"I wrote the stories included in this book in the last fifteen years. From a world that vanished most dreadfully, and that lives on in our memories, images of piety, virtue, and Jewish morals awaken. There people stood with feet on poor soil, but with their souls in a higher world of good works and good deeds. These very images live in me, and they emerge in a large number of the stories in this book. A Jew was never concerned with the appearance of the walls of his house. He would never call an interior decorator when he needed to whitewash these walls for Passover. He merely hung a picture of the Vilna Gaon on the wall, and that was embellishment enough. He wasn't concerned about what kind of bookcases he had, as long as they contained the Talmud. It didn't matter to him if the windows of his house weren't in the latest style, because he still knew where the eastern wall was. When he gave to charity, he certainly didn't look in the newspapers to see if his name was there, and if the letters were big enough. In our time, people have moved from an inner, spiritual world to a life of externals, to things that flaunt themselves in one's face, that have more glitter than warmth, more talk than thought; more outward show than introspection. And as a Jew advanced from an inner to an outer station, as usual, in that advance, he lost those possessions he had, and had to go back, look for, and find them. These losses and gains are both tragic and comic. A good number of the stories in the book are dedicated to this significant phenomenon in our lives. Perhaps that was why I wanted to call the book A House with Seven Windows: light and shadows enter into each window."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Jews from the United StatesJews from PolandPoets from PolandImmigrants to the United States20th-century poets from the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Kadia_Molodowsky
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Kadia Molodowsky
Kadia Molodowsky (Yiddish: קאַדיע מאָלאָדאָװסקי; also: Kadya Molodowsky; May 10, 1894, in Bereza Kartuska, now Byaroza, Belarus – March 23, 1975, in Philadelphia, USA) was a Polish-American poet and writer in the Yiddish language, and a teacher of Yiddish and Hebrew. She published six collections of poetry during her lifetime, and was a widely recognized figure in Yiddish poetry during the twentieth century.
23 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Kadia Molodowsky →
Related Quotes
"no one's good luck lasts forever."
"A person would not be able to live in this world if not for the bit of goodness that he has seen with his own eyes-th…"
"When a person lies in a fever, he keeps nothing hidden. When a person's head is burning, his tongue loosens."
"There were always guests at Bashke's table: merchants conducting business with her husband, emissaries soliciting for…"
"It was one of those blessedly beautiful afternoons at Brighton Beach, when the sky is so distinctly clear, it was as …"
"If Mr. Kasher could have gotten rid of just one word in the English language, he would have banished the word funny. …"
"When a person gets rich suddenly, it's not so much apparent in any one thing so much as it is in his eyes and his lap…"
"This was the happiest laughter that was ever heard on the hill."
"One rich man is drawn to another."
"She eats with obedient earnestness down to the very last crumb, as if she were finishing praying."