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Haim Nachman Bialik, Krakow, Poland, 1931
Haim Nachman Bialik, Krakow, Poland, 1931

Haim Nachman Bialik

Haim Nachman Bialik (1873 -1934), poet, essayist, writer, translator and editor, born in Radi (aka Hrada) near Zhitomir, Ukraine (then part of the Russian Empire), to a poor family. He was sent in 1880, after his father’s death, to his paternal grandfather with whom he lived for ten years. He was first instructed in a heder, later pursued his studies alone and furthered them from 1890 at a yeshivah in Volozhin, Lithuania. During his studies there Bialik started to withdraw from religion and read Russian poetry and world literature. He was also introduced to Haskalah literature and considered Ahad Ha-Am his greatest mentor. In 1891 he stayed for six months in Odessa and made the acquaintance of leading figures in literature with whom he later developed lasting relationships, among them Yehoshua Rawnitzki.
In 1893 Bialik married Manya Averbuch. In 1897, after failing in business, he became a teacher in Sosnowiec near the Prussian border. His despair with contemporary Jewish life was relieved with the First Zionist Congress and he welcomed the flourishing national enthusiasm. In 1900 he managed to get a teaching position in Odessa where he lived until 1921. There he joined the literary and Zionist circles. The Kishinev pogroms in 1903 deeply shocked him. In 1904 he was appointed editor of Ha-Shilaoh and moved to Warsaw. He held the position until 1909 and later served as editor of Keneset (1917) and Reshumot (1918-1921).
In 1921 Bialik went to Berlin where he lived until 1924 when he settled in Eretz Israel. In Palestine he founded the literary magazine Moznayim.

Bialik’s first poem, El ha-Zippor (To the Bird) was written in Volozhin. Upon his return to Zhitomir from his first stay in Odessa he wrote Bi-Teshuvati (On my Return, 1892) and El ha-Aryeh ha-Met (To the Dead Lion, 1893). Soon after his marriage he wrote the poems Al Saf Beit ha-Midrash (On the Threshold of the House of Study, 1894) and Ha-Matmid (The Talmud Student, 1894-95). During his time in Sosnowiec Bialik wrote some stories (among them, Aryeh Ba’al Guf) and the poem Akhen Hazir ha-Am (Surely the People is Grass, 1897). In Odessa he wrote the poems Zohar (Radiance, 1901); Metei Midbar (The Dead of the Desert, 1902), Al ha-Shehitah (On the Slaughter, 1903), Be-Ir ha-Haregah (In the City of Slaughter, 1904), Ha-Berekha (The Pool, 1905), Megillat ha-Esh (The Scroll of Fire, 1905) and Safi’ah (Aftergrowth, 1908), the story Me-Ahorei ha-Gader (Behind the Fence, 1909) and Zanah lo Zalzal (A Twig Fell, 1911). Together with Rawnitzki, Bialik compiled a selection of rabbinic lore, Sefer ha-Agadah (1908-1911). In Palestine he wrote the poem cycle Yatmut (Orphanhood, 1933).
He died in Vienna, Austria, where he had gone for medical treatment and was buried in Israel.

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Haim Nachman Bialik

Haim Nachman Bialik (1873 -1934), poet, essayist, writer, translator and editor, born in Radi (aka Hrada) near Zhitomir, Ukraine (then part of the Russian Empire), to a poor family. He was sent in 1880, after his father’s death, to his paternal grandfather with whom he lived for ten years. He was first instructed in a heder, later pursued his studies alone and furthered them from 1890 at a yeshivah in Volozhin, Lithuania. During his studies there Bialik started to withdraw from religion and read Russian poetry and world literature. He was also introduced to Haskalah literature and considered Ahad Ha-Am his greatest mentor. In 1891 he stayed for six months in Odessa and made the acquaintance of leading figures in literature with whom he later developed lasting relationships, among them Yehoshua Rawnitzki.
In 1893 Bialik married Manya Averbuch. In 1897, after failing in business, he became a teacher in Sosnowiec near the Prussian border. His despair with contemporary Jewish life was relieved with the First Zionist Congress and he welcomed the flourishing national enthusiasm. In 1900 he managed to get a teaching position in Odessa where he lived until 1921. There he joined the literary and Zionist circles. The Kishinev pogroms in 1903 deeply shocked him. In 1904 he was appointed editor of Ha-Shilaoh and moved to Warsaw. He held the position until 1909 and later served as editor of Keneset (1917) and Reshumot (1918-1921).
In 1921 Bialik went to Berlin where he lived until 1924 when he settled in Eretz Israel. In Palestine he founded the literary magazine Moznayim.

Bialik’s first poem, El ha-Zippor (To the Bird) was written in Volozhin. Upon his return to Zhitomir from his first stay in Odessa he wrote Bi-Teshuvati (On my Return, 1892) and El ha-Aryeh ha-Met (To the Dead Lion, 1893). Soon after his marriage he wrote the poems Al Saf Beit ha-Midrash (On the Threshold of the House of Study, 1894) and Ha-Matmid (The Talmud Student, 1894-95). During his time in Sosnowiec Bialik wrote some stories (among them, Aryeh Ba’al Guf) and the poem Akhen Hazir ha-Am (Surely the People is Grass, 1897). In Odessa he wrote the poems Zohar (Radiance, 1901); Metei Midbar (The Dead of the Desert, 1902), Al ha-Shehitah (On the Slaughter, 1903), Be-Ir ha-Haregah (In the City of Slaughter, 1904), Ha-Berekha (The Pool, 1905), Megillat ha-Esh (The Scroll of Fire, 1905) and Safi’ah (Aftergrowth, 1908), the story Me-Ahorei ha-Gader (Behind the Fence, 1909) and Zanah lo Zalzal (A Twig Fell, 1911). Together with Rawnitzki, Bialik compiled a selection of rabbinic lore, Sefer ha-Agadah (1908-1911). In Palestine he wrote the poem cycle Yatmut (Orphanhood, 1933).
He died in Vienna, Austria, where he had gone for medical treatment and was buried in Israel.

Written by researchers of ANU Museum of the Jewish People