-
Kadia Molodowsky (Yiddish: קאַדיע מאָלאָדאָװסקי; also:
Kadya Molodowsky; May 10, 1894, in
Bereza Kartuska, now Byaroza,
Belarus –
March 23, 1975, in Philadelphia)...
-
Lutzky Itzik Manger Anna
Margolin Peretz Markish N. B.
Minkoff Kadia Molodowsky Rikuda Potash Gabriel Preil (alternative
English spelling: "Gabriel Preyl")...
-
incorporated into the
tsarist prison.
Jakob Klatzkin,
Jewish philosopher Kadia Molodowsky,
Jewish poet and
writer Kseniya Koçyiğit, Belarusian-born Azerbaijani...
-
artistic ideology.
Writers such as
Celia Dropkin, Anna Margolin,
Kadia Molodowsky,
Esther Kreitman,
Katie Brown and
Esther Shumiatcher Hirschbein created...
-
known for her
research focus on
Yiddish women writers,
notably Kadya Molodowsky,
Malka Heifetz Tussman, and
Celia Dropkin. ****erstein was born in 1952...
- word for a
scabby scalp, but
metaphorically also
meaning "loathsome" (
Molodowsky 2006, p. 84;
Herzl 1960, p. 238).
Avner Falk
translates schnorrers as...
- (1977)
Avraham Shlonsky,
Micky Mau. The
Kibbutz Theatre (1976)
Kadia Molodowsky, Open the Gate.
Theatre for the Young, Tel Aviv (1975) M. Binetzky's movie:...
- rooted".
Irena is well
known for her
translations of
Yiddish poets Kadya Molodowsky and
Fradl Shtok.
Klepfisz has
worked as an
activist in feminist, ****...
-
cello (Texts by
Peretz Hirschbein,
Itzik Manger,
Isaac Leib Peretz,
Kadya Molodowsky[42], A. Lutzky,
Rachel H. Korn,
Jacob Isaac Segal, Karl Wolfskehl, Eliyahu...
-
community involvement and are
named for
Yiddish writers and
poets –
Kadya Molodowsky, Mani Leyb,
Avrom Reyzen, I.L. Peretz.
Yvette Coppersmith - artist, Archibald...