By the early 1920s, Leivick was writing poetry and drama for several Yiddish dailies, including the
Communist Morgen Freiheit. From 1936 to his death, he wrote regularly for
Der Tog. He was also active as an editor, working with fellow writer
Joseph Opatoshu on an exhaustive series of Yiddish anthologies. Leivick was involved with
Di Yunge, a group of avant-garde American-Yiddish poets who praised Yiddish for its artistic and aesthetic possibilities, not merely a conduit for disseminating radical politics to the immigrant masses.
Di Yunge included such notable personalities as
Moyshe-Leyb Halpern and Mani Leib. Leivick spent most of his life employed as a wallpaper-hanger while simultaneously pursuing his writing. Leivick's style was
neo-Romantic and marked by a deep
apocalyptic pessimism combined with an almost naive interest and yearning for the mystical and
messianic, themes that continually appeared in his writing, particularly
The Golem, which depicts the Jewish
Messiah and
Jesus Christ as representatives of a peaceful redemption, only to be chased away by the
Maharal of Prague and his violent
Golem, who ultimately rampaged through the streets of Prague injuring large numbers of people. In
The Golem, Leivick simultaneously condemns any attempts to heal the world through violence, and highlights the fallibility and impotence of all would-be Messiahs. The poem was widely interpreted as a thinly veiled critique of the
Bolshevik Revolution, and caused Leivick to be criticized by the
Soviet Union and Communist Yiddishists. Leivick stopped writing for the Communist papers in 1929 following their public support for the
Arab riots in Palestine and broke off all connections with the left following the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of 1939. ==Legacy==