Menachem Kipnis

1878 - 1942

photo credits: Wikimedia Commons

country of citizenship:  Poland
languages spoken, written or signed:  YiddishPolish

Menachem Kipnis (born 1878 in Ushomyr, Volhynia, d. 1942 in the Warsaw Ghetto), was a singer, critic, journalist, humorist, and photographer. He was also an ethnographer of Yiddish songs. As a tenor, Kipnis was a common performer of Yiddish songs. He died from a stroke in 1942. Menachem Kipnis' father was an educated cantor. From the age of eight, Menachem Kipnis lived with his older brother, who was also a cantor and is the father of the writer Levin Kipnis. Menachem Kipnis received a traditional Jewish education and sang with his brother in the choir of the Chernobyl synagogue. In this he impressed with his beautiful alto voice. Kipnis was a major contributor to the lore of the Wise Men of Chelm. He published a column of Chelm stories in the Warsaw Yiddish daily Haynt, pretending to be a journalist reporting from Chelm. There was a (possibly apocryphal) story that the women of Chelm asked Kipnis to stop doing this because their daughters could not find bridegrooms: every time they hear from shadkhn that the girl is from Chelm, they cannot stop laughing. He later published these tales in the book Khelemer mayses (Chelm Stories; Polish transcription: Chelemer Majses, 1930). Source: Wikipedia (en)

Series

There is nothing here

Create a new serie

Works

There is nothing here

Create a new work

Articles

There is nothing here

Human - wd:Q11777340

Welcome to Inventaire

the library of your friends and communities
learn more
you are offline