Fefer, Itzik

Fefer, Itzik

 

(Isaak Solomonovich Fefer). Born Sept. 10 (23), 1900; died 1952. Soviet Jewish poet.

Fefer was born in the village of Shpola, in what is now Cherkassy Oblast. He became a member of the CPSU in 1919 and in the same year joined the Red Army as a volunteer. He fought in the Great Patriotic War (1941–45).

Fefer began publishing in 1919. The Civil War was the main theme of his lyric verse collections Chips of Wood (1922) and Of Myself and Those Like Me (1924) and of his narrative poems Josl Schinder (1925), The Boys (1925), and The Death ofll’ia (1928). The narrative poems Stone Upon Stone (1925), Layers (1932), and Great Borders (1939) were devoted to socialist construction. Fefer also wrote the plays The Chimney Sweep (1926) and The Sun Does Not Set (1947).

WORKS

Lieder, balades, poemes. [Foreword by G. Remenik.] Moscow, 1967.
In Russian translation:
Stikhi i poemy. Moscow, 1958.
Stikhi. Moscow, 1969.

REFERENCES

Dobrushin, I. “Fefer der Dichter.” In In iberboi. Moscow, 1932.
Remenik, G. “Der Dichter fun Sieg.” Sovetish Heimland, 1975, no. 9.