Intentar ORO - Gratis
The Last Great Yiddish Novel
The Atlantic
|April 2025
Chaim Grade's Sons and Daughters rescues a destroyed world.
The Yiddish poet Chaim Grade survived World War II by fleeing his city, Vilna, now Vilnius, and wandering through the Soviet Union and its Central Asian republics. His wife and mother stayed behind and were murdered, probably in the Ponary forest outside Vilna, along with 75,000 others, mostly Jews. After the war, Grade moved to the United States and wrote some of the best novels in the Yiddish language, all woefully little known.
Before he left for America, however, he went back to Vilna, previously a center of Eastern European Jewish cultural, intellectual, and religious life—“the Jerusalem of Lithuania.” In his memoir, My Mother’s Sabbath Days, he describes what he found there. The impossibility of conveying in ordinary Yiddish the experience of walking through the empty streets of one’s eradicated civilization pushes Grade into a biblical register. His mother’s home is intact, he writes, but cobwebs bar his entry “like the angels with flaming swords who barred Adam and Eve from returning to Eden.”
Esta historia es de la edición April 2025 de The Atlantic.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The Eighth Deadly Sin
Humankind has devised a new form of debasement.
5 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
The Art of the (New) Deal
What the murals of the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building can teach us about patriotism, propaganda, and beauty
12 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
New Chairs
Collaboration, for Robert Rauschenberg and Merce Cunningham, began with the arrangement of chairs.
1 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
HISTORY IS RUNNING BACKWARDS
Why reactionaries are taking over the world
21 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
SOMEDAY IN TEHRAN
Like Donald Trump, I, too, once underestimated the Islamic Republic of Iran.
16 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
On Losing a Daughter
The people we were died at the exact moment our child did.
19 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
I Found It: The Best Free Restaurant Bread in America
Thirteen thousand miles. Infinite contenders. One beautiful loaf.
15 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
EVERYTHING IS FREE AND NOTHING MATTERS
What I saw at Jeff Bezos's Campfire retreat
9 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
Who Is Black Comedy For?
A new book is nostalgic for the '90s. But the era of crossover success was not necessarily the pinnacle of Black comedic achievement.
8 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
The Feeling of Becoming Less and Less of a Person
In Ben Lerner's new novel, technology divides us further from one another, and ourselves.
9 mins
May 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
