The YIVO and a couple of universities supported the endeavors of scholars and laymen to collect folk songs, and the trend of publishing them lasted until after the Second World War.
One collection was compiled by Ruth Rubin by interviewing 61 Yiddish-speaking immigrants in the United States and Canada, for whom folk songs represented a part of their old home in Europe. The song Ver Es Hot in Blat Gelezen (Those Who Read the Newspapers) was recorded in Montreal in 1955 from a Mr. Persky and classified as a topical song, which “[reflects] a variety of attitudes towards specific social phenomena and events” (227). It deals with a pogrom which happened in Odessa, specifically the one in 1871. Furthermore, the annotations reveal that the song was “folklorized from a poem by Abraham Goldfaden”