This is a book that recounts the ordeal of the survival of certain children during the Holocaust. Rabbi Teller utilizes his storytelling talents and skill in describing the true events of people who have gone on to lead successful and Jewish lives.
There are some conclusions one may glean from this contribution. The survivors seem to have had a healthy suspicion toward the Nazis. There was a natural tendency not to believe what they were being told. This means that orders were not followed - if the community was told to gather in the a certain place certain individuals did the opposite - they fled. How did they come to such suspicion when most of the Jewish world naively obeyed is a mystery. Perhaps one may speculate that because these stories seemed to have occurred from the middle and toward the end of the war when possibly the Final Solution was already widespread these people understood if not intuitively that they were in a fight for survival.
Another point gleaned is that there were gentiles whose hearts were touched by these children and their humanity overcame their fear of the Nazi threat. Some gentiles offering hiding places, some offered food. Rabbi Teller does point out that most of these kindnesses were perpetuated on a minimum level like recommending stables or sties for hiding places or offering minimum staples and meager portions of food.
The author bluntly and accurately recounts the brutality of the Nazis, however, the book is resplendent in lessons in faith, a very worthwhile read.
Brief book summaries of an eclectic nature [including Jewish, General, American and Sports History and Literature]
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Exclusiveness and Tolerance by Jacob Katz
Jacob Katz discusses and analyzes the ties between Jews and
Gentiles throughout the post Talmudic era and shows an historical evolution of
attitudes of Jews toward gentiles and Gentiles towards Jews. He shows that in the beginning of the Middle
Ages when life for the Jews was almost welcomed by the reigning Kings, there
emerged a certain tolerance in doing business with the Christian community. The
harsh Talmudic dictums about the prohibition in dealing and doing business with
Gentiles are halachically foregone. One sees, according to Katz that economic necessity
and changes in interpretation of Christians creating a category of Gentile not in
the same category as the idolaters of the Talmud and thus permitted with whom to do business.
Nevertheless with the growth of the temporal strength of the
Church one witnesses the rising polemics and accompanying tensions between the
two communities. Katz points out that
the Jewish community was very dependent on the Christians for its livelihood
and thus needed to be flexible in business but he shows quite conclusively that
the Jewish community of Ashkenaz were steadfast in their belief of Judaism’s
innate worth and stubbornly refuse to commit apostasy.
With the Crusades and the Ghettoization of the Ashkenazim, indifference
occurs and an insular attitude develops where the Jewish community is
completely indifferent to the Christian outside world. No real religious controversies are recorded
like previously during the time of disputations. What Katz points out are the unusually
tolerant statements of the 13th century Provence rabbinic authority
HaMeiri toward Christians and Christianity.
Although Prof. Katz mentions that HaMeiri must have witnessed the
Expulsion from France, he does not offer any explanation of why HaMeiri is so
tolerant. He clearly expresses the logical process to such an Halachic stance but he never offers possible practical reasons. The explanation of such positive and tolerant
attitudes could stem from fear of the Church as noted by a current
rabbinic authority [Minchas Asher] does not occur to Katz. {This is probably because the
critical historian is limited to the sources laid before him and his method precludes him to go
beyond them}
This study is critical in understanding Moses Mendelsohn’s
attitude of tolerance. He has a very
close relationship with Lessing, the leading literary figure of his day. He also has a correspondence with the
Christian theologian, Lavater. He has a live and let live attitude. Mendelsohn believes, however, that Judaism is a revealed
religion based on Reason. This implies
that one could conceive it through thought.
Lavater challenged Menelsohnn to convert to Christianity if religion is
based on Reason implying that there are not really any significant differences
between the majority religion and the minority religion. Mendelsohn hesitates to express his true view
that he could never convert to Christianity because he is not convinced
Christianity is a religion based on Reason.
He actually believes that it is irrational.
Mendelsohn’s attitude may be problematic as we see so many of his followers commit apostasy, yet his vision is nothing short of utopian but it
does not come to fruition. Acceptance of
the Jew is never realized and the enlightenment period is short
lived.
Friday, July 17, 2015
Ally by Michael B. Oren
The former ambassador to the US has written a very engaging sensitive memoir of his days in office. It can be characterized as an odyssey about a man growing up in NJ absorbing all the great values of America, loving America and synthesizing those ideals with a Jewish upbringing culminating in being inspired to make Aliyah after the 6 Day War in 67 through the inspired leadership of Yitzchak Rabin. Being an American and a Zionist for Mr. Oren implies no contradiction. He sees the only democracy in the Middle East as a kindred spirit of the USA.
Mr. Oren recounts his tumultuous tenure with the tools of a historian (his histories of the 6 day War and America's involvement in the Middle East - Power Faith and Fantasy are outstanding historical contributions) and the sensitivity of one who truly loves the USA. He recounts how traumatic was the punching of his US Passport symbolizing the irrevocable step of renouncing his US citizenship.
But what makes this contribution significant, I believe, is his attitude towards the US president. Instead of dismissing the President as biased against Israel, Mr. Oren believes that the president believes in the Jewish state but rather forcefully disagrees with the policies of the Likud party and its head, Benjamin Netanyahu. He constantly gives the president the benefit of the doubt when the situation presents itself. The recent trashing of the book in the press by the President's acolytes belie reading it. The dismissals of the book are totally off base and misplaced. The shouting against the book probably testifies to the book's truth.
The conclusions of the book are troubling. Mr.Oren squarely places the disagreements and deterioration in the relationship with Mr. Obama. His tough stance and style with demanding the Israelis freeze settlements that include most of modern Jerusalem Jewish neighborhoods for any Israeli government prove difficult. Mr. Oren claims that the relationship that always implied openness and no surprises changed to Israel being ignored even when its security was at stake like the secret talks engaging Iran. The Israelis, according to Mr. Oren continue to wonder how knowledgeable or naive are the Americans in understanding how the Middle East ticks! Mr. Abbas was hardly nudged; the lionshare of pushing was against Israel.
Mr. Oren also is troubled by the erosion of American Jewish support of the Jewish State. Despite the growing support of the non Jewish population in America there seems to be an ever growing divide between American Jews and Israelis. What once was axiomatic support is now mired with disdain for policies that liberal Jews can not countenance. So called 'settlement activity' is called by the American Jewish community an impediment to peace, however, Arab irredentism is completely ignored! J Street claims to be pro Israel and Pro Palestinian but one would be hard pressed to cite one pro Israel position!
With a signed Iranian deal that seems to allow nuclear threshold status, Israel must evaluate its next move carefully. Seeing red lines erode and promises stretched do not bolster confidence in the alliance between the USA and Israel. The book is a well written engaging romp about diplomacy. Mr. Oren has a great grasp of history and has peppered his memoir with great analogies and insights. He is very aware of the present US policy of disengagement, dissociation and outreach to the Muslim world. It's a must read in understanding what is happening before our eyes.
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
It Happened in Italy by Elizabeth Bettina
The Italian people did not give up for slaughter their Jews during WWII although the Italians needed to create concentration camps and round up the Jews to satisfy the Nazis as their allies. Elizabeth Bettina has written a report that proves that the so called camps in Italy were not the same as those found in Poland - death camps and work camps where millions of Jews perished. They were more like summer camps for recreation. She also discovers that many simple Italians protected and hid Jews during the war because of their innate humanity.
Ms. Bettina has written a person discovery about her relatives and friends from the heartland of Italy who risked their lives to save Jews from the Nazi clutches. She recounts how growing up in a NY neighborhood with many Jewish friends she becomes curious about Jewish names that popped up in conversation among her Catholic friends or when she visited Italy for summers she would wonder about certain veiled references or esoteric codes about Jewish people. As a personal mission she begins research about what happened to one of the Jewish people who was named, and discovered that the Italians by nature did not conform to Nazi ways and did the opposite of collaboration. The bulk of the book is a recounting of very moving reunions of Holocaust survivors with their wartime Italian hosts.
Italy did not require a visa for entry during the war and thus many Jews sought refuge. 80 percent of the Jewish people living in Italy during the war survived - an incredible statistic considering 90 percent of Polish Jewry did not! Only when the Germans ended up administering the country after the death of Mussolini did Jews get transported to death camps in Poland.
The book is written from the perspective of a proud Catholic who can stand tall because her relatives and ancestral home did the right thing! The book is, however, not critical of the Catholic Church's record on saving Jews during the war but rather highlights the anomaly of some parish priests who saved Jews.
Ms. Bettina has written a person discovery about her relatives and friends from the heartland of Italy who risked their lives to save Jews from the Nazi clutches. She recounts how growing up in a NY neighborhood with many Jewish friends she becomes curious about Jewish names that popped up in conversation among her Catholic friends or when she visited Italy for summers she would wonder about certain veiled references or esoteric codes about Jewish people. As a personal mission she begins research about what happened to one of the Jewish people who was named, and discovered that the Italians by nature did not conform to Nazi ways and did the opposite of collaboration. The bulk of the book is a recounting of very moving reunions of Holocaust survivors with their wartime Italian hosts.
Italy did not require a visa for entry during the war and thus many Jews sought refuge. 80 percent of the Jewish people living in Italy during the war survived - an incredible statistic considering 90 percent of Polish Jewry did not! Only when the Germans ended up administering the country after the death of Mussolini did Jews get transported to death camps in Poland.
The book is written from the perspective of a proud Catholic who can stand tall because her relatives and ancestral home did the right thing! The book is, however, not critical of the Catholic Church's record on saving Jews during the war but rather highlights the anomaly of some parish priests who saved Jews.
Monday, July 13, 2015
Orthodox Jews in America by Jeffrey S. Gurock
This history of Orthodox Jewry in America is an outstanding
example of what a critical historian does.
Prof. Gurock shows that from the beginning of Jewish settlement in North
America, the Jewish citizen wanted to desperately fit in and would go to great
lengths at bending the rules of Jewish Law without abrogating his affiliation to gain acceptance
as an American. Prof. Gurock shows us
that those people who identify with the Orthodox synagogue and refuse to compromise
in their affiliation to join a Conservative or Reform synagogue do not
necessarily manifest a wholly observant life style that the synagogue
represents. These people do not, like so
many others, go over to the Non -Orthodox synagogues in an effort to assuage
guilt but rather tenaciously hold steadfast their belief that Judaism has an authentic
teaching that cannot change with the vicissitudes of social pressures and
morays. Prof. Gurock presents a thesis
that there is such a thing as an ‘authentic sinning Orthodox Jew’(my quotation
marks).
The historian presents two types of Jews: the one that makes
accommodations to American Life to fit in and another who separates himself
from the mainstream of American culture but benefits from the legal rights of
all Americans. The accommodationist is
highlighted in this very readable history showing a variety of American
cultural phenomena that the Orthodox Jew wants desperately to experience
(like mixed dancing). One can feel the
overwhelming pressures of the immigrant experience that bring on the agonizing
decision to work or not to work on the Sabbath.
One reads about the painful question does one put Tefillin on the
Holiday if one is treating the Holy day as a secular moment since one is
working on the day!
After WWII, with an influx of Hasidim, and others with a separatist
attitude begin to confront the accomodationists. The book highlights Rabbi Joseph B.
Soloveitchik’s leadership in leading those who accommodate and those Roshei
Yeshiva like Rabbi Aaron Kotler who lead the separatists. Unfortunately, the clash between these two
camps becomes aggressive with the separatists casting the claim of ‘illegitimate’
to the approach of those who accommodate! Prof. Gurock outlines some of the
innovations that the accommodationist rabbis allow and shows clearly that the
innovations (women's prayer groups, women putting on Tefillin, women being called
to the Torah or acting as leaders of prayer and even becoming rabbis) come from
the social pressures and values of modernity (like feminism). These social patterns come from the outside
and are not germane to Jewish law or Tradition.
The rabbis are not so much leading as much as they are attempting to keep their flock
from straying!
The Prof. concludes that even today outside of New York or
other Metropolitan areas where the separatists have claimed victory and
authority calling into question anyone who does not lead a wholly observant
lifestyle, one still finds in the heartland of
America or its outer stretches the type of Jew who feels more comfortable in
the Orthodox synagogue but does not lead a complete Shulchan Aruch abiding lifestyle. One may conclude from reading this history
that there are social pressures that are so great that even rabbis do not have
the sway to change people's behavior.
The separatists only gain a major following when the immigrant
experience has already run its course!
When the social model changes from “melting pot” to “salad bowl”; that
to be different is in vogue does the separatist gain momentum and clashes with
those who want to “be American”.
What I learned from this critical historian is that people
do not necessarily follow their leaders but rather social, economic and
societal pressures move people. In such
situations, the leadership has to have the wisdom to condone or condemn or
ignore the ignominious or irreligious behavior that is not found in the Shulchan Aruch.
Monday, June 8, 2015
When Harlem was Jewish by Jeffery Gurock
This history of Harlem is a fascinating study of the Jewish migration out of the ghetto of the Lower East side of Manhattan by more upwardly mobile people. Although originally of German Jewish descent, the community grew with the newly fabricated train lines that connected the community with the needle trade, garment district in Midtown and the influx of more and more Eastern European immigrants until it too became overcrowded. What Prof. Gurock makes clear is that the Jewish people of Harlem did not flee as African Americans settled in the neighborhood, but rather shows that the community was well ethnically defined with Irish, Italian, German, African American and Jewish settlement blocks early on in the beginning of the 20th century.
Harlem represented an escape from the Jewish ghetto, it meant that assimilating to American ways was such a priority that it shook up Jewish leadership. Assimilation evoked new programs to keep Jewish people affiliated with the Jewish community. Such dynamic rabbis as Bernard Drachman, Herbert Goldstein and Mordechai Kaplan all ordained by the Jewish Theological Seminary of the America, instituted new outreach programs that attempted to synthesize Jewish traditions and American culture.
This was an era when the Jewish Theological Seminary produced so called "orthodox" rabbis. The Seminary's mandate was to produce American rabbis who could inspire Jewish youth to observe Judaism without sacrificing one's American identity. Clearly, Mordechai Kaplan, later the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism veered off to found a new strand, however in the beginning he served Orthodox congregations in Harlem.
Of the three, Herbert Goldstein was truly Orthodox having received a traditional ordination from a sage in the Lower East side before entering the Jewish Theological Seminary. He founded the (Orthodox) Institutional Synagogue which is now situated on the West Side with extensive programing reaching out to young Jewish people.
Ultimately, by the 1930's, the Jewish settlement of Harlem emptied to other emerging neighborhoods in Brooklyn and the Bronx because of its overcrowding and its own Jewish 'ghettoization'. The pestering problem of assimilation, the demand to Americanize could well define the American Jewish community throughout its history.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Pressburg Under Siege by Rabbi Moshe Sofer
This slight (only 93 pages) autobiographical memoir of the French invasion of Pressburg during the Napoleonic wars describes the shelling of Pressburg (present day Bratislava, 40 miles from Vienna) and how the Jewish community and Austrian troops responded to the carnage.
The Chasam Sofer, (synonymous with his Halachic Work) tells his reader about the miraculous saving of the Jewish community and how no one was killed except for one individual cut down by a bullet to his thigh that the doctors kept trimming away muscle until he succumbed to his wound but not before confessing his sins. His confession is a fascinating glimpse into the politics of community and the role of the chief rabbi. Rabbi Sofer reports that the young man was under the influence of a very manipulative woman. She swayed the man to raise rents preventing the poor from gaining residence thus creating a housing shortage. As a result, the chief rabbi had to campaign against such inequality. The young man in response to the rabbi's campaign hurled false charges against the rabbi! Knowing his time was up, the young man confesses and dies a penitent.
One can not help but wonder about the miraculous saving of the Jewish community. Although the Jewish quarter was utterly ravaged by fire with home after home destroyed, no sefer Torah was destroyed and no member of the Jewish community lost his life. As a matter of fact, the rabbi tells of heroic behavior by some carrying others to safety.
I could not help but wonder about this account. It reminded me of the 9/11 attacks destroying the World Trade Center. Scores of Hatzalah first responders were on the scene furiously working hard to save lives and incredulously not one lost. The Fire Chief when asked how many rescuers were lost and heard that none were lost, replied,"your community is obviously blessed!" To have such a great personage as the Chasam Sofer who at every opportunity interpreted the goings on prudently and accurately creates an obvious blessed community and makes for a fascinating read.
The Chasam Sofer, (synonymous with his Halachic Work) tells his reader about the miraculous saving of the Jewish community and how no one was killed except for one individual cut down by a bullet to his thigh that the doctors kept trimming away muscle until he succumbed to his wound but not before confessing his sins. His confession is a fascinating glimpse into the politics of community and the role of the chief rabbi. Rabbi Sofer reports that the young man was under the influence of a very manipulative woman. She swayed the man to raise rents preventing the poor from gaining residence thus creating a housing shortage. As a result, the chief rabbi had to campaign against such inequality. The young man in response to the rabbi's campaign hurled false charges against the rabbi! Knowing his time was up, the young man confesses and dies a penitent.
One can not help but wonder about the miraculous saving of the Jewish community. Although the Jewish quarter was utterly ravaged by fire with home after home destroyed, no sefer Torah was destroyed and no member of the Jewish community lost his life. As a matter of fact, the rabbi tells of heroic behavior by some carrying others to safety.
I could not help but wonder about this account. It reminded me of the 9/11 attacks destroying the World Trade Center. Scores of Hatzalah first responders were on the scene furiously working hard to save lives and incredulously not one lost. The Fire Chief when asked how many rescuers were lost and heard that none were lost, replied,"your community is obviously blessed!" To have such a great personage as the Chasam Sofer who at every opportunity interpreted the goings on prudently and accurately creates an obvious blessed community and makes for a fascinating read.
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