- of the
Yiddish Language").
Nahum Stutchkoff was born
Nachum Stuczko (or
Nokhem Stutshko in Yiddish) into a Ch****idic
family living in the
northeast of...
-
Abraham Nahum Stencl (Polish:
Avrom Nokhem Sztencl; Hebrew: אברהם נחום שטנצל; 1897–1983) was a Polish-born
Yiddish poet.
Stencl was born in Czeladź in...
- “provincial
Yiddishist approach.” Estraikh,
Gennady (2010,
October 18). "Shtif,
Nokhem." YIVO
Encyclopedia of Jews in
Eastern Europe.
Retrieved 2015-09-18 from...
- of Ukraine,'
Tablet 22
February 2022.
Maurice Wolftal,
introduction to
Nokhem Shtif, The
Pogroms in Ukraine, 1918-19:
Prelude to the Holocaust, Archived...
-
redaktsye fun
Shmuel Rozhanski, 1974. Der
oytser fun der
yidisher shprakh fun
Nokhem Stutshkov;
unter der
redaktsye fun Maks Vaynraykh, c. 1950
Praktishe gramatik...
- ": 165
Among his
collaborators were
Nokhem Shtif,
Jacob Lestschinsky,
Jacob Ze'ev Wolf
Latzky Bertholdi, and
Nokhem Gergel. The
archive ****embled by these...
- War II.
Shomer was born
Manya Shaikevitsch in Odessa,
Russian Empire, to
Nokhem Mayer Shaikevitsch, a
novelist and playwright, and his wife
Dinneh Bercinsky...
- self-reliance and socialism.
Leaders of the
party included Avrom Rozin (Ben-Adir),
Nokhem Shtif,
Moyshe Zilberfarb and Mark Ratner. The
party was
close to the...
- (1932–1935) Buzi
Goldenberg (1936–1937) Buzi
Miller (1941, 1944–1948) Naum (
Nokhem)
Fridman (1949–1950) Naum
Korchminski (1956–1984)
Leonid Shkolnik (1984–1988)...
- Greenbaum,
Avraham (19
August 2007). "To My Wise and
Understanding Son: Avrom-
Nokhem Shtensl's
Letters from
Poland to Germany, 1922-1934". The
Mendele Review:...