Subscribe to Print Edition | Fri., November 27, 2009 Kislev 10, 5770 | | Israel Time: 13:57 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
Jewish World Haaretz Toolbar
Diplomacy
Defense Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Focus U.S.A. Strenger than Fiction Business Travel Magazine Week's End Anglo File Books
Scholar and teacher Itche Goldberg gesturing during an interview in his New York apartment in May, 2006. (AP)
Share |
Last update - 00:00 03/01/2007
Itche Goldberg, promoter of Yiddish culture, dies at 102
By The Associated Press

Itche Goldberg, a writer and educator, died at age 102 on December 27.

For a century, Goldberg has been one of the last remaining living links to the Yiddish culture of East European immigrants.

Goldberg died of cancer at his New York home, according to Itzik Gottesman, associate editor of the Yiddish-language Forward weekly newspaper.
Advertisement
Two years ago, when he turned 100, Goldberg edited the last issue of the literary journal Yidishe Kultur, which reflected his belief that Yiddish was key to the survival of the culture of East European Jews and their descendants. Yiddish is a Germanic language used by European Jews that incorporated Hebrew and borrowed freely from the languages of countries populated by Jews.

"You can't possibly see a future Jewish life with the disappearance of 1,000-year-old language and with it a 1,000-year-old culture," Goldberg told The Associated Press last year. "Somehow it has to be there."

Born Yitzhak Gutkind Goldberg in 1904 in Opatow, Poland, Goldberg moved with his family to Warsaw in 1914, and then to Canada in 1920. In Toronto, he taught himself English.

He also taught Yiddish at the Workmen's Circle School, run by a socialist organization that promoted workers' rights. In the 1920s and '30s, Goldberg embraced Soviet Communism, but became disenchanted after the horrors under the Stalin regime came to light in the 1950s.

Goldberg intensified his passion for Yiddish, promoting it by writing poetry, music, lyrics, children's books and essays, as well as running Yiddish schools and summer camps. In the 1970s and 1980s he was a professor of Yiddish language and literature at New York's Queens College.

Goldberg was painfully aware of the decline of Yiddish from its heyday in the early 20th century, when 13 million Jews - or some 70 percent of Jews worldwide - spoke the lilting language that gave the English language such words as "chutzpah," a term for courage bordering on arrogance, and "schmuck," used as a putdown for a detestable person.

"You get the impression that I'm full of fight?" Goldberg told The New York Times in 2004. "I'm not really. I might as well tell you: I only have two dreams. One dream is that someone will knock on the door and I will open it and they give me a check for $150,000 for the magazine. Second dream is that someone knocks at the door and I open it up and he gives me a corned beef sandwich."

In New York, there are now about 200,000 Yiddish speakers, Gottesman said. A bastion of Yiddish is the ultra-orthodox Hasidic community in the borough of Brooklyn.
PROMOTION: Mamilla Hotel
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
Likud MK slams U.S.
Culture and Sports Minister says the decision to freeze settlements is a mistake.
Settlements freeze
Barak instructed IDF to issue injunction to temporarily freeze settlement construction.
  1.   Reason for the Decline of Idish (Yiddish) 05:20  |  Johnny Weintraub 04/01/07
  2.   Yiddish (Idish!) 08:56  |  Daniel 04/01/07
  3.   Yiddish on the Rise 08:59  |  Rich S 04/01/07
  4.   Goldberg of the Golden Language 09:08  |  asa 04/01/07
  5.   Proverbs and others, response to asa 09:52  |  malkah 07/01/07
Special Offers
Advertisement
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on online reservations
Award-Winning 'Obsession'
Watch 'Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West' Online FOR FREE!
Protea Hills
A Retirement Village in Nature Nestled in the Foothills of Jerusalem
Date Local Jewish Singles
Ready to meet your match? Join Jdate today!
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
 Haaretz Hot Topics
Iran elections
Obama speech in Cairo
The Pope in the Holy Land
Durban II conference
Israel vs. Hamas
More Headlines
13:26 IAEA passes resolution rebuking Iran over nuclear cover-up
13:00 Palestinian killed as IAF strikes Gaza rocket launchers
06:24 Israel okays 28 new settlement buildings, despite freeze
06:31 ANALYSIS / Settlers have been working for months to undermine construction freeze
10:50 God's promise of land to Jews has deep pull on secular Israelis
12:39 Iran confiscates rights lawyer's Nobel Peace medal
04:14 The Golan is moving closer to Israel, geologists say
00:35 TV ROUND-UP: Palestinian stabs two Israelis near Hebron
11:07 IBM to buy Israeli start-up company for $225 million
05:02 Left-wing radio caller ordered to compensate rightist for on-air insult
08:18 Hamas Deputy Chief: Significant progress achieved in Shalit deal
06:36 ANALYSIS / Is Netanyahu positioning himself to be the next Ariel Sharon?
06:20 Agam painting sells for record-setting $326,500 in New York
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Site rules |
| Advert: Recommended Restaurants | Makom: Engaging on Israel
| Search engine marketing
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved