An NPR Best Book of the Year A Washington Post Best Book of the Year A Chicago Tribune Best Read
Monday, June 13, 2022 at 7 pm Advance registration required. Visit spertus.edu/voices for program details and to reserve your spot.
Spertus Institute is thrilled to again be working with writer and New Yorker cartoonist Ken Krimstein—and to be able to share his amazing latest project with you. Several years ago, we worked with Krimstein on an exhibition of archival materials and drawings from his graphic biography of Hannah Arendt, which went on to be a finalist for the Jewish Book Award. In the middle of our work together, he left on a mysterious trip to Vilnius. Sparked during that visit, his book When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers has us mesmerized. In the 1930s, the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Vilna (Vilnius), held a memoir-writing contest for Yiddish-speaking teens. They received 700 entries. The prize was to be awarded on September 1, 1939, the day Hitler invaded Poland. Long thought to be lost to the Nazis, the teens’ essays were in fact heroically smuggled into hiding. In 2017, they were found. Krimstein, notebook in hand, came to bring them to life. In When I Grow up, Krimstein shares stories from six of the young men and women. Almost cinematic, the narratives are full of humor, yearning, ambition, and teen angst. It’s as if half a dozen new Anne Frank stories suddenly came to light, framed by the dramatic story of their rediscovery. This is Spertus Institute’s 2022 Horwitz Family Presentation on Jewish History, generously endowed by the Horwitz Charitable Fund. This program is free thanks to donor support.
“Readers will leave with gratitude for Krimstein’s innovative vision of a time and place, rescued from oblivion.” — JEWISH BOOK COUNCIL 23