1980. Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: אַבֿרהם סוצקעווער, romanized: Avrom Sutskever; Hebrew: אברהם סוצקבר; July 15, 1913 – January 20, 2010) was an acclaimed Yiddish poet. [1] The New York Times wrote that Sutzkever was "the greatest poet of the Holocaust.".
Avrom Sutzkever was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna (Vilnius) ghetto during World War II. Avrom Sutzkever was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna (Vilnius) ghetto during World War II, and his escape to join Jewish partisans. After the Holocaust he became a major figure in Yiddish letters in Israel and throughout the world.
Yiddish Poet Avrom Sutzkever, Creator of a Golden Chain
Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: אַבֿרהם סוצקעווער, romanized: Avrom Sutskever; Hebrew: אברהם סוצקבר; J – Janu) was an acclaimed Yiddish poet. [1] The New York Times wrote that Sutzkever was "the greatest poet of the Holocaust.".
Vilner gedenken: Avrom Sutzkever in Focus - Yiddish Book Center
Avrom Sutzkever was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna (Vilnius) ghetto during World War II, and his escape to join Jewish partisans. After the Holocaust he became a major figure in Yiddish letters in Israel and throughout the world. Abraham Sutzkever - Wikipedia
Avrom Sutzkever, 1913-2010, (Abraham Sutzkever) was the definitive Yiddish poet of the post-War period. His biography embodied the transformations of Jewish life in the twentieth century, both its catastrophes and its triumphs. Abraham Sutzkever - Jewish Studies - Oxford Bibliographies
Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: Avrom Sutskever; Hebrew: Avraham Sutskever) (b. 1913–d. 2010) was a titan of Yiddish literature. Over the course of six decades, he published more than thirty volumes of poetry and prose. Abraham Sutzkever - Jewish Studies - Oxford Bibliographies
Abraham Sutzkever was born in 1913 in what is now Belarus. He was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna (Vilnius) ghetto during World War II, and his escape to join the Jewish partisans. Vilner gedenken: Avrom Sutzkever in Focus - Yiddish Book Center Abraham Sutzkever was born in 1913 in what is now Belarus. He was a Yiddish-language poet whose works chronicle his childhood in Siberia, his life in the Vilna (Vilnius) ghetto during World War II, and his escape to join the Jewish partisans.Avrom Sutzkever - Yiddish Poet, Holocaust Survivor & Israeli ... Nearly a decade after his death in 2010 in Israel, Sutzkever’s astonishing life story is being told on film for the first time in an award-winning documentary co-produced by his granddaughter.Abraham Sutzkever - The Poetry Foundation Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: Avrom Sutskever; Hebrew: Avraham Sutskever) (b. 1913–d. 2010) was a titan of Yiddish literature. Over the course of six decades, he published more than thirty volumes of poetry and prose. Abraham Sutzkever - Yiddish Poetry
Nearly a decade after his death in 2010 in Israel, Sutzkever’s astonishing life story is being told on film for the first time in an award-winning documentary co-produced by his granddaughter.
Avrom Sutzkever | Yiddish Poet, Holocaust Survivor & Israeli ...
Abraham Sutzkever (1913 - 2010) turned out to be the most significant Yiddish poet of the twentieth century for a variety of reasons. There is the delicacy of his pre-War love poems and the uniqueness of his pastoral suite Siberia; the musicality of his verse, with coinages and wordplay every bit as inventive as in Aron Tsaytlin.