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Shifting focus from WWII
destruction,
donor pushes Jewish culture in Poland
By: Ruth Ellen Gruber
KRAKOW, July 22 (JTA)
During a visit to Poland this
summer, Tad Taube recalled the moment when his mother
learned that her father had been killed at Auschwitz.
"It was in 1942 or 1943,"
said Taube, a California-based philanthropist. "She
had adored her father; he was the central figure in
her life. When she got the news, I distinctly remember
that she spent the next six months crying. And that
was followed by other communiques about family
members who were killed."
Born in Krakow in 1931, Taube
and his parents escaped Poland on the eve of World War
II. But he lost 70 percent of his relatives in the Shoah
and, even growing up safe in America, he said, "I
was totally immersed in the tragedy of the Holocaust."
When Taube left Poland in 1939,
the country was home to 3.5 million Jews. Some 3 million
of them were killed in the Shoah.
Naturally, Taube said, it's important
to remember these victims and mourn their deaths.
But it's equally important to
recognize, remember and build on the rich Jewish culture,
creativity and civilization that was murdered along
with them, he said..
"When many Jewish people come to Poland, they
fly into Warsaw, go straight to Auschwitz, then want
to get out," he said.
"But until the war, Poland
had the most prolific, culturally diverse, creative
Jewish population anywhere, ever," he said. "We
can't afford to relegate those 3.5 million people to
a postscript in history."
This assertion could be the motto
of the Polish Jewish Heritage Program, a new philanthropic
focus of his Taube Family Foundation for Jewish Life
& Culture.
The program, the Taube Foundation's
first international operation, has two goals. One is
to foster positive interest in Poland among American
Jews.
The other is to support the remarkable
revival of Jewish culture in Poland since the 1989 collapse
of Communism, and to further awareness of this resurgence
among Jews and non-Jews.
The foundation awarded multi-year
grants totaling $420,000 to three key Polish institutions
that for years have worked to foster Jewish culture
and promote knowledge and understanding of Jewish culture,
history and traditions among Poles.
The institutions - the annual
Festival of Jewish Culture in Krakow, Krakow's Center
for Jewish Culture and the Jewish Historical Institute
in Warsaw - will serve as partners for the foundation
as it seeks to establish a broader network, Taube said.
The foundation also provides some
support for Rabbi Michael Schudrich, the American-born
rabbi of Warsaw and Lodz.
"We're planting seeds,"
said Taube, who also president of the Koret Foundation
and a trustee of the Hoover Institution. "And I
see movement, rapprochement, reconciliation.
"It was a gamble," he
said. "We didn't know we could influence changes
here."
Though the foundation only began
active work in Poland last year, Taube already has achieved
high-profile recognition.
At a June 30 ceremony in Warsaw,
he was awarded the Commander's Cross of the Order of
Merit of the Republic of Poland, the country's second
highest distinction for a foreigner.
"It is an expression of respect
for your life philosophy, which lets you combine achievements
in business with an active participation in public life
and with philanthropy," a representative of Poland's
president told Taube at the award ceremony. "We
are deeply convinced that your initiatives have greatly
influenced the development of Polish-Jewish relations,
rooted in history but heading for the future."
Organizations such as the Ronald
S. Lauder Foundation and the American Jewish Joint Distribution
Committee long have worked in Poland to support the
welfare of individual Jews and the activities of the
small Jewish communities that have emerged since the
fall of Communism. Around 15,000 Jews are believed to
live in Poland today.
Taube, though, is one of several Holocaust survivors
and Jews who left Poland just before the war and who
recently have begun to shift their focus away from the
destruction of the Holocaust toward programs that preserve
and teach about prewar Jewish life and culture. Others
include Sigmund Rolat, who sponsored a major exhibit
this spring on Jews in his native Czestochowa, and Aaron
Ziegelman, who sponsored an exhibit on the shtetl of
Luboml that has been traveling in the United States.
Their activities are aimed at the general public as
well as Jews.
"Because they belong to the
Holocaust generation, their perspectives on preserving
heritage and fostering culture are all the more important
and have special credibility," said Shana Penn,
director of the Polish Jewish Heritage Program.
Lena Bergman, of the Jewish Historical
Institute in Warsaw, said focusing on Poland's rich
Jewish past and promoting Jewish culture can help break
long-ingrained stereotypes.
"It's a matter of educating
a broad public, creating the support for normal relations,"
she said.
"What we are trying to do
is to show the reality and richness of Jewish life before
the Shoah," she said. "We show that Jews were
not victims by definition, as is sometimes asserted.
We focus on life."
For example, a recent exhibition mounted by the institute
centered on Jewish soldiers in the Polish military.
Taube's visit to Krakow this summer
coincided with his first direct experience with the
Jewish Culture Festival, a nine-day annual extravaganza
that takes place in the synagogues, streets and squares
of Kazimierz, the city's former Jewish district.
He said attending the festival's
opening event, a concert by three cantors held in the
ornate 19th-century Tempel synagogue, which was restored
in the 1990s, reaffirmed his belief in his goals.
"Here we are, committed to
supporting a renaissance of Jewish culture, and all
of a sudden we find ourselves in an incredible synagogue,
restored with love and care, along with 1,000 other
people listening to cantorial music," he said.
The audience included local Jews,
American Jewish tourists, and hundreds of non-Jewish
Poles.
"It was an incredible experience,"
he said. "People were literally hanging from the
rafters!"
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