

Luboml, Lublin, Poland
"An image of the authors ancestral shtetl Luboml, Poland."
Rakishok, MarijampolÄ—, Lithuania
"Here, a former resident of Rakishok, a shtetl in Lithuania,, remembers his weekly visits to the kvass maker."
New York, United States
"Starting in the late 19th century, in immigrant cities like New York, Jews from the same town had banded together to create self-help societies which you could turn to in times of crisis."
Brooklyn, New York, United States
"She lives in Brooklyn."

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Cairo Item ID 73568
Cairo Source ID 35
Retrieved 2026-01-27 05:31:24 UTC
Curated 2026-01-27 08:31:51 UTC