"Kutcher's memoir is not only a monument of Holocaust remembrance but a testimony to the lives of the Jews murdered in the Holocaust. This is a valuable component of Holocaust literature that is too often effaced in most assigned readings about World War II and the destruction of European Jewry."—Marc Caplan, author of Yiddish Writers in Weimar Berlin: A Fugitive Modernism
"Ber Kutsher was a reporter for the Yiddish Warsaw daily 'Haynt' at the height of the Yiddish press in Poland. In this memoir, Kutsher proves to be an unforgettable storyteller, describing all types and classes of Jews in the Polish metropolis in vivid, and especially humorous, detail. In his translation, Gerald Marcus wonderfully captures the informal, conversational style of Kutsher and by the end of the work, the reader gets to know and appreciate the inner life of the Warsaw Yiddish press, theater, literary world and Jewish street life."—Itzik Gottesman, University of Texas at Austin
"The book gives vivid snapshots that in total depicts an important chapter of Polish Jewish cultural history."—Jan Schwartz, author of Survivors and Exiles: Yiddish Culture after 1945
Description
As a young man in interwar Warsaw, newspaperman Ber Kutscher threw himself into the city’s vibrant Jewish arts and culture scene from the headquarters of the Association of Jewish Writers and Journalists at Tlomkatse 13. In Once There Was Warsaw, Kutsher’s achingly human depictions of writers, cabbies, artists, neighbors, and more are translated from the Yiddish into English for the first time, painting a tangible portrait of a moment in Polish history too quickly buried by the horrors of World War II.
Kutsher viewed his memoir, originally published in 1955 after witnessing the devastation of his home and relocating to France, as something of a holy mission, an opportunity to present the lives of the people who brought Warsaw to life while still making room to mourn the past. Written with humor, heart, and a deeply felt grief, Once There Was Warsaw is a complex and layered portrayal of a city and its people and the pain in remembering just how much was lost in its absence.
About the Author
Ber Kutsher (1893–1978) was a writer and newspaperman. He came of age in Warsaw between the world wars, and his writing explores the lives of the Yiddish-speaking community in Poland during that time. He published his memoir, Geven amol varshe, in Paris in 1955.
Gerald Marcus has been a student and avid reader of Yiddish for more than twenty-five years and grew up surrounded by Yiddish-speaking relatives and friends. He is the translator of Reuben Iceland’s memoir, From Our Springtime, and Joseph Rolnik’s With Rake in Hand.
Series: Judaic Traditions in Literature, Music, and Art
6 x 9, 334 pages, 1 black and white illustrations, 1 maps
September 2024