Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger
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Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger
Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger (February 5, 1924 in Romania, 1924 – December 16, 1942 in Romania, 1942) was a Romanian-born German language, German-language poet. A History of the Jews in Romania, Jew, she was murdered in the Holocaust at the age of 18 in a labor camp in Ukraine. Meerbaum-Eisinger of her father, the shopkeeper Max Meerbaum in Cernăuţi (Czernowitz), a town in the Northern Bukovina region of the Romanian Kingdom (now Chernivtsi, Ukraine). Eisinger was the surname of her stepfather. At an early age she began to study literature. Her work shows a heavy influence from those she studied: Heinrich Heine, Rainer Maria Rilke, Klabund]Tagore. In 1939 she began to write poetry, and was already a skilled translator, being able to translate between French language, French, Romanian language, Romanian, Yiddish language, Yiddish and her native German. After German troops World War II, invaded in July 1941, and the region where she lived was ceded to the Soviet Union in 1940, the f ...
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Cernăuţi
Chernivtsi ( uk, Чернівці́}, ; ro, Cernăuți, ; see also other names) is a city in the historical region of Bukovina, which is now divided along the borders of Romania and Ukraine, including this city, which is situated on the upper course of the Prut river in the Southwestern Ukrainian territory. Chernivtsi serves as the administrative center for the Chernivtsi raion, the Chernivtsi urban hromada, and the oblast itself. In 2021, the Chernivtsi population, by estimate, is and the latest census in 2001 was 240,600. The first document that refers to this city dates back to 1408, when Chernivtsi was a town in the region of Moldavia, formerly as a defensive fortification, and became the center of Bukovina in 1488. In 1538, Chernivtsi was under the control of the Ottoman Empire, and the Turkish control lasted for two centuries until 1774, when Austria took control of Bukovina in the aftermath of the Russo-Turkish War. Chernivtsi (known at that time as ) became the ...
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