翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Abrahamian
・ Abrahamic religions
・ Abrahamite monks
・ Abrahamites
・ Abrahamowicz
・ Abraham Stavsky
・ Abraham Stern (inventor)
・ Abraham Sternberg House
・ Abraham Sternhartz
・ Abraham Stocker
・ Abraham Storck
・ Abraham Stouffer
・ Abraham Straski
・ Abraham Stupp
・ Abraham Susenier
Abraham Sutzkever
・ Abraham Sánchez
・ Abraham Taylor
・ Abraham Tedros
・ Abraham Teerlink
・ Abraham Ten Broeck
・ Abraham Teniers
・ Abraham Tesser
・ Abraham the Great
・ Abraham the Great of Kashkar
・ Abraham the Jew
・ Abraham the Laborious
・ Abraham the Monk
・ Abraham the Poor
・ Abraham the Writer


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Abraham Sutzkever : ウィキペディア英語版
Abraham Sutzkever

Abraham Sutzkever (Yiddish: אַבֿרהם סוצקעווער — ''Avrom Sutskever''; Hebrew: אברהם סוצקבר; July 15, 1913 – January 20, 2010) was an acclaimed Yiddish poet.〔()〕 ''The New York Times'' wrote that Sutzkever was "the greatest poet of the Holocaust."
==Biography==
Abraham (Avrom) Sutzkever was born on July 15, 1913 in Smorgon, Russian Empire, now Smarhoń, Belarus. During World War I, his family fled eastwards from the German invasion and settled in Omsk, Siberia, where his father, Hertz Sutzkever, died. Three years after the war, his mother, Rayne (née Fainberg), moved the family to Vilna, where Sutzkever attended cheder. In 1930, he joined the ''Bee'' Jewish scouting movement. He married Freydke in 1939, a day before World War II. In 1941, he and his wife were sent to the Vilna Ghetto. Ordered by the Nazis to hand over important Jewish manuscripts and artworks for display in an Institute for Study of the Jewish Question, to be based in Frankfurt, Sutzkever and his friends hid a diary by Theodor Herzl, drawings by Marc Chagall and Alexander Bogen, and other treasured works behind plaster and brick walls in the ghetto.〔 His mother and newborn son were murdered by the Nazis.〔 On September 12, 1943, he and his wife escaped to the forests, and together with fellow Yiddish poet Shmerke Kaczerginsky he fought the occupying forces as a partisan. Sutzkever joined a Jewish unit under the command of Moshe Judka Rudnitski, and took part in several missions before being smuggled into the Soviet Union. In July 1943, he gave a fellow partisan a notebook of his poems, which reached the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee in Moscow. In March 1944, a small plane was sent to the Vilna forests to bring Sutzkever and his wife to Russia.〔
In February 1946, he was called up as a witness at the Nuremberg Trials testifying against Franz Murer, the murderer of his mother and son. After a brief sojourn in Poland and Paris, he immigrated to Mandate Palestine, arriving in Tel Aviv in 1947.
Sutzkever has two daughters, Mira and Rina.〔 He died on January 20, 2010 in Tel Aviv at the age of 96.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Abraham Sutzkever」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.