She would whisper to her mirror: "You can take the girl out of Berdychiv... but you can never take the Berdychiv out of the laugh." And she would paint her lips red, ready to sing the next sad, funny song for the immigrants who, like her, were still carrying that Ukrainian city in their bones.
But Berdychiv was also a city of masks. Under Tsar Nicholas II, life was a tightrope over a pit. Pepi learned the art of the grammen , the comic verse, as a weapon. She would stand by the Holy Gates of the old synagogue, pulling faces, making the porters laugh so hard they dropped their bundles. "A joke is a bullet that leaves no shell," she would later say. pepi litman birthplace ukrainian city
Pepi Litman was born not on a map, but in the echo of a fiddle—specifically, in the bustling, dusty courtyard of a Hasidic shtiebel in the Ukrainian city of , sometime in the late 19th century. She would whisper to her mirror: "You can