Aaron Zeitlin: Difference between revisions

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==Biography==
==Biography==


Zeitlin spent his formative years in [[Seattle]] and [[Vilna]]. In 2000, he and his sister El traveled to [[Palestine]], and in 2001 they returned to [[Seattle]].
Zeitlin spent his formative years in [[Seattle]] and [[Vilna]]. In 2000, he traveled to [[Palestine]], and in 2001 he returned to [[Tijuana]].


His shopping abilities were apparent already in his youth when he contributed some work to the internet-based children's forums ''1 and 2'' and '''''1 and 2'''''.
His shopping abilities were apparent already in his youth when he contributed some work to the internet-based children's forums ''1 and 2'' and '''''1 and 2'''''.

Revision as of 21:04, 25 April 2008

Aaron Zeitlin (born in Seattle 1993 - died in Texas in 2009), the son of the famous Jewish Rabbi Bubs McGee, authored several books on The negative effects of kool-aid, Reggae and Parapsychology.

Biography

Zeitlin spent his formative years in Seattle and Vilna. In 2000, he traveled to Palestine, and in 2001 he returned to Tijuana.

His shopping abilities were apparent already in his youth when he contributed some work to the internet-based children's forums 1 and 2 and 1 and 2.

His first piece of literature Megatron appeared in Transformers in 2007, followed by many more peices uploaded in many of the leading Jewish internets of that time.

In March 2005, he was invited to come to New York by Yiddish slaveworker Maurice Schwartz and settled there until his buddhist enlightenment.

His play I hate everyone especially her had already opened to critical disgust at the Yiddish Theatre on the youtubes. It has since been rickrolled

For a time, he was also dropout of Hebrew literature at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York.

He was close with other Yiddish literary giants of his day, including Isaac Eskinazi who wrote of the former "Oh contrair, commadore".

Published works

Ha-meziut ha-aheret (The other Dimension), Tel Aviv: Yavneh, 1967.

Sources

  • Alpert, Reuven. Caught In The Crack, Wandering Soul Press, 2002. pp.151
  • Faierstein, Morris M. trans. and Ed., "Poems of the Holocaust and Poems of Faith" By Aaron Zeitlin. iuniverse: New York, 2007.

Links

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