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Velvel Zbarjer
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==Published works== His first published poem, written in Hebrew and based on a [[Talmud]]ical parable, appeared in "''[[Kokebe Yizhak]]''," xii. 102-103, [[Vienna]], 1848. His next work, "''Hazon la-Mo'ed''," a satire on the [[Hasidic Judaism|Hasidim]] and their rabbis, is also in Hebrew (Iaşi, 1855). His Yiddish songs were published with a Hebrew translation in four parts, under the collective name "''Makkel No'am''" (Vienna, 1865, and Lemberg—now [[Lviv]]—1869–78). A new edition in Roman characters appeared in [[Brăila]], Romania, 1902 (see ''[[Ha-Meliẓ]]'', v. 42, No. 125). His "''Makkel Hobelim''" (1869) and "''Sifte Yeshenah''" (1874) appeared in [[Przemyśl]]. [[Gustaf Hermann Dalman]]'s "''Jüdisch-Deutsche Volkslieder aus Galizien und Russland''," pp. 29-42, 2d ed., [[Berlin]], 1891 reproduces some of Velvel Zbarjer's songs.<ref name=je>{{Jewish Encyclopedia|inline=1|url=https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5458-ehrenkranz-benjamin-wolf|article=Ehrenkranz, Benjamin Wolf|author=[[Isidore Singer]], [[Peter Wiernik]]}}<br>'''''Jewish Encyclopedia'' bibliography:''' * [[Leo Wiener|L. Wiener]], ''History of Yiddish Literature in the Nineteenth Century'', [https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/46729/pg46729-images.html#page_073 pp. 77-80]; * ''[[Ha-Shaḥar]]'', ii. 204-206; v. 367, 368. </ref>
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