Isaac Bashevis Singer
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Isaac Bashevis Singer
Isaac Bashevis Singerwas a Polish-born Jewish author in Yiddish, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1978. The Polish form of his birth name was Icek Hersz Zynger. He used his mother's first name in an initial literary pseudonym, Izaak Baszewis, which he later expanded. He was a leading figure in the Yiddish literary movement, writing and publishing only in Yiddish. He was also awarded two U.S. National Book Awards, one in Children's Literature for his memoir A Day Of...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth14 July 1904
CountryUnited States of America
Isaac Bashevis Singer quotes about
To be a vegetarian is to disagree - to disagree with the course of things today... starvation, cruelty - we must make a statement against these things. Vegetarianism is my statement. And I think it's a strong one.
The New England conscience doesn't keep you from doing what you shouldn't -- it just keeps you from enjoying it.
As long as people will shed the blood of innocent creatures there can be no peace, no liberty, no harmony between people. Slaughter and justice cannot dwell together.
Whenever I'm in trouble, I pray. And because I'm in trouble all of the time, I pray almost constantly.
A Marxist has never written a good novel.
If Moses had been paid newspaper rates for the Ten Commandments, he might have written the Two Thousand Commandments.
Even in the worm that crawls in the earth there glows a divine spark. When you slaughter a creature, you slaughter God.
Doubt is part of all religion. All the religious thinkers were doubters.
When you betray somebody else, you also betray yourself.
I am thankful, of course, for the prize and thankful to God for each story, each idea, each word, each day.
Kindness, I've discovered, is everything in life.
What nature delivers to us is never stale. Because what nature creates has eternity in it.
While facts never become obsolete or stale, commentaries always do.
No technological achievements can mitigate the disappointment of modern man, his loneliness, his feeling of inferiority, and his fear of war, revolution and terror. Not only has our generation lost faith in Providence but also in man himself, in his institutions and often in those who are nearest to him.