Der vaser-treger

Act I. Exterior of Reb Yosele’s village inn. Simkhe Plakhte is a water carrier and an orphan. He brags that he was born from a rock, big and strong, and that immediately he became a water carrier. He supplies the entire town with water in exchange for bits of bread, kitchen scraps, and tattered, old clothes. Yosele Parnos, the chief beadle and proprietor of the town hotel, exploits Simkhe more than anyone else. Still, Simkhe carries water for Reb Yosele’s household without complaint because he is in love with Tsipe, Reb Yosele’s beautiful servant. Although Tsipe returns Simkhe’s affections, she realizes he is too poor to get married. Simkhe eventually marries Beyle, an orphan who mothers him and does not mind his poverty.

One day Beyle tells Simkhe she dreamed her deceased mother and father returned to tell her that her husband is destined to become a great rabbi and that in her attic there is a caftan and a shtreimel (fur hat women by Hasidic men) which have been awaiting him for thousands of years. Simkhe accepts this prophetic dream. The Jews of the town initially refuse to accept Simkhe’s claims of rabbinic status. Then the local nobleman’s prize horse strays from him, and he threatens to confiscate Jewish property until his horse is returned to him. Simkhe tells the nobleman to look for his horse in the words. Miraculously, the nobleman finds the horse in the woods, and both he and the villagers recognize him as a great rabbi. Reb Yosele and a petty Lithuanian merchant decide to exploit Simkhe’s alleged powers for economic gain, and appoint themselves his beadles. Tsipe regrets that she did not marry the water carrier when she had the chance. Beyle, on the other hand, snubs the village elites who mistreated her.

Act II. Interior of Reb Yosele’s village inn. Word of the miracle man spreads through the surrounding countryside and men, women, and children trudge for miles to seek his aid. Reb Yosele and the Lithuanian make the unsuspecting pay well for the Rabbi’s assistance, meanwhile pocketing the money for themselves. Whatever solace Simkhe finds in his new position comes chiefly through the delicacies prepared for him by the beadles. But the Rabbi still loves Tsipe and he begs for an opportunity to once again carry some water to Reb Yosele’s household so he can see her again. The beadles refuse this request, since it is in their interest to avoid a scandal. Tsipe, unknown to Simkhe, makes several desperate attempts to see him, but is turned away from the Rabbi’s door by the wily beadles. The situation becomes so unbearable, that Reb Yosele and the Lithuanian decide to grant the Rabbi a divorce from his wife so he may marry Tsipe. Beyle, now ruling with an iron hand, scoffs at the thought of divorce and adds a few threats of her own, making the position of the beadles more untenable than ever. When the pious crowd into the Rabbi’s study for his daily blessings, Tsipe manages to elude the guards and rushes to Simkhe’s outstretched arms. The outraged beadles attempt to remove her, but Simkhe protects her and announces he is ready to run off with his beloved, come what may. The beadles decide that this match may have been made in heaven, Beyle notwithstanding. The nobleman, steadfast in the belief in Simkhe’s supernatural powers, thinks he can drive out the ghosts who haunt his castle, and for this purpose brings a golden chair with which to convey him to the palace. As they lift Simkhe onto the chair, he cries out in pain and runs off to his private study. The Rabbi has been overstuffed with delicacies, but Reb Yosele, to continue the duplicity, convinces the townsfolk that the Rabbi received a sudden message from heaven to teach the Torah to the angels. Beyle cannot be fooled, however. She fears she is going to lose her husband and discloses the truth about him and his position as Rabbi. The crowd is horrified to learn Simkhe is a rank imposter, but no more so than Simkhe himself. Sadly he discards his rabbinical attire, dons his old clothes again and walks off a beaten, broken-hearted and disillusioned man. When the people finally discover that much of the deceit was planned by the beadles as a grandiose money-making scheme, the irate nobleman orders them whipped for their heinous sins. Simkhe returns a little later in the regalia of the water carrier and promises to serve the townsfolk henceforth without thought of pay for the delicious food given him when he was their spiritual advisor. Further, he tells them he found his greatest happiness as a lowly water carrier. He declares that he will pursue this occupation for the rest of his life, although he still hopes to marry Tsipe.

Synopsis adapted from a Yiddish Art Theater program by Sonia Gollance.


Article Author(s)

Sonia Gollance

Project Manager, Plotting Yiddish Drama University College London

Grinbergs tekhter

Act I. Zalmon Greenberg is a prosperous butcher on the Lower East Side. His world consists of his unlettered, simple-minded, and devoted wife, Sarah; of his two children, Esther and Bessie, the former a shy, modest, dutiful homebody, the latter a jazz-baby and frequenter of cabarets and dancehalls; of his pious and learned uncle Aaron, and his shrewd, sharp-tongued, yet kindly aunt Hennie, whom he has brought over from Europe, given a home and set up in business in his own house; of his customers and neighbors and, finally, of his daughters’ lovers: Dave Levinson, who has been in love with Esther since childhood, to the great chagrin of his father, who keeps a dry-goods store across the street from the Greenbergs and ranks butchers rather low in the scale of social and matrimonial merit; and last, but not least, Bessie’s beau, Max Bernstein, a prize-fighter, who attributes his recent knockout at the hands of Kid Bushie to the fact that the trunks he wore for the fight did not have a Star of David sewn on them. Though somewhat Americanized, Zalmon retains the psychology and general views of the Old World. He refuses his daughters’ plea that the family join in the general exodus from the Lower East Side; and in order to silence their complaints, he takes advantage of their absence in the country, where they are spending their vacation, to beautify his house by having it painted and installing modern improvements and new furniture, including a radio, so as to surprise the girls upon their return. As the play opens, a painter is seen at work in the butcher-shop, while an expressman delivers new furniture. A letter arrives from Bessie in which she informs her parents that Esther has shed her customary shyness and modesty in the country and is carrying on “high and mighty” with a traveling salesman who is stopping at the same hotel; she even suggests that it would be advisable for her and Esther to return home at once. Bessie’s remarks fill Zalmon with indignation and attributes them to jealousy, but Sarah has some misgivings. At this point Aaron rushes in terror-stricken and reports that his bookstore is being raided by the police who are falsely charging him with being a bootlegger. While Zalmon and Aaron hasten to the latter’s store, Sarah asks Dave to come in. No sooner does he enter than Max Bernstein arrives. Sarah shows them a picture of her daughters that Bessie enclosed in her letter, and the two young men are discussing plans for spending the week-end with the girls, when the elder Levinson enters and summons his son back to his work at the dry-goods store. Left alone with Sarah, Max tells her that he is giving up pugilism and opening a poolroom. He has already invested a thousand dollars and needs a hundred dollars more. Sarah lends him a hundred and fifty, and he departs. Zalmon and Aaron return, the misunderstanding with the police having been satisfactorily cleared up, and the two go upstairs to try out Zalmon’s new radio, only to discover that a radio is not all it is cracked up to be. Max comes back to report that he has just signed a contract for a return match with Kid Bushie and so isn’t going into the poolroom business after all. He returns the money he borrowed from Sarah and declares his intention of going to Bessie in the country and establishing his training quarters there. No sooner does he leave than Bessie suddenly arrives–alone, Esther having eloped with the traveling salesman the day before.

Act II. Three weeks have passed and still no trace of Esther. From a conversation between Bessie and Max, we learn that the latter is through with prize-fights, Kid Bushie having knocked him out again, though this time he was careful to have a Star of David sewn on his fighting trunks. The two discuss plans for their forthcoming marriage and for settling in California, where Max is sure a fortune is awaiting him. He expresses surprise that so quiet and modest a girl as Esther should have yielded so soon to temptation. Bessie attributes her sister’s fall to the fact that she had never associated with men and so fallen an easy prey to the first one who whispered sweet lies into her ears. Aaron, Hennie and Sarah try to dissuade the two from getting married at this time, but they are adamant, and find an unexpected ally in Zalmon. The latter then sends for Dave and tells him the truth about Esther’s absence from him. Dave staggers out of the house, and Aaron and Hennie rush in to scold their nephew for what he has done. Presently a young woman enters and announces herself as Lena Becker, wife of Esther’s seducer. She relates the circumstances under which she found Esther, whom she absolves of all blame in the matter, and who, she says, bitterly repents her mistake and above all the wrong she has done to her by betraying his great trust in her. Mrs. Becker adds that she has brought Esther with her and left her at Aaron’s store. While Sarah and Hennie run to fetch her, Aaron pleads with Zalmon to be kind to his erring daughter, because a sinner who truly repents is, according to the Talmud, superior to a person who has never sinned. Esther is brought in and is greeted by her faltering father with: “How are you, Esther?”

Act III. Hennie remonstrates with Sarah for keeping the butcher-shop closed now that Esther is back home and Dave has given her an engagement ring. She threatens to take matters in her own hands and hire a butcher to run her nephew’s shop. Aaron comes in with the startling news that Zalmon has sold the house, and that he is now showing the premises to the new proprietor. Presently Zalmon and Mr. Lefkowitz, the new owner, enter and take an inventory of the contents of the house. Hennie shrewdly tries to frighten away Lefkowitz by telling him that Zalmon is insane; she also threatens to smack his face if he does not give up the idea of buying the house. Her brave threats are in vain; Zalmon insists on the sale. Esther and Dave return from a walk and learn of the sale of the house. Esther blames herself for her father’s action in thus uprooting his existence and undoing the work of a lifetime. Dave comforts her, vows his everlasting love for her, suggests an early marriage and urges her to talk the matter over with her father. Max and Bessie arrive and announce that they have just got married in court and that they are leaving forthwith for Atlantic City. When Esther pleads with Bessie not to go away like this and break their mother’s heart, Bessie, who has adopted a “holier-than-thou” attitude towards her unhappy sister, merely scoffs at her. Sarah is disconsolate, but Zalmon gives them his blessing. The latter tells his uncle why he has sold his house and given up his business. “A building,” he says, “holds fast as long as the foundation endures. Esther was the foundation that held me up.” Dave rushes in to tell them that his father has learned of his secret engagement to Esther. Presently the terrible Mr. Levinson himself comes in to voice his objection to the marriage of his only son to a butcher’s daughter; but Zalmon argues with him with such dignity, restraint, and sweet-reasonableness that he half wins him over to the match, and Dave and Esther prepare to leave at once for another city to get married there.

Adapted from Maximilian Hurwitz’s synopsis for the Yiddish Art Theater by Sonia Gollance


Article Author(s)

Sonia Gollance

Project Manager, Plotting Yiddish Drama University College London