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YIVO is founded at conferences of Jewish scholars and educators
in Berlin and Vilna. An American branch of YIVO is also established.
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YIVO
dedicates its new building at 18 Wiwulskiego Street in Vilna.
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YIVO begins publication of YIVO-bleter, a Yiddish-language scholarly journal.
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YIVO's tenth anniversary is commemorated with a conference attended by scholars
from all over the world. The institute establishes the Dr. Tsemakh Shabad
aspirantur, a training program for young Jewish studies scholars.
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YIVO helps standardize spelling in Yiddish by establishing rules for Yiddish
orthography.
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Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, YIVO's international headquarters
are relocated to New York City, to the HIAS building on Lafayette Street. YIVO
later moves to a building on West 123rd Street. |
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The Nazis take over YIVO's Vilna headquarters and plunder thousands of books
and documents for use in a proposed "Institute for the Study of the Jewish Question,"
in Frankfurt am Main. YIVO scholars are ordered to select materials for shipment
to Germany, but in heroic acts of resistance, hide many rare items. |
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The first volume of YIVO Annual of Jewish Social Science, an English-language
scholarly journal, is published in New York. That same year, YIVO director Max
Weinreich publishes Hitler's Professors, a stinging condemnation of the
compliance of German academicians with Nazism.
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With the help of the U.S. Army, YIVO begins the recovery of materials appropriated
by the Nazis during World War II. YIVO's exhibition, Jews in Europe: 1939-1946,
provides some Americans with their first look at documentary evidence of the
Holocaust.
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YIVO publishes Uriel Weinreich's College Yiddish, the first English-language
textbook for the study of Yiddish at the university level. A year later, it
publishes Der oytser fun der yidisher shprakh (Thesaurus of the Yiddish
Language) by Nahum Stutchkoff.
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YIVO moves to its third U.S. home, the former Vanderbilt mansion at 1048 Fifth
Avenue.
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YIVO provides archival material for use in the trial of Nazi Adolf Eichmann in
Jerusalem. YIVO and Yad Vashem begin publication of the Guide to Jewish History
Under Nazi Impact, the first of twelve bibliographical guides to literature on the
Holocaust.
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YIVO establishes the Max Weinreich Center for Advanced Jewish Studies for graduate-level study of
Yiddish language and literature and Jewish social science. The Uriel Weinreich Program
in Yiddish Language, Literature and Culture, an intensive summer program, is
inaugurated at Columbia University.
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YIVO publishes Max Weinreich's monumental Di geshikhte fun der yidisher shprakh
(The History of the Yiddish Language)in Yiddish. In 1982, the University
of Chicago publishes the first two volumes in English translation.
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Image Before My Eyes, a major exhibition devoted to photographs of Polish Jewish life,
is organized by YIVO and the Jewish Museum. YIVO will go on to publish a book and
produce a documentary film based on the exhibition. |
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YIVO responds to a new public interest in traditional Jewish music, or klezmer, by
inaugurating the first Yiddish Folk Arts Program, bringing together young musicians with
seasoned performers of the genre. The program, popularly known as KlezKamp, also
teaches other Yiddish folk arts, such as dance, calligraphy, paper-cutting, and cooking. |
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Long-lost YIVO archives and library materials are rediscovered in the Lithuanian National Book Chamber (formerly a Catholic church) in Vilnius, Lithuania, where they have been secretly safeguarded
by librarians throughout the Soviet period. |
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YIVO acquires a major new collection, the Bund Archives and Library of the Jewish Labor
Movement. |
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The first shipment of YIVO archival materials discovered in Vilnius are received by
YIVO in New York for cataloging, microfilming, and preservation. |
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YIVO moves into its fifth American home, the Center for Jewish History, at 15 West 16th
Street. |