S. Ansky
Encyclopedia
Shloyme Zanvl Rappoport (1863, Chashniki –1920, Otwock
), known by his pseudonym S. Ansky (or An-sky), was a Russian Jewish author, playwright, and researcher of Jewish folklore.
{| class="infobox" style="clear:right; float:right; width:15em; margin:0 0 1.25em 1.25em;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"
|style="padding:0;"|
{|style="background:transparent; text-align:center; margin:0.5em 0.5em 0; font-size:11px;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"
|style="small"|Part of a series of articles on the
|-
!style="font-size:160%; padding-bottom:0.5em;"| Jewish Labour Bund
|-
|style="padding-bottom:0.5em;"| אַלגעמײַנער ײדישער אַרבעטער בּונד אין ליטע פוילין און רוסלאַנד
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
1890s to World War I
Russia Austria-Hungary
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Interwar years and World War II
Belarus
Latvia
Lithuania
Poland Romania
Soviet Union
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
After 1945
International Jewish Labor Bund
Branches: Australia France Israel
United Kingdom
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
People
Viktor Alter Henryk Ehrlich
Esther Frumkin Vladimir Medem
Noah Meisel
Anna Rozental Szmul Zygielbojm
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Press
Arbeiter Fragen
Arbeiterstimme
Der yidisher arbeyter
Folkstsaytung
Lodzer veker
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Associated organisations
Klain Bund
Kultur Lige
Morgnshtern
S.K.I.F.
Tsukunft
Tsukunft shturem
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Splinter groups
Communist Bund (Poland) Communist Bund (Russia)
Communist Bund (Ukraine)
Komtsukunft
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Categories
Otwock
Otwock is a town in central Poland, some southeast of Warsaw, with 42,765 inhabitants . It is situated on the right bank of Vistula River below the mouth of Swider River. Otwock is home to a unique architectural style called Swidermajer....
), known by his pseudonym S. Ansky (or An-sky), was a Russian Jewish author, playwright, and researcher of Jewish folklore.
{| class="infobox" style="clear:right; float:right; width:15em; margin:0 0 1.25em 1.25em;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"
|style="padding:0;"|
{|style="background:transparent; text-align:center; margin:0.5em 0.5em 0; font-size:11px;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"
|style="small"|Part of a series of articles on the
|-
!style="font-size:160%; padding-bottom:0.5em;"| Jewish Labour Bund
Bundism
Bundism is a Jewish socialist and secular movement, which originates from the General Jewish Labour Bund founded in the Russian empire in 1897. Bundism was an important component of the social democratic movement in the Russian empire until it was violently suppressed by the Communist party after...
|-
|style="padding-bottom:0.5em;"| אַלגעמײַנער ײדישער אַרבעטער בּונד אין ליטע פוילין און רוסלאַנד
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
1890s to World War I
Russia Austria-Hungary
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Interwar years and World War II
Belarus
General Jewish Labour Bund in Belarus
The Belarusian chapter of the General Jewish Labour Bund was among political parties forming the government and parliament of the Belarusian People's Republic gaining independence in 1918....
Latvia
General Jewish Labour Bund in Latvia
The General Jewish Labour Bund in Latvia was a Jewish socialist party in Latvia, adhering to the political line of the General Jewish Labour Bund.-The beginnings of the Latvian Bund:...
Lithuania
General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania
The General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania was a Jewish socialist party in Lithuania, adhering to the political line of the General Jewish Labour Bund....
Poland Romania
General Jewish Labour Bund in Romania
The General Jewish Labour Bund in Romania was a Jewish socialist party in Romania, adhering to the political line of the General Jewish Labour Bund. Founded in 1922, shortly after the establishment of Greater Romania, it united Jewish socialists in Bukovina, Bessarabia and the Romanian Old Kingdom...
Soviet Union
Social Democratic Bund
The Social Democratic Bund was a short-lived Jewish political party in Soviet Russia. It was formed as the Russian Bund was split at its conference in Gomel in April 1920. The Social Democratic Bund was formed out of the rightwing minority section of the erstwhile Russian Bund...
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
After 1945
International Jewish Labor Bund
International Jewish Labor Bund
The International Jewish Labor Bund is a New York-based international Jewish socialist organization, based on the legacy of the General Jewish Labour Bund founded in the Russian empire in 1897 and the Polish Bund that was active in the interwar years. The IJLB is composed by local Bundist groups...
Branches: Australia France Israel
Arbeter-ring in Yisroel - Brith Haavoda
The Arbeter-ring in Yisroel – Brith Haavoda is the Israeli branch of the International Jewish Labor Bund, launched in 1951.-Secretaries:Its first secretary was Isachar Artuski , a former Polish Communist who had joined the Bund in 1935...
United Kingdom
Jewish Socialists' Group
The Jewish Socialists' Group is a Jewish socialist collective in Britain, formed in the 1970s.-History:The Jewish Socialists' Group is a Jewish socialist collective in Britain, that was founded in Manchester/Liverpool in 1974-1977 as lobby group campaigning against the fascist National Front and...
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
People
Viktor Alter Henryk Ehrlich
Henryk Ehrlich
Henryk Ehrlich was an activist of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party , member of the Petrograd Soviet, Warsaw City Council and member of the executive committee of the Second International...
Esther Frumkin Vladimir Medem
Vladimir Medem
right|250px|thumb|Picture of Medem from the Medem Library in ParisVladimir Davidovich Medem, né Grinberg , , was a Russian Jewish politician and ideologue of the Jewish Labour Bund...
Noah Meisel
Noah Meisel
Noah Meisel was a Jewish Bundist politician and doctor in Latvia. He worked in the Latvian Department of Health. Meisel, also a Daugavpils city council member, was elected for the Bund in the three first Latvian Parliament in 1922, 1925 and 1928, but was not reelected in 1931.Meisel was arrested...
Anna Rozental Szmul Zygielbojm
Szmul Zygielbojm
Szmul Zygielbojm was a Jewish-Polish socialist politician, leader of the Bund, and a member of the National Council of the Polish government in exile...
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Press
Arbeiter Fragen
Arbeiter Fragen
Arbeiter Fragen was a monthly journal of the Jewish Bundist trade unions active in Poland in the 1920s and 1930s. It was published in Yiddish language, with some articles printed in Polish and Latinized Yiddish...
Arbeiterstimme
Arbeiterstimme
Arbeiterstimme was the central organ of the General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia. It appeared from 1897 to 1905, as an underground publication. The Bund resumed the publication, now as a legal paper, after the February revolution....
Der yidisher arbeyter
Der yidisher arbeyter
Der yidisher arbeyter was a Yiddish-language periodical. It began as a Jewish workers journal in Vilna. In December 1896, Vladimir Kossovsky became the editor of the publication. With the sixth issue of the journal, published in March 1899, it became an organ of the General Jewish Labour Bund...
Folkstsaytung
Folkstsaytung
The Folkstsaytung was a Yiddish language daily newspaper which served as the official organ of the General Jewish Labour Bund in Poland. Folkstsaytung was published from Warsaw. It began publication in 1921 and officially lasted until the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939. Thereafter it continued on...
Lodzer veker
Lodzer veker
Lodzer veker was a newspaper of the General Jewish Labour Bund in Łódź, Poland. In 1922, it was taken over by the Jewish Communist Labour Bund. The General Jewish Labour Bund re-started the newspaper in October 1926, as a weekly....
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Associated organisations
Klain Bund
Klain Bund
Klain Bund was a youth organization in the Russian empire, connected to the General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia. Klain Bund was founded in 1903....
Kultur Lige
Kultur Lige
The Kultur Lige was a secular socialist Jewish organization associated with the Jewish Labour Bund, established in Kiev in 1918, whose aim was to promote Yiddish language literature, theater and culture...
Morgnshtern
Morgnshtern
Morgnshtern was a Jewish sports organisation in interbellum Poland, politically linked to the Bund. It was founded in the end of 1926. Morgnshtern increased significantly in influence in the period just preceding the Second World War...
S.K.I.F.
Sotsyalistishe Kinder Farband
The Sotsyalistishe Kinder Farband was founded in Eastern Europe as the youth organisation of the Jewish Labour Bund, a Jewish Socialist political party...
Tsukunft
Tsukunft
Tsukunft or Cukunft or Zukunft was the youth organization of the General Jewish Labor Union . It was founded in the year 1910 and in the year 1916 it was officially called Yugnt-Bund Tsukunft. Their newspaper was the Yugnt veker. In 1921 Tsukunft suffered a split, in which a pro-Communist group...
Tsukunft shturem
Tsukunft shturem
The Tsukunft shturem was the self-defence organisation of the Tsukunft, the youth organisation of the General Jewish Labour Bund in Poland, between 1929-1939. Its centre was Warsaw, where the shturem had 200-300 members....
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Splinter groups
Communist Bund (Poland) Communist Bund (Russia)
Communist Bund (Russia)
The Communist Bund was a Jewish political party in Soviet Russia. It was formed as the Russian Bund was split at its 12th conference in Gomel in April 1920...
Communist Bund (Ukraine)
Communist Bund (Ukraine)
The Communist Bund was a Jewish Communist political party in Ukraine and Bielorussia, formed after a split in the General Jewish Labour Bund . In late 1918 Bund branches in cities like Bobruisk, Ekaterinoburg and Odessa formed 'leftwing Bund groups'...
Komtsukunft
Komtsukunft
Komtsukunft was a Jewish communist youth organization in Poland in the early 1920s. It was a splinter-group of the Bundist Tsukunft movement. Komtsukunft broke away from Tsukunft in late 1921, as Tskunft's had withdrawn its application for membership of the Communist Youth International had been...
|-
|style="padding:0; border-top:solid 1px #aaa;"|
Categories