![]() ![]() A 1933 “autobiography” by a malnourished fifth grader, Bebe Epshtein, describes how her parents forced her to eat by telling her beguiling stories. When “I would open my mouth,” she wrote, “they would pour in food.”Īlmost as intriguing as the cache is the serpentine story of the documents’ rescue and rediscovery, much of which had been known before but which has been updated with the new find. When the Nazis occupied Lithuania from 1941 to 1944, they were determined to incinerate or grind up the country’s Jewish collections, particularly those at YIVO, which from 1925 to 1940 in Vilna was the world’s foremost library of Jewish life in Eastern Europe. (In Lithuania alone, 90 percent of the prewar Jewish population of 160,000 was murdered.) With characteristic incongruity, though, they decided to save a third of the YIVO collection for a research center near Frankfurt that would study “the Jewish question” even if they planned to make sure the Jews would be extinct. They needed Yiddish speakers to analyze and select the materials, and deployed 40 ghetto residents like Sutzkever and another raffish poet, Shmerke Kaczerginski, as slave laborers. Risking death by a firing squad, this “paper brigade” rescued thousands of books and documents. When the Germans were pushed out of Lithuania by the Soviets, survivors like Sutzkever spirited some hidden treasures to New York. (The Soviets frowned on anything evocative of ethnic or religious loyalties.) Meanwhile, a gentile librarian, Antanas Ulpis, who was assembling the remnants of the national library in a former church, St. George’s, stashed stacks of Jewish materials in basement rooms to hide them from Stalin’s enforcers. He is, as a result, regarded by YIVO as a kind of Oskar Schindler of document rescue. Last year, the entire basement collection was transferred to the Martynas Mazvydas National Library of Lithuania, which had reopened in a grand colonnaded building, and in May officials there informed Mr. Brent, of the new trove of 170,000 documents. They had been stored in a separate church basement room and had never been evaluated because none of the assigned archivists could read Yiddish or Hebrew. Lithuania has chosen to hold onto all the Jewish documents in the library’s Judaica center as part of its national heritage. But it has allowed YIVO to digitize them for the use of the general public - and to have select items to display in Manhattan later this month. “It’s going to take decades for scholars to analyze all of this,” said Mr. What is a water carrier, a Talmud student might ask? Fishman, who this month published “The Book Smugglers: Partisans, Poets and the Race to Save Jewish Treasures From the Nazis.”Īmong the more mundane curiosities that were salvaged is a weathered agreement from 1857 between a yeshiva in Vilna and a union of water carriers. In Vilna at that time, water carriers were needed to deliver buckets of water to homes from available wells. The ragtag Jewish water carriers formed a guild, which promised to donate a Torah scroll and a set of Talmuds to the yeshiva if members were given a room of their own, rent-free, for worship. The crew that rescued these records largely did not survive the war. Some 34 of the 40 people viewed by experts as having been members of the “paper brigade” died, according to Mr. Kaczerginski was killed in 1954 in a plane crash in the Andes.įishman, some in death camps like Treblinka or in labor camps or in more random fashion. Sutzkever had an illustrious career as a poet in Israel and died at age 96 in 2010. When I replaced the Fjord with a Sea of Deep Regret, the tree went back to normal, and it was again sliced in exactly the same way.Ulpis, who helped save the documents later found in the church basement, died in 1981.Below this notice, the article may be out of date. The lesson learned here is that mostly likely at most two variables completely define the random seed for terrain gen (assuming other possibilities like date, number of players, size of the total world don't factor in): Location and previously existing terrain world (edit).Īnother interesting thing that happened was when I first created the Fjord biome, a tree in the bordering Highlands was cut in half. I don't mean similar, I mean it was exactly the same. The same mountains, the same cave, the same waterfall, everything. The second attempt generated exactly the same biome. Luckily, we had plenty of Infinium, so I just flattened it to another sea of regret and tried again. I was trying to expand my club world with Frigga's Fjord, and got the typical disgusting mountain range. Apologies if this is already common knowledge, but I didn't find anything mentioning this in lots of Google searches. ![]()
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