Try GOLD - Free
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.”
This story is from the April 2025 edition of The Atlantic.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The First 18 Months
A Cabinet meeting with my son, who is exactly as old as the current administration
2 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
What Dogs See
To understand a painting, look for the canine.
10 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Boy George
Finally, an action movie about Washington’s French and Indian War years.
5 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Disneyland With No People
When I was 17, I worked at Fantasyland’s magic shop as a magician demonstrating Svengali decks, cups and balls, and the Incredible (their word) Shrinking Die.
4 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
THE REBELLIOUS ORIGINS OF AMERICAN SPORTS
FROM THE BEGINNING, PATRIOTISM AND PLAY HAVE BEEN INEXTRICABLY LINKED.
12 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Queen of the Skies
The Boeing 747, the world’s first jumbo jet, has started its final descent.
18 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
HOW TO TELL THE AMERICAN STORY
Finding a common history that’s both unsparing and unifying has proved all but impossible in recent years. It shouldn’t be.
17 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s American Horror Story
The author wrote a tale that challenged the nation’s founding myths. Then it disappeared.
13 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
The Surprising, Liberating History of Marriage
To find a future for the institution, Stephanie Coontz turns to its wildly varying past.
11 mins
July 2026
The Atlantic
USE IT OR LOSE IT
Freedom of speech, and of the press, can be guaranteed only if Americans exercise their rights.
8 mins
July 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
