Rikudah Potash

1906–1965

by Frieda Johles Forman

Kadya Molodowsky (L) Ida Maze (C), Rokhl Korn (R), poets who were an integral part of Yiddish literary creativity in all of its major centers of the twentieth century.
Courtesy of Sylvia Lustgarten.
In Brief

Born in Tshenstokhov, Poland, Rikudah Potash began to write Yiddish poetry in the wake of the 1918 Lemberg pogrom. In 1934, after a divorce, she moved to Palestine, where she continued her illustrious writing career, maintaining Yiddish as a language despite the stigma around it in Zionist communities. Her writing covered tragedy, Biblical women, and the aftermath of the Holocaust. Eventually, she focused on the newly arrived Separdhi and Mizrahi immigrant communities in Jerusalem, sharing their lives and stories with the Yiddish world. She was crowned “the Poetess of Jerusalem” by the famous Yiddish writer Sholem Asch. 

Introduction

Crowned “the Poetess of Jerusalem” by Sholem Asch (1880–1957), Rikudah Potash wrote in Yiddish about the landscape of her beloved city and its diverse ethnic communities. She brought to Yiddish readers the rarely seen Middle Eastern Jewish woman. Potash’s Jerusalem, both the heavenly and the earthly, was a capacious universe that she inhabited, body and soul, for thirty years.

Early Life

Potash was born into a prosperous and enlightened family from Tshenstokhov (Częstochowa), Poland. In 1904 the family moved to Skale-bay-Oytsov (Ojców, 16 km north-northwest of Cracow), the “Switzerland of Poland,” where Rikudah was born in 1906 and which inspired her early nature poetry. Her father, Yekutiel Potash, was a correspondent for Unzer Lebn; her older brother, Mordekhai Narkiss (1898–1957), a curator and art historian, was director of the Bezalel Museum in Jerusalem from 1932. Potash was raised in the traditional Jewish spirit but became enamored of Polish culture, which was reflected in her early writing.

When she was sixteen her poetry was published in “Swiat” (Cracow). In the aftermath of the Lemberg pogrom of November 1918 (which surpassed the Kishinev pogroms of 1903–1905 in brutality), she returned to Yiddish, familiarizing herself with its literature, particularly the new Yiddish literature. Her debut piece, “Tsvey lider” (Two Poems), was published in 1922 in the Lodzer volksblat. At this time she began to write and publish Yiddish poetry on nature and Sabbath motifs, short stories, children’s tales, and novellas about the lives of girls. These appeared in a variety of publications, including Shvelen, Ilustrirte Vokh, and Lodzer Tageblat. She began a mystery drama, “Skales,” produced years later in Israel, and a comedy, “Durkh der vant” (Through the Wall). She also translated Polish literature.

Life in Palestine

In 1924 Potash moved to Łódź, where she joined the Lodzer Young Poets group and became the first wife of the poet and critic Khayim-Leyb Fuks (1897–1953). Their daughter, Avivit, was born in 1926. Having divorced Fuks, she and her daughter emigrated to Palestine in 1934, settling in Jerusalem. From 1935 to the end of her life she was the librarian of the art division of the Bezalel Museum in Jerusalem. The renowned Yiddish poet and critic Jacob Glatstein (1896–1971) recognized in Potash’s free verse an original voice, whimsical, eccentric, at times impatient. He praised her role in creating a new Yiddish in a new Jewish land, which “warmed Yiddish with the brightness of Hebrew.” In her lifetime Yiddish was officially shunned because of its diasporic associations.

Her anthropomorphic poetry and prose animated every creature and object. Alive with purpose and intelligence, her writing moves lavishly over time and place. In the tradition of the Ze’enah u-Re’enah (an exegetical rendering in Yiddish of the Torah she-bi-khetav: Lit. "the written Torah." The Bible; the Pentateuch; Tanakh (the Pentateuch, Prophets and Hagiographia)Pentateuch, haftarot, and the Lit. "scroll." Designation of the five scrolls of the Bible (Ruth, Song of Songs, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther). The Scroll of Esther is read on Purim from a parchment scroll.Five Scrolls, written for women) Biblical personalities are given new interpretation and expression. Mother Sarah tenderly urges Hagar to visit Ishmael; Jephthah’s daughter is cosseted and welcomed as a guest in the next world; Mother Rachel goes to the Me’ah She’arim quarter in Jerusalem to comfort grieving women.

In her collection Fun Kidron Tol (1952) Potash turns to modern Israel and conveys tragic realities in domestic vernacular: A mother who has lost a son in war places his shoe on the kitchen windowsill; another patches the torn shirt of her fallen son. “My Sister’s Children,” one of the poems in her lamentations for family and friends who perished in the Holocaust, concludes with “Are we permitted to write poems now?—/Poems with invented rhyme yet!”

The Poetess of Jerusalem

She devoted the last years of her creative life to short stories and character portraits of the various ethnic groups in Jerusalem, which were published in the Yiddish and Hebrew press. Her only prose collection, In Geslekh fun Yerushalyim (In the Alleys of Jerusalem, 1968), published posthumously, centers on the vibrant ethnic communities in Jerusalem. A spellbinding storyteller, she populates her tales with the first generation of Descendants of the Jews who lived in Spain and Portugal before the explusion of 1492; primarily Jews of N. Africa, Italy, the Middle East and the Balkans.Sephardi and Lit. "Eastern." Jew from Arab or Muslim country.Mizrahi immigrants from Yemen, Salonika, Bukhara, Kurdistan, and Turkey and their Israeli-born children. Her stories are brief, dramatic moments disclosing the essence of life among the Mizrahi residents of Jerusalem. In a rich linguistic mix she portrays the struggles between the young who embrace the freedom of modern Israel and their parents, who are caught between two cultures.

Potash is unique among Yiddish writers in her attention to Mizrahi women: In “Prikhah’s Complaint to God” a clever but unschooled woman is derided in her attempts at independence; In “Shraby’s Daughter Comes Home” a young soldier is rebuked by her father for her devotion to the state, as he insists that “girl soldiers” delay the arrival of the Messiah. Her stories, like her poems, tell of old men married to impoverished young girls whose only escape is fantasy. When love, freely chosen, enters their lives, her characters are moved to transcend their past sorrows and shape new realities.

Her mother, Chana, died in Jerusalem in 1944 and Rikudah Potash died in Jerusalem on May 15, 1965.

Selected Works

Korman, Ezra. In Yidishe dikhterins antologiya. Chicago: 1928.

Vind Oyf Klavishen. Łódź: 1934.

Fun Kidron Tol. London: M. Oved, 1952.

Moled iber Timna lider. Jerusalem: Sifre Tarshish, 1959.

Yaffe, Mordekhai. Eretz Yisroel in der Yidisher literatur. Tel Aviv: Y.L. Perets, 1961.

Lider. Tel Aviv: Yidishn liṭeraṭn un zshurnalisṭn farayn in Yiśroel, 1967.

Geslekh fun Yerusholayim. Tel Aviv: Yiśroel-bukh, 1968.

“Five Stories from In the Alleys of Jerusalem.” In Frieda Forman et al. Found Treasures: Stories by Yiddish Women Writers. Toronto: Second Story Press, 1994.

Potash’s writings also appear in periodicals: Goldene keyt, Tsukunft, Yidishe kultur, Unzer vort, among others.

Bibliography

Chaver, Yael. What Must Be Forgotten: Yiddish in Zionist Palestine. Hebrew, Jerusalem; English, Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2004.

Glatstein, Jacob (Yankev Glatshteyn). In der Velt mit Yidish (In the World with Yiddish). New York: 1973.

Kagan, Berl. Leksikon fun der nayer Yidisher literatur. New York: R. Ilman-Kohen, 1968.

Reyzen, Zalmen, ed. Leksikon fun der Yidisher literatur, prese un filologye (Lexicon of Yiddish Literature, Press, and Philology), vol. 1 Vilna: B. Ḳletsḳin, 1928.

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How to cite this page

Forman, Frieda Johles. "Rikudah Potash." Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 27 February 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on April 18, 2024) <http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/potash-rikudah>.