The Cockney Yiddish Podcast

By: Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs
  • Summary

  • The Cockney Yiddish Podcast explores the unknown Yiddish popular culture of London's East End through an array of newly discovered stories and songs from the 1880s to the 1950s. Historians Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs share their passion for the tunes and words of Jewish Londoners encountering the Cockney culture of music halls, street markets and rhyming slang. They discover a rich landscape of music and interviews from the archives and chat about hidden histories, family stories, lost connections and real and imagined places with special guests and readers including Michael Rosen, Miriam Margolyes, Alan Dein and David Schneider. Join Nadia and Vivi on their journey and hear East London’s long forgotten songs and stories brought to new life by contemporary musicians and actors.


    Episodes released every Monday.

    Go to our website for more information about the music and texts we discuss.




    The Cockney Yiddish Podcast is written and presented by Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs

    Produced by Natalie Steed at Rhubarb Rhubarb for Queen Mary University of London Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), Grant reference AH/Z505614/1.

    Big thanks to: Adam Corsini at the Jewish Museum London; Tamsin Bookey and Sanjida Alam at Tower Hamlets Local History Library and Archives; Ru Dannreuther, Silke Boettcher, Kaptan Miah and Olivia Warren at Queen Mary University of London; Ashraf Al-Hawrani, the Holocaust Survivors’ Centre, London, the Yiddish Sof-Vokh.


    Podcast image: © Jeremy Richardson.

    Featured music: Klezmer Klub and Katsha’nes.

    Translations: Vivi Lachs and Barry Smerin.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs
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Episodes
  • 5. Khanike oder Krismes
    Mar 11 2025

    This episode, entirely in Yiddish, focuses on the pressures on interwar immigrant and second generation Jews to engage with English life and the particular dilemma of what to do about Christmas. We hear Katie Brown’s story of a family negotiating Hanukkah and Christmas and the street song ‘Mayn heym in Ventvort Strit’. This week’s guest, Yiddish teacher Sima Beeri describes her multilingual background and her experience of Lithuanian-Yiddish Christmas. We discuss the way English and Cockney words, like ‘kapati’ (cup of tea), creep into Yiddish texts, with participants of the UK Sof-Vokh Yiddish learners’ and speakers’ Weekend, and the Holocaust Survivors’ Centre Yiddish Group.


    The episode is entirely in Yiddish. Go to our website for an English transcript.



    The Cockney Yiddish Podcast is written and presented by Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs

    Produced by Natalie Steed at Rhubarb Rhubarb for Queen Mary University of London

    Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council

    Guest: Sima Beeri

    Contributors: participants from the Yiddish Sof-vokh 2024: Joseph, Pam, Justin, Tamara, Jake, Barry, Motl, and participants of the London Holocaust Survivors Centre Yiddish group

    Readers: Vivi Lachs,Sima Beeri

    Featured story: Katie Brown, ‘Krismes Prezents’ (Alts in eynem, 1951)

    Featured song: Raymond Kalman, ‘Mayn heym in ventvort strit’ (streetsong)

    Theme music: Klezmer Klub, ‘Vaytshepl mayn vaytshepl’ (trad) and ‘Yiddisher Honga’ (trad). From the CD Whitechapel mayn Vaytshepl (Klub Records, 2009)

    Podcast image: © Jeremy Richardson


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    39 mins
  • 4. Oy! Who are you laughing at?
    Mar 10 2025

    Did you hear the one about Haimy and Moishe …? In this episode Vivi and Nadia tell some of their families’ favourite Jewish jokes and find out about Cockney-Yiddish rhyming slang with actor Nick Cassenbaum. We look at Yiddish humour with our studio guest, writer Michael Rosen. We discuss his family’s fragmentary use of Yiddish and how he drew on it in his comic writing. We mull over what is so funny about a story of Jewish technical incompetence, and the outrageous adventures of an East End Jewish wife in a Yiddish music hall parody of a famous ragtime song, Bill Bailey Won’t You Please Come Home.



    The Cockney Yiddish Podcast is written and presented by Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs

    Produced by Natalie Steed at Rhubarb Rhubarb for Queen Mary University of London

    Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council

    Guests: Michael Rosen and Nick Cassenbaum

    Reader: Michael Rosen

    Featured story: Asher Beilin, ‘A Jew Takes a Pleasure Trip’, translated by Vivi Lachs. From East End Jews: Sketches from the London Yiddish Press (Wayne State University Press, 2025)

    Featured song: Katsha’nes, ‘Vos geyst nisht aheym, sore-gitl?’ (Lyrics: Arn Nager. Music: Hughie Cannon). From the CD Don’t Ask Silly Questions (Katshanes, 2017)

    Theme music: Klezmer Klub, ‘Vaytshepl mayn vaytshepl’ (trad) and ‘Yiddisher Honga’ (trad). From the CD Whitechapel mayn Vaytshepl (Klub Records, 2009)

    Podcast image: © Jeremy Richardson


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    49 mins
  • 3. When you go to a Yiddish theatre
    Mar 3 2025

    Pack your picnic, practise your heckles and come with us to the Yiddish theatre. This episode looks at Yiddish theatre and music hall from its early days in the late nineteenth century, from the popular theatre with its cheap songs and audience misbehaviour to highbrow performances of Shakespeare and opera in Yiddish. Nadia and Vivi bring you a short story about audience antics, and ‘Gevalt polis!’ (Help Police!), a comic song about East End crime. We are joined by the actor and writer David Schneider whose family had a leading role in London’s Yiddish theatre. David performs his grandfather’s translation of Shylock’s ‘Hath not a Jew’ speech in Yiddish, and historian David Mazower describes the doomed attempt to set up a London Yiddish art theatre.



    The Cockney Yiddish Podcast is written and presented by Nadia Valman and Vivi Lachs

    Produced by Natalie Steed at Rhubarb Rhubarb for Queen Mary University of London

    Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council

    Guests: David Schneider and David Mazower

    Reader: David Schneider

    Featured story: A. M. Kaizer ‘When You Go to a Yiddish Theatre’, translated by Vivi Lachs. From London Yiddishtown: East End Jewish Life in Yiddish Sketch and Story, 1930-1950 (Wayne State University Press, 2021)

    Featured song: Katsha’nes, ‘Gevalt Police’ (Lyrics and music: Anon). From the CD Don’t Ask Silly Questions (Katshanes, 2017)

    Theme music: Klezmer Klub, ‘Vaytshepl mayn vaytshepl’ (trad) and ‘Yiddisher Honga’ (trad). From the CD Whitechapel mayn Vaytshepl (Klub Records, 2009)

    Podcast image: © Jeremy Richardson


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    44 mins

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