Warsaw and Yiddish: Europe’s Once Largest Jewish City Cover Image

Warsaw and Yiddish: Europe’s Once Largest Jewish City
Warsaw and Yiddish: Europe’s Once Largest Jewish City

Author(s): Tomasz Dominik Kamusella
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Language studies, Language and Literature Studies, Jewish studies, History of Judaism, Nationalism Studies, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: ethnolinguistic nationalism; language politics; politics of script; Warsaw; Yiddish

Summary/Abstract: Prior to the Katastrofe (Yiddish for ‘Holocaust’), Warsaw functioned as the world’s capital of Yiddishland, or the Ashkenazic civilization of Yiddish language and culture. In the terms of absolute numbers of Jewish inhabitants, at the turn of the 20th century, New York City surpassed Warsaw. Yet, from the perspective of cultural and political institutions and organizations, Warsaw remained the center of Europe’s Jewish life. This article offers an overview of the rise of Warsaw as such a center, its destruction during World War II, and the center’s partial revival in the aftermath, followed by its extinction, which was sealed with the antisemitic ethnic cleansing of Poland’s last Jewish communities in 1968. Twenty years after the fall of communism, beginning at the turn of the 2010s, a new awareness of the Jewish facet of Warsaw’s and Poland’s culture and history has developed during the past decade. It is a chance for a new opening, for embracing Jewish culture, Yiddish and Judaism as inherent elements of Polish culture and history. This country’s history and culture was not created exclusively by Catholics, as ethnonationalists are wont to claim incorrectly. Hence, the essay is intended to serve as a corrective to this anachronistic preconception.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 6
  • Page Range: 1-29
  • Page Count: 29
  • Language: English