Noah Prylucki (1882-1941), a leading Jewish cultural and
political figure in pre-Holocaust Eastern Europe, was a proponent
of Yiddishism, a movement that promoted secular Yiddish culture as
the basis for Jewish collective identity in the twentieth century.
Prylucki's dramatic path - from russified Zionist raised in a
Ukrainian shtetl, to Diaspora nationalist parliamentarian in
metropolitan Warsaw, to professor of Yiddish in Soviet Lithuania -
uniquely reflects the dilemmas and competing options facing the
Jews of this era as life in Eastern Europe underwent radical
transformation.
Using hitherto unexplored archival sources, memoirs, interviews,
and materials from the vibrant interwar Jewish and Polish presses,
Kalman Weiser investigates the rise and fall of Yiddishism and of
Prylucki's political party, the Folkists, in the post-World War One
era. Jewish People, Yiddish Nation reveals the life of a remarkable
individual and the fortunes of a major cultural movement that has
long been obscured.
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