- Srul Bronshtein
Srul Bronshtein ( _yi. סראָל בראָנשטײן‎; ca. 1913 — 1943) was a
Romania n and SovietYiddish -language poet.Biography
Srul Bronshtein was born into a Jewish baker's family in the village of Ştefăneşti,
Bessarabia — at the time a southwestern province ofImperial Russia (Ştefăneşti is currently in Ştefan Vodă district,Moldova ). As a child, he received a traditional "cheder " education.In the 1930s, Bronshtein lived in
Bucharest , where he debuted with poetry and critical essays in the Yiddish-language literary periodicals of Romania. Among other magazines, he published in "Di Vokh" ("The Week"), edited by prose writerMoyshe Altman , and in "Shoybn" ("Windows"), edited by the poet and theatrical director Yankev Shternberg. Shternberg organized a circle of Yiddish literati, predominantly from Bessarabia, which in addition to Srul Bronshtein included poetsTzvi Tzelman ,Zishe Bagish and prose writersIkhil Shraybman ,Arn Ocnitzer , Azriel Roitman, among others.It was in Bucharest that Bronshtein's first collection of Yiddish verse was published in 1938, entitled "Moldove, mayn heym" ("
Moldavia , my home"). [ [http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/fishstein/search/fullrecord.php?id=170 Search record] in Joe Fishstein Collection of Yiddish Poetry, Division of Rare Books and Special Collections, McLennan Library,McGill University . Accessed online 4 December 2006.] It was followed by the second collection "Kh'ob geefnt breyt di toyern" ("I've opened wide the gates") a year later. A large selection of his poetry appeared in the Yiddish-language periodicals of Bucharest throughout the 1930s, including "Shpitol-Lider" ("Hospital poems"), "Fabrik-Lider" ("Factory poems"), "Tfise-Lider" ("Prison poems"), the ballad "Malkutse Der Gasnfroys Farveynt Harts" ("The cried-out heart of the street girl Malcuţa"), and a long poem, "Banakhtike Asfalt-Leygers" ("Nocturnal Asphalt Pavers").In 1940 Bessarabia was annexed by the Soviet Union, and Bronshtein, as with almost all other Bessarabian writers, moved back home. Later in
World War II , he was mobilized into theRed Army at the outbreak of the German invasion (June 1941) and suffered a penetrating lung wound from shrapnel the following year. Bronshtein died of the wound in winter 1943 at a military hospital inTashkent ,Uzbek SSR (present-dayUzbekistan ).Despite his humble, provincial background, Bronshtein's poetics are pointedly urbane, with typical modernistic themes of
anomie ,:"Kh'shlep arum a zak mit beyner":"Af di gasn tsu farkoyfn":"Keyner ober vil ba mir di skhoyre koyfn,":"Keyner.":"Pardon, kh'ob yo a koyne af ir getrofn.":"Darf er ober beyner hobn emesdike toyte,":"Nit vi mayne, lebedike un bahoyte..."::I drag around a bag of bones::In the streets to sell,::No one, however, wants to buy it,::No one.::Pardon, I did encounter a customer.::But he needs real bones, dead in earnest,::Not like mine, alive and still in flesh...(I. Shraybman, "Zibn yor mit zibn khadoshim" (p.261)
Published works
* "Moldove, mayn heym: lider un poemen" (מאָלדאָװע, מײַן הײם; "Moldova, my home: verses and long poems"), illustrated by А. Lebas, Bucharest, 1938 [http://memorial.library.wisc.edu/yiddishmf2.html Harvard University Library, under Brunstein, S.]
* "Kh'ob geefnt breyt di toyern" (כ'האָב געעפֿנט ברײט די טױערן; "I've opened wide the gates", poetry), Bucharest, 1939Critical works about Bronshtein
*Ikhil Shraybman, "Zibn yor mit zibn khadoshim" (יחיאל שרײַבמאַן, זיבן יאָר מיט זיבן חדשים; "Seven years with seven months, an autobiographic novel"), Yiddish and Russian; Chapter 6: biographical information on Srul Bronshtein), Editura Ruxandra,
Chişinău , 2003
* Sarah Shpitalnik, "Bessarabskiy Stil"' (Сара Шпитальник, "Бессарабский стиль"; "Bessarabian style"), Russian-language bibliographic information on Bessarabian Yiddish authors, Editura Ruxandra, Chişinău, 2005References
ee related Russian-language articles
* Цельман, Цви — Zvi Tzelman
* Шрайбман, Ихил Ицикович — Ikhil Shraybman
* Окницер, Арн — Arn Ocnitzer
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