KHANE
(ANNE) VIDERMAN (b. June 20, 1899)
She was born in the town of Ushitse (Ushytsya), Podolia
district, Ukraine, into a well-to-do family.
During the civil war she escaped into Russia. In 1924 she settled in Canada. She debuted in print with a story entitled “Der
eynzamer kinstler” (The lonely artist) in Keneder
odler (Canadian eagle) in Montreal, where she became a regular
contributor. She penned stories, humorous
sketches, monologues, and feature pieces.
In book form: Umetiker sheykhl
(Ubiquitous smile) (Montreal, 1946), 208 pp.; Alte heym un kinder yorn, derinerungen, monologn, humoreskes,
dertseylungen (The old country and childhood years, experiences,
monologues, humorous sketches, stories) (Montreal, 1960), 144 pp.
Sources:
Y. Y. Sigal, in Keneder odler
(Montreal) (March 5, 1947); Ida Maze, in Keneder
odler (May 29, 1947); Kh. Viderman, “Ot azoy bin ikh gevorn a shrayberin”
(That’s how I became a writer), Kender
odler (April 27, 1959).
[Additional
information from: Berl Kagan, comp., Leksikon
fun yidish-shraybers (Biographical dictionary of Yiddish writers) (New
York, 1986), cols. 236-37.]
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