VIRTUAL: Six Jews of Vilna with Rachel Greenblatt

Date: April 13 at 7:30 PM


Where: Online! Email lynne@vilnashul.org for Zoom link.
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As the Vilna Shul returns to its renovated, historic location in Beacon Hill, we will seize the opportunity to look, close-up, at Vilna of the Old Country, the “Great City of Israel, Jerusalem of Lithuania,” whose emigres founded this Boston synagogue a century ago. Examinations of six specific lives will provide a window through which to see diverse religious and secular aspects of this East European Jewish cultural center, and to consider what its legacy means for us today.  Weekly biographies will likely include: Rabbi Elijah ben Shelomo Zalman, “The Vilna Ga’on” (1720-1797), an extraordinary Talmudist and opponent of Hasidism; Devorah Romm, publisher and scion of a learned family of Hebrew-type printers (d. 1903); Max Weinreich (1894-1969), founder of YIVO, the first institute for academic study of Yiddish language and culture; author Chaim Grade (1910-1972), as a representative of the avant-garde Yiddish-language cultural movement called Yung Vilne; Rachela Pupko-Krinsky (1910-2002), who with Abba Kovner and others resisted Nazis in the Vilna ghetto; and Lucy Dawidowicz (1915-1990), who, as an American-born literature student, sailed from New York to Vilna to study Yiddish language and culture – in September, 1938 – stayed until August, 1939, and lived to tell her tale.

Rachel Greenblatt has taught at Dartmouth College, Harvard and Wesleyan Universities. Rachel holds a Ph.D. in Jewish History from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and B.A. in Histor from Cornell. She has also studied biblical and rabbinic text at the Pardes Institute and at Matan - the Sadie Rennert Women’s Institute for Torah Study, both in Jerusalem. Rachel’s scholarship focuses on the cultural and social history of Jews in central and eastern Europe.

In partnership with Hebrew College Open Circles.