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Zelig Hirsch Kalmanovich (Latvian: Zēligs Hiršs Kalmanovičs) (1885–1944) was a Litvak Jewish philologist, translator, historian, and community archivist of the early 20th century. He was a renowned scholar of Yiddish. In 1929 he settled in Vilnius where he became an early director of YIVO.

Zelig Hirsch Kalmanovich
Born1885
Kuldīga, Russian Empire
(modern-day Latvia)
Died1944
Vaivara concentration camp, Reichskommissariat Ostland
(modern-day Estonia)
Occupation
  • Philologist
  • translator
  • historian
Known forDiary of daily life in the Vilna ghetto

He was incarcerated in the Vilna Ghetto where he became an observant Jew. During his time in the ghetto, Kalmanovich kept a secret diary which is one of the few primary sources recording day-to-day life. His diary stressed the efforts of the community to retain their humanity in the face of oppression. For example, on October 11, 1942, he wrote the following entry in his diary:

On Simhat Torah eve at the invitation of the rabbi, I went for services in a house that had formerly been a synagogue and was now a music school ... I said a few words: 'Our song and dance are a form of worship. Our rejoicing is due to Him who decrees life and death. Here in the midst of this small congregation, in the poor and ruined synagogue, we are united with the whole house of Israel, not only with those who are here today ... And you in your rejoicing, atone for the sins of a generation that is perishing. I know that the Jewish people will live ... And every day the Holy One, blessed be He, in His mercy gives us a gift which we accept with joy and give thanks to His holy name.[1]

During the Nazi occupation, he was forced to work at the YIVO offices under Nazi supervision, sorting through the pillaged contents of Vilna's libraries and preparing selected volumes for shipment to Germany; these labourers, known as the Paper Brigade, managed to save a portion of these documents from destruction. He was sent to the Vaivara concentration camp in Estonia, where he died in 1944.


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  1. As quoted in: Stephen Howard Garrin, "'But I forsook not thy precepts'" (Ps. 119:87): Spiritual Resistance to the Holocaust," in Jonathan C. Friedman (Ed.), The Routledge History of the Holocaust (pp. 337-347). London: Routledge, 2011. p. 340.

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На других языках


[de] Zelig Kalmanovitch

Zelig Hirsch Kalmanovitch (geboren 1885 in Goldingen, Russisches Kaiserreich; gestorben 1943 im KZ Vaivara, Estland) war ein lettischer, jüdischer Philologe und Übersetzer. Er war einer der bedeutendsten Jiddisten des 20. Jahrhunderts.
- [en] Zelig Kalmanovich

[ru] Калманович, Зелик Файвушевич

Зелик-Гирш Файвушевич Калманович (идиш ‏זעליק קאַלמאַנאָװיטש‏‎[3][4], лит. Zelikas Kalmanovičius[5]; 30 октября 1881[6], Гольдинген, Курляндская губерния, Российская империя — 1944, около Нарвы, генеральный округ Эстония, рейхскомиссариат Остланд, Германия) — еврейский историк, переводчик, филолог, архивист, исследователь языка идиш, один из первых директоров Еврейского научного института (сегодня — YIVO). Один из авторов аналитической записки о нееврейском происхождении караимов, которую он предоставил для немецких оккупационных властей в 1941 году[7].



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