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The Meyerowitz Family from Königsberg: Contemporaries of Hans-Joachim Schoeps

from Nexus Forum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2018

Eric M. Meyers
Affiliation:
Duke University
William Collins Donahue
Affiliation:
Professor in German, in Jewish Studies, and in the Program in Literature at Duke University, where he is also Chair of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literature and a member of the Jewish Studies Executive Committee.
Martha B. Helfer
Affiliation:
Professor and Chair of the Department of German, Russian, and Eastern European Languages and Literatures and an affiliate member of the Department of Jewish Studies at Rutgers University.
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Summary

HANS-JOACHIM SCHOEPS AND MY FATHER, Karl Otto David Meyerowitz, were each born in East Prussia in 1909, my father in Königsberg, home of the Jewish Reform Movement inspired by Julius's ancestor Moses Mendelsohn. The intellectual and religious currents unleashed in the Jewish Enlightenment or Haskalah in the eighteenth century were still being played out in the lifetimes of both our fathers, in my family's case with a little different script but with the same defining characteristics. It may be instructive, then, to briefly sketch the story of another prominent German Jewish family from this milieu. It may provide a richer context for considering the perplexing case of Schoeps.

My father was born into an aristocratic Prussian Jewish family like the original Mendelsohns: his father was a wealthy textile factory owner with a house on the sea and a schooner with a captain and mate as well. Opa Benno Meyerowitz married Oma Kaethe Supplee, a Protestant Huguenot whose ancestors were from St. Petersburg and who, when Hitler came to power, converted to Judaism as a sign of resistance and family unity. She was a concert pianist and accomplished soprano, Benno served as a volunteer impresario of the Königsberg State Opera, and the family spent several nights a week either in the front row of the opera house or backstage watching the action unfold. My father knew Puccini and Verdi in German and studied voice while preparing to take over the family business after attending university. He had two older sisters, Eva and Leni, and their fateful lives also illuminate the social and intellectual world of Prussian Jewry in the 1920s and 1930s.

In 1922 my father became a Bar Mitzvah in the Great Liberal Synagogue of Königsberg where men and women sat separately and the men on such occasions wore cutaways and high hats. The famous cantor and composer, Louis Lewandowski, who died there in 1894, wore religious garb as well as a high yarmulke, and could have been mistaken for a Lutheran pastor. While the holidays were celebrated at home after a fashion, the Jewish calendar did not greatly influence the lives of the Meyerowitz family.

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Chapter
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Nexus
Essays in German Jewish Studies
, pp. 29 - 32
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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