KHAYIM
EHRENRAYKH (HAYIM EHRENREICH) (May 10, 1900-March 31, 1970)
He was born in Sukhari, Mohilev
district, Byelorussia. He studied in
religious elementary school and in the Russian-Jewish school. At the age of ten (August 1910), he moved
with his parents to the United States.
He then began studying in public school in New York and in December 1910
he was the first pupil in the first Jewish national radical school in New
York. Under the influence of his
teacher, Yoyel Entin, he grew closer to the Yiddish theater. His older brother Tsvi-Hirsh, one of the
veterans of the Zionist labor movement in America, also exerted a major
influence on his life. In 1915 he
graduated from the Jewish school and became a teacher there. For a time he also attended the Jewish
teachers’ seminary. He graduated from
Stuyvesant High School and studied at City College (in the division for
journalism), while at the same time becoming a student at the American Academy
of Dramatic Arts. He was a stage manager
for Emanuel Heyber when the latter ran his studio in New York. In 1951 he was one of the founders and later
president of the American Israel Club, an unaffiliated association of Jewish
writers and artists. He was a member of
the Labor Zionists, the Jewish Socialist Alliance, the Forverts Association, as
well as a member of the administrative committee of the Jewish Culture Congress
and other cultural and community institutions.
He began writing in his early youth.
He published (1918-1919) children’s poetry in Y. Marinov’s Kunst (Art). In late 1922, after the publication of his
first article in Forverts (Forward),
he became a regular contributor to it.
Initially he published reportage pieces of New York life and was
employed in the news division of the newspaper.
He was appointed in 1925 editor of the theater page of the paper. He wrote treatments of Yiddish and non-Yiddish
theatrical performances, music, dance, and art and gained a name as an acclaimed
theater critic and journalist. Before
and after WWII, he traveled on several occasions through Europe and published
travel narratives in Forverts. He also published light features under the
pen name Herman Kvins and every Saturday (using the pen name Sydney Gordon)
drama tales from Jewish families in America (adapted from real events and
dubbed the Jewish “Family Location Service”).
He composed the one-act plays Vu
nemt men a kop? (Where do you get a head?) and Dos lid fun negev (Song of the Negev), among others, which were
staged with success. He received from
the World Jewish Culture Congress the B. Surovitsh Prize for his book Lender un mentshn, rayze bashraybungen
(Lands and peoples, travel descriptions) (New York: Tsiko, 1957), 292 pp. Subsequent work included: Farblibene verter (Forgotten words) (Tel
Aviv: Bukh-komitet, 1974), 156 pp.; Figurn
un profiln af der yidisher bine (Figures and profiles on the Yiddish stage)
(Tel Aviv: Bukh-komitet, 1976), 288 pp. He
died in Brooklyn, New York.
“The most important part of this
book,” noted Y. Varshavski [Isaac Bashevis Singer] concerning Lender un mentshn, “was his voyage
through the Scandinavian countries. This
trip was not very long, and it gives us an image of today, not of the
past. Another thing: Ehrenraykh did not
miss a single corner which might have been interesting for the reader,
especially a Jewish reader. He was not
satisfied just to visit several big cities, but he made trips to the distant North
where tourists rarely go, and in these distant and secluded places (where the
sun shines ‘in the middle of the night’) there are Jews there as well. Because Ehrenraykh used an airplane [to get
around], he was able to cover terrain that in earlier times would have taken
months. He established ties with the
Jewish communities and with all manner of Jewish personalities of various and
sundry sorts, and the reader of his book (as the reader of the Forverts earlier) gains a precise image
of Jewish life in Scandinavia.”
Sources:
Y. Shmulevitsh, in Forverts (New
York) (February 8, 1957); Y. Varshavski, in Forverts
(April 14, 1957); Z. Yefroykin, in Der
veker (New York) (October 1, 1957); N. Ben-Natan, in Davar (Tel Aviv) (March 7, 1958); Arbeter-ring boyer un tuer (Builders and leaders of the Workmen’s
Circle), ed. Y. Yeshurin and Y. Sh. Herts (New York, 1962), pp. 282-83; Sh.
Bontshek, in Idisher kemfer (New
York) (May 10, 1963).
Leyb Vaserman
[Additional
information from: Berl Kagan, comp., Leksikon
fun yidish-shraybers (Biographical dictionary of Yiddish writers) (New
York, 1986), cols. 413-14.]
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