Brenner, Joseph Haim (1881-1921)
Hebrew
novelist.
Brenner was born in the Ukraine and after studying in a yeshivah, he
went to Gomel where he joined the Bund, a Jewish left-wing organization.
Later he served three years in the Russian army, but at the outbreak of
the Russo- Japanese war, he deserted and escaped to London. There he worked
in a printing shop, founded a Hebrew language periodical and became active
in the Po'alei Zion, a socialist-Zionist movement. All this time he had
been writing.
After working as an editor in Lemberg, Poland, he emigrated to Erez
Israel in 1909. During World War I he became an Ottoman citizen so that
the Turkish authorities would not expel him from the country. Brenner
lived and worked as an editor and writer in many different towns in Erez
Israel. He was murdered during the Arab riots on May 2, 1921.
Brenner
wrote many short stories and novels. He described the life of the Jews
in Russia, the plight of the Jewish workers in England, and the state
of the Jewish community in Jerusalem that lived on charity in the form
of the halukkah. He was concerned about social conditions and described
his subjects negatively, no doubt hoping to arouse his readers to change
things.
He translated some of the world's classic books into Hebrew and both
wrote and translated in Yiddish. In his writings, Brenner made an important
contribution to the development of modern Hebrew.
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