Muslim and Jewish Women in Nazareth

'We can live in peace'...John Lennon (photo: Dafna Tal)

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Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Avi Katz

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David Grossman

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Ben Heine

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Dem Milner’s Trern (“The Miller’s Tears”)

by Mark Warschawski

yivovd_horse_cart

Originally published in the Jewish Daily Forward, the caption said: “Mekhl, a peddler, posing with his horse-drawn cart on a mountain path” (credit: YIVO Institute/People of 1,000 Towns photo catalog)

Click on the title above to hear this wonderful song.

Oy, vifl yorn zenen farforn Oh how many years have passed
Zayt ikh bin a milner ot to do. Since I’ve been a miller here?
Di reder dreyen zikh The wheels turn
Di yorn geyen zikh, The years pass
Ikh bin shoyn alt un grayz un gro. I’m growing old and grey.

S’iz teg faranen There are days
Ch’vil mikh dermonen I would have wanted to remember
Tsi kh’hob gehat a shtikl glik— If I had only had a bit of happiness
Di reder dreyen zikh The wheels turn
Di yorn geyen zikh The years pass
Keyn entfer iz nit do tsurik. No reply do I hear

Ch’hob gehert zogn I’ve heard it said
Men vel mikh faryogn They want to drive me out
Aroys fun dorf Away from here
Un fun der mil. And from the mill.
Di reder dreyen zikh The wheels turns
Di yorn geyen zikh The years pass
Oy, on an ek un on a tsil. Without end and without purpose

Fun glik fartribn Exiled from happiness
bin ikh geblibn I remain without it
On vayb, on kind ot do aleyn. Without wife or child–myself alone
Di reder dreyen zikh The wheel turns
Di yorn geyen zikh, The years pass
Un eylent bin ikh vi a shteyn. I am lonely as a stone

Vu vel ikh voynen Where will I live?
Ver vet mikh shoynen Who will care for me?
Ikh bin shoyn alt I’m already old
Ich bin shoyn mid – I’m already tired
Di reder dreyen zikh The wheels turn
Di yorn geyen zikh, The years pass
Un oykh mit zey geyt oys der yid. And with them too goes the Jew.

translated by Richard Silverstein
(with initial assistance from Jenny Levison’s translation at Zemerl)

I’d never heard this song until 1983, when my brother introduced me to Zupfgeigenhansel’s wonderful version of it on Jiddische Lieder. It is an extraordinary allegory about the pain and suffering of exile in the face of Czarist-inspired anti-Semitic pogroms in the early years of the 20th century. Few songs capture the deep sadness and longing for a life lost than this one. Zupfgeigenhansel’s version is beautifully understated with the soft, lilting strains of the mandolin as it solos between verses.

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2 Responses to “Dem Milner’s Trern (“The Miller’s Tears”)”

  1. [...] Jiddische Lieder is a remarkable, if somewhat flawed recording of old Yiddish folk standards and lesser known gems. It is remarkable because the Yiddish ballads are performed with a deft and beautiful touch. At their best, the arrangements are simple and understated. Dem Milners Trern (”The Miller’s Tears”) alone makes the album worthwhile. Listen to the beautiful mandolin playing on this cut (Listen Here) in which a few notes waft across the interval between the vocal stanzas: gorgeous! On Dortn, Dortn and all the ballads, the tenor vocals convey sweet and ravishing beauty. The song choices are unusual and almost always interesting. [...]

  2. [...] Jorma Kaukonen, Embryonic Journey (Surrealistic Pillow) Pete Seeger, Livin’ in the Country (hear it and read my post about it) Tabu Ley Rochereau, C’est Comme Ca la Vie (hear it and read my post about it), Mikis Theodorakis (vocal-Maria Fantantouri), Asama Amaton (hear it and read my post about it), Ballad of Mauthausen Dem Milner’s Trern (”The Miller’s Tears”–hear it and read my post), Zupfgeigenhansel [...]

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