Julia Kolchinsky, born in Ukraine, was the Second Place winner of Narrative’s Sixteenth Annual Poetry Contest. She the author of five poetry collections, including The Many Names for Mother and PARALLAX (University of Arkansas Press, 2025). Her awards include two William Carlos Williams Prizes, the Ezra Pound Prize for Literary Translation, and the Ruth Stone Poetry Prize. She holds an MFA from the University of Oregon and a PhD in comparative literature from the University of Pennsylvania and is an assistant professor of English and creative Writing at Denison University.

Learning Yiddish

by Julia Kolchinsky

To Vikhlya Moishka Gershkovna Khalfin, 1912–2003

Vera, though I never called you that, you,
babushka, groys bubby, mamen, whose name
in Russian rings of faith, in Yiddish
of debate, in Latin it is all that’s true,
though other romance tongues have argued you
claim impartial judgment like a god.
Then in the German, Vera is a strong
wild boar, sowing the fields your yellow hue.

But when I searched the Hebrew, you floated
up out of the letters of your own
Talmudic name: vav vav yud resh aleph,
two hooks, wisdom, beginning or a head,
then teacher. Vera, let me say your name again:
Which tongue do I believe? And which did you?
People on couch
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