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Pauline Wengeroff : ウィキペディア英語版
Pauline Wengeroff
Pauline Wengeroff (1833-1916), born ''Pessele Epstein'' is the author of a two-volume memoir chronicling her experience of Jewish Modernity in Russia in the late 19th century. She was born in 1833 in Bobrujsk, Belorussia (currently Belarus), and grew up in Brest-Litovsk, in Minsk. The book, ''Memoiren einer Grossmutter, Bilder aus der Kulturgeschichte der Juden Russlands im 19 Jahrhundert'' (''Memoirs of a Grandmother: Scenes from the Cultural History of the Jews of Russia in the Nineteenth Century''), was originally published in Yiddish by a German press in 1910.〔(Magnus, Shulamit S. "Pauline Wengeroff 1833-1916." Jewish Women's Archive. )〕
Her husband, Chonon (Afansyi) Wengeroff was director of the Commercial Bank in Minsk and served the City Council from 1880 to 1892. Wengeroff and her husband founded vocational schools for poor Jewish children in Minsk.
==Writing==
Wengeroff's memoirs are critical of the loss of women's power and family values in the modern Jewish family leading to the loss of Jewish culture as a whole. She was critical of the era of the Haskalah movement (Jewish intellectual and social enlightenment). Wengeroff drew inspiration from her struggles to maintain in Jewish family life in the face of her husband and children's ultimate rejection of Judaism.
〔(Magnus, Shulamit S. "Wengeroff, Pauline." in YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. )〕
Jewish cultural leaders Gustav Karpeles, a Jewish literary historian, Theodor Zlocisti, a German Zionist pioneer, and Solomon Schechter, President of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America praised the memoir.
Wengeroff's work first appeared in English in Lucy Dawidowicz's translation of several discontinuous excerpts from ''Volume 2 in The Golden Tradition: Jewish Life and Thought in Eastern Europe. New York: 1976.'' ''Memoirs of a Grandmother,'' was translated into English by Shulamit S. Magnus in 2010.〔Wengeroff, Pauline, and Shulamit S. Magnus. 2010. ''Memoirs of a grandmother scenes from the cultural history of the Jews of Russia in the nineteenth century''. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press.〕
Wengeroff also published stories of her life in ''Voshkhod'', a major Russian-language Jewish periodical at the time.

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