This pioneering study shows what brought Yiddish-speaking Jewish intelligentsia to the Communist movement in the interwar years. They believed that Communism is not only a way to solve the Jewish problem but also to save the Yiddish culture. Biography of the central protagonist of the book, a Yiddish writer Dovid (David) Sfard, is just a pretext to show a full range of Jewish Communist activists (such as Hersh Smolar, Bernard Mark, Szymon Zachariasz, etc.) and their life choices. This relatively small milieu influenced and controlled the Jewish life in post-war Poland until the anti-Semitic campaign of 1968. Their lives, reconstructed thanks to sources in several languages, make up a panorama of Jewish Communist experience in 20th-century Eastern Europe.
- Available now
- What's new?
- Belly Laughs: Humor for Kids
- Fairy Tales Reimagined
- Popular titles
- Check these out!
- Read-Alongs
- Squad Goals
- Favorites for Early Readers
- Life As We Know It: Realistic YA
- Narrative Nonfiction for Kids and Teens
- See all ebooks collections
- Available now
- What's new?
- Life As We Know It: Realistic YA
- Favorites for Early Readers
- Popular titles
- Check these out!
- Squad Goals
- Belly Laughs: Humor for Kids
- Narrative Nonfiction for Kids and Teens
- Fairy Tales Reimagined
- See all audiobooks collections