E-mail

Polski





IS IT 'JUDAICA MINUS TH4 JEWS' IN Europe?

Aufbach, 4 April 2002

http://www.aufbauonline.com/aktuell/pages7/14.html

A Review of Virtually Jewish by Ruth Ellen Gruber

On my first visit to Kraków in 1994, I was shaken up by the Jewish Museum in the Old Synagogue in the former Jewish quarter of Kazimierz. What surprised me was the way the displays - mannequins of shtetl Jews, a collection of ritual objects - were presented as remnants of a culture long dead. For a moment, I saw myself as a rare specimen of an extinct species. I knew better, of course. Jewish life was flourishing in many places in the world and, in fact, a small but growing Jewish community existed in Poland. But it was absence - not presence - that was on the mind of those who had put the exhibit together.


This memory surfaced while reading Ruth Ellen Gruber's Virtually Jewish: Reinventing Jewish Culture in Europe, a provocative study of the recent explosion of interest in "anything to do with Judaism, Jews, the Holocaust and Israel" in countries where the Jewish populations are small and, in some places, dwindling.


As Gruber documents in detail, a plethora of Jewish festivals, seminars, conferences, workshops, readings, lectures, etc., now take place from "Milan to Munich, Kraków to Kluj." Jewish Museums have opened in cities as varied as Berlin and Bologna, and Jewish Studies form part of the curriculum in universities in twenty-two European countries and count over a thousand Europe-based scholars doing research on the subject. Throughout the continent, numerous films are produced, books published, and TV shows aired that focus on Jewish issues. And everywhere, crowds fill concert halls and arenas to hear performances of Jewish music.


What became clear to Gruber was that the very size and extent of this phenomenon went far beyond the capacities of the small Jewish populations. Both organizers and audiences tend to be largely Gentile, and that raises the troublesome question of what Gruber calls "Judaica minus the Jews."


To describe the engagement with Jewish history, memory and the Holocaust in the absence of Jews themselves, the scholar Diana Pinto developed the useful term "Jewish space." Gruber takes this formulation one step further, declaring the space to be the void in European life created by the Holocaust. This is what is now being filled by a "virtual" Jewishness, some aspects of which draw on authentic sources, while others are based on the outsiders' needs and perspectives. Indeed, the motivations of the promoters and consumers of this surfeit of "Things Jewish" are as diverse as the manifestations themselves. What is disturbing is that some of the most successful organizers who profess to embrace Jewish memory and culture, do not even seek out contact with living Jewish communities.


In a book of only 239 pages, Gruber's attempt to be encyclopedic can be overwhelming. The density of description and richness of reference make it almost impossible for the reader to take in all she has explored. The sections in which the author has divided the book - "Afterlife," "Jewish Archaeology," "Museum Judaism?" and "Klezmer in the Wilderness" - are almost small volumes in themselves.


Most heartening are the pages on "Jewish Archaeology" describing the significant restoration of Jewish sites - synagogues, cemeteries, ritual baths, occasionally whole neighborhoods - after decades of neglect in countries on both sides of the former Iron Curtain. Some preservation and restoration had taken place as a result of the efforts of a few individuals before 1990. But it was in that year, when a meeting of the Jewish Heritage Council, a division of the World Monuments Fund, took place, that a more official impetus began. More than two hundred participants from fifteen countries attended, including several from the former Communist countries. What emerged was "an unprecedented public, international statement that Jewish monuments were part of the global cultural heritage, not meaningful solely to Jews any more than Egyptian, Greek or Roman monuments are meaningful solely to Egyptians, Greeks and Italians." Since then, national monument authorities as well as local organizations have taken active part in restorations, while tourist bureaus have put the awakening interest in the Jewish heritage on the sightseer's maps.

Movers and performers of "Things Jewish"

For this reader, one of the more fascinating aspects of the book were Gruber's depictions of some of the prime movers and performers of "Things Jewish," both Jews and non-Jews. Moni Ovadi, a Sephardic Jew who was born in Bulgaria in 1946 and grew up in Milan draws crowds throughout Italy with his Yiddish-punctuated performances based on Eastern European culture. Gruber describes an evening in Trieste where she first attended a Simchat Torah festival in the old synagogue with the small congregation that remains in that city. From there, she went on to Ovadi's performance which included excerpts from books about the Jewish experience in Trieste, Jewish songs and jokes. But, as she points out, no mention was made that this was a major Jewish holiday, nor was there any awareness that a service was going on at the same time a few minutes away. Ovadi concluded his performance by turning off all the lights to symbolize that Jewish life in Trieste no longer existed.

The disconnect with the lived Jewish life is only one level of the artifice Ovadi cultivates. The culture he professes to represent, and which the non-Jewish Italians take literally, is not only not his, it has no connection to the Jewish life as it was ever experienced in Italy. The authenticity his audiences believe they are applauding is a series of stereotypes with no connection to the present or the past. This is "Yiddishkeit" as a universal and Ovadi speaks like a guru when he says the music he plays speaks of "man's holy being, his possibility of facing the universe, weak yet sublime."

In 1988, two young non-Jewish Poles - Janusz Makuch and Krzysztof Gierat - launched the first Festival of Jewish Culture in Kraków. It is now such a successful annual with audiences in the thousands that it has even been dubbed a "Jewish Woodstock." According to Gruber, "Makuch sees no contradiction in his role as a non-Jew directing a Jewish cultural festival for other non-Jews in a former Jewish neighborhood that today is a Jewish ghost town."


Makuch's conversation is replete with Jewish words and Yiddishisms, "The Jewish Culture Festival is a special kind of prayer," he tells Gruber. "For me, it's a Kaddish, which you pray once a year. The festival is a mitzvah, a good deed a Jew would do. This is my world, this is my life." There is no doubt, that Makuch is sincere, even though he is refering to the new "world" of the virtual Jew.


Yet another variation on "Things Jewish," in Europe is the strange symbiosis between American-Jewish klezmer musicians and their enthusiastic German fans. Michael Alpert of the American group Brave New World wrote a Yiddish song titled "Berlin 1990" to express his ambivalence about this connection. One verse went as follows:

I'm proud of my heritage
Yet I envy you,
Today's children of yesterday's enemy,
Because yours is the future
One land and one language
While we are left here speechless …

Inevitably, in the virtual Jewish world, the song became a hit. "We [Jews] are the vanished race of Europe." Alpert sums up. "[We are] on the national conscience, romanticized and ascribed wisdom".


In her conclusion, Gruber cannot resist the old question. "But is it good for the Jews?" And in proper talmudic fashion, her answer is yes and no. Many in Europe have learned to appreciate Jewish culture as part of their own heritage. However, there is the danger that the "Jewish Thing" is moving too far out of Jewish hands. Active Jewish input is essential to keep "Jewish cultural products" from replacing the living reality.


Gruber has written a solid and fascinating account of a paradoxical moment of Jewish history.


Monica Strauss