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Guide to the Records of the Yidisher Lerer Fareyn (Yiddish Teachers Union), Vilna, RG 50

Processed by Fruma Mohrer, with the assistance of a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Finding aid edited, encoded and posted online with the assistance of a grant from the Gruss Lipper Family Foundation

YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
15 West 16th Street
New York, NY 10011
Email: archives@yivo.cjh.org
URL: http://www.yivo.org

© 2006 YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. All rights reserved.

Electronic finding aid was converted to EAD version 2002 by Yakov Sklyar in September 2006. EAD finding aid customized in ARCHON in 2012. Description is in English.

Collection Overview

Title: Guide to the Records of the Yidisher Lerer Fareyn (Yiddish Teachers Union), Vilna, RG 50

ID: RG 50 FA

Extent: 2.2 Linear Feet

Arrangement: The collection is divided into 3 series:

Abstract

The Yidisher lerer fareyn (Yiddish Teachers Union) in Vilna was a professional association of secular Yiddish teachers, which supported the ideology of the TSYSHO school system. The union engaged in a wide range of activities in order to promote the interests of its member teachers. Its membership, although composed primarily of Yiddish teachers expanded gradually to include teachers from religious and Hebrew schools. Founded in 1915 the union lasted until c. 1940. The records of the Yiddish Teachers’ Union reflect its activities from 1910-1940.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

Series I includes a comprehensive file on individual Yiddish teachers in Vilna. It provides a view of the type of problems encountered on a daily basis by the union offices. These problems include job placement, salary certificates and other personal documents. The file is arranged in Yiddish alphabetical order by name of teacher.

Series II includes correspondence with organizations such as the Tsentraler Bildungs Komitet, ISHO, TSYSHO, Vilna Kehilla; a correspondence file with various organizations arranged in Yiddish-alphabetical order by name of school, organization or place-name; a correspondence file arranged chronologically only, because of the absence of organization name, place-name or name of school; and finally, a file on the teachers’ strike of 1929.All the correspondence files are fragmentary but provide a fairly clear representation of the range of contacts and activities exercised by the Union.

Series III includes various types of records.

a)Teachers’ applications arranged in alphabetical order by teachers’ name. The applications include statistical information on the teachers’ background, Education, family status.

b) Contribution lists from individual schools in alphabetical order, including lists of membership dues paid by each school periodically. Some religious schools in Vilna are among the contributors.

c) Minutes of YTU executive board, 1921-1933, as well as resolutions and reports relating to general issues. These minutes are rich in information and reflect all of the YTU’s range of activities.

d) Financial records which include bookkeeping records, 1923-1934.

e) Miscellaneous administrative records: YTU library records; printed materials;clippings, mainly relating to the teacher’s strike; miscellaneous materials on the Hebrew Teacher’s Union.

All of these are very fragmentary.

Historical Note

The Yidisher lerer farayn (Yiddish Teachers’ Union) was a professional organization active in Vilna from 1915 to c. 1940. It worked for the interests of teachers of Yiddish secular schools and was closely affiliated with the TSYSHO and the TSBK in Vilna. At some point in its history, teachers of other types of schools also became members. For example, by 1925 the YTU represented the interests of the Tarbut Hebrew Teachers’ Seminary. There are visible signs of cooperation between the Yiddish and Hebrew Teachers’ Union in the form of joint meetings. In addition, religious schools, such as Toras Emes or Ezra, are among those contributing membership dues.

Founded in September 1915 after the Russians’ departure from Vilna, the YTU’s original purpose was both political and practical. Its early by-laws recognize the socialist principle of class struggle and uphold the secular Yiddish school system and the policy of Yiddish as the language of instruction. In practical terms the YTU was a union of teachers, which met regularly to protect and improve the working conditions of teachers as well as upgrade the general welfare of students and teachers in the schools. It established uniform salary scales throughout the Vilna region and lobbied actively for higher salaries, both at the Vilna Kehilla Education Department and at the TSBK central office. It led several teachers’ strike against the Vilna Kehilla in the late ‘20’s and in the ‘30’s, forming a special strike committee, which supervised daily strike activities.

The YTU ran a placement service for teachers seeking positions in Yiddish schools. It maintained special funds, such as a sick fund and distributed clothes and money regularly to needy teachers. It adjudicated in teacher administration conflicts. In the educational field, the YTU had some control of curriculum in the Vilna region and published a program of geography and science. In 1916-1917 the YTU gave courses in which 50 teachers participated. Committees were appointed to work out Yiddish terminologies of arithmetic, geometry and geography. A YTU library was set up and the budget provided for library upkeep and improvement.

On the community level the YTU assumed an interest in cultural, educational activities as well as in relief work. For example, when a YTU investigation of living conditions in a Vilna children’s home revealed that the home was in a deplorable state, the OSE was requested to step in and provide relief. The YTU participated in cultural events such as the city-wide commemoration of Y.L. Peretz, and sent representatives to these events.

YTU income was based on subsidies, from the Vilna Kehilla, TSBK, donations from abroad, and most importantly, on membership dues sent in regularly by schools. Expenses were to pay for general maintenance costs, publicity, aid activities such as the sick fund, loans to needy teachers, cultural activities, publications and the library.

Members of the executive board included G. Pludermacher, B. Silberbein, Sh. Bostomski, Halpern, Reines, Shur, Gurwicz, Lubocki. Members of the Hebrew Teachers’ Union, which may have merged with the YTU at a later date included Senitsky, Yeveliovitch, Tsemel, Olnitsky.

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions:

Open to researchers by appointment  with the Chief Archivist.

For more information, contact: Chief Archivist, YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, 15 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011.  email: archives@yivo.cjh.org

Preferred Citation: Published citations should read as follows:Identification of item, date (if known); YIVO Archives; Yiddish Teacher's Union; RG 50; folder number.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Correspondence with Teachers, 1910-1940,
Series 2: Series II: Correspondence with Organizations, 1916-1938,
Series 3: Series III: General Administrative Records, 1917-1939,
All

Series III: General Administrative Records
1917-1939

The series includes various types of records.

a)Teachers’ applications arranged in alphabetical order by teachers’ name. The applications include statistical information on the teachers’ background, Education, family status.

b) Contribution lists from individual schools in alphabetical order, including lists of membership dues paid by each school periodically. Some religious schools in Vilna are among the contributors.

c) Minutes of YTU executive board, 1921-1933, as well as resolutions and reports relating to general issues. These minutes are rich in information and reflect all of the YTU’s range of activities.

d) Financial records which include bookkeeping records, 1923-1934.

e) Miscellaneous administrative records: YTU library records; printed materials;clippings, mainly relating to the teacher’s strike; miscellaneous materials on the Hebrew Teacher’s Union.

All of these are very fragmentary.

Folder 23: Minutes of executive board
1918-1925
Folder 24: Minutes of executive board
1928-1931
Folder 25: Minutes of executive board
1921-1933
Folder 26: Minutes of executive board
undated
Folder 27: Resolutions, appeals, reports, etc.
undated
Folder 28: Strike Committee. Reports, minutes, circulars, printed materials
undated, 1928-1931
Folder 29: Minutes of meetings: other organizations or unidentified
undated, 1924-1929
Folder 30: Contribution lists from individual schools. S. Anski Orphanage
undated
Folder 31: Contribution lists from individual schools. Arbeter Kinderheym
undated, 1923-1923
Folder 32: Contribution lists from individual schools.Borokhov Kindergarten
undated
Folder 33: Contribution lists from individual schools. Beis Yehuda
undated, 1921-1923
Folder 34: Contribution lists from individual schools. L. Gurevitch
1933-1934
Folder 35: Contribution lists from individual schools. Grininke Beimelekh
1922-1923
Folder 36: Contribution lists from individual schools. I . Dinesohn
undated, 1923
Folder 37: Contribution lists from individual schools. Humanistic Gymnasium
undated, 1927
Folder 38: Contribution lists from individual schools. Hilf Durkh Arbet
undated, 1938
Folder 39: Contribution lists from individual schools. Winchevski Evening School
undated, 1921
Folder 40: Contribution lists from individual schools. Yiddish Teachers Seminary, Orphanage
undated
Folder 41: Contribution lists from individual schools. Mefitse Haskolo
undated, 1921, 1939
Folder 42: Contribution lists from individual schools. S. Frug, Frug-Kuperstein
1927-1934
Folder 43: Contribution lists from individual schools. D. Kuperstein
undated, 1927-1934
Folder 44: Contribution lists from individual schools. Ratner Evening School
1922-1923
Folder 45: Contribution lists from individual schools. Sholem Aleikhem
undated, 1929, 1931, 1937
Folder 46: Contribution lists from individual schools. Torat Emes
undated, 1921, 1927-1933
Folder 47: Contribution lists from individual schools. Torah Temima
undated, 1921, 1931
Folder 48: Lists of teachers and schools
undated, 1921-1922, 1931-1932
Folder 49: Various lists
undated, 1922-1923, 1926
Folder 50: Applications from teachers. In alphabetical order
undated, 1918-1929
Folder 51: Bookkeeping records
1924
Folder 52: Budgets and Invoices
undated, 1923-1934
Folder 53: Strike Committee: financial materials
undated
Folder 54: Printed materials: invitations, forms
undated, 1917-1919
Folder 55: Clippings
1928-1929
Folder 56: Library materials: invoices, card, minutes, etc.
undated, 1926
Folder 57: Hebrew Teachers’ Union: printed materials and correspondence
undated
Folder 58: Unidentified fragments
undated

Browse by Series:

Series 1: Series I: Correspondence with Teachers, 1910-1940,
Series 2: Series II: Correspondence with Organizations, 1916-1938,
Series 3: Series III: General Administrative Records, 1917-1939,
All
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