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David Milofsky - Eternal people

Here you can read online David Milofsky - Eternal people full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1998, publisher: University Press of Colorado, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Eternal People tells the story of Joseph Abrams, a Ukrainian Jew who finds his way to America at the end of the nineteenth-century. During a break from his studies in Russia, he returns to his shtetl in the Ukraine to find it is the target of a Cossack raid. The village is destroyed by the Cossack attack and Josephs family murdered, but he manages to escape and make his way by river and train to Germany. Eventually, Joseph emigrates from Europe to America, where he lands a job at the Jewish Daily Forward under its famous editor Abraham Cahan, who had been a member of the idealistic Am Olam (eternal people) movement in his youth. Eventually he sends Joseph to Wisconsin as a correspondent to report on the last existing Am Olam commune in Gays Mills. In Wisconsin, Joseph is reunited with his uncle and joins the movement, eventually becoming secretary to the leader of the commune, Edward Liberty. Things begin to heat up for Joseph, however, when he falls in love with Libertys daughter, and yet he finds himself torn by desire for another woman. At the same time, the commune is threatened by the followers of a travelling missionary named Jacob Kleinschmidt, known as the Moses of Menomonee, who preaches a message of hate which eventually leads to a showdown with the Jewish idealists that results in a terrible and destructive fire. As the novel boils toward a climax, Joseph is forced to make some difficult choices, choices which nevertheless bring him more fully into his own adulthood. Drawing on original research into idealistic movements of the nineteenth century, the book is a provocative coming-of-age novel rich with historical detail.

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title Eternal People A Novel author Milofsky David - photo 1

title:Eternal People : A Novel
author:Milofsky, David.
publisher:University Press of Colorado
isbn10 | asin:0870815024
print isbn13:9780870815027
ebook isbn13:9780585098982
language:English
subjectJews--Wisconsin--History--19th century--Fiction, Religious communities--Wisconsin--Fiction, Jews--Persecutions--Ukraine--Fiction, Historical fiction, Bildungsromane, Jewish fiction.
publication date:1998
lcc:PS3563.I444E74 1998eb
ddc:813/.54
subject:Jews--Wisconsin--History--19th century--Fiction, Religious communities--Wisconsin--Fiction, Jews--Persecutions--Ukraine--Fiction, Historical fiction, Bildungsromane, Jewish fiction.
Page iii
Eternal
People
David Milofsky
University Press of Colorado
Page iv
Copyright 1998 by the University Press of Colorado
International Standard Book Number 0-87081-502-4
Published by the University Press of Colorado
P.O. Box 849
Niwot, Colorado 80544
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
The University Press of Colorado is a cooperative publishing enterprise
supported, in part, by Adams State College, Colorado State University,
Fort Lewis College, Mesa State College, Metropolitan State College of
Denver, University of Colorado, University of Northern Colorado,
University of Southern Colorado, and Western State College of Colorado.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the
American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of
Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1984
Portions of this work were published originally in a slightly
different form in the Madison Review and Prairie Schooner.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Milofsky, David.
Eternal people: a novel / David Milofsky.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-87081-502-4 (cloth: alk. paper)
1. JewsWisconsinHistory19th centuryFiction. 2. Religious
communitiesWisconsinFiction. 3. JewsPersecutionsUkraine
Fiction. I. Title.
PS3563.I444E74 1998
813' .54dc21Picture 2Picture 3Picture 4Picture 5 98-24620
Picture 6Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9Picture 10Picture 11CIP
07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 99 98 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Page v
For Jean,
and to the memory of my parents
Page vii
preface
Eternal People is a work of the imagination rather than a scholarly treatise on Jewish immigration in the nineteenth century, yet it has historical underpinnings. There was a socialist agrarian movement of Russian Jews in the United States known as Am Olam, and its members did establish a number of idealistic communities throughout the West, though the most successful of them lasted only a few years. My interest in the Am Olamniks was piqued by a passing reference to the movement in Irving Howe's masterful work on Jewish immigration, World of Our Fathers. Yet when I tried to find more on the subject, I found that very little had been written. Howe's source was an article by Abraham Menes in a YIVO annual entitled "The Am Oylam Movement," and there were one or two other articles in such obscure periodicals as The Jewish Messenger, The Overland Quarterly, and The Reflex. Though Am Olam had clearly been important in nineteenth-century Russia, it was nearly forgotten to contemporary America, even among Jewish scholars.
Far more useful for my purposes were original documents from settlers who had actually participated in the movement. Of course, everyone interested in the subject should simply be grateful for the existence of YIVO, the Institute for Jewish Research, and I am. I also deeply appreciate the assistance of Fannie Zelcer, archivist of the American Jewish Archives in Cincinnati, who graciously supplied me with copies
Page viii
of journals of early settlers in agricultural colonies in the West. The Oregon Historical Society very kindly sent me a copy of Helen E. Blumenthal's unpublished thesis on New Odessa, the most successful of the Am Olam colonies, and Mrs. Blumenthal was very generous in answering my many questions about the colony, both by mail and over the telephone. The late Joe Sinaiko shared his memories of immigration from Russia in the early years of the twentieth century, as well as his extensive knowledge of farming in the upper Midwest.
Perhaps the most curious and intriguing member of New Odessa was its leader, a Russian positivist named William Frey. The most important work on this mysterious visionary is Avraham Yarmolinsky's A Russian's American Dream, though Abraham Cahan, who knew Frey, discusses him at some length in his autobiography, The Education of Abraham Cahan. The largest collection of material relating to Frey is in the New York Public Library. I am grateful to the research librarians of that remarkable institution for generously allowing me free run of the Frey Collection during the long, hot summer of 1981. In addition, Lewis Greenberg's exhaustive The Jews in Russia allowed me to understand precisely what the Jewish settlers had undergone in their native land and why they were willing to leave.
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