Srul Bronshtein was a Romanian and Soviet Yiddish-language poet.
Biography
Srul Bronshtein was born into a Jewish baker's family in the village of Ştefăneşti, Bessarabia Governorate — at the time a southwestern province of Imperial Russia. As a child, he received a traditional cheder education. In the 1930s, Bronshtein lived in Bucharest, where he debuted with poetry and criticalessays in the Yiddish-language literary periodicals of Romania. Among other magazines, he published in Di Vokh, edited by prose writerMoyshe Altman, and in Shoybn, edited by the poet and theatrical directorYankev Shternberg. Shternberg organized a circle of Yiddish literati, predominantly from Bessarabia, which in addition to Srul Bronshtein included poets Tzvi Tzelman, Zishe Bagish and prose writersIkhil Shraybman, Arn Ocnitzer, Azriel Roitman, among others. It was in Bucharest that Bronshtein's first collection of Yiddish verse was published in 1938, entitledMoldove, mayn heym. It was followed by the second collection Kh'ob geefnt breyt di toyern a year later. A large selection of his poetry appeared in the Yiddish-language periodicals of Bucharest throughout the 1930s, including Shpitol-Lider, Fabrik-Lider, Tfise-Lider, the balladMalkutse Der Gasnfroys Farveynt Harts, and a long poem, Banakhtike Asfalt-Leygers. In 1940 Bessarabia was annexed by the Soviet Union, and Bronshtein, as with almost all other Bessarabian writers, moved back home. Later in World War II, he was mobilized into the Red Army at the outbreak of the German invasion and suffered a penetrating lung wound from shrapnel the following year. Bronshtein died of the wound in winter 1943 at a military hospital in Tashkent, Uzbek SSR. Despite his humble, provincial background, Bronshtein's poetics are pointedly urbane, with typical modernistic themes of anomie,
Published works
Moldove, mayn heym: lider un poemen, illustrated by А. Lebas, Bucharest, 1938
Kh'ob geefnt breyt di toyern, Bucharest, 1939
Critical works about Bronshtein
Ikhil Shraybman, Zibn yor mit zibn khadoshim, Editura Ruxandra, Chişinău, 2003
Sarah Shpitalnik, Bessarabskiy Stil', Russian-language bibliographic information on Bessarabian Yiddish authors, Editura Ruxandra, Chişinău, 2005