Abraham Golomb (1888 in Lithuania â 1982 in Los Angeles, USA; Yiddish ÃÂÃÂèÃÂàÃÂæÃÂç ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂ) was a Yiddishist teacher and writer. He wrote many pedagogical articles and books, and also published, primarily in Yiddish, about his belief in the need for retaining Jewish distinctiveness in the Diaspora and the centrality of Hebrew and Yiddish as the languages of the Jewish people. His work has not been widely translated into English.
Golomb was affiliated with the Psychology and Education section of YIVO in Vilna, under the direction of by Leibush Lehrer, and was also active in the Kultur-lige. From 1921 to 1931, he was the director of the Vilna Teachers Seminary.
After a living in Palestine from 1932 to 1938, Golomb emigrated to Winnipeg, Canada, where he became principal of the Peretz School. In 1944 he moved to Mexico City, where for 20 years he ran the Yiddish schools. Finally, in 1964 he and his wife Rivke Savich Golomb moved to Los Angeles, California.
Selected works
- á¹¾i fun a fish iz a frosh geṿorn: zikhroynesàfun mayn ḳindheyá¹Â. (How a fish became a frog: memories of my childhood) Bialystok: Ferlag Ḳulá¹Âur lige, 1921.
- Dos ershá¹Âe mol in ṿald : zikhroynesàfun mayn ḳindheyá¹Â. (The first time in the forest: memories of my childhood) Bialystok: Ferlag Ḳulá¹Âur lige, 1921.
- ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂçâ ÃÂÃÂâÃÂàäÃÂàÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂçàäÃÂÃÂç : âáÃÂÃÂâà/ Eybiḳe ṿegn fun eybiḳn folḳ : eseyn (Eternal ways of eternal people: essays). Buenos Aires : Yoyvl-ḳomiá¹Âeá¹Â, 1964.
- æÃÂÃÂÃÂéàêçÃÂäÃÂê / [äÃÂÃÂ] ÃÂ. ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂàTsṿishn tḳufesÃÂ. (Between epochs). Tel-Aviv: Y.L. Peretz, 1968.
References
Further reading
- ÃÂéÃÂèÃÂÃÂ, ÃÂâäÃÂÃÂ, 1885þ1967. æÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂâàÃÂÃÂâéÃÂâÃÂàäÃÂàÃÂâäÃÂàÃÂéÃÂèÃÂà(Abraham Golomb, bibliography / compiled by Ephim. M. Jeshurin) Buenos-Aires (1964)
- Avrum Golomb Der Pedagog (Abraham Golomb the Pedagogue). Archive of the Yiddish Literary Journal Kheshbn, 91 (1978). Archive of the Yiddish Literary Journal Kheshbn, The UCLA Center for Jewish Studies, UC Los Angeles. http://escholarship.ucop.edu/uc/item/3wn6m8sd (in Yiddish)