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2012 | 4(244) | 470-489

Article title

Scholar, Zionist, And Man Of Letters: Reuven Fahn (1878-1939/1944) In The Caraite Community Of Halicz (Notes On The Development Of Jewish Ethnography, Epigraphy And Hebrew Literature)

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Reuven Fahn (1878–1939/1944), was a self-made historian, ethnographer, epigraphist, poet, writer, journalist, and ardent Zionist of Galician origin. Already in his youth he could speak and write literary Hebrew, German, Yiddish, and apparently, Polish and Ruthenian (Ukrainian). At the age of 13 he was a Jewish nationalist and admirer of Erets Yisra’el. He published his first journalist report in Hebrew in the periodical “Ha-Magid” in 1893. At the age of 16 he published a poem entitled Beit Yisra’el. In 1897 he and moved to Halicz which was at that time a shtetl with significant Rabbanite and Karaite community. Fahn left an impressive literary heritage: ca. 14 separate monographs and brochures, and more than 200 articles and reports in Hebrew, Yiddish, and German. These publications included journalist reports, travel notes, poems, short stories, legends, feuilletons, and scholarly essays. The importance of Fahn’s scholarly publications on the Karaites is also strengthened by the fact that many of the sources used by Fahn (e.g. tombstone inscriptions, manuscripts, and architectural monuments) were later lost or destroyed. During Fahn’s lifetime his belletrist publications attracted much attention and criticism on the part of famous Jewish litterateurs such as Samuel Agnon, Joseph Brenner, or Gershom Bader. The aim of this paper is to analyse Reuven Fahn’s publications dedicated to the Karaite community of Halicz and to remind scholarly public about the importance of the contribution to the field of Jewish studies and Hebrew literature of Reuven Fahn – writer, scholar, Zionist and a victim of Nazi persecution. Readers can also find interesting information on the contacts between Fahn and important twentieth–century Jewish figures such as Samuel Agnon, Majer Bałaban, Sholem Asch, Samuel Poznański and others.

Year

Issue

Pages

470-489

Physical description

Contributors

  • Uniwersytet w Tybindze (Tübingen)

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-233e5752-2404-4eba-b9d8-50831bda4d35
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