Have you subscribed to “Habitus: A Diaspora Journal” yet? Twice yearly Josh Ellison (originally of Providence where his parents still reside) and his staff bring forth a journal of essays, fiction, poetry, photographs with a focus on a city in which Jews have or are still playing a major cultural role. Number 7, just out, features Berlin, one of those cities where Jews no longer reside in large number, but you cannot think of the Jews of Europe without also thinking of Germany and its capital. The events of 1933-1945 still resonate. The cancer of anti-Semitism, exploited by the Nazis who found it waiting for their use continues. It’s still part of the “What is a Jew,” or rather, “What is a European” question.
The Jews of Germany had been living their since ca. 1000 CE., a generally impoverished and persecuted minority. But with the coming of the Enlightenment, Jews (some Jews, I have in mind as exemplar Moses Mendelssohn--1729–1786) discovered the beauties of western culture and Germans (some Germans) realized that Jews were people with intelligence who ought to be welcomed into society—either as Jews or as converts. For their part Jews were willing to modify their religion so as better to fit in, to assimilate—the Reform, Conservative, and Modern Orthodox movements have their origins in 19th century Germany. The point is that Jews made a successful transition from pariah to bulwarks of culture, industry and finance. In the end, that’s part of what did them in. How could such a small population rise to control the stock market, the theater, be so prominent in law, science and medicine? It must be that they are using unscrupulous methods. The Jew was seen as an outsider who only pretended to be German!
So under Hitler Germany became judenrein, Jew-free. Most Jews in modern Germany are from the former Soviet Union, their predecessors having escaped before the War or killed during it. There they live with government subsidies, a kind of reparations.
Today in Germany there is a new outsider, principally Muslim, often Turkish. They are not re-living the Jewish experience in that they are new to the country, new to the continent unlike the Jews who resided as a subject race within Germany for centuries and who knew western culture if only by observation. But these new Germans, living in the land for a generation or more can identify with the older group. Jews were rejected; Turks are being rejected.
Zafer Şenocak is a Turko-German. He was born in Istanbul and with his parents moved to Germany when he was child. His native tongue is Turkish, but he writes in German when his themes demand it. In an interview with “Habitus” he concludes, “It is very strange: anti-Semitism describes Jews as less than human. Then you have this anti-anti-Semitism, describing the Jew as something unreachable: good at everything, knowing everything. Jews are just people. They kill and are killed like every other people. In Europe there is no balance on this issue—you move from one extreme to the other. This is the problem with idealization—it’s a broken image. There is no real discourse with the Jewish people. There is no direct contact. Everything has to be deflected. Europe still can’t look the Jews directly in the face.”
It was that last line, “Europe still can’t look the Jews directly in the face” that sent chills down my spine. We are the overachievers who hold the broken distorted mirror in the face of Europeans who killed us, reminding them of what they did. Few are left who organized the slaughter, manned the gas chambers, found and destroyed hiding places. But Europe knows what it’s done, Şenocak reminds.
In Europe, some of us were socialists, others capitalists, some were intellectuals others shop keepers, the gamut of intellectual and economic behavior. All were destroyed, except those few who managed to survive. Here in America, we are in a similar circumstance. We came to a country not our own, a country where Christians were the dominant element bringing with us our strange ways. Many of us have subsequently modified, but we are still strangers in a strange land. When “Americans” are of the left or right they are still Americans. Jews though are Jews of the left or right. And we are caught in the middle between those who have become anti-Semitic through being philo-Palestinian on the left and the gun-totting yahoos on the right, neither of which represents us, both of which might be very happy if we left.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Europe and the Jews
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