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2015-2016 Max Weinreich Center Research Fellowships

3/20/2015

YIVO is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2015-2016 Max Weinreich Center Research Fellowships.

With a large number of highly qualified applicants from a diverse number of countries and disciplines, the selection committee tackled the daunting task of choosing just one fellow for each category. We thank all who applied, and encourage those who did not receive an award this year to re-apply in following years.

Projects that received awards this year will entail investigation of YIVO’s rich archival and bibliographic resources in the areas of children’s literature, literary correspondence, survivor testimony, records of philanthropic activity and pogroms, and Yiddish dance, theater, and performance archives.

The projects of the 2015-2016 cohort of fellows embody YIVO’s commitment to the highest levels of scholarship and inquiry, and we look forward to seeing the results. Stay tuned for upcoming programs and public lectures featuring our fellows!

Di gantse velt af a firmeblank: The World of Jewish Letterheads

3/20/2015

Assemble the letterheads of Jewish organizations, institutions, and individuals in Europe, North and South America, and Palestine from the 1890s to the eve of World War II in 1939 and you have a portrait of the Jewish world: transnational; diverse in language, political, and religious orientation; and flourishing. Di gantse velt ...

Facts About Yiddish in America (1965)

3/20/2015

This episode was originally broadcast on November 7, 1965. Host Sheftl Zak provides some facts about Yiddish in America that he thinks will be of particular interest to two types of listeners: people using the textbook College Yiddish to learn the language and people who have written in to YIVO ...

Joshua Fishman (1926-2015)

3/6/2015

YIVO mourns the passing of Joshua Fishman, who died on March 1, 2015 at age 88.

Planning for the Jewish Future: A Lecture by Dr. Rakhmiel Peltz

3/6/2015

by ROBERTA NEWMAN On February 17, 2015, about 60 dedicated YIVO members and others braved a cold and snowy evening to attend “Planning for the Jewish Future: Standards for Yiddish in the 20th and 21stCenturies,” a lecture by YIVO’s new Atran Visiting Professor of Yiddish Language and Linguistics, Rakhmiel Peltz (Drexel ...

YIVO Archives Acquires Important Collection on the Jews of Harbin and Northern China

3/6/2015

The Toper brothers, Jewish fur traders, in rural China. (YIVO/Dan and Yisha Ben-Canaan Collection) Dan Ben-Canaan and his wife, Liang Yisha, have donated a large collection of research materials about the Jewish community of Harbin and Northern China. Professor Ben-Canaan founded the Sino-Israel Research and Study Center at Heilongjiang University in ...

An Exhibition & A Class on Yiddish Spelling (1965)

3/6/2015

In this episode, originally broadcast on October 17, 1965, Zosa Szajkowski joins Sheftl Zak to talk about a YIVO exhibition on Yiddish orthography that was presented in conjunction with a class by Dr. Mordkhe Schaechter on the same subject. The scope of the exhibition reached as far back as the ...

2015-2016 Max Weinreich Center Research Fellows

3/1/2015

List of recipients of YIVO’s 2015-2016 faculty and graduate student fellowships.

YIVO-Bard Winter Program on Ashkenazi Civilization Now in Its Fourth Year

2/20/2015

From January 5-January 23, 2015, a diverse range of students flocked to YIVO to take advantage of a rare opportunity to study the culture, history, language, and literature of East European Jews with some of the leading scholars in the field of Jewish Studies. The courses in the YIVO-Bard Winter Program on Ashkenazi Civilization (inaugurated in 2011) offer something different than the usual survey course in a university or adult education program: a chance to explore in detail fascinating aspects of this world.

Highlights of the program included:

Feliks Tych (1929-2015)

2/20/2015

Prof. Dr. Feliks Tych, an eminent historian and director of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, died on February 17, 2015 at the age of 85.

Feliks Tych was born in Warsaw on July 31, 1929. He grew up in Radomsko, central Poland, where his father owned a metal works.

During World War II, his parents and sibling all perished in the Treblinka death camp. Tych survived in Warsaw on false documents, living with a Polish family.