The letters between Lev and Fenya were written between sometime in 1910, which I believe is the year they met, and April, 1913, when Fenya finally joined Lev in New York. During that time Fenya lived in Kiev and Lev lived in Voronezh, possibly sometimes Kiev and elsewhere, and then New York. There are letters to Fenya from her family and friends after she emigrated, as well as from friends while she was still in Russia.
We do not have any of the letters that Fenya wrote to Lev while he was still in Russia, only those that she sent to him in the US; therefore what we know of her during that time can only be gleaned through Lev’s responses to her letters.
The translators noted that Lev’s Russian was clearly not his first language, that his spelling and grammar were poor. Why did they write to each other in Russian, rather than Yiddish, a language they both knew well? Perhaps one or both of them couldn’t write fluently in Yiddish, or perhaps they didn’t want their parents to be able to read the emotional letters that flew back and forth. However, it is also the case that a series of nineteenth century Russian laws designed to assimilate the Jewish population promoted Russian education at the expense of traditional Jewish education.[1] By the time our grandparents were growing up, they were most likely being educated as much if not more in secular schools than in cheders.[2] Like young people everywhere, they probably wanted to be modern and thus different than their parents.
For years the letters were tied up in a knipple (knot) in a piece of cloth. They remained in Lucy Battalen Fass’ home on 1320 East 7th Street in Brooklyn, NY, until my mother Ethel Battalen Goldstein convinced Lucy to give them to her. Ethel knew a Russian immigrant hairdresser who translated a couple of the letters. In 1999, Ethel gave me the letters and I began to seriously undertake their translation.
I worked with two graduate students in the Slavic Languages Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Laura Little and Alice Harris; Ethel provided funds so that I could pay them. I photocopied the letters and gave the translators family trees to familiarize them with the characters they encountered in the letters.
The bulk of the letters were translated by Lydia Vaynshtayn, z”l. Lydia had been an English teacher at a high school in Tashkent, and arrived in Madison with members of her family during the Russian refugee immigration of the early 1990’s. Lydia had red hair, a sparkling personality and a little dog that she loved dearly. She lived in a nearby retirement community and we had her over for dinner a couple of times. The translations reflect her idiosyncratic use of the English language. Sometime around 2014 I worked with a young Russian Jewish woman, Catherine Vakhnina, who sorted through unidentified fragments and disconnected pages. She was able to reconstruct several letters this way, based on textual context, handwriting and quality of the paper and pen. She also translated the last remaining untranslated letters.
[1] History of the Jewish in Poland and Russia, by Simon M. Dubnow, 1918.
[2] Religious schools, primarily to educate boys.
THE LETTERS OF THE BATTALEN-RONEN FAMILY, WITH TRANSLATIONS
IN-COUNTRY PEN PALS
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, Sister’s address-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, December 2, 1910, You will love me-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, December 9, 1910-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, December 23, 1910-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Confession of Love-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, Postcard, January 14, 1911
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh January 17, 1911-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Postcard, Voronezh, February 3, 1911
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, February 24, 1911-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, March 10-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, March 23-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, March 28-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, April 14-Translation
Lev to Fenya, Voronezh, March 23, 1911, Celebrated sister’s wedding, with translation
Wedding announcement of Raisa Battalen & Lyova Popkov, June 28, 1911
THE LONG WAIT
Fenya To Louis Kiev, September 7 Possibly 1912
Louis to Fenya, New York, September 12, Unexpected happiness
Louis to Fenya, New York, September 18 Finances, pogrom worry
Fenya to Roma, Kiev November 7
Louis to Fenya, New York, December 4, Dear Freeda, description of day
Louis to Fenya, New York, A person has to fight
Louis to Fenya, New York, Statue of Liberty
Louis to Fenya, New York, New Year’s Eve
Fenya to Louis, Possible Titanic reference
Louis to Fenya, New York, May 13, 1912 Want to Achieve Stability
Louis to Fenya, May 25, I’m free from debts
Louis to Fenya, New York, June 30, 1912
Louis to Fenya, New York, July 9, Roma’s address
Louis to Fenya, New York, Can’t find work August 30
Fenya to Louis, Don’t want to be dependent
Louis to Fenya, New York, Nov 4 1912, Election tomorrow
Louis to Fenya, New York, One must have savings, fragment
Fenya to Louis, Kiev, November 12, 1912, Written with tears
Postcard Louis to Fenya, New York, November 27, 1912 Not getting letters
Fenya to Louis, Here or There, undated
Louis to Fenya, New York, Sister paid a fine
Louis to Fenya, New York, undated, Here or There
Fenya to Louis Kiev December 8, 1912
Louis to Fenya, New York, Sister was in danger December 12, 1912
Fenya to Louis, Counting the days
Fenya to Louis, My dreams are insane
Roma to Fenya, New York undated Roma to Fenya,
New York undated, Make oneself independent
Louis to Fenya, New York, Undated, Need help from parents
Postcard Misha to Fenya, Krakow, 1912
Louis to Fenya, New York, Undated, Fragment with poem
Robert to Louis, New York, Living arrangements
Louis to Fenya, New York, Jan 8, Hello Sweet Darling, your revenge
Fenya to Louis, Kiev January 13, 1913
Fenya to Louis, February 13, 1913
Louis to Fenya, New York, February 18, 1913, envelope
Louis to Fenya, New York, February 22
Louis to Fenya, New York, Travel plans
Louis to Fenya, New York, Travel Plans2
Louis to Fenya, New York, Daily Schedule, Starting Family Life
FAMILY
Postcard Louis to Fannie, New York, April 22,1913
Chana Ronen, Kiev, after April 15-1913
Ronen Family, Kiev. after April 15, 1913, fragment
Rosa Yanova to Fannie & Louis, Kiev, September 13
Nechama Ronen to Fannie Kiev, December 29, 1913
Ronen Family, Kiev May 28, 1913
Nechamka Ronen to Fannie, Kiev post-April 13
Ronen Family to Fannie, Kiev, Beilis Reference November 4, post November 1913
Sara Ronen to Fannie, Kiev, November 24, 1913
Ronen Family to Fannie, Kiev, January, 1914
Nechama Ronen to Fannie, Kiev, March 1914
Postcard Sarah to Fannie, Kiev March 28, 1914
Chana Ronen, Kiev, to Fannie, March 12, 1915 or later
Postcard Franya to Fannie, Kiev, April 9, 1914, Lady with violin
Franka to Fannie, Kiev, April 20, 1914
Fannie to Louis New York, Early June 1914
Franya Ronen to Fannie, Kiev, June 6, 1914
Postcard, Misha to Fannie, November 15, 1915
Franka Ronen to Fannie, Kiev August 30, 1922