Ițic Șvarț (Yiddish: יצחק שװאַרץ, 1906–2001), commonly known by the pen name I. Kara (י. קארא) or in English as Itzik Schwartz-Kara, was a Romanian Jewish cultural critic, historian, poet, and playwright, who published in Yiddish, Romanian, and other languages.[1]

Biography

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He began his writing career as a correspondent for the Bucharest Yiddish-language newspaper Undzer veg.[1] He soon began sending cultural criticism and literary pieces to a variety of publications: Tshernovitser bleter in Chernivtsi, Shoybn, and Ivo-bleter in Vilnius.[1]

During World War II he joined the Red Army.[1] He later participated in the Soviet march on Berlin.[1] After the war ended he worked as a teacher in a Gymnasium in Bacău, Romania.[1] He relocated to Bucharest and became a playwright for the Yiddish theatre there.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bickel, Shlomo (1961). Rumenye: geshikhṭe, liṭeraṭur-ḳriṭiḳ, zikhroynes (in Yiddish). Buenos Aires: Poʻale Tsiyon-hitaḥdut. pp. 351–2.