Put Moshe ( Stavsky Moshe ) ( 1884 , Antopol of the Grodno province - June 24, 1964 , Tel Aviv ) - Israeli writer and journalist in Yiddish and Hebrew . Anna Margolin husband.
| Put Moshe | |
|---|---|
| Heb. משה תוי | |
| Birth name | Stavsky Moishe |
| Date of Birth | 1884 |
| Place of Birth | Antopol |
| Date of death | June 24, 1964 |
| Place of death | Tel Aviv |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
Content
Biography
Born in the town of Antopol in the family of Jacob-Shmuel Stavsky and Hai-Riva Lifshits . Received a traditional Jewish religious education. In 1904 he began writing his first stories in Yiddish. In 1907 he moved to Warsaw , where in 1908 his first story was published in the newspaper Der Veg. He worked as a journalist "Forverts" and "Unzer Lebn."
In 1911 he emigrated to Eretz Yisrael . He worked in the library of the gymnasium in Tel Aviv , was engaged in agriculture in the kibbutz . He collaborated with the Hebrew editions of Ha-Poel, Ha-Zair, Akhdut and Moledet. He published his articles and notes on the pages of the newspaper "Davar".
His works have been translated into Russian, Polish, German, French and other languages.
Works
- "Idilen un builder" ("Idylls and pictures") (1909)
- "A quiet un Under derderuilungen" ("Shawl" and other stories ") (1910)
- “Stenome Frind” (“Silent Friends”, 1931)
- Wen tog Fargate (When the Day Comes in, 1931)
- "Araber derceiln" ("Arabs tell", 1933)
Family
- Sister - Evgenia Yakovlevna Stavskaya (1891—?) - Soviet gynecologist, Doctor of Medical Sciences, professor [1]
Notes
- ↑ [1]
Links
- http://www.rujen.ru/index.php/STAVSKIY_Moshe - article from the Russian Jewish Encyclopedia
- [2]