Processed by Ezekiel Lipschutz. Edited by Rivka Schiller with the assistance of a grant from the Gruss Lipper Family Foundation. Described and encoded by Rachel Harrison as part of the CJH Holocaust Resource Initiative, made possible by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research©2011 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.
Electronic finding aid was encoded in EAD 2002 by Rachel S. Harrison in December 2011. Description is in English.
Title: Guide to the Papers of Khaykl Lunski (ca. 1881-ca. 1942) 1885-1941 bulk 1900-1935 RG 58
Predominant Dates:bulk 1900-1935
ID: RG 58 FA
Extent: 1.25 Linear Feet
Arrangement:
Ezekiel Lipschutz compiled and wrote a Yiddish finding aid for RG 3, Collection of Yiddish Literature and Language, ca. 1950. This finding aid was translated from Yiddish by Chava Lapin and edited by Rivka Schiller, 2007-2008 with the assistance of a grant from the Gruss Lipper Family Foundation. The Papers of Khaykl Lunski were extracted from RG 3 to form their own record group, RG 58.
The collection was formerly part of Record Group 3, from which it was extracted to form a separate record group, RG 58. The folder arrangement was maintained. RG 3 is a segment of a larger block of the Vilna YIVO records within which all folders are numbered consecutively. Record Group 3 begins at folder 1701 and continues through folder 3402, within which the folders of RG 58 are numbered from 2311 to 2350B. The Lunski materials are arranged in one series.
Languages: Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, Lithuanian, Polish, German, English, French
The Papers of Khaykl Lunski are comprised of Lunski’s manuscripts and correspondence and documents from the administrative files of the Strashun Library and the S. Ansky Historical Ethnographic Society in Vilna. These materials were part of the YIVO Archives in Vilna before 1941, which were recovered by YIVO in New York in 1947. The papers were reassembled in the YIVO Archives in New York circa 1950.
The materials in this collection are composed of Khaykl Lunski’s written works, as well as materials he collected for the Strashun Library. These include biographical profiles of rabbinic figures such as the Vilna Gaon, articles on the history of the Jewish community of Slonim, materials pertaining to various religious, social welfare, and educational institutions, administrative notes, minutes, bulletins, salary records, and bibliographic notes of the Strashun Library, correspondence with writers, rabbinical figures, educators, historians, religious institutions in Palestine, personal and family correspondence, and newspaper articles regarding Lunski.
The collection is 1.3 linear feet and dates from 1885-1941, the bulk of which are from 1900-1935. The majority of the materials are in Yiddish and Hebrew, although there are some materials in Russian, Lithuanian, Polish, German, English, and French.
Khaykl Lunski’s papers were presumably mixed with other looted collections from the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg unit. In 1945, these and other Jewish materials from Eastern Europe were placed by the U.S. Army in the Offenbach archival depot, from which they were subsequently redistributed among archives and libraries. The Lunski papers, together with volumes from the Strashun Library, were recovered after the war and brought to YIVO in New York in 1947. They were originally part of the collection arranged as RG 3, Collection of Yiddish Literature and Language, by Ezekiel Lifschutz, ca. 1950, who also created a finding aid in Yiddish. RG 3 is arranged as a reference collection in which documents from various individual collections that refer to Yiddish writers are assembled in folders according to the writer’s name. In 2007-2008 the finding aid for RG 3 was translated into English by Chava Lapin and edited by Rivka Schiller.
Biographical Note Khaykl Lunski was born on June 29, 1881(?) in Slonim, Russia (now Belarus). His father was a melamed (religious schoolteacher) and was descended from a rabbinical family from Koenigsberg (Krolewiec). From a young age, Lunski received a traditional Jewish education, attending kheyder and then the yeshivas of Slonim and Lida. In 1892 he came to Vilna, where he spent two years as a shammes (beadle) in a small synagogue. In 1895 Lunski began working for the Strashun Library, the Jewish library run by the Vilna kehilla (community), for which he collected books, rare manuscripts and historical documents. He remained there as a librarian until the liquidation of the library by the Nazis in 1941. In 1918, he assisted S. Ansky in establishing the Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society in Vilna and collected thousands of documents, books, pictures, pinkasim (record books of Jewish communities), and folklore materials for the Society and for its publications. He became secretary of the Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society in 1919 and was also an active member of the Bibliographic Center of the YIVO in Vilna. Lunski’s literary career began with some Zionist poetry, which he published in Luah Eretz-Yisrael (Calendar of Israel) in 1905. He began his Yiddish literary activities in 1917, publishing an essay in the Vilner Zamlbukh (Vilna Collection). In later years he published essays, articles, books on the history of Vilna Jews during World War I, biographies of rabbis and religious scholars, including the rabbi of Slonim and the Vilna Gaon, a memoir of S. Ansky, a catalogue of the Strashun Library, and several other works. He also collected thousands of books for the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Just prior to the Second World War, Lunski was in the process of writing a history of the Jewish community of Slonim. In all probability, this work was lost during the war. During the Nazi occupation of Vilna, the Strashun Library and YIVO Library and Archives were liquidated. Lunski and other members of Vilna’s Jewish intelligentsia were forced, along with other Jews from the Vilna Ghetto, to work for the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, a Nazi unit involved in looting Jewish cultural property in the occupied countries. Lunski was made to sort, pack, and ship thousands of Jewish books and archival materials from the Strashun Library, mainly to the NSDAP Institut zur Erfoschung die Judenfrage in Frankfurt a/Main. He continued writing while in the Vilna Ghetto, writing about the gravestones in the old Jewish cemetery in Vilna and about Jewish publishing in Vilna. He also kept a ghetto diary. These works also appear to have been lost. The information concerning Lunski’s death is contradictory. Shmerke Kaczerginski claimed that Lunski was deported to Treblinka together with his daughter Khana, while other accounts say that he was beaten to death in September 1942. References Abramowicz, Hirsz. Profiles of a Lost World: Memoirs of East European Jewish Life before World War II . Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press, 1999. Jeshurin, Efim, ed. Vilne: A zamelbukh gevidmet der shtot Vilne . (Vilna: A Collection Dedicated to the City of Vilna). New York: Vilner 367 Brentsh, Arbayter Ring, 1935. Kruk, Herman. The Last Days of the Jerusalem of Lithuania: Chronicles from the Vilna Ghetto and the Camps, 1939-1944 . New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2002. Congress for Jewish Culture, ed. Leksikon fun der nayer yidisher literatur . (Lexicon of the New Jewish Literature). New York: 1963. Khaykl Lunski was born on June 29, 1881(?) in Slonim, Russia (now Belarus). His father was a melamed (religious schoolteacher) and was descended from a rabbinical family from Koenigsberg (Krolewiec). From a young age, Lunski received a traditional Jewish education, attending kheyder and then the yeshivas of Slonim and Lida. In 1892 he came to Vilna, where he spent two years as a shammes (beadle) in a small synagogue.
In 1895 Lunski began working for the Strashun Library, the Jewish library run by the Vilna kehilla (community), for which he collected books, rare manuscripts and historical documents. He remained there as a librarian until the liquidation of the library by the Nazis in 1941. In 1918, he assisted S. Ansky in establishing the Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society in Vilna and collected thousands of documents, books, pictures, pinkasim (record books of Jewish communities), and folklore materials for the Society and for its publications. He became secretary of the Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society in 1919 and was also an active member of the Bibliographic Center of the YIVO in Vilna.
Lunski’s literary career began with some Zionist poetry, which he published in Luah Eretz-Yisrael (Calendar of Israel) in 1905. He began his Yiddish literary activities in 1917, publishing an essay in the Vilner Zamlbukh (Vilna Collection). In later years he published essays, articles, books on the history of Vilna Jews during World War I, biographies of rabbis and religious scholars, including the rabbi of Slonim and the Vilna Gaon, a memoir of S. Ansky, a catalogue of the Strashun Library, and several other works. He also collected thousands of books for the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Just prior to the Second World War, Lunski was in the process of writing a history of the Jewish community of Slonim. In all probability, this work was lost during the war.
During the Nazi occupation of Vilna, the Strashun Library and YIVO Library and Archives were liquidated. Lunski and other members of Vilna’s Jewish intelligentsia were forced, along with other Jews from the Vilna Ghetto, to work for the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, a Nazi unit involved in looting Jewish cultural property in the occupied countries. Lunski was made to sort, pack, and ship thousands of Jewish books and archival materials from the Strashun Library, mainly to the NSDAP Institut zur Erfoschung die Judenfrage in Frankfurt a/Main. He continued writing while in the Vilna Ghetto, writing about the gravestones in the old Jewish cemetery in Vilna and about Jewish publishing in Vilna. He also kept a ghetto diary. These works also appear to have been lost.
The information concerning Lunski’s death is contradictory. Shmerke Kaczerginski claimed that Lunski was deported to Treblinka together with his daughter Khana, while other accounts say that he was beaten to death in September 1942.
References
Abramowicz, Hirsz. Profiles of a Lost World: Memoirs of East European Jewish Life before World War II . Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press, 1999.
Jeshurin, Efim, ed. Vilne: A zamelbukh gevidmet der shtot Vilne . (Vilna: A Collection Dedicated to the City of Vilna). New York: Vilner 367 Brentsh, Arbayter Ring, 1935.
Kruk, Herman. The Last Days of the Jerusalem of Lithuania: Chronicles from the Vilna Ghetto and the Camps, 1939-1944 . New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2002.
Congress for Jewish Culture, ed. Leksikon fun der nayer yidisher literatur . (Lexicon of the New Jewish Literature). New York: 1963.
Clippings - Newspaper clippings, Documents - Correspondence, Documents - Financial records, Documents - Manuscripts, Documents - Minutes, Documents - Notes, Documents - Official documents, Elijah ben Solomon, 1720-1797, Jewish history, life, and culture, Lithuania, Lunski, Khaykl, Poland, Rabbis, Shatzky, Jacob, Strashun, Mathias, d. 1885, Strashun Library, Vilnius (Lithuania), YIVO Archives
Access Restrictions: Permission to use the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archivist.
Use Restrictions:
Permission to publish part or parts of the collection must be obtained from the YIVO Archives. For more information, contact:
YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011
email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
Acquisition Method: Recovered by the YIVO Archives in New York in 1947.
Separated Materials: There is no information about materials that are associated by provenance to the described materials that have been physically separated or removed.
Related Materials: The Papers of Khaykl Lunski were originally part of RG 3, Yiddish Literature and Language Collection, with which they share a provenance. RG 55, Yiddish Writers and Journalists Union, was also originally part of RG 3, as was RG 57, Papers of Nahum Shtif. The YIVO Archives also has other archival and library materials from the Strashun Library, of which Lunski was the long-time librarian, as well as several books by Lunski.
Preferred Citation: Published citations should take the following form: Identification of item, date (if known); Papers of Khaykl Lunski; RG 58; folder number; YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.
documents about the Magid
by-laws of the Shomrei Torah Society
resolutions at the meetings of the Valk-kloyz of Ha'azinu
materials about: Agudas Akhim
YEKOPO
HIAS
Agudas Marbitsey Toyre
Jewish Teachers' Seminary
Old Peoples’ Home
Burial Society “Bring Salvation”
about needy persons who have asked for help
the Minsk "Godl"
the first anniversary of the great Gaon, R. Raphael Gordon
bibliographical notes
proposed rules for the administration of the library
minutes of an administrative session
copy of a bulletin: To American Jewry, to American writers and Vilna Landslayt
letters to the library administration and to M. Strashun
notes on the history of the library
notes on books received
salary records
description of the library, 3/18/1941
copies of letters to:
Antokolski
Shimon Hakohen, 1898
Yosef Opatoshu, 1939
letters from:
Rabbi Yitshok Blaser to Yekusiel Mankevitch, 1905
A. M. Bernstein, 1925-1930
letters from: Khaya, Lifshe and Abraham Yankev Brock (Bruk)
to: Khaya Brock (Lunski's future wife)
Refoel Nathan Kuliszewski
Fanny Abramowitz
letters from:
Benjamin Lunianski, 1910
Chaim Liberman, 1936-1940 (also copy of a reply by Lunski)
Hayim Libovits, 1911
Yom Tov Lewinski
J. A. Daynovski, 1936-1937
from Mordkhe Note Wigodski, 1902
Rabbi Nisn Waksman
Mordkhe Vaytsl, 1910
Yitshok Broydes, 1933
Rabbi Shmuel Yehoshua Vaytsl
K. Likhtenshteyn, 1933
Yankev ben Yankev
letters from:
L. Etinger to S. Dubnow, 1894
Gershon Pludermacher
Rabbi S. Fried
Hillel Zeitlin, 1923, 1936
Pinkhas Kon, 1926-1927
Rabbi Shimon Kaniak, 1934-1936
Yosef Kaplan, 1914
Pesakh Kaplan, 1928-1935
Yitskhok Rivkind, 1938
Sara Reisin
letters by Lunski and copies of letters to:
Pupko, 1937
Z. Reisen
Khana Shapiro, 1926 (a few words at the Shloyshim)
letters from:
Pinye Abramowitz
A. Z. Baron
Mendl Buski
Eliezer Bukstein
Shloyme Berman
Sheyne and M. Garfinkl
Itke Dworetzki
Hirsh Harbowski
Rivke Heilpern
Roza Hirsh
Rabbi M. Halinski
Nathaniel Woliwelieki
A. Volfson
Yitskhok Volfson
David Hakoen Triviush
Hayim Libovits
Shamay Lisvitski
F. Margolin
Salutski
Yitskhok Stotland
Tsvi Moyshe Skidl
Yosef Poretski
J. Palatnik
Friedman
J. Frenkel
David Yidl Kafion
Sholem Mordkhe Katzenellenbogen
Hayim Klein
Rabbi Eliezer Lipa Klepfish
Mordkhe Raduminski
Kh. Shapiro
Tsvi Sharubin (?)
Yitskhok Yankev Shvartzberg
Berl Schumache
Yitskhok Shtatlikh
Strashun
A. L. Sheynhoyz
copies of letters to:
Reb Aaron
A. Aysenshtat
Yosef Berger
H. Berman
Yitshok Broydes
S. Ginzburg
Nathan Gensh
Rabbi Khayim Oyzer Grodzienski
Shmuel Hurwitz
Israel Heilprin
Rabbi Shmuel Yehoshua Vaytsl
Moyshe Zabalski
Yankev ben Yankev
A. Litwin
Hayim Libovits
Nakhmen Mayzel
A. Morewski
S. Niger
Eliyohu Soyfer
Dr. Eliasohn
S. Poznanski
J. Pupko
Shoshana Persits
Hillel Zeitlin
Franz Kabler
Yefim Jeshurun
H. Kameniecki
Rabbi Shimen Kaniak
H. Rubinow
Dr. Yitskhok Rivkind
Yitskhok Rubinstein
Dr. Emanuel Ringelblum
Ringelbaum
Hirsh Sharubski
Dr. Yankev Schatzki
Rivke Schenkman
M. Strashun
letters to:
the Writers Union, 1919-1926
Library of the Hebrew University (copy)
to the trustees of the Vilna Burial Society
some of the letters to his landlord
medical records
official reports and certificates
about books in the Strashun Library
about Lunski's own books
notes about the students of the Gaon of Vilna, personalities of Slonim and notes about authors
copies of letters to: Refoel Rabinowicz
Hayim Jeshurun
greetings in honor of Prof. Moshe Schorr's 60th birthday
dictionary, 1900-1909
accounts
synagogue
care of sick
debts, 1926
address book
Jewish National and University Library
Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society
Hevrah Mefitsei Haskalah (Society for the Promotion of Culture)
Friends of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem
copy of a letter by Lunski to Koylel Khabad in Jerusalem about his late father
other correspondence
draft of a will
epitaph for Lunski's mother's gravestone
protest against Soviet requisition of flour in Vilna, 1919
letters from Jacob Waisbord at Hotel Amdurski to Mankiewicz, 1903
from Zvi Kriviski to his father
from the Teachers' Seminary, Vilna, 1923
memoirs concerning Ratner
Pesakh 1919 (about A. Veiter)
memoirs of the year 1917