• This show recalls the tragic events in the USSR of August

    12, 1952. Popularly known as "Night of the Murdered Poets", the

    event itself, as well as associated themes -- such as Yiddish

    language and culture in the Soviet Union, Soviet Bloc, and in

    leftist circles -- is being remembered on this special broadcast by

    two distinguished guests, Gennady Estraikh and Jana Mazurkiewicz

    Meisarosh.

The so-called Night of the Murdered Yiddish Poets took place on

August 12, 1952, when thirteen leading Jewish political, cultural,

and intellectual figures of the Soviet Union, among them five highly

distinguished Yiddish writers, were executed in the Lubyanka Prison

in Moscow, after having been arrested, imprisoned, and falsely

accused of espionage and treason, part of a broad anti-Jewish

campaign in the postwar USSR.

Gennady Estraikh is the Rauch Clinical Professor of Yiddish

Studies at New York University, where he teaches and writes about

Yiddish intellectual history. He is the former managing editor of

Sovetish Heymland and writes regularly for the Yiddish Forward

(Forverts). He has been the author or editor of numerous scholarly

works. His books include Yiddish in the Cold War (Routledge, 2008);

Uncovering the Hidden: The Works and Life of Der Nister

(Routledge, 2014); and his latest Transatlantic Russian Jewishness: Ideological Voyages of the Yiddish Daily Forverts in the First Half of the Twentieth Century

(Academic Studies Press, 2020). He spoke to us from his summer residence in

Oxford, England, via Zoom.

Jana Mazurkiewicz Meisarosh is the founder and CEO of YAAANA

(yaaana.org), and a Ph.D. candidate at the University of

Michigan. She is working on her dissertation on Yiddish Theater in

Communist Warsaw. Originally from Poland, Jana holds a Master of

Arts degree in Polish Philology and Jewish Studies from the

University of Wrocław. She spoke to us via Zoom from her home in San

Diego.

Sholem Beinfeld, regular contributer to the Yiddish Voice,

joins as co-host to lead the interview and provide additional

commentary. He is Professor of History (Emeritus) at Washington

University (St. Louis) as well as Co-Chief Editor of the

Comprehensive Yiddish-English Dictionary. He spoke via Zoom from

his home in Cambridge.

Music:

  • Emil Gorovets: In Vinter Farnakhtn, words by Dovid Hofshteyn, music by Emil Gorovets, musical arrangement and piano accompaniment by Zalmen Mlotek

Intro instrumental music: DEM HELFANDS TANTS, an instrumental track from the CD Jeff Warschauer: The Singing Waltz

Air Date: August 12, 2020

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