Background
She grew up in a Yiddish-speaking home and attended Yiddish schools as a child.
She grew up in a Yiddish-speaking home and attended Yiddish schools as a child.
She began writing poetry, much of which was published in the journals Yugntruf and Afn Shvel, in 1980. Several poems were published in English and Yiddish in Hadassah magazine, the literary journal Five Fingers Review, and various anthologies. While her poems range widely in subject matter, her lyric technique is remarkably consistent.
She tends towards short poems of no more than two pages, exploring single incidents or observations fully but using highly compressed language.
She uses rhyme in many but not all poems, and varies rhyme scheme within a poem when necessary. She uses a variety of meter as well as unmetered verse.
While her technique produces poems of unusual intensity, they are leavened with playfulness and puns. Her subject matter includes big questions such as marriage and grief.
And small questions such as baking a failed loaf of bread.
A poem about the day following the September 11, 2001 attacks is eerily still. Her 2003 book Plutsemdiker Regn/Sudden Rain is a bilingual edition of about 40 of her poems in Yiddish and English. Although Schaechter-Viswanath is a native speaker of both languages, she does not write poetry in English and does not translate her own Yiddish works into English.
The magazine Hadassah called her poems "introspective and witty," and the book was hailed as "that rarest of miracles: a first book of poetry in which every poem is a gem" by the Newsletter of the Association of Jewish Libraries.
Schaechter-Viswanath"s intellectual pursuits have been widely varied: she earned degrees in Jewish literature, Russian language, nursing and health administration. She works as a clinical consultant in health care and remains active in Yiddish cultural endeavors.
Her children all speak Yiddish as well as their father’s first language, Tamil. Her father, Mordkhe Schaechter, was an influential linguist of the Yiddish language.
Schaechter-Viswanath is a member of a leading family in Yiddish language and cultural studies.