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A SORT OF RETURN TO EUROPE

JEWISH CULTURE REDISCOVERED - WITHOUT THE NECESSITY OF JEWS

Elaine Kalman Naves

The Gazette, Montreal, 16 February 2002

 

Virtually Jewish, Reinventing Jewish Culture in Europe
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
University of California Press (304 pages, $59.95)


In her earlier works, Jewish Heritage Travel: A Guide to Eastern Central Europe and Upon the Doorposts of Thy House: Jewish Life in East-Central Europe. Yesterday and Today, Ruth Ellen Gruber displayed a keen curiosity about Jewish history and a solid handle on contemporary Jewish life in eastern Europe.


In her new book, she brings this interest and expertise to bear on an intriguing recent trend that cynics might well call a fad. The phenomenon she explores in this fascinating and very readable study is the explosion of enthusiasm for Jewish culture (klezmer music, Yiddish songs, new books on Jewish topics, new Jewish bookstores and Jewish-style restaurants that sometimes feature dishes made of pork) in a part of the world decades ago Holocaust made the Jews practically extinct.


Gruber is well equipped for the task she has set herself. Now a freelance journalist dividing her time between Hungary and Italy, she was born in the U.S. and for many years shuttled between Rome, Brussels, London, Belgrade, Warsaw, and Vienna as a foreign correspondent for United Press International. Since the late 1980s she has been crisscrossing Germany, Poland the Czech Republic. Austria and Italy with a view of writing this book.


It's based on a striking paradox. In the countries that she's surveying Jews are clearly the participants, sponsors and consumers of art, dance, theatre and scholarship that make up "virtual Jewishness". But these countries for the most part contain miniscule Jewish populations. Austria, for instance, numbers 10,000 Jews out of a total of seven million people; the Czech Republic contains between 3,500 to 6,000 out of 12 million; Poland has at most 20,000 out of 38 million. Germany account for no more that 80,000 Jews in a country of 80 million, In numerical term, then, the preponderance of those lapping up the new Jewish culture in Europe are non-Jews. "The result" writes Gruber "is a form of Jewish culture, or at least Judaica, minus the Jews"


She advances several possibilities to try to explain the process that some have compared to the appropriation and exploitation of aboriginal cultures in North America by the mainstream. In present-day Europe, crass commercialism, political correctness, "post-Holocaust necrophilia" and wide spread ignorance of Jewish history coexist with thoughtful re-evaluations of the past and genuine desire to fill the enormous void created by the Holocaust and reinforced by more than four decades of Communist repression.


In other words, the scene that Gruber reports on is by turns murky, confusing, disconcerting and heartening. She tackles this emotionally charged terrain both as observer and as active participant. Herself Jewish, in 1980 she became involved in a clandestine study of Jews and non-Jews in Warsaw who were trying to explore the dimensions of Jewish life at a time when such pursuits were being actively discouraged by the state.


It is Gruber's refusal to be co-opted by any one group or to take up doctrinaire positions on the appropriation debate that makes Virtually Jewish such an absorbing and at the same time perplexing read


She stays true to her objective of presenting snapshots of a process rather than the final word on it. Some of these are devoted to non-Jewish Poles - such as Tomasz Wisniewski, a journalist born after the war - who have gone out of their way to document and preserve Jewish memory in Poland, often braving the opprobrium of the former communist regime. About his search to uncover the history of the town of Bialystok (of which before the war, Jews made up more that half the population) Wisniewski told Gruber, "Back in the early 1980s, few people wrote about the Jews, so I considered what I did almost a duty….An honest history of Poland does not exist without the history of the Jews".


But the increased number of Jewish visitors to Poland since the raising of the Iron Curtain have been slow to perceive any change in the Polish attitudes since the virulent anti-Semitism of yore. "The experiences they remember of their trip are likely to be those that enhance an already existing negative opinion. Indeed they are the experiences they expected to have in Poland, and because they confirm deeply held convictions, they are almost a desired part of the trip."


At the same time the non-Jewish mainstream may find it easier to deal with dead Jews than with the living. Among the many examples Gruber gives of the representation of Jewish culture in museums and tourism, installations reconstructing Passover seders are common. However, the impressions these exhibitions leave is of an illustrated death myth, not of a family ritual of great meaning to leaving Jews.


One of the most troubling of the vignettes presented in the book is the Schindler's List Tour of Krakow so completely melts historical reality with imagined reality that it's impossible to ascertain which of today's sites in the city of Oscar Schindler pertains to the Holocaust and which to Hollywood.


And yet, while she's thoroughly disconcerted by it, Gruber finds much to appreciate in the revitalization of Krakow's Jewish quarter, Kazimierz - a direct consequence of the enormous popularity of Steven Spielberg's film. The klezmer bands,.Jewish style cafes, the bookshops, she maintains, represent an important transitional moment. "Rather than scarifying Jewish Kazimierz as a place of mourning and remembrance. It signifies it instead as a place to be enjoyed."


A pop-culture happening still in the process of evolution, "virtual Jewishness" gets a provocative airing in this unusual take on the uses of memory.

 

 

Elen Kalman Naves's book "The Shoshanna Stories us dye out next year"