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  1. Isaac Leib Peretz (Polish: Icchok Lejbusz Perec, Yiddish: יצחק־לייבוש פרץ) (May 18, 1852 – April 3, 1915), also sometimes written Yitskhok Leybush Peretz was a Polish Jewish writer and playwright writing in Yiddish.

  2. I.L. Peretz (born May 18, 1852, Zamość, Poland, Russian Empire—died April 3, 1915, Warsaw) was a prolific writer of poems, short stories, drama, humorous sketches, and satire who was instrumental in raising the standard of Yiddish literature to a high level.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. I.L. Peretz (1851-1915) is the third of the great classical Yiddish writers [along with Mendele Mokher Seforim and Sholom Aleichem] and the one considered the more literary and probing realist of the trio.

    • Payson R. Stevens
  4. It is customary to speak of three figures—Mendele Mokher Sforim, Sholem Aleichem, and I. L. Peretz—as the founders of modern Yiddish literature, but for those readers who must encounter them mainly through the rough lens of English translation, they are by no means equally accessible or attractive.

  5. Annotated Guide to I. L. Peretz. Discover Yiddish Literature. The latest Pakn Treger is a special issue devoted to I.L. Peretz, in honor of the hundreth anniversary of his passing (his yortsayt).

  6. Apr 8, 2016 · A century after his death in 1915, I. L. Peretz remains one of the modern Jewish writers to whom we continually return—not out of a sense of duty to the past, but because of what his work tells us about ourselves. This course explores some of Peretz's liveliest writing as well as the context and milieu in which he wrote. Introduction

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  8. Peretz dominated Jewish literary life in Warsaw almost from the moment he settled there in 1890 until his death on the fifth day of Passover, April 3, 1915, his influence radiating outward from the Polish capital to the growing centers of Jewish settlement worldwide.