Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Noach Prylucki

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Noach Prylucki

Died
  
1944

Role
  
Politician

Noach Prylucki

Noach (Nojach) Prylucki or Noach Prilutski (born October 1, 1882 in Berdichev, died on August 12, 1941 in Vilnius) was a Jewish Polish politician from the Folkspartei. He was also a Yiddish linguist, philologist, lawyer and scholar of considerable renown. Prylucki was a respected attorney and was said to have had "leadership over the scattered (non-Zionist) national clubs, societies, and groups".

In 1910–1936, Prylucki was the editor of the Folkist newspaper Warszawer Togblat (The Warsaw Daily), later renamed as Der Moment. In 1916 he was the founder and then became the leader of the Jewish People's Party in Poland (Folkspartei), and was elected the same year at the municipal elections (under German occupation), where the Folkspartei gained 4 seats in Warsaw. In 1918 he became a member of the Provisional Council of State of the Kingdom of Poland. Elected as a member of the Legislative Sejm in 1919, he had to resign his seat because he was not a Polish citizen. In 1922–1927 he was reelected to the Sejm on the Bloc of National Minorities list.

Prylucki authored numerous books on Yiddish folklore, philology, culture and theatre, published in Warsaw. He once said of Yiddish theatre that it did not arise simultaneously with theatre in other European "national" languages; he conjectured that this was at least in part because the Jewish sense of nationality favored Hebrew over Yiddish as a "national" language, but few Jews of the period were actually comfortable using Hebrew outside of a religious/liturgical context.

After Soviet forces took Vilna in January 1941, he was appointed the head of the YIVO Institute.

He was eventually murdered by the Gestapo in Vilnius (Vilno) in August 1941.

References

Noach Prylucki Wikipedia