THE NOSTALGIC APPEAL OF
THE YIDDISH FOLK SONG
by
ELIE DELIEB
So often, Chazanim sing the same over-familiar repertoire when undertaking a Yiddish folk-song. True, many fine compositions abound, by Rund and Jaffe, Golub, Secunda and Rumshinsky, as sung by eminent Chazanim such as Hershman or Rosenblatt. But it would be well to consider the effect of a "Sh'tet'l Melody" on the public - "Mein Sh'tetele Beltz" is one popular example - although this too has been weakened by repetition.
The Yiddish amatory folk-song, or love-song, can be likened in some measure to the Classical Lied: there is no crudity, but tender subtlety. While it must be remembered that the Yiddish masses then were, for the most part working class, they could be astonishingly refined in their approach to 'affairs of the heart', and the pathos and yearning expressed by a few composers - poets would be a better ascription - merits examination.
One such folk-composer was the late, lamented Polish poetcomposer, Mordechai Gebirtig, of whom little has yet been published. He was born in Crakow (in Western Galicia, which, until 1938, contained 50,000 Jews) in 1877, and eked out a humble and miserable life as a woodworker in a furniture factory. His wife, Blumke, and their three daughters, Shifrah, Chavah and Leah, are remembered by dedications in his work. They frequently performed his songs, which. became famous throughout Poland although not many people knew the composer. Gebirtig himself could not write musical notations: he either piped the tunes on a tin-whistle, or tapped them out with one finger on a piano, for a local musician, Hoffman, to transcribe.
When the Nazis occupied Crakow, Gebirtig and his family fled to a nearby village, where he composed a number of his "Ghetto Songs" - one is famous: 'Undzer Sh'tet'l Brent'. In 1941, he was driven back into the Ghetto, and perished on the 4th of July, 1942, at the age of 65. His daughters, Chavah and Leah, died on the 5th of January, 1945, but the fate of his wife and other daughter, Shifrah, is unknown.