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Review: And So Is the Bus: Jerusalem Stories

Dreamy detours on a ride to the terminus

September 16, 2016 08:29
15092016 and so is the bus a

By

Clive Sinclair

2 min read

By Yossel Birstein (Trans: Margaret Birstein, Hana Inbar, Robert Manaster)
Dryad Press, £9.50

Yossel Birstein was a raconteur of genius, and a writer of the first rank. I was introduced to him by his friend, the painter Yosl Bergner. Born within three weeks of each other in 1920, they met in their teens on a boat bound for Australia. Birstein was sailing to join his grandparents (the majority of his family, who remained in Biala-Podolsk, were murdered by the Nazis). Bergner was following his father, the poet Melech Ravitch, who had spent much of the 1930s seeking a refuge for European Jewry.

When news of the catastrophe they had so narrowly escaped reached Australia, both responded in the only way they knew how; Bergner with brushes, Birstein with the pen. In those days, he regarded himself as a poet. Ravitch judged the poems harshly, and declared them to be without merit. God forbid I should contradict a poet of his esteem, but to my mind they are worthy of consideration, because, among other reasons, they expose the pain that is tucked away in Birstein's later prose like some primal wound.

The poems are raw lamentations, elegies for a lost brother, a lost sister, a lost father, and a lost mother. "It was poetry I chose," he wrote in the collection Under Alien Skies, "for neighbour to my grief."