Leib Kvitko
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Leyb Moiseyevich Kvitko | |
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Born | |
Died | August 12, 1952 | (aged 61)
Occupation | Poet |
Leyb Moiseyevich Kvitko (Russian: Лев Моисе́евич Кви́тко, Yiddish: לייב קוויטקאָ) (October 15, 1890 – August 12, 1952) was a prominent Yiddish poet, an author of well-known children's poems and a member of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC). He was one of the editors of Eynikayt (the JAC's newspaper) and of the Heymland, a literary magazine. He was executed in Moscow on August 12, 1952 together with twelve other members of the JAC, a massacre known as the Night of the Murdered Poets. Kvitko was rehabilitated in 1955.[1]
He was born in a Ukrainian shtetl, attended traditional Jewish religious school for boys (cheder) and was orphaned early. He moved to Kiev in 1917 and soon became one of the leading Yiddish poets of the "Kiev group". He lived in Germany between 1921 and 1925 joining there the Communist Party of Germany and publishing critically acclaimed poetry. He returned to the USSR in 1925 and moved to Moscow in 1936, joining the CPSU in 1939. By that time he was primarily writing verses for children and his style fully corresponded to the canons of Socialist Realism.
Gallery
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Children's book by Kvitko
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In vald L Kvitko tseykhenungen Y Ribak, children's book cover
References
- ^ "Списки жертв". Lists.memo.ru. Retrieved 2014-06-15.
External links
- Works by or about Leib Kvitko at the Internet Archive
- The Jewish Poet, Lev Kvitko (in Russian)
- Selected poetry of Jewish poet Lev Knitrko (in Russian)
- Life would have been magnificent, contains Kvitko's letters to friends, in Almanac "Yegupets", No 9, Kiev (in Russian)
- 1890 births
- 1952 deaths
- People from Khmelnytskyi Oblast
- Jews of the Russian Empire
- Ukrainian Jews
- Soviet Jews
- Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
- Yiddish-language poets
- Jewish anti-fascists
- Jewish Ukrainian poets
- Jewish socialists
- Soviet children's writers
- Soviet male writers
- 20th-century male writers
- Soviet poets
- Russian male poets
- Children's poets
- Jews executed by the Soviet Union
- Executed writers
- Soviet rehabilitations
- Ukrainian anti-fascists