CZERNOWITZ YIDDISH LANGUAGE CONFERENCE
- CZERNOWITZ YIDDISH LANGUAGE CONFERENCE
- CZERNOWITZ YIDDISH LANGUAGE CONFERENCE, first international,
interparty conference to deal with the role of Yiddish in Jewish life.
It was held from August 30 to September 4, 1908. The idea of such a
conference was first broached by nathan birnbaum , and the
original call was sent out by an organizing committee in New York
consisting of Birnbaum, dramatists jacob gordin and
david pinski , the publisher A.M. Evalenko, and the philosopher
chaim zhitlowsky . The 70 delegates who went to Czernowitz
(Chernovtsy), the principal Yiddish-speaking center of Bukovina,
included representatives of all shades of Jewish opinion, from Zionist
Hebraists to militant Bundists, and such diverse personalities as
I.L. Peretz , abraham reisen , sholem asch ,
H.D. Nomberg , noah prylucki , matthias mieses ,
mordecai spector , gershom bader , and Esther (Lifshitz).
The two leading Yiddish authors, S.Y. Abramovitsh (Mendele
Mokher Seforim) and shalom aleichem , prevented by illness from
attending the conference, endorsed its aims. The agenda included
problems of orthography, grammar, literature, theater, press,
translation of the Bible into Yiddish, and, above all, recognition of
Yiddish as a national language of the Jewish people. Controversy raged
between delegates who espoused Hebrew as the only Jewish national
language and who looked upon Yiddish as a galut ("Diaspora")
language to be discarded, and delegates who regarded Yiddish as the
living Jewish language and Hebrew as the language solely of the past and
of prayer. After long debates, a compromise resolution was adopted
proclaiming Yiddish as a national language and asking for its political,
cultural, and social equality with other languages. By using the
expression "a national language" rather than "the national language,"
the conference wished to leave participants free to take any stand on
Hebrew that accorded with their personal convictions. The conference
aroused much discussion in the Jewish press. Aḥad Ha-Am called
it a Purim spectacle. hillel zeitlin , reuben brainin , and
morris rosenfeld ridiculed it, while S. Niger and
Ba'al-Makhshoves defended it as an historic achievement. After
the conference, Peretz, Asch, Reisen, and Nomberg undertook a tour of
Jewish communities of Galicia and Bukovina to intensify interest in
Yiddish language, literature, and culture. The conference heightened the
prestige of Yiddish. It stimulated literary creativity, research, and
publication in Yiddish, and laid the ideological basis for the later
founding of yivo .
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
YIVO, Die Ershte Yidishe Shprakhkonferents
(1931); S. Liptzin, Flowering of Yiddish Literature (1963),
175–7.
(Sol Liptzin)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
Look at other dictionaries:
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