Motke Chabad (Mordechai Chabad) (c.1820-c.1880) was a Jewish Lithuanian (litvak) jester (badchen) from Vilnius known from many Jewish jokes.[1][2][3][4]

  • Mordechai complained: "Had God willed it, I could have made a hundred golden rubles yesterday". People asked: "How could that be?" He replied: "A rich matron said she would give me one hundred golden rubles to look upon me." They told him: "Mordechai, you fool, why did you refuse?" He answered: "I did not refuse. It was just that she was blind in both eyes".[5]
Motke Chabad
A book Hershele Ostropoler and Motke Chabad

In many jokes he is an archetypal schlemiel, misfortunate in his endeavors:[3]

  • Motke decided to become a teamster, but soon he noticed that his horses eat lots of oats and decided to train them out of this bad habit depriving him of all profits. So he started giving them less and less oats and soon they ate almost none of it. The horses didn't complain, but suddenly they died all. "What a pity!" - grieved he. - "Would they endure one more week and they wouldn't need oats at all!".[3]

Some jokes of Motke Chabad are ascribed to Hershele Ostropoler and vice versa.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ "Motke Habad", by Gershon Winer
  2. ^ Arie Sover, Jewish Humor: An Outcome of Historical Experience, Survival and Wisdom p. 55
  3. ^ a b c Sanford Pinsker, The Schlemiel as Metaphor: Studies in Yiddish and American Jewish Fiction, pp. 11, 12
  4. ^ Biography of Motke Chabad translated from Zalmen Zylbercweig's Leksikon fun yidishn teater
  5. ^ From the collection Sefer ha-bdikha ve-ha-khidud The Book of Jokes and Wit [he] by Alter Druyanov, vol. 1, joke no. 2177, as cited by Arie Sover
  6. ^ Haim Schwarzbaum, Studies in Jewish and World Folklore, pp. 200, 268

Further reading edit