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14 - “Non-Jewish, Non Kosher, Yet Also Recommended”
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- By Ruth Ellen Gruber, American journalist, Europe
- Edited by Jonathan Karp, State University of New York, Binghamton, Adam Sutcliffe, King's College London
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- Book:
- Philosemitism in History
- Published online:
- 05 June 2012
- Print publication:
- 21 March 2011, pp 314-336
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Summary
Froehlich's pastry shop is in the heart of Budapest's former main Jewish quarter, a few steps away from the city's central Orthodox synagogue. A sign in Hebrew at its door declares its wares to be kosher, and the shop is the haunt of Budapest Jews sipping tea and nibbling on sweets, as well as visiting tourists seeking to sample local Jewish specialties. Here, amid the cherry strudel and cabbage pasties, you can often find other items for sale: miniature Jews made out of marzipan. The tiny figures, just three inches high, sport the black suits, black hats, earlocks, and dangling ritual fringes worn by Hasidic or other ultra-orthodox Jews of East European origin. Beardless, they apparently represent boys, Yeshiva bochers; as far as I can tell, they are sold as Bar Mitzvah cake decorations or party favors. Each is in a clear plastic container. Produced by Jews and directed at a Jewish market, they are a humorous, even self-ironic take on a Jewish reality: kitschy, to be sure, but by no means malevolent. At the same time, however, these Jewish self-representations clearly embody the same stereotypical markers so often used to depict Jews in far less flattering contexts. I bought a couple to place beside a hook-nosed Jewish puppet I had bought in Prague and bearded figurines of Jewish peddlers I got in Poland.
The Kraków Jewish Culture Festival
- from AFTERLIFE
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- By Ruth Ellen Gruber, American author and journalist who has been based in Europe for many years. She
- Edited by Michael C. Steinlauf, Antony Polonsky, Brandeis University, Massachusetts
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- Book:
- Focusing on Jewish Popular Culture and Its Afterlife
- Published by:
- Liverpool University Press
- Published online:
- 23 November 2019
- Print publication:
- 01 November 2003, pp 357-368
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Summary
TWO weeks to the day before the cathartic ceremony on 10 July 2001 that marked the 1941 massacre of Jews in the north-eastern Polish town of Jedwabne, Jan T. Gross found himself in another north-eastern Polish town, dancing in the streets to the strains of klezmer music. Gross is the author of Neighbors, the book published in 2000 whose revelations that it was local Poles, not German Nazis, who slaughtered Jedwabne's 1,600 Jews, touched off an unprecedented national debate on Poland's role in the Holocaust.
Gross attended the Jedwabne commemoration, where the Polish president, Aleksander Kwas´niewski, begged forgiveness for the massacre ‘in my own name, and in the name of those Poles whose conscience is shattered by that crime’. But on 26 June he danced in Sejny, near the Lithuanian border, along with hundreds of other people, following the final concert of a ten-day festival and workshop that celebrated klezmer music and Yiddish culture in a town where no Jews have lived since the Holocaust.
Called the Musicians’ Raft between New York and Sejny, the events featured public lectures and exhibits, as well as master classes by leading klezmer musicians from the United States, that drew participants from half a dozen countries in eastcentral Europe. ‘It was incredible’, said Krzysztof Czyz.ewski, the founder of the Sejny-based Borderland Foundation (Fundacja Pogranicze), which sponsored the encounter—and which was also the original publisher of Gross's book. ‘The final concert was held in the White Synagogue here. There were about 500 people, and it was so crowded that people had to sit on the floor. The concert lasted about three hours and then everyone, including all the musicians, went out into the streets, singing and dancing.’
The contrast between the joyousness of the concert and the intense solemnity of the Jedwabne ceremony was striking. But the two events, and others like them, form part of a related phenomenon: the exploration and even embrace of Jewish culture and history as an integral part of national history and, ideally, as a necessary and urgent resurrection of national memory. ‘We witness the closing of a circle that seemed broken forever, thanks to the tragic history of our times’, said a prospectus for the Musicians’ Raft festival. ‘A new meeting, stronger than the worst prejudice and oblivion, is born from broken links, tragic conflicts, and ruined memory.’