The Shmooze, The Yiddish Book Center's Podcast

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The Yiddish Book Center's podcast includes conversations with Jewish culture makers, plus news and stories related to Yiddish literature, language, and culture.

Yiddish Book Center


    • May 17, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 23m AVG DURATION
    • 392 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from The Shmooze, The Yiddish Book Center's Podcast

    Episode 392: The Shtetl Story behind The Light Keeper

    Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2025 17:34


    Co-authors Sheila Baslaw and Karen Levine joined "The Shmooze" to talk about "The Light Keeper," their illustrated children's book that tells the story of ten-year-old Shmuel Saslovsky's life in an early-twentieth-century shtetl. At 92, this is Sheila's first published children's book. In collaboration with Karen Levine, she worked to tell the story of how Sheila's father Shmuel helped when electricity first came to his shtetl in Russia. Epsiode 392 May 18, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Episode 391: Albert Chasan Paints His Parents' Lives

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 36:14


    When Albert Chasan (1930–2024) retired from the marketing communications firm he founded, “It hit me: I had to do something with the stories my parents told.” He took up painting and commemorated the formative years of his parents' lives through a series of expressionistic, boldly hued acrylics. A selection of color prints of many of these historically poignant works are on exhibit at the Yiddish Book Center. On the occasion of the exhibit opening, before a live audience at the Yiddish Book Center, Albert's daughter Betty and his son Robert sat down with "The Shmooze" to talk about their father's work as a painter and stories behind his narrative painting. Episode 391 May 5, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Episode 390: Isaac Bashevis Singer: Writings on Yiddish and Yiddishkayt

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2025 27:09


    This week on "The Shmooze," writer, translator, and literary scholar David Stromberg. In a wide-ranging conversation, David talks about his recently released translation of "Isaac Bashevis Singer: Writings on Yiddish and Yiddishkayt: A Spiritual Reappraisal, 1946–1955" (White Goat Press) and sheds light on Bashevis's lesser-known nonfiction, which he has translated and edited for this collection of Singer's writings. Episode 390 April 23, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Episode 389: Treasured Melodies—The Morris Hollender 100th Birthday Concert

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 23:55


    Hankus Netsky joined "The Shmooze" to talk about his upcoming Morris Hollender 100th birthday concert. In conversation we spoke about how interest in Eastern European Jewish musical traditions has experienced an unprecedented resurgence in recent years and how the melodies that Morris Hollender brought over from his birthplace in a small farming village in the Carpathian Mountains have become a major pillar of that resurgence. An Auschwitz concentration camp survivor, Hollender came to the Boston area from Czechoslovakia in 1967. The program will include little-known melodies that Hollender learned as a child in the Munkacs region of Eastern Czechoslovakia (now Ukraine) and shared generously with Temple Beth Israel members and others during his years in the United States. The concert will take at Temple Beth Israel located at 25 Harvard St, Waltham, MA 02453. Tickets and more information are available at https://tbiwaltham.org/concert/. Episode 389 April 14, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Episode 388: Onscreen at the Pioneer Valley Jewish Film Festival

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 18:54


    Deb Kirvoy, director of the annual Pioneer Valley Jewish Film Festival, joined "The Shmooze" to talk about this year's lineup. Now in its nineteenth year, the Pioneer Valley Jewish Film Festival continues its tradition of showcasing award-winning films from around the globe. This year's festival kicks off at the Yiddish Book Center on April 3 with the screening of "Midas Man." Episode 388 March 26, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Elephants by Night: Sutzkever's African Poetry

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 38:09


    Translator Mel Konner and Professor Justin Cammy sat down with "The Shmooze" to talk about the release of "Elephants by Night," a collection of newly translated poems by Abraham Sutzkever. The poems, a result of Sutzkever's travels to South Africa, are meditations on place, memory, and renewal. Episode 387 January 16, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Ep_0386_Allen_Lewis_Rickman_Yelena_Shmulenson

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 22:06


    Allen Lewis Rickman and fellow actor Yelena Shmulenson, better known as the shtetl couple from the Coen brothers' Oscar-nominated "A Serious Man," sat down with "The Shmooze" to chat about their work in Yiddish theater and their staging of their fast-paced comedy "THE ESSENCE: A YIDDISH THEATRE DIM SUM," which is onstage at the New York's Theater 154 January 7 to 12, 2025. Episode 386 January 7, 2025 Amherst, MA

    Episode 385: Bashevis's Demons

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 26:04


    Direct from engagements in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro, Shane Baker and Miryem-Khaye Seigel sat down with "The Shmooze" to talk about their latest collaboration, "BASHEVIS'S DEMONS." The performance includes three short stories by legendary Nobel Prize winner Isaac Bashevis Singer. It makes its official Off-Broadway bow at Theatre 154, 154 Christopher Street (between Greenwich and Washington Streets), with performances beginning December 18, 2024, through January 5, 2025. "BASHEVIS'S DEMONS" will be presented by the Congress for Jewish Culture in association with Out of the Box Theatrics and ChaShaMa. Tickets are available at https://congressforjewishculture.org/bashevisdemons. Episode 385 December 11, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 384: Frank London's Latest Releases

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 32:39


    Frank London visited with "The Shmooze" to chat about his latest LP, "In the City of God," and other releases. In a far-flung conversation, Frank spoke about how he became a musician, his influences past and present, and the release of the new LP. Episode 384 December 5, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 383: Sabor Judío: The Jewish Mexican Cookbook

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 21:32


    Ilan Stavans sits down with "The Shmooze" to talk about his recently released cookbook, "Sabor Judío." Co-authored with Margaret Boyle, the collection of over 100 recipes celebrates the fusion of two culinary traditions, Jewish and Mexican, and tells the story of how cooking and eating connects Jewish Mexicans across places and generations. Episode 383 November 30, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 382: Menachem Mendel Schneerson: Becoming the Messiah

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 17:57


    Ezra Glinter sat down with "The Shmooze" to talk about his recently released biography of Menachem Mendel Schneerson. This is the first biography of Schneerson to combine a nonpartisan view of his life, work, and impact with an insider's understanding of the ideology that drove him and that continues to inspire the Chabad-Lubavitch movement today. Episode 382 November 21, 2024 Amherst, MA"

    Episode 381: Harvey Wang's New York

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 29:22


    In a live conversation at the Yiddish Book Center, award-winning photographer, filmmaker, and author Harvey Wang visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about his work and his recently opened exhibit, "Harvey Wang's New York."In the early years of his career, in the 1980s, Harvey's photographic beat was the New York City nightlife scene. Yet a very different facet of the downtown landscape fascinated him. Cycling through the Lower East Side, he'd notice old businesses clearly not long for this world—venerable holdouts from when the neighborhood was an epicenter of Jewish immigration. Episode 381 October 9, 2024 Amherst, MA"

    Episode 380: Yiddish: A Global Culture live on Bloomberg Connects

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 23:53


    David Mazower, chief-curator and writer of "Yiddish: A Global Culture," and Caleb Sher, the Yiddish Book Center's Richard S. Herman Endowed Senior Fellow, join "The Shmooze" to share the news that the Center's groundbreaking exhibition, "Yiddish: A Global Culture," is now live on the Bloomberg Connects app. The free, downloadable app allows users to explore expert-curated guides from some 550 selected cultural institutions across the globe in the palm of their hand. David and Caleb share some of what can be found on the app—from featured artifacts, videos, and audio to how to plan your visit or learn about related exhibits and public programs. Episode 380 September 26, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 379: The Book of Izzy

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 24:49


    Novelist Ben Gonshor joins "The Shmooze" to talk about his debut novel, "The Book of Izzy." The book's main character, Izzy, is a writer at wit's end in life and on the verge of a complete breakdown with his career in wedding planning. Following an encounter with a mysterious bird seemingly visible only to him, he agrees to take on the leading role in an amateur production of the greatest play in all of the Yiddish theater: "The Dybbuk," a gothic tale of destiny, possession, and the triumph of love over all. In conversation with Ben we talk about the many layers of Izzy and the book's underlying narrative. Episode 379 August 27, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 378: Displaced Persons: A Multilayered Collection of Stories

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 23:53


    Writer Joan Leegant joined "The Shmooze" to talk about her latest book, "Displaced Persons," a collection of rich, multilayered short stories, half set in Israel, half among Jewish families in the States. The fictional stories explore exile, belonging, and what it means to call a place home. Episode 378 August 22, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 377: Ashkenazi Folk Magic at the Threshold

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2024 26:56


    Rokhl Kafrissen—journalist, teacher, playwright, and 2022 winner of the prestigious Adrienne Cooper Dreaming in Yiddish prize—sits down with "The Shmooze" this week to talk about her upcoming Yiddish Book Center online course “Sacred Time and Liminal Space: Ashkenazi Folk Magic at the Threshold.” Rokhl talks about the unique Eastern European women's folk magic ritual known as "feldmestn:" measuring a cemetery (and its graves) to make special holiday candles. In conversation she shares other traditions and tells how the course will also place a special emphasis on learning about these customs through short stories, particularly the work of Sarah Hamer Jacklyn. Episode 377 August 14, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0376: Adapted for a Staged Reading: Sholem Asch's Shabbtai Tsvi

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 21:00


    Translator and adapter Weaver sits down with "The Shmooze" to talk about the drama group Theater Between Addresses and its upcoming immersive, staged reading of Sholem Asch's "Shabbtai Tsvi," which Weaver translated and adapted. Never before performed in its entirety, the play shows the meteoric rise and tragic fall of Shabbtai Tsvi, the 17th-century Ottoman Jewish mystic whose messianic aspirations attracted a following of thousands of Jews from every corner of the earth. The reading will take place outdoors on the grounds of the Yiddish Book Center. Episode 376 August 7, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0375: The Yiddish Supernatural on Screen

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 28:51


    This week on "The Shmooze" we visit with Rebecca (Rivke) Margolis, author of "The Yiddish Supernatural on Screen: Dybbuks, Demons and Haunted Jewish Pasts." In conversation we talk about how the book traces the transformation of the figure of the dybbuk—a soul of the dead possessing the living—from folklore to 1930s Polish Yiddish cinema to global contemporary media. We also explore how translated and subtitled Yiddish dialogue reimagines Jewish lore and tells new stories, where the supernatural looms over the narrative. Episode 375 July 31, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0374: Klezkanada's Summer Retreat

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 22:42


    Avia Moore and Sebastian Schulman join "The Shmooze" for a lively conversation about all things Klezakanda. As Avia shares, KlezKanada “fosters a community where the vibrant living tradition of Yiddish culture and Jewish music continues to thrive.” This year's lineup includes workshops on Yiddish song, dance, and language learning as well as a translation workshop, a cabaret, and a three-part talk on Quebec in Yiddish and Yiddish in Quebec. The Yiddish Book Center is a co-sponsor of KlezKanada 2024. Episode 374 July 25, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0373: Nathan-ism: The Story of Artist Nathan Hilu

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 15:22


    Filmaker Elan Golod visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about his documentary "Nathan-ism." The film tells the story of Nathan Hilu, the son of Syrian Jewish immigrants to New York who received a life-changing assignment from the U.S. Army: to guard the top Nazi war criminals at the Nuremberg trials. This experience fueled a lifetime of artistic inspiration for Nathan, a virtually unknown outsider artist who spent the next 70 years obsessively creating a visual narrative from his memories. Episode 373 June 11, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0372: The Yiddish Folksong Project

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 16:40


    Kimberly Lazzeri joins "The Shmooze" to talk about the recently released "Yiddish Folksong Project Anthology." Kimberly shares the story behind this collection of Robert De Cormier's folksong arrangements, which had been in a storage closet for over forty years. This is the first-ever publication of De Cormier's arrangements of Yiddish folksongs and the first-ever large body of Yiddish folksong repertoire arranged in the classical style for performance on the concert or recital stage. Episode 372 June 6, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0371: After 80 Years Postcards Find Their Way Home to Lublin

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 27:18


    Piotr Nazaruk and Karla McCabe joined "The Shmooze" to tell the story of the thirty-six postcards that Karla recently hand-delivered to Pitor Nazaruk at a ceremony in Lublin, Poland. Karla explains how this collection of postcards were looted from the Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva in the war and now, eighty years later, have found their way back home. Episode 371 May 29, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0370: Sivan Slapak's Here Is Still Here

    Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 20:51


    Writer Sivan Slapak visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about her debut collection, "Here Is Still Here." The stories provide a layered exploration of human connection and the complexities of identity. In conversation, Sivan shares how these stories—which take readers from Montreal to Jerusalem and back again as the main character navigates checkpoints and borders, home and exile, milestones and disappointment, and love and loss—are threaded together. Episode 370 May 13, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0369: Yiddish Culture in America

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2024 36:13


    "The Shmooze" visits with Sebastian Schulman for a chat about Yiddish culture in America as we celebrate American Jewish Heritage Month. In conversation he shares some of what he's found on the Yiddish Book Center's website related to the Jewish American experience—Yiddish writers in America, Jewish food, Yiddish film, immigration, activism, and more. Episode 369 April 28, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0368: in a dark blue night: two song cycles on Yiddish/Jewish New York

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2024 20:36


    Alex Weiser visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about his latest work, "in a dark blue night," consisting of two connected song cycles. The first, “in a dark blue night,” sets to music modernist Yiddish poetry about New York City at night, all written by Jewish immigrant poets at the turn of the 20th century. The second, “Coney Island Days,” transforms an oral history with his late grandmother, Irene Weiser, into a musical exploration of the time when Jews became Americans and the way that humble, individual stories can capture the sweeping breadth of history. Episode 368 March 14, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0367: The Yiddish Book Center's Bossie Dubowick YiddishSchool

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 25:15


    Sonia Bloom and Judith Liskin-Gasparro speak to "The Shmooze" about Yiddish-language learning, their work in the field, and their participation at the Yiddish Book Center's upcoming Bossie Dubowick YiddishSchool. Episode 367 March 11, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0366:The Fight to Preserve Endangered Mother Tongues in New York

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 24:09


    Ross Perlin, the co-director of the Endangered Language Alliance, visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about his new book, "Language City: The Fight to Preserve Endangered Mother Tongues in New York." The book provides a portrait of contemporary New York City through six speakers of little-known and overlooked languages, diving into the incredible history of the most linguistically diverse place ever to have existed on the planet. Episode 366 March 7, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0365: Across So Many Seas

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2024 20:06


    Author Ruth Behar speaks with "The Shmooze" about "Across So Many Seas." Her latest book was inspired by Behar's paternal grandmother's side of the family of Sephardic Jews living in Spain up until the Spanish Inquisition of 1492. Behar used her background as an anthropology professor to make a thoroughly researched and powerful novel about religious persecution and how refugees have been treated throughout history. Episode 365 February 4, 2024 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0364: A Worker's Yiddish Library on View

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 23:48


    Marvin Zuckerman and Ruby Elliot Zuckerman join "The Shmooze" to talk about their family's story, which is featured in the Yiddish Book Center's new core exhibition, "Yiddish: A Global Culture." As Marvin shares, “In our one-bedroom apartment in the Bronx we had world literature—Georg Brandes, Maupassant, Marx, Darwin, Jack London, Tolstoy—all in Yiddish.” Marvin and his granddaughter Ruby share the experience of traveling together from the West Coast to be part of the exhibition's opening and to see their family's “Worker's Library” on view. Episode 364 January 22, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0363: Telling the Story of Yiddish Theater

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2024 33:41


    David Mazower, chief curator of the Yiddish Book Center's core exhibition, "Yiddish: A Global Culture," and Caraid O'Brien, co-curator of the exhibition's theater section, chat with "The Shmooze" about all things Yiddish theater. You'll hear how they gathered rare artifacts and stories about the actors, the audiences, and the contemporary Yiddish theater scene. Episode 363 January 14, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0363: Staging Mikhl Yashinsky's American Yiddish Drama

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 22:50


    Mikhl Yashinsky is on "The Shmooze" to talk about his new drama "The Gospel According to Chaim," the strange tale of a Jewish writer's quixotic attempt to publish a controversial book. The New Yiddish Rep, who is producing the play, says this is the first entirely original, full-length American Yiddish drama to be produced for a general audience in seven decades. Episode 362 December 20, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0361: New in Translation: Yiddish Writer Frume Halpern

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 25:53


    Yermiyahu Ahron Taub joins "The Shmooze" to talk about his latest translation, a collection of short stories by Yiddish writer Frume Halpern. These psychologically insightful stories present the lives of protagonists who are working-class poor, social outcasts, and experiencing illness, disability, and racism. Halpern worked as a massage therapist in a hospital, and many of these stories are about those who, like her, work with their hands: workshop and factory workers, piece workers, a shoemaker, a butcher, and a hairdresser. Episode 361 December 14, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0360: Shir Hashirim (The Song of Songs): A Yiddish Operetta

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 31:02


    Ronald Robboy and Alex Weiser visit with "The Shmooze" to talk about their collaboration on the performance of the music of "Shir Hashirim (The Song of Songs)," a 1911 operetta by Joseph Rumshinsky and Anshel Shor. "Shir Hashirim" is a musical comedy that features several interlocking love triangles, including an aging composer along with his children and their lovers and friends. Reconstructed from a variety of archival materials collected at YIVO, UCLA, and the Library of Congress, the operetta will be performed by students of the Bard Conservatory Vocal Arts Program. Episode 360 December 10, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0359: Jewish Anarchist Histories Reclaimed

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 30:57


    "The Shmooze" visits with Anna Elena Torres, Kenyon Zimmer, and Ayelet Brinn, editors and contributors to an expansive new volume of essays exploring suppressed histories of Jewish anarchism. "With Freedom in Our Ears: Histories of Jewish Anarchism" is a rich collection of essays across radical politics, immigrant history, the Yiddish press, and issues of gender and ethnicity. Episode 359 November 30, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0358: Kristen Morgenstern's Zine: Irena Klepfisz: The Life of the Fighter

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2023 22:45


    On "The Shmooze," Kristen Morgenstern, a senior studying history and theater at Middlebury College, tells the story behind her zine "Irena Klepfisz: The Life of the Fighter." The zine was selected for inclusion in the Yiddish Book Center's core exhibition, "Yiddish: A Global Culture." Episode 358 November 21, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0357: Amid Falling Walls: A Groundbreaking Musical

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2023 20:57


    Avram Mlotek visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about the upcoming performance of Amid Falling Walls, for which Avram created the libretto. "Amid Falling Walls" (Tsvishn falnkike vent) is a groundbreaking musical that pays homage to the perseverance of the human spirit during one of the most devastating moments of history. The performance, presented by National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene, is composed of songs that were written and performed in ghettos, clandestine cabarets and theaters, forced labor camps, and partisan encampments. Episode 357 November 14, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0356: Faith Jones on Translating Shira Gorshman

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 26:48


    This week "The Shmooze" visits with translator Faith Jones to talk about her recently released "Meant to Be and Other Stories," by Shira Gorshman (White Goat Press). Shira Gorshman is most notable for her unflinching examination of women's lives and her willingness to dwell on uncomfortable emotions. Faith shares how Gorshman's stories follow the trajectory of 20th-century Jewish life in Eastern Europe, from the Lithuanian shtetl to the Russian Revolution, through the kibbutz and collective farms, to Central Asia during wartime, and back to mid-century Soviet life. Episode 356 November 2, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0355: David Mazower on Yiddish: A Global Culture

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 24:57


    "The Shmooze" sat down with chief curator and writer David Mazower for the first in a series of conversations about the Yiddish Book Center's landmark permanent exhibition, which opens on October 15, 2023. In describing what visitors will encounter when they view this massive exhibition, David notes, “We've created a bright, colorful space full of powerful stories and wonderful objects that make you think but also touch the heart and soul; I want people to see this exhibition and feel inspired, surprised, moved, informed, and entertained.” Episode 356 September 21, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0354: Women on the Yiddish Stage

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 32:50


    This week on "The Shmooze," editors Amanda (Miryem-Khaye) Seigel and Alyssa Quint talk about "Women on the Yiddish Stage," a series of publications that amplifies the voices of women who served as creative leaders in the historical Yiddish theater. Episode 354 June 15, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0353: The Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2023 20:30


    On a visit with "The Shmooze," photographer Marisa Scheinfeld talks about her work on The Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project. The resulting work will create a series of markers to commemorate the Borscht Belt era. Episode 353 June 8, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0352: A Life in Yiddish Translation

    Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2023 27:15


    Curt Leviant, professor, novelist, and translator, speaks with "The Shmooze" about his life translating the work of Sholem Aleichem and Chaim Grade, and he shares some stories about his encounters with Nobel laureates. Episode 352 May 16, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0351: Four Days of Concerts: Yidstock 2023

    Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2023 28:56


    "The Shmooze" sits down with Seth Rogovoy to talk about what's in store for the Yiddish Book Center's 11th annual Yidstock: The Festival of New Yiddish Music (July 13–16). Once again curated by Yidstock artistic director Seth Rogovoy, this year's festival will bring some audience favorites, including Merlin Shepherd, Nigunim Trio, and Lorin Sklamberg, along with rising stars making their Yidstock debuts, among them Forshpil, Midwood, and Sam Sadigursky—and that's just some of what we learned about in conversation with Seth. Episode 351 May 7, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0350: Writing the Story of Franya Winter

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2023 23:38


    Meryl Frank visits with "The Shmooze" to talk about her recently released book, "Unearthed: A Lost Actress, a Forbidden Book, and a Search for Life in the Shadow of the Holocaust." "Unearthed" is the story of Meryl's search for details about the life and untimely death of Franya Winter, a renowned actor in prewar Vilna. Through archives across four continents, chance encounters and miraculous discoveries, and the shocking truth recorded in the pages of a forbidden book, Meryl conjures a history of hatred, resistance, and the rogue spirit of her cousin—her beauty and her tragedy. Episode 350 April 30, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0349: Dear Mr. Dickens: The Story Behind the Letter

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 28:11


    Award-winning children's book author Nancy Churnin talks with "The Shmooze" about her illustrated children's book "Dear Mr. Dickens," which tells the true story of Eliza Davis. In Eliza Davis's day, Charles Dickens was the most celebrated living writer in England. But some of his books reflected a mindset that was all too common at the time: prejudice against Jewish people. Eliza was Jewish and wanted to point out how unfair that was—even if it meant speaking out against the great writer. So she wrote a letter to Dickens himself. What happened next is history. Episode 349 March 30, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0348: Caraid O'Brien on Sholem Asch's Underworld Trilogy

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2023 32:00


    Caraid O'Brien, one of the foremost contemporary interpreters and translators of Sholem Asch's work, talks with "The Shmooze" about the Theater J class she's teaching—Prostitutes, Criminals, and the Walking Dead: Sholem Asch's Underworld Trilogy in Translation. The class is based on her translations of three of Asch's seminal works, "God of Vengeance," "Motke Thief," and "The Dead Man" (forthcoming from White Goat Press, the Yiddish Book Center's imprint). Episode 348 March 19, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0347: Di Shvester—The Sisters: Eleanor Reissa and Cilla Owens

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 26:16


    This week on "The Shmooze," two of New York's finest vocalists, Eleanor Reissa and Cilla Owens, chat about their upcoming performance alongside the Paul Shapiro Quartet. Eleanor and Cilla have interpreted music for decades as soloists and bring their experiences and talents together for a foot-tapping, heart-grabbing concert. The upcoming concert salutes the rich contribution of Jewish women in Yiddish and English music. The program, co-sponsored by the Yiddish Book Center and the Museum of Jewish Heritage, is part of the 2023 Carnegie Hall Festival salute to women and music. The program will take place on March 5, 2023, in New York at the Museum of Jewish Heritage. Episode 347 February 22, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0346: IIrena Klepfisz on Birth and Later Years: New and Collected Poems

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2023 29:11


    Following the release of "Birth and Later Years: New and Collected Poems, 1971–2021," poet Irena Klepfisz sat down to speak with "The Shmooze" about her life, work, and the release of her collected poems. Irena was born in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1941. She survived the war hiding in an orphanage and later in the Polish countryside with her mother. After the war they lived in Łódź and Sweden before settling in New York in 1949. She played a key role in the emergent Jewish lesbian movement starting in the 1970s and has been dedicated to the recovery and transmission of women's writing in Yiddish as an active scholar, translator, and teacher. Episode 346 February 2, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0345: Max Weinreich on the Great Jewish Books Club

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2023 24:44


    "The Shmooze" caught up with Max Weinreich to talk about his interest in and work with the Great Jewish Books Club. Max, a postdoctoral researcher in mathematics at Harvard University, comes to Yiddish through his family ties to the language. His great-grandfather, also named Max Weinreich, founded the field of Yiddish sociolinguistics and was one of the three co-founders of YIVO. His grandfather, Uriel Weinreich, was a renowned Yiddish linguist in his own right. Drawn to Yiddish by a budding curiosity about this family history, he's an alum of the Yiddish Book Center's Steiner Summer Yiddish Program in 2016, where he worked on indexing poetry recordings, and has gone on to be the moderator for the Yiddish Book Center's Great Jewish Books Club since its inception. As a book club steward, he leads discussion and conversation about both classic Jewish books and new translations. Episode 345 January 17, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0344: And what about the taste? with Sima Beeri

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 27:05


    On "The Shmooze" from London, a visit with Dr. Sima Beeri to chat about her recently published "And what about the taste?" This book is the second part of a larger project to research and document her family's roots and heritage. The first part deals with her family's history in the 20th century, while the second part focuses on documenting recipes from her own and her husband's family together with her personal culinary additions to pass on to the next generation. Episode 344 January 11, 2023 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0343: Aaron Bendich on the Launch of Off Beet

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 23:46


    We caught up with Aaron Bendich this week to chat about his latest venture, the launch of his new record label imprint, Off Beet, a spin-off of his radio show Borscht Beat. To quote Aaron, he will be “releasing music from the fringes of musical expression.” We spoke about what's behind this exciting new record label and what inspired him to create Off Beet. Episode 343 December 22, 2022 Amherst, MA

    Episode 0342: The Inaugural New York Jewish Book Festival

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 19:46


    Joshua Mack and Gabriel Sanders sat down with "The Shmooze" to share a preview of what's on for the 2022 New York Jewish Book Festival. On Sunday, December 11, the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City will present its first-ever New York Jewish Book Festival, featuring talks, panels, and author signings. Joshua and Gabriel tease out some of what's planned for the daylong event. Episode 342 November 30, 2022 Amherst, MA

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