English ייִדיש
Board
Yisroel Bass (Secretary)
became interested in Yiddish shortly after his Bar-Mitzvah. He realized that if he didn’t begin to learn Yiddish, it would cease to have a meaningful future in his family. Now he speaks Yiddish both with his mother and with his new-born nephew. After 1.5 years of college in California, Yisroel moved to New York City where he studies Philosophy and Jewish Studies at the City College of New York. Outside of College, Yisroel studies the works of Chaim Zhitlovsky and other distinguished territorialists. At Yugntruf, he makes t-shirt designs for the online store. Moreover, he has began to work on bigger projects including a Yiddish Conference and a Yiddish agricultural program.
Julie Leye Blum
started learning Yiddish from her husband, Yankl-Perets, about six months after they started dating. Her responsibilities as a board member include working on the website, development, and the Yugntruf zhurnal (journal). Leye studied playwriting at Hunter College under playwright Tina Howe, and she works at the Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life as Senior Associate for Leadership and Engagement.
Yankl-Perets Blum (Chair)
Yiddish is not the first language Yankl-Perets spoke, but he considers that a mere fluke of history that he has dedicated himself to correcting. His grandfather was a typesetter in the Forverts, and his aunt (צו לאַנגע יאָרן) is a Yiddishist who was involved with Yugntruf and raised her kids with Yiddish. Yakov missed out on much Yiddish in his childhood years, but now he’s making up for lost time. After college he moved to New York City, and now speaks Yiddish with most of his friends there, many of whom he met through Yugntruf. All of his jobs also involve Yiddish, including freelancing as a Yiddish teacher and tutor. He is currently a linguistics student at the CUNY Graduate Center, is married to Leye (whom he taught Yiddish: see above) and lives in a “Yiddish Hoyz” on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. His activities at Yugntruf include being the chair of the executive board, working on the website, and helping provide Yiddish-learning opportunities.
Leizer Burko
began learning Yiddish in order to be able to speak with his grandparents in Israel, who didn’t know any English. He received a BA in Medieval an Renaissance Studies from NYU, where he was interested especially in Germanic Philology. Afterwards he received a MA in Germanic Studies (Medieval Germanic Languages) from the University of Minnesota. Yiddish he knows both from the YIVO Summer Program and from the Yiddish newspaper the Forverts, where he worked for three years as a typist and editorial assistant. Currently he is a doctoral student at JTS in New York, where he studies Jewish history and Yiddish literature.
Menachem-Yankl Ejdelman
is a red-headed 26-year-old who currently works in information technology. He is one of Yugntruf’s “Forzitser Emeritus”, a distinguished honor in and of itself. A native of New York, Menachem-Yankl was raised in a Yiddish-speaking household where English, pork and illegal fireworks were not tolerated. An alum of Rutgers University, the Pardes Institute in Jerusalem and YIVO, and a current Manhattan resident, Menachem-Yankl has been spearheading numerous Yiddish events all over the country. He also speaks Hebrew, German, Russian and Spanish. In his spare time, Menachem-Yankl reads the Forverts (Yiddish Forward), studies Calculus and plays soccer.
Jordan Kutzik
started learning Yiddish when he was about 16 in order to research the Holocaust from the perspective of Jewish survivor’s accounts and memorial books. After beginning to learn the language, however, he found that he was far more interested in the role of Yiddish in Jewish life and in the wealth of cultural and religious information, both through people and the written word, made available through it. Since discovering that the language, despite what he had grown up believing, is far from dead, he has dedicated much of his spare time to aiding networking among young Yiddish speakers. He is particulary interested in spreading resources to aid Yiddish speakers in raising Yiddish speaking children and is in the beginning stages of creating a multilingual website to that end. He joined Yugntruf in 2007 after being contacted by Arele Viswanath and became a board member in early 2008. He is a sophmore at Rutgers University majoring in Spanish and Linguistics with special interests in childhood bilingualism and Yiddish. He has studied Yiddish at Gratz College and at the Vilnius Yiddish Institute at Vilnius University.
Abby Miller
learned to speak Yiddish in college at the University of Texas in Austin. She was an intern at the National Yiddish Book Center in 2001 and a student at the YIVO Yiddish program in 2002. She holds a B.A. in Linguistics from Simon’s Rock College and a M.Ed. in Education of the Deaf from Boston University. She is currently a teacher of Deaf students with special needs in Framingham, Massachusetts.
Daneel Schaechter
has been speaking Yiddish since he was in his mother’s womb. He has become active in Yugntruf in recent years, and at 17, assumed a position on its Executive Board. His responsibilities as board member include working on the website, Yiddish Break, and Yiddish Vokh. He is finishing his senior year at Hunter College High School and will study in a yeshiva in Israel for a year before college. After his gap year, he will attend University of Pennsylvania, and hopes to build a Yiddish-speaking community at Penn, sing in the Penn Jewish A Capella group, The Shabbatones, and race on the Penn Cycling Team.
Arele (Arun) Viswanath
, 19, is a freshman at Harvard University and has been speaking Yiddish since he was a kleyn yingele. Born and raised in Teaneck, NJ, he enjoys reading, blading, ethnic people, and languages (although mame-loshn certainly takes the front seat). Arele hopes that all Jewish youth with an Ashkenazic background will study Yiddish language and culture in order to prod that pintele yid out of its hiding place in the recesses of the collective Jewish memory. He promises that it will enrich their lives and Jewish identities, as well as provide them with a distinctly Jewish sense of humor. Also, Yiddish is just awesome.
Meena-Lifshe Viswanath (Treasurer)
been speaking Yiddish her whole life – her first word (besides calling for a parent) was “ti-a,” a childish pronunciation of “tir,” or door, indicating that she wanted someone to open the door! She is now an undergraduate in MIT studying civil engineering. Her responsibilites on the board include publicity, the website, and Yugntruf’s archives.
Judith Waletzky
is a native speaker of klal (Standard) Yiddish. Raised in a Conservative Yiddish-speaking household in New York City, her life-long friendship with other Yiddish-speaking children helped sustain this strong cultural theme within her Jewish identity. From age 2-12, she was part of Yugntruf’s playgroup, Pripetshik, for children from Yiddish-speaking homes. Her family has been attending Yidish-Vokh since 1977 and she has gone every year of her life. As a member of the Executive Board since she was 15, she plans events and designs Yugntruf’s promotional materials. She was most privileged to be the Director of Yidish-Vokh 2008 and personally invites you to attend Yidish-Vokh 2009! Having just graduated from Northeastern University as an Architecture major, she finally has the time to enjoy wandering around Manhattan and imagining the future. On a side note she is thrilled that Feygi Zylberman is flying in from Australia and landing in Yidish-Vokh 2009!
Staff
Judith Bro Pinhasik (Coordinator)
has fourteen years’ experience in management and fundraising for health, education, environmental, and arts non-profit organizations. In the Yiddish world, Judith was Associate Director for Development for Living Traditions (KlezKamp). For ten years, she was the pro bono fundraiser and still sings with the Jewish People’s Philharmonic Chorus, which performs works entirely in Yiddish. Judith has a Certificate in Fundraising Management from New York University; she graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Maryland with a BA in Political Science (Minor in Journalism) and an MA in Film History and Criticism. An actor for fifteen years, Judith is also a competent Yiddish speaker; her son, Joey, is learning Yiddish and Jewish culture at the Workmen’s Circle Midtown Shule and at Yidish-Vokh. She has been a Yugntruf member–and has enjoyed shmuesing, singing, and sunning at Yidish-Vokh–for more than a decade.