top of page
Copy of Copy of Shmues Intermission 29.7.25 (1920 x 600 px) (2200 x 629 px).jpg

Leyvik House

For the Yiddish language and Ashkenazi culture
Books 3.JPG

LEYVIK HOUSE

For the Yiddish language and Ashkenazi culture
tel-nordau-y6.JPG

LEYVIK HOUSE

For the Yiddish language and Ashkenazi culture
Yiddish books.jpg

LEYVIK HOUSE

For the Yiddish language and Ashkenazi culture
400_filter_nobg_6064a6a6c5326_edited.png

Leivik House 

Located at 30 Dov Hoz Street in Tel Aviv, it is a center for Yiddish culture and the home of the Yiddish Writers and Journalists Association in Israel.


We continue the mission of the writers who founded the Yiddish Writers' Association in 1928. Over the years, its activities have been enriched by writers who came to Israel through various immigrations. We foster Yiddish culture to flourish among the general public.

Subscribe to the newsletter

To subscribe to the newsletter and receive invitations to events, enter your email address.

Please note! The newsletter may end up in your spam folder, so don't forget to check there too :)

Bookstore

Leivik Publishing, the most professional and oldest in its field, is reinventing itself with the best books on the contemporary Jewish world

Archive

The gallery reflects our social life, starting with the respect we acquire for the Nephilim generation, through language studies, artists and visitors from all over the world, with active involvement in Israeli culture.

Events

Here you can watch a selection of previous events.

Sunday, May 25, 2025, 6:00 PM (Israel):

Presentation of the novel "Tzuzamenbroch" by Emil Kalin.

David Amr Cohen said it. S'Nemen and Unteil ׃ Emil Kalin, Boris Sandler, Jeffrey Sandler, Shalom Berger and Daniel Galai. Emil Collins' novella "Tzuzamenbroch" can be read with the right to point out that this is the first larger work in Yiddish about life in the last few decades in Israel.

The main hero, Arash Greenberg, is a mittzeitler of the writer. Hootetseitik on raeleavant for a nyher, nygeriker leydenshaft.

-----

Moderator : David Amar Cohen Meeting with Amil Kalin, Boris Sandler, Jeffrey Sandler, Shalom Berger and Daniel Galai Amil Kalin's novel "The Collapse" can be called the first major work in Yiddish about life in Israel in recent decades.

The main character, Hersh Greenberg, is a contemporary of the author, both around the same age, and the story is told in the first person, as the hero himself dreams of becoming a writer. Current and relevant for a new and curious readership.

LOGO Mis Tarbut.png
LOGO IRIYA.jpg
LOGO Reshut.png
bottom of page