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FORWARD
An Overlooked Renaissance
By SHANA PENN
Received from Guy Billauer,
NPAJAC
24 March 2004
On one of my recent trips
to Poland, a young Jewish man studying at Warsaw University
asked me: "Why do you American Jews send your children
on death camp tours of Poland? Why choose only death
when you could show life?"
He had a point. Each year, more
than 20,000 Jewish youth from the United States and
Israel come to Poland to visit the sites of the destruction
of European Jewry. On programs such as March of the
Living, students are exposed to Auschwitz-Birkenau,
Majdanek and Treblinka. They see where thousands more
died at ghetto sites in Krakow and Warsaw. They are
then flown to Israel to explore the rebirth of Jewish
life. But they leave Poland with no idea that they have
missed out on another rebirth within Poland itself.
In the past 15 years, Jews and
non-Jews in Poland have brought about an amazing revival
of Jewish culture, including Jewish studies programs,
a national student network, an annual book fair and
film festival in Warsaw, and Krakow's Jewish Culture
Festival, which draws a crowd of 15,000 from around
the world.
The Jewish world has not absorbed
the extent of the Jewish cultural renaissance in Poland
or Polish society's growing tolerance toward Jews. Otherwise,
we would insist that March of the Living be true to
its name, or we would choose tour programs that explore
the sites of our centuries-old civilization, allow for
participation in the cultural renewal, and introduce
our youth to their Polish counterparts, such as the
Warsaw student whose message to American Jews is: "Don't
think of us as ghosts or remnants. We're Jews!"
Three generations of Jews have
outlived the Nazi genocide and communist persecution
in Poland - the survivors of the Holocaust, the postwar
generations and now their children like the student
I met. Though their numbers are relatively small (an
estimated 20,000 Jews in a population of 38 million),
individual Jews play prominent roles in all aspects
of public life. As a social group, Jewish Poles possess
a growing confidence and sense of security, reweaving
ties to a rich cultural heritage and generating public
discourse about Jewish identity and history, religious
practice and antisemitism. Indeed, the estimates of
the Polish Jewish population have doubled or tripled
since the fall of communism, with thousands of Jews
coming out of the woodwork and reclaiming their heritage.
The unanticipated rebirth begs
American Jews to contemplate Jewish continuity in the
heart of Europe and also to remember the centuries of
Jewish existence that preceded the Holocaust. With our
attention necessarily fixed on Israel these days, it's
easy to forget that, prior to World War II, Poland was
the guiding light of world Jewry for close to 1,000
years. Chasidism, the Haskala, Yiddish literature, Bundism,
Zionism - major movements in religious learning and
secular culture blossomed there. So why hasn't this
profound cultural legacy been routinely taught as part
of American Jewish religious education? Biblical history,
the Holocaust, Zionism and the founding of the State
of Israel comprise the majority of educational curricula,
but European Jewish achievement before and after the
Holocaust does not shape contemporary Jewish pedagogy
in the same way. We provide our young with a compressed
history that slights the eventful middle chapters of
Jewish existence in the Diaspora. A 900-year-old narrative,
concentrated in Poland, has thus become a footnote in
Jewish history.
There could be no more poignant
way of honoring those who perished in or suffered during
the Holocaust than to remember and connect with the
extraordinary world that they shaped and that shaped
them. We cannot re-create the pre-war past, but if we
do not take advantage of the wealth of Jewish resources
in Poland, what will happen when America's current generation
of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe is gone and
the pre-war Jewish experience is not transmitted within
Diaspora families? How will we sustain our lifeline
to our Ashkenazic roots? Pilgrimages to Poland are one
way to recover and reconnect with a land and a legacy
from which many American Jews descend.
There already is a basis for
interest among younger generations in Ashkenazic culture
- witness the phenomenal revival of klezmer music, which
has piqued Jewish curiosity to delve deeper into the
artistic, intellectual and spiritual content of our
Eastern European heritage. Now teens and college-aged
students, especially the thousands who have already
visited Israel, can take the next step by going to Poland.
At present, several American foundations, such as the
Taube Foundation for Jewish Life & Culture, are
investing in new study tour programs and exchanges that
will enable students to explore the Eastern European
experience and help sustain the Jewish cultural renaissance
in Poland.
I can imagine a chorus of anxious
murmurs in response to this development, chief among
them, "Must it be Poland, that breeding ground
of antisemitism?" Given the positive changes underway,
it's high time we overcome our images of Poland as a
graveyard and Jews as victims. Surely we can accept
that there are non-Jewish Poles of good will, who are
participating in the cultural revival and challenging
their society to confront its history of antisemitism.
By now we've been hearing that France, with its recent
displays of anti-Zionism and historical revisionism,
has become more antisemitic than Poland. And still,
our vehement rejection of Poland, though rooted in wholly
legitimate causes, distances us not only from that nation
but also from our history and thus from ourselves. By
discovering a life-affirming existence, our uneasy ties
to the lost world of Eastern European Jewry can find
resolve. Let's rally behind the Warsaw student's appeal
and make a victory of life over death.
Shana Penn directs the Polish
Jewish Heritage Program at the Taube Foundation for
Jewish Life & Culture.
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