Benutzer:Shi Annan/Grininke Beymelekh
- Der Text kann teilweise in einer Fremdsprache verfasst, unvollständig sein oder noch ungeprüfte Aussagen enthalten.
- Wenn du Fragen zum Thema hast, nimm am besten Kontakt mit dem Autor Shi Annan auf.
- Bitte denke daran, die Angaben im Artikel durch geeignete Quellen zu belegen und zu prüfen, ob er auch anderweitig den Richtlinien der Wikipedia entspricht (siehe Wikipedia:Artikel).
- Nach erfolgter Übersetzung kannst du diese Vorlage entfernen und den Artikel in den Artikelnamensraum verschieben. Die entstehende Weiterleitung kannst du schnelllöschen lassen.
- Importe inaktiver Accounts, die länger als drei Monate völlig unbearbeitet sind, werden gelöscht.
Vorlage:Short description Vorlage:Infobox newspaper
Grininke Beymelekh (Vorlage:Langx) was a Yiddish-language children's periodical published in Vilna, Lithuania (now Vilnius), intermittently from 1914 to 1939.
Description
[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten ]Grininke Beymelekh began publication in February 1914 by the publishing house of Vorlage:Ill in Vilna, Lithuania, and was managed by linguist Nochum Shtif and edited by poet and educator Vorlage:Ill. Twenty issues of the paper were produced in 1914 and 1915, until it was forced to cease publication due to the spread of the First World War. Although a children's paper entitled Farn Kleynem Oylem was included with the newspaper Di Yidishe Vokh from 1912 to 1913, Grininke Beymelekh was the first Yiddish children's magazine published as its own periodical.Vorlage:Sfn Vorlage:Sfn The name of the periodical was taken from a 1901 poem about Jewish children ("Unter di grininke beymelekh", 'Under the Green Trees') by Hayim Nahman Bialik.Vorlage:Sfn
After the war, the paper was continued in 1919 under the editorship of Shlomo Bastomsky, who had long been an advocate for a Yiddish children's paper.Vorlage:Sfn The following year, Bastomsky founded a magazine aimed at older children titled Der Khaver ('The Friend'). Both of these papers ceased publication in 1922, but Grininke Beymelekh was reestablished by Bastomsky in 1926, as was Der Khaver three years later. Although specific circulation figures have not been recorded, the Grininke Beymelekh likely sold around 1,000 papers per issue. Yiddish children's journals were frequently short-lived, but the Grininke Beymelekh continued publication from 1926 until the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939.Vorlage:Sfn Vorlage:Sfn Vorlage:Sfn
References
[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten ]Bibliography
[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten ]- Adina Bar-El: Children's Literature: Yiddish Literature. In: YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Abgerufen am 6. Januar 2025. Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Cite web): "translator-last; translator-first"
- Nathan Cohen: Reading Polish among Young Jewish People. In: Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry. 28. Jahrgang, 2016, S. 173–186, doi:10.3828/polin.201628173 (jhu.edu [PDF]).
- Nathan Cohen: No More 'Little Jews without Beards': Insights into Yiddish Children's Literature in Eastern Europe Prior to World War I. In: Modern Judaism . 41. Jahrgang, Nr. 1, 2021, S. 102–109, doi:10.1093/mj/kjaa018 .