JNS
“Everything I dreamed of, I’ve been able to do,” said the founder of an organization that works to preserve a vital element of Jewish history.
Aaron Lansky calls himself “one of the luckiest people in the world” because he “got to sit at the kitchen table with literally thousands of Jews who were bequeathing their greatest treasure to me.”
On Tuesday, Lansky announced his retirement from the organization he had formed, the Yiddish Book Center, which has collected more than 1.5 million Yiddish language books since the late 1970s. Experts at the time believed that there were only 70,000 books available.
Lansky wrote in his memoir, Outwitting History, that he sought “to save the world’s Yiddish books before it was too late.” He said, “Everything I dreamed of, I’ve been able to do.”
Susan Bronson, the center’s executive director, will assume Lansky’s position. He will continue for two years as an adviser. The center is based at a 10-acre complex at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., which includes a replica shtetl, museum, library, bookstore and storehouse. The organization has been working at digitizing its collection and making books available for download.
“Running the Center is the only job I’ve had since graduating college. For years, I worked twelve hours a day, six days a week. I hoisted so many boxes of books onto my shoulder I required surgery to repair the damage,” Lansky wrote in announcing his retirement. “I can no longer lay claim to the extravagant energy of my younger years when Yiddish speakers used to refer to me as ‘der yungerman,’ the young man.”
He added that “as proud as I am of what we’ve achieved, I recognize that the time has come to pass the torch to new leaders with vision, talent and dreams of their own.”