Below please find my 1997 article about the Golem legend, including analysis of Elie Wiesel's retelling.
Thank God for Elie Wiesel's work. May his memory be a blessing.
Golem
as Gentile, Golem as Sabra:
An
Analysis of the Manipulation of Stereotypes
of
Self and Other
in
Literary Treatments of a Legendary Jewish Figure
New
York Folklore
XXIII:1-4 (1997):39-64.
Introduction
The golem
is a Jewish folkloric character. It is a manmade, man-like creature, usually
made of soil and approximately life size. There have been many golem stories;
this paper will focus on literary treatments by H. Leivick, Isaac Bashevis
Singer, and Elie Wiesel. All three are reworkings of the plot of a 1909
manuscript popularly attributed to Yudl Rosenberg. In Rosenberg's work an
historical figure of sixteenth-century Prague, Rabbi Loew (a.k.a. Liva, Lowi,
Leib, Low, Levi), creates a golem to protect Jews from a blood libel.
[1]
Representations
of the golem changed over time; this paper argues that these changes reflect
dovetailing stereotypes of Jews and Gentiles in Eastern Europe as well as the
changing position many Jews came to take in response to attack.
"Golem" was a Yiddish expression for "clumsy fool"
[2]and was
"used affectionately as a synonym for 'dummy.'"
[3]
Early in the legend's development, golems were little more than human-shaped
sculptures of mud. In this century's literary treatments, golems changed from
mute to capable of speech, from neuter to sexual, from passive to active,
innocuous to dangerous. As the golem story is reworked, authors reveal less
anxiety about and more confidence in their hero's violence, immediacy, and
divorce from Jewish tradition.
Authors'
struggles with the golem as a new and stereotypically "gentile"
Jewish defensive force parallel concerns Jewish thinkers voiced about sabras,
or native born Israelis, the sabras' perceived spontaneity, divorce from
tradition, and their martial response to attack. This is not the first time
this comparison has been made. In
A
Psychohistory of Zionism, Jay Gonen writes, "Zionism. This new
political force, this new Golem, if you will, offered similar protection."
[4] Gonen does
not develop the metaphor; this paper will attempt to do so.
Golems:
A Brief History
It is
assumed that the golem legend was influenced by and has influenced other
similar manmade, man-like creature stories in folklore and literature. Moshe
Idel, an Israeli scholar of Jewish mysticism, theorizes that Jews may have originally
been inspired in the development of the golem legend by the ancient Egyptian
practice of placing tiny statues in coffins, and the belief that these statues
were animated through magical inscriptions placed on their torsos.
[5] Rabbi Ben
Zion Bokser claims that golem legends may have indirectly inspired Goethe in
his work on the Faust legend.
[6] Other
creative artists whose work may have been influenced by the golem legend
include Mary Shelly, author of
Frankenstein,
and Karel Čapek, Czech author of the play
R.U.R.
, source of the English word "robot."
[7]
Golem
creation is traced back to various sources, both Biblical and not. For example,
recipes for creating golems were extracted from the
Sefer Yetzirah, or
Book of
Creation, dated between the third and sixth centuries AD, and traditionally
attributed to Abraham, though probably not written by him. In the Bible,
Abraham and Sarah are said to take with them "the souls they made in
Haran." Some believe these souls to have been Abraham's golems.
[8] The word
"golem" appears only once in the Bible, in verse 16 of Psalm 139,
traditionally attributed to Adam, though, again, probably not written by him.
This psalm is an exquisite evocation of man, not as creator or actor, but as
passive creation, contemplating his state as created being, and his
relationship to the God who created him. The speaker reports that his maker
knows him utterly, that he can never escape from God's omnipresence, nor the
searching penetration of God's intimate knowledge of His creation. The psalmist
writes: "Your eyes saw my substance, being yet unformed (i.e., golem), and
in your book, they were all written, the days fashioned for me, when as yet
there were none of them."
In
Sanhedrin 38b, the tellurian powers Adam had when he was yet a golem -- an
unformed substance of clay -- are recorded: "even in this state, he was
accorded a vision of all the generations to come" Early folkloric golems,
however, were more easily defined in terms of what they could not do than what
they could. In Sanhedrin 65b, the Babylonian Talmud, we may read, "Rava
created a man and sent him to R. Zeva. The latter spoke to him but received no
answer. Thereupon, he said to him, 'You are from the companions; [sometimes
translated as 'magicians' or 'pietists'] return to your dust.'"
[9] Although
this early manmade creation, described in the fourth century A.D., could walk,
he did not excite R. Zeva. Rather, the golem was recognized as a golem by his
inability to speak, and, without any excitement, he was returned to the dust
from which he had sprung.
Idel writes
that the speechlessness of the Jewish golem may have differentiated it from the
contemporaneous "pagan" practice of animating idols to hear their
prognostications. Others attribute this particular golem's muteness to some sin
in Rava, its creator. Perhaps Rava's sin prevented him from creating a fully
functional creature. Others say that at that time it was believed that, while a
knowledgeable mystic could make a golem, only God could make a speaking
creature.
[10]
The
prototypical golem recipe evolved between the fifth and twelfth centuries.
Recipes required clay, dust, and/or soil for formation, and the names of
letters, spoken aloud, for animation. There were five variants of the basic
recipe, one of which required dancing; in another the golem is buried before
being animated: "only after its burial is it capable of developing into a
more elaborate anthropoid."
[11] In a
Spanish recipe, a vessel was required. In the late fifteenth century, golem
recipes were translated into Latin, and thus entered Christian lore.
[12]
Early
golems were remarkable for their inactivity. Scholar and Kabbalah authority
Gershon Scholem says that mystics may have actually performed rituals around
clay figures, which were immediately destroyed. "There is nothing in the
instructions that have come down to us to suggest that it was ever more than a
mystical experience. In none of the sources does a golem created in this way
enter into real life and perform any actions whatsoever."
[13]
Art
historian Emily Bilski does see golem creation as serving a function, however.
She writes that golem creation among thirteenth century Ashkenazic mystics
"probably sought to demonstrate that Jewish masters possessed the highest
knowledge." In the Renaissance, Jews felt that "Christian culture was
progressing more rapidly than Jewish culture." Creating a golem "as
the pinnacle of scientific achievement" could "prove the superiority
of Judaism."
[14]
Increasingly
practical golems appear in late fifteenth-century sources; these practical
golems parallel contemporaneous advances in the sciences. By the sixteenth
century, the golem legends of German and Polish Jews feature contemporaries
rather than figures from the past. Documents discussing golems become more
numerous in the seventeenth century.
In his 1808
Journal for Hermits, Jakob Grimm
reported on golems.
After saying certain prayers
and observing certain fast days, the Polish Jews make the figure of a man from
clay or mud, and when they pronounce the miraculous shemhamphoras over him, he
must come to life. He cannot speak, but he understands fairly well what is said
or commanded. They call him golem and use him as a servant to do all sorts of
housework. But he must never leave the house. On his forehead is written
'emeth.' Everyday he gains weight and becomes somewhat larger and stronger than
all the others in the house, regardless of how little he was to begin with. For
fear of him, they therefore erase the letter, so that nothing remains but
'meth,' whereupon he collapses and turns to clay again.
[15]
"Emet" means truth in Hebrew; "met,"
death. "Grimm's golem influenced many Romantic writers who began to
incorporate golem characters into their works," reports Emily Bilski.
[16]
After the
golem of Prague, subject of this paper, the seventeenth-century golem of Chelm
is the second most famous. Chelm is a Polish town famous for its fools. There
Rabbi Eliahu's golem grew daily, until the rabbi was unable to erase the
animating word "emet" on its forehead, which would have killed the
golem. The rabbi devised a plan. He asked the golem to kneel down and remove
his boots. The golem did so, allowing the rabbi to erase the "e" of
"emet." The dying golem fell forward, and, in some versions of this
legend, injured or killed the rabbi in his fall.
[17]
Another
famous golem legend is associated with the historical figure Solomon ibn Gabirol,
an eleventh-century poet and philosopher from Málaga, Caliphate of Córdoba. Ibn
Gabirol suffered from a repulsive skin disease that drove people away.
According to legend, he created a female golem to do his housework. Unlike
other golems made of clay, ibn Gabirol's was made of wood and door hinges, the
only golem to have been so constructed. Jewish leaders learned of ibn Gabirol's
golem, accused him of fornication, and made him destroy her.
[18]
A didactic
golem story features the biblical prophet Jeremiah. He animated his golem by
writing on it "God is truth," "Elohim emet." The golem
erased the aleph from emet, leaving the words, "God is dead." The
golem then lectured Jeremiah with a story about the dangers of usurping God's
role of creation.
[19]
Previous
Scholarly Approaches to the Golem
Scholars
and academic writers have focused on varying aspects of the golem legend.
Golems have been compared to non-Jewish manmade anthropoids, like Frankenstein
and Čapek's robots.
[20] Moshe
Idel, in his
Golem: Jewish Magical and
Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid treats golems as
significant in the development of Jewish mysticism; Rabbi Gershon Winkler, in
The Golem of Prague, treats golems as
items of faith. American English professor Carl Schaffer, inter alia, discusses
the spiritual purity and excellence required for creation of a golem.
[21] This act
of creation has been described as a rapture that brings one closer to God.
[22] Golem
lore has been mined in discussions of technologically altered life forms.
[23] A Jungian
writer has approached the golem as the Jungian "shadow."
[24] Modern
adaptations of golem legends have been faulted or praised for their popular
treatment of Jewish folkloric sources.
[25]
According to American film scholar Lester Friedman, the golem legend was
appropriated and twisted in the creation of an anti-Semitic German film, Paul
Wegener's 1920, "The Golem; How He Came into the World."
[26]
Surprisingly,
although the golem legend provides all the details necessary to be considered
as an example of anal creation folklore,
[27]
I found no scholarly works that pursued such an analysis. Like other myths and
legends typified as exemplary of anal creation, the golem is created by a male,
not a female, from dust, earth, or clay, is animated by words, and, in some
versions, grows continuously until it is out of control. As in other anal
creation tales, women are devalued and/or erased. In Singer's version, Rabbi
Loew informs his golem that he, the golem, has no mother. The golem "lets
out a harrowing cry."
[28]
The golem
legend might also be analyzed for the insights it offers into attitudes towards
women. Earth, from which the golem is made, can be seen as symbolic of feces as
in anal creation analyses; earth, too, has frequently symbolized
"mother," or the feminine, in world folklore. This convention is not
unknown to Judaism. Zion, throughout the Bible, is portrayed as God's bride --
a delightful espoused virgin when she is good; a harlot when she is bad.
Scholem reports a more generalized earth-as-goddess belief among Jews.
[29] Some
recipes for golems specify that "virgin" soil from mountains be used.
Women are often said to have intuition, a different kind of knowledge than
men's. Leivick, Singer, and Wiesel all gift their golems with intuition. Wiesel's
can see souls, and yet, as is the case with women in orthodoxy, Wiesel's golem
is excluded from "divine inspiration."
[30]
Symbols in folklore are protean; this paper will not pursue golem as anal
creation or golem as barometer of gender roles, but, rather, as gentile and as
sabra.
Rabbi
Loew and the Golem of Prague
Rabbi Loew
of Prague was born in 1512, 1520, or 1525, and died in 1609. He was perhaps
born, and certainly educated, in Poland. He was called "The Maharal,"
an acronym for
Moreinu ha-rav Rabbi,
"our teacher, the master Rabbi Loew." He was an educational reformer
who did not believe in miracles and who condemned magic. Loew is seen as a
bridge from medieval, mystical thought to modern, rational thought. His
biographer, Rabbi Ben Zion Bokser, calls him "a Jewish representative in
the movement of transition from medieval to modern times."
[31] Czech
scholar Vladimir Sadek writes, "la réforme pédagogique de Loew y
représente une borne importante entre le moyen-âge et l'ère moderne dans la
domaine pédagogique, de ses formes et méthodes"
[32]
Stories
connecting the creation of a golem with Rabbi Loew did not become common until
more than a century after his death. Some date this association to as early as
1730. Sadek refutes this, saying that the association is first recorded by
Jewish humorist and revolutionary Ludwig Kalisch (1814-1883) who was born in
Poland and who claimed to have heard such legends in his childhood.
[33] Literary
accounts of the legend begin in the mid-nineteenth century in
Sippurim, a collection of Jewish
folklore published in Prague. Since then several written versions, films,
plays, at least one ballet, and a poem have been based on the legend of Rabbi
Loew and the golem of Prague.
In 1909, a
Polish-born, Yiddish-speaking Jew, Yudl Rosenberg, published Nifla'ot Maharal im ha-Golem, The Golem, or
the Miraculous Deeds of Rabbi Liva. Rosenberg claimed that he did not write
the work, but, rather, bought it. It was, in fact, he said, a true record of
events, written by Rabbi Liva's son-in-law. In this work, for the first time,
the golem of Prague defends his people against blood libel.
Rabbi Loew
was the chief rabbi of Prague during a difficult time. Apostate Jews persecuted
practicing Jews; copies of the Talmud were burned six times; in 1559 all Hebrew
books were seized; Jesuits in 1561 ordered Jews to listen to Christian sermons.
Historians report, however, a "certain humanitarian attitude among the
sovereigns."
[34] Rudolf II
(reign: 1576-1612), who upheld the 1551 edict that all Jews must wear yellow
badges and who expelled Jews from Moravia, was considered benign compared to
other Christian monarchs. For example, he repealed restrictions forbidding Jews
from making fur-trimmed coats and dresses.
Writer,
teacher, and Prague resident Frederich Thieberger (1888-1958) claims that,
however conditions might have been otherwise, there was no evidence of a blood
libel in Bohemia at this time.
[35] Further,
according to Sadek, there is no mention of the golem in Rabbi Loew's writings.
[36] How,
then, did the golem, and, specifically, a golem who defends Jews against blood
libel, get attached to Rabbi Loew?
Sadek
theorizes that Hasids from Poland who came to leave written prayers in Rabbi
Loew's tomb were the first to disseminate legends in which Loew created a
golem. Why? Perhaps because of a similarity in the names of Rabbi Loew and a
Biblical character who had power over the magic of letters. Maybe the connection
was made "grâce à l'influence d'une haggadah du Talmud, ayant rapport au
personnage biblique de Bezalel ... il savait ... réunir les lettres qui avaient
crée les cieux et la terre ... les deux noms -- Belazel -- Yehouda Liva ben
Bezalel -- [pouvaient] jouer un certain rôle "
[37]
Rabbi
Loew's famous audience with Rudolf II may have been another factor in his being
cast in legends as a savior of Jews. What was said at this audience is unknown;
however, Rudolf's relative benignity may have been popularly understood among
Jews as the result of Rabbi Loew's influence.
That Rabbi
Loew required a golem to attain legendary hero status, rather than being able
to fulfill such a role without the aid of a golem, supports the main idea of
this paper. If, as this paper argues, the golem is a blank screen on which to
work out the contested and projected urge for a new response to assault,
namely, "action without ideology," as Friedman calls the sabra
mentality,
[38] then
Rabbi Loew would be the ideal choice for the creator of the most famous golem.
Loew was exemplary for his modernity, learning, and rationality. Such a man
would make the perfect bridge between an ancient, mystical, ritual and a
frighteningly new and violent expression of the Jewish spirit, between a valued
past and an uncertain future. In fact, Rabbi Loew's synagogue was known as the
Altneu, the "old new." As Elie Wiesel put it: "The Golem:
servant and ally of the Maharal. It is the Maharal who understands and it is
the Golem who acts. The intelligence of the former, allied with the occult
powers of the latter, never fails to arrive at the truth and therefore cause
justice to triumph."
[39]
Blood libel
may have become an element in the legend because the 1909 manuscript which
provided a foundation for Leivick, Singer, Wiesel, and others was not, as Yudl
Rosenberg claimed, an historical record, or actual oral tradition, but rather,
fakelore,
[40] inspired
by contemporaneous events. Rabbi Gershon Winkler argues for the authenticity of
Rosenberg's manuscript, and treats the golem as an item of faith. Rosenberg, he
says, was a respected rabbi who could never have perpetrated a literary hoax.
Goldsmith, however, points out that Rosenberg's manuscript misnames key
geographic features of Prague, including the Vltava, its central river.
[41] It is
widely assumed that Rosenberg wrote the manuscript himself, and introduced the
blood libel element in response to the Hilsner case. In 1899 in Polna,
Czechoslovakia, Leopold Hilsner was sentenced to death for the alleged
sacrifice of a Christian.
[42] Further
indication that Rosenberg was inspired by the Hilsner case can be seen in the
alleged sacrifice in his story. While most blood libels involve young boys as
alleged victims, in Prague golem stories the golem rescues a mature Christian
girl. The Hilsner case involved a Christian girl of 19.
The Hilsner
case was part of an international trend. Since the late nineteenth century,
anti-Semitism and anti-Semitic violence had been on the increase in Europe and
North America. Many Jews reacted to this trend by denouncing what they saw as a
passive and hidebound response to violence and statelessness. Land and soil, it
was argued, could save Jews. Zionism, a movement begun by Jews in east and
central Europe in the latter half of the nineteenth century, promoted the idea
of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The first Zionist settlement was founded
there in 1882. Theodor Herzl, a prominent Zionist and first president of the
World Zionist Organization, published
Der
Judenstaat, The Jewish State, in 1896. Zionism called Jews to "a
libidinous link with the soil ... a mystical betrothal between Israel and the
promised land," a return to the "womb" of history".
[43]
A man made
of earth, the golem, might have temporarily provided a blank screen onto which
Jews could project their fantasies of retaliating against violence with
violence, and work out the anxieties attendant upon such a path. The real men
and women who would defend the state of Israel, and the legendary earth man who
would fight for Jews, resorted to tactics that caused Jews worry and pain, as
these had heretofore been seen as the tactics of the gentile "other."
Stereotypes
of Jews and Gentiles in Eastern Europe
Stereotypes
in the folklore and literature of Eastern Europe portrayed Jews and gentiles as
opposite, complementary versions of humanity. Jews were seen as an
intellectually active, mercantile, non-violent people. In some cases, Jews were
not considered to be as sexually expressive as gentiles. Stereotypes of gentile
peasants describe a dumb, violent, fertile, and earthy people who drank alcohol
to excess. Disseminated in jokes, legends and other folklore with delight,
resignation, viciousness, or some attitude in between, these stereotypes were
advanced by both Jews and gentiles alike. As American folklorist Alan Dundes
has shown, Jews might tell Jewish jokes with relish;
[44]
social historian Ewa Morawska describes Eastern European peasants assessing
themselves as constitutionally "stupid," unsuited to formal
education, and incompetent with money.
[45]
A popular
collection of Jewish folklore relies on images of Jews that conform to the
stereotype. In his
A Treasury of Jewish
Folklore, Nathan Ausubel divides his section "Heroes" into four
subsections. There are eighty-six tales of wisemen, seventy-four tales of holy
men, twenty-eight tales of miracles, and ten tales of fighters and strongmen.
There is no section entitled "Lovers." One tale is titled, "Why
Scholars Have Homely Wives," another tells how a chaste Jewish girl
resisted seduction by giving her pursuer her eyes.
[46]
There is a tale in which a simple Jewish tailor is able to defeat a trained
Catholic theologian in a debate.
[47] There are
tales describing the chutzpah and craftiness of businessmen. There are
twenty-nine tales of schlemiels and schlimazels (sad sacks and born losers).
Juxtaposing bright Jews with sad sacks and losers fits the stereotype. In
A Pscyhohistory of Zionism, Jay Gonen
speaks of Jews feeling, "a Jewish genius at home, with voluminous
treasures of mind" who becomes "on the street, a luckless, inept
schlemiel, unable to achieve security and equality with his non-Jewish
neighbors."
[48]
Isaac Bashevis
Singer created a gentile character who was often mistaken for a Jew: "'he
had all the qualities attributed to Jews. He shunned fighting, could not stand
liquor ... read serious books, avoided athletic sports, visited museums and art
shows.'"
[49]
Both
gentile and Jewish literature and lore report a downside to the stereotype:
vincibility in combat. As anti-Semitic violence rose in the 1880s, the
long-honored traits of wisdom and a faithful, patient waiting for God's
deliverance in the form of the Messiah were assessed as inadequate. Even though
Jews were a forcibly disempowered minority facing attack from majority
gentiles, some Jews began to argue for direct action. For example, poet Hayim
Nahman Bialik raged at Jewish men who were unable to protect their women from
gang rape and murder during the Kishniev pogrom of 1903.
[50]
Bialik shamed his audience with reminders of past military heroes like the
Maccabees.
[51] He
scoffed at survivors' prayers
[52] and their
efforts to exploit their wounds for begging.
[53]
Sabras,
native-born Israelis, sometimes expressed contempt for the shtetl Jews' assumed
passivity, and for the history of the European Diaspora. In Elie Wiesel's
novel,
A Beggar in Jerusalem, a young
sabra proclaims that all the grand talk about Jews as humanity's conscience was
invented as an alibi for not fighting.
[54]
Though sabras were reported to know Jewish history up to the Roman Exile well,
they couldn't be bothered with the history of the last 2,000 years of exile in
Europe.
[55] In a
collection of sabra jokes the following appeared:
"Mom, how did I come
into this world?"
"The stork brought
you."
"So it's true what the
neighbors say about daddy's being impotent?"
[56]
In the Israeli army, during the 1950s, newcomers of European
ancestry were called "sabon," soap, implying that the newcomer's
people had been so passive that they had allowed themselves to be made into
soap.
[57]
Another
perceived downside to the stereotype was relative sexual inadequacy.
Jews sometimes felt that the
uncircumcised gentiles had a greater ability to satisfy women. This idea
preoccupied Jews and in the twelfth century Moses Maimonides discussed it in
The Guide of the Perplexed. His major
thesis was that circumcision is a means of reducing the strength of the sexual
drive ... As an old Jewish saying goes, a woman who has had sexual intercourse
with an uncircumcised man finds it difficult to break away from him.
[58]
Singer's
male heroes, even while pursued by hordes of women, Jews and gentiles alike,
comport themselves more like losers than great lovers, claims scholar of
American literature Dinah Pladott in "Casanova or Schlemiel? The Don Juan
Archetype in I. B. Singer's Fiction." Even while having sex they can't
stop thinking: "They ... continuously liken the microcosmic realm of their
lusts and loves to the macrocosmic realm of universal rationality and
meaning."
[59] Singer
has been soundly condemned by many in his Yiddish reading audience for writing
about sex at all. The "oddest aspect of Singer's work," is the
"'inordinate stress, certainly for a Yiddish writer, which is placed on
sex.'"
[60]
The
opposite of the cerebral, mercantile, spiritual Jew was the stereotypical
gentile. English author and Zionist Israel Zangwill (1864-1926) wrote:
"'Beware of the goyim ... drunkards and bullies, swift with the fist or
the bludgeon, many in species, but all engendered of God for our sins.'"
[61]
Gonen sees
the roots of this attitude in the Bible:
Jacob came to symbolize the
Jews and Esau the gentiles. Thus, an image of contrasting roles was formed
whereby the Jews were supposed to use their heads and the gentiles their
muscles ... These role distinctions received expression in a folksong by the
poet Bialik. In this song, while Jacob spends his time praising the Lord and
devoting himself to his family, Esau spends his time drinking and beating his
wife. Thus, the superior Jew uses his head in a variety of worthwhile pursuits,
both divine and mundane, while the inferior gentile uses his hands in degrading
activities.
[62]
Gonen reports that these dovetailing roles were formed in childhood:
...it was impossible for
Jewish children not to sense early in life the difference between their values
and those of the neighboring gentile children playing barefoot in streets and
barnyards. To Jewish children, intellectual, scholarly, and spiritual pursuits
became identified as Jewish values, whereas sensual, gross, and menial
preoccupations became identified as gentile.
[63]
In Eastern
Europe, feudal conditions lasted much longer than in Western Europe. Up until
the massive industrialization instituted by Stalin after World War II, most
Eastern Europeans were peasants, living in conditions more primitive than those
found to the west. Jews were often literate, urban, and employed in
money-related activities in the service of the nobility. They often expressed a
view of the peasantry of Eastern Europe as ignorant, bestial, dirty, fertile,
and violent.
[64] Tobias
Kohn, a Jewish observer of peasant life in Poland wrote in 1707:
This country is more fertile
than all the other lands of the nations, but it is full of filth and offal ...
people's homes stink and their clothes are dirty. They do not comb their hair
or beards even once a year...Their diet is bizarre, mainly beans, pickles, and,
on an empty stomach, radishes, onions, and garlic. They drink liquor that burns
the heart and the soul as well as mead and beer and other unhealthy drinks that
unquestionably cause serious diseases ... so there is no wonder that they
suffer such illnesses due to their bad habits ... even if demons had never been
created they would have had to have been created for the people of this
country; for there is no land where they are more occupied with demons,
talismans, oath formulas, mystical names and dreams ....
[65]
Jews had a
highly profitable monopoly on the sale of alcohol in much of Eastern Europe.
[66] In
taverns, gentiles often saw Jews as greedy drug pushers who corrupted men and
nations,
[67] while
Jews saw gentiles as grotesque drunks. Bialik described the interface between
Jews and Poles in his father's tavern as the border between cleanliness and
dirt, civilization and savagery, humanity and bestiality. It was a
meeting between the gates of
purity and defilement
There, in a human swine cave,
in the sacrilege of a tavern
in streams of impious
libation...
my father's head appeared,
the skull of a tortured martyr
in smoke clouds, his face
sick with sorrow,
eyes shedding blood
the faces were monstrous...
the words a filthy stream.
[68]
Singer's
works present a parade of bestial, sexual, dirty gentiles who lack tradition
and act without impulse control. Here is a typical description from The Slave:
The mountaineers no longer
bothered him. But this was not true of the girls who slept in the barn and
tended the sheep. Night and day they bothered him…they sought him out and
talked and laughed and behaved little better than beasts. In his presence they
relieved themselves, and they were perpetually pulling up their skirts to show
him insect bites on their hips and thighs. "Lay me," a girl would
shamelessly demand, but Jacob acted as if he were deaf and blind. It was not
only because fornication was a mortal sin. These women were unclean, and had
vermin in their clothes and elflocks in their hair; often their skins were
covered with rashes and boils, they ate field rodents and the flesh of rotting
carcasses of fowls. Some of them could scarcely speak Polish, grunted like
animals, made signs with their hands, screamed and laughed madly. The village
abounded in cripples, boys and girls with goiters, distended heads and
disfiguring birthmarks; there were also mutes, epileptics, freaks who had been
born with six fingers on their hands, or six toes on their feet. In summer, the
parents of these deformed children kept them on the mountains with the cattle,
and they ran wild. There, men and women copulated in public; the women became
pregnant, but, climbing all day as they did on rocks, bearing heavy packs, they
often miscarried.
[69]
There is a
positively valued female variant of the sexual, fertile, animal gentile in
Singer's fiction. She cannot think, but she is good. Such Polish Catholic women
appear in Singer's The Slave, Enemies, a
Love Story, Shosha, and The Magician
of Lublin. A Jewish man stops to appreciate the gifts of Tekla, a Polish
Catholic woman, in Shosha, comparing
her to more worldly and complex Jewish women:
These
are the real people, the ones who keep the world going, I thought. They serve
as proof that the cabalists are right ... An indifferent God, a mad God,
couldn't have created Tekla. ... Her cheeks were the color of ripe apples. She
gave forth a vigor rooted in the earth, in the sun, in the whole universe. She
didn't want to better the world as did Dora; she didn't require roles and
reviews as did Betty; she didn't seek thrills as did Celia. She wanted to give,
not take. If the Polish people had produced even one Tekla, they had surely
accomplished their mission.
[70]
Fiction by
gentile authors also presents two stereotypes of the peasant, writes Polish
scholar Ewa Korulska. There is the positive stereotype of the placid peasant of
deep faith and deep love for his family, and, even more, for his livestock; on
the other hand there is the "okrutne, ciemne, zabobonne bydle, lubiące
upijać do nieprzytomnoscie, znęcac´ nad wszytkim;" the peasant as
"brutal, ignorant, superstitious beast, who loves to drink to
unconsciousness, and who bullies everyone."
[71]
Jews did
not encounter only Polish peasants, but also Polish nobility. Tradition and law
dictated that Jews handle finance while peasants might touch money but once a
year, or not at all. In Jewish folklore and literature, Polish noblemen are
often amoral beasts who ruin themselves, their peasants, Jews, and Poland,
through greed and irrational spending.
[72]
In
The Golem, Singer describes a
stereotypical encounter between a gentile aristocrat who wants money and a Jew
who is called upon to provide it.
"You cursed Jew! I will
get the money one way or another," the count screamed in rage. "And
you will pay dearly for your insolence in refusing a loan to the great Count
Bratislawski."
Saying these words, the Count
spat in to Reb Eliezer's face. Reb Eliezer humbly wiped off the spittle with
his kerchief and said, "Forgive me, Count, but there was no sense in
gambling for such high stakes and signing notes that cannot be honored."
[73]
The
gentiles and Jews in Singer's
Golem
are traditional stereotypes. The main gentile character is the violent, greedy,
drunken, and sexually criminal Count Bratislawski, who uses his own daughter to
harm Jews. Reb Eliezer is taken away by "a group of soldiers holding their
naked swords in their hands."
[74]
Bratislawski's paid witnesses are "a man who looked like a drunk and a
woman whose face was full of warts and who squinted."
[75]
Israeli
scholar of Ashkenazic history, Israel Bartal, reports that gentile aristocrats
were portrayed as sexual threats in Yiddish literature: "the Polish
nobleman represents the uncleanness, the lust, and the violent nature of the
gentile world. The Polish noblewoman is the epitome of sexual attractiveness
and lasciviousness, and can be resisted by the Jew only with difficulty."
[76] Bartal
quotes passages from Peretz in which a young Polish radical expresses a sexual
interest, glossed by Peretz as violently disruptive to Jewish life, in a Jewish
woman, and a description of a Polish noblewomen driving out in full regalia,
Cossacks in tow, in order to search the countryside for "comely"
Jewish men who are too overawed to resist their splendor and beauty.
Gentile
stereotypes of Jews often focused on money, perceived craftiness, and the
relative non-physicality of Jews. A Czech priest, František Pravda, a
contemporary of Yudl Rosenberg, wrote of "Jewish swindlers, greedy,
spineless ... opportunists."
[77] In
general,
The Jew depicted in Czech
literature is ... not very much different from the Jew portrayed in the
literature of most other European nations. He wears the face of Ahasarus, the
Wandering Jew, the too complicated introvert contrasting sharply with the simplicity
of his environment, or of Shylock, the hated, scheming, rich exploiter, or of
the poor, ridiculed rag picker, who must constantly devise new tricks in order
to survive.
[78]
Polish
literature professor Mieczysław Inglot writes that in Poland, the country in
which Rabbi Loew was educated, "The Jew depicted ... in stories in general
circulation " was a person to whom was attributed "dishonesty in
business, cowardice, and strange rituals. There is the folk stereotype of the
"'Little Jew,' or 'Żydek,' who is amusing, cunning, cowardly."
[79]
Golem
as Gentile; Golem as Sabra
As an anthropoid
form and folkloric fantasy, the golem served as a perfect surface onto which
the folk could have projected any quality. Jewish folklore could have, and did,
produce legends in which characteristics typical of the traditional stereotype
were marshaled to rescue Jews. David Gans, a student of Rabbi Loew's, recounts
the legend of how the Jews were allowed to build their first synagogue in
Prague. The Jews rescued Christians from marauders, not by might, but by
"acting cleverly and slyly" and were rewarded by the grateful
Christians.
[80] As
mentioned above, in another tale, intellectual superiority won a debate for a
simple Jewish tailor. Chayim Block recounts a legend in which Rabbi Loew, hero
of the Prague golem stories, debates and defeats three hundred priests in
groups of ten for thirty days.
[81] The
Jewish folkloric anthropoid, the golem, was endowed with none of these
intellectual gifts.
Earlier
golems, as described above, were relatively featureless. They were created for
brief periods and then destroyed. They remained within homes. They were often
mute. The defensive golems of this century are increasingly violent, sexual,
and/or lacking in impulse control. They resort to what had been seen as gentile
tactics: violence, crudeness, sexual incontinence, and ignorance of or
hostility to ancient Jewish tradition. In oral legends the golem's "gruff
appearance permits him to infiltrate the gentile community" as a spy.
[82]
Why did
Jewish folklore endow its heroes with the power to create only gentile-like
anthropoids? This paper will propose two possible reasons. First of all, it
will be argued that the golem served as a method for Jews to test out and
struggle with their urges to respond to anti-Semitic violence with violence of
their own. That point will be argued below.
There may
be another reason why Jewish mystics could create only gentile-like creatures.
Spiritual and intellectual excellence were required for the successful creation
of a golem.
[83] Such
creation brought the creator close to union with God, to a God-like status.
[84] Golems
were always incomplete, in the way that the stereotype of gentiles are
incomplete; they sometimes lack the ability to think, to speak, to control
themselves, to participate in Jewish ritual life. Perhaps only God can create a
Jew, but an enlightened Jew, in golem legend tradition, can create a
gentile-like creature.
This aspect
of golem creation -- that of a man a bit less than God being able, through
relative superiority, to create a creature that is that much less than God --
is reflected in a Talmudic text. In this text, it is a female, rather than a
gentile, who serves as lesser creature: "Rabbi Samuel ben Unya said in the
name of Rab: A woman (before marriage) is a golem, and concludes a covenant
only with him who transforms her (into) a (useful) vessel, as it is written,
'For your maker is your husband; the Lord of Hosts is His name' (Isaiah 54:5)
(Sanhedrin 22b)."
[85] Singer
attributes this attitude to Rabbi Loew, the hero of the Prague golem legend.
Singer reports that in Rabbi Loew's book
Be'er
Hagolah, Loew wrote that men, through sexual intercourse, endow women with
spirit and physical form.
[86]
As a lesser
other, as one who does work that Jews, by tradition, are prevented from doing
themselves, the golem can be compared to the
shabbes goy, or Sabbath goy. (Because Orthodox Jews are prohibited
from performing certain tasks on the Sabbath, such taboo work was performed by
gentiles; thus, "shabbes goy.") In one early Polish golem legend, the
golem serves as a shabbes goy and is put to work lighting ovens.
[87] In the
more complex works by Leivick, Singer, and Wiesel treated here, the golem
performs other more complex but equally taboo behaviors Jews were prevented, by
tradition, from performing themselves.
The golem
is created by Jews, but, as all the authors treated here report, his status as
a Jew is doubtful, given his gentile-like behavior. This in-between creature
was a perfect medium through which Jews could express and debate anxiety about
adopting the tactics of what had been seen as the inferior other, the gentile.
These discussions can be compared to the reaction of many Jews when considering
the native born Israeli, or sabra. Like golems, sabras were also seen as being
more "gentile" than Jewish.
The golem
in Yudl Rosenberg's 1909 version was an innocuous figure. He could not speak.
The closest he comes to any significant contact with a woman is his rescue of
the living Christian girl who was assumed to have been sacrificed and his
delivery of her to the proper authorities. Rosenberg's golem is merely a
"domestic android whose programming needs fine tuning."
[88] Though
the golem is attacked by a group of men who throw him down a well and stone
him, Rabbi Liva refuses to permit the golem to avenge himself. The attacker later
dies of black mange. God's plan is righteous, it triumphs, and the golem never
needs to controvert the religious decree about taking the law into his own
hands. Future golems were not so tame.
Jewish
suffering inspired poet and playwright Leivick Halpern, a.k.a. H. Leivick
(1886-1962) to adapt the Prague golem material into a 1920 play,
The Golem, a Dramatic Poem in Eight Scenes.
When Leivick was seven years old, a Polish bully attacked him for not doffing
his hat while passing a church. Later that day, in Hebrew school, Leivick was
told the story of Abraham and Isaac. This story upset him terribly. What if the
rescuing angel arrived too late, and Isaac had been sacrificed? Later Leivick
spoke of Holocaust victims as "six million Isaacs."
[89]
Eventually Leivick was arrested by the czarist government for his communist
activities and sent to Siberia. Leivick attributed his writing of
The Golem to anti-Semitic violence,
including that childhood attack, his own suffering in prison in Siberia, and
the suffering of others he witnessed there.
[90]
Leivick's
experiences might certainly be seen as justifying his projection of a fantasy
who can and does defeat gentiles at what is seen as their own game--brute
force. Even so, Leivick's pre-Holocaust play, unlike Singer's or Wiesel's
post-Holocaust versions of the Golem legend, never delights in what the golem
can do. The play's atmosphere is relentlessly dark and troubled; the set is
comprised of caves and towers scattered with cobwebs and ruins. Unlike Singer,
who rollicks in his golem's crudity and burlesques his rough sexuality, and
unlike Wiesel, who telegraphs a finely honed respect for the fighting machine
of his creation, Leivick draws his golem in unrelieved anxiety and an agonized
sense of his fantasy as a betrayal of Jewish spirituality and God's plan of a
patient wait for the Messiah.
Creation of
a violent golem taints Leivick's Rabbi Levi from the first. He is allowed no
honeymoon period in which to enjoy the release of action without ideology. Even
before it has taken form, the spirit of Leivick's golem warns against his own
creation.
[91] Once
made, Rabbi Levi assesses his blatantly carnal creation with despair: "Is
this he? The man I dreamt into existence? The champion? The hero? He? Such
hands, such shoulders, legs. So much body? So much still sorrow?"
[92] Rabbi
Levi's self debasement offers the arch enemy of the Jews, Father Thaddeus, the
chance to accuse Rabbi Levi of the hatred Thaddeus himself has generated:
"What causes that strange look within your eyes? ... I have never chanced
to see two Jewish eyes that looked upon me with true fury, with murderous rage
and hate, as yours do now." This anti-Semite delivers the coup de grâce,
telling Rabbi Levi that his eyes seem "the eyes of some golem run wild."
[93] Finally,
Rabbi Levi commits the apostasy of rejecting God's plan for the Jews, in the
form of the Messiah. When the Messiah shows up, complaining of sore feet, the
rabbi announces that it is not yet the Messiah's time; it is the time of the
golem.
[94]
Rabbi Levi
never manages to marshal his golem's energies to advancing the Jewish cause;
rather, this golem threatens the spiritual and physical life of the community.
This golem's crazed urges cause him to loathe himself and wish to harm himself
and the rabbi.
[95] His
immediate and uncontained sexuality terrorizes Jewish women. Rabbi Levi must
constantly rebuke and discipline the golem for being attracted to the rabbi's
daughter; in spite of this, the golem corners the girl and describes to her
every giddily violent, almost cannibal act he could and would like to perform
upon her body.
[96] "In
everybody's sight," he grabs and kisses her.
[97]
The golem identifies himself as an outsider and ignorant of tradition; he
reasons like a child.
[98] What
wisdom he does have is the wisdom of earth.
[99]
He eats in gulps, without first blessing his food.
[100]
He mirrors the world in its depravity; he is a measure of how lacking in worth
are Jews in their current state.
[101] In
short, "He does not seem a Jew."
[102]
Leivick's
golem is never regenerated. He dies after killing Jews and being denounced by
the girl he loved. Rabbi Levi declares that the golem never learned to live in
peace "as Jews live," and that his crimes against Jews are punishment
for the Jews attempting to save themselves by force, a blasphemous alteration
of God's plan that Jews must await deliverance in the form of the Messiah.
[103]
Sixty years
after the first publication of Leivick's play, and more than three decades
after the end of World War II, Noble Prize-winning author Isaac Bashevis Singer
(1904-1991) gave the world a much less angst-ridden account of the golem.
Singer was born in Poland. He emigrated to America in 1935, thus escaping the
Holocaust, in which most of Poland's Jews were murdered by Nazis. Singer
devoted his career to writing in Yiddish and recreating the world of Poland's
lost Jews. His children's book,
The
Golem, offers a humorous, affectionate treatment of the golem legend.
Singer's Rabbi Loew is warned: "Take care that he should not fall into the
follies of flesh and blood."
[104]
Fall he does, but it is a fortunate fall.
In a
wonderfully subtle and inventive plot device, Singer has a servant search the
city for clothing large enough to fit a golem. All the servant can find is a
theater troupe's costume for a Goliath figure. Goliath is the infamous Biblical
giant, champion of the enemies of the Jews, brought down by naked young David
with a simple slingshot. The Jews have long identified with David, and
identified their powerful and outnumbering enemies as Goliath. Like Leivick's
golem, Singer's is more a stereotypical gentile than Jew.
Like
Singer's Polish Catholic women, his golem is of the earth, earthy, and retains
the special powers of earth. Rabbi Loew indulgently instructs the golem in his
place in the great chain of being: "You are part of the earth, and the
earth knows many things -- how to grow grass, flowers, wheat, rye, fruit."
[105]
This golem
is not a typical Singer Jewish male character, engaging in a
"Camusian" search for meaning through sex.
[106]
Of all three golems treated here, Singer's has the most extended and most
reciprocated adventures with women.
Miriam ... helped with the
household chores ... Miriam asked, "Joseph, are you hungry?"
"Hungry," the golem
repeated ...
Miriam brought him bread,
onions, and radishes. The golem gulped them all down in no time...
"Food," the golem
echoed. Suddenly, he said, "Miriam nice girl."
Miriam began to laugh.
"Hey, golem, I didn't know that you notice girls."
...He gazed at her with large
eyes. Suddenly he did something that startled Miriam. He lifted her up and
kissed her. His lips were as scratchy as a horseradish grinder. Miriam screamed
and the golem exclaimed, "Miriam golem bride"
[later]... the golem began to
clamber up the tower ... when he spotted Miriam in the crowd, he rushed over to
her, caught her in his arms, and ran cheerfully with her through the streets,
jumping and dancing with joy.
[107]
Though, in
some places and times, Jews had to agitate for the honor of fighting in
national armies, Joseph is so strong and fearless that the Austrian army wants
to recruit him. "But the golem was afraid neither of soldiers nor of
fences nor of ditches. He hurdled all the barriers. He caught living soldiers and
began to play with them as if they were lead toys. Heavy stones bounced off of
him as if he were made of steel."
[108]
Unlike
Leivick, Singer explicitly reassures his reader that the anxieties attendant to
a release of violence are not necessary. Jews are wise enough as a people to
know how to channel violence strategically. Too, resorting to a golem is not an
abrogation of God's plan, but part of it. This reassurance offers Singer's
reader the vicarious and fantastic opportunity to gloat with the underdogs,
suddenly blessed with the upper hand. Singer's emperor says to Rabbi Leib:
"With a giant like this,
you Jews could conquer the whole world. What guarantee do we have that you will
not invade all the countries and make us into slaves?"
To this Rabbi Leib replied,
"We Jews have tasted slavery in the land of Egypt, and therefore we don't
want to enslave others. The golem is only a temporary help to us in time of
exceptional danger. The Messiah will come when the Jews deserve to be redeemed
by their virtuous deeds"
It was the first time in the
history of the Jews after they were exiled from their land that a rabbi had to
promise an emperor that the rabbi would safeguard him and his people from
impending mishap.
[109]
Rabbi Leib
never puts full faith in his golem, nor does he abandon old hopes: "He
knew that our salvation could never come from sheer physical strength."
[110] Singer's
golem, like Wiesel's, does not repudiate the past, but vindicates it: "A
great power was hidden in these people whom God had chosen for his own."
[111]
As Singer's
book progresses, the golem's speech improves, he asks to be schooled, and he
wants a bar mitzvah. "Golem no want be golem," he says.
[112] In these
strivings of an incomplete creature towards Judaism, Singer's golem is like his
righteous Catholic females. These beautiful, earthy, Polish Catholic women are
eager to escape and transcend the debasement of the Polish Catholic
culture-world Singer describes for them. Like his golem, their thirst for a
better life can only be satisfied by conversion to Judaism; however, like
Singer's golem, their conversions are never fully successful. Wanda, in
The Slave, must pretend to be mute so as
not to betray her ignorance and accent; Jadwiga, in
Enemies, a Love Story, is sexually betrayed by her bigamist husband
Herman, who cheats on her with two Jewish wives.
Singer's
golem successfully carries out his assignment of protecting Jews from blood
libel. His outrageous exploits cause Rabbi Loew to destroy him, but even in
this Singer cannot condemn his golem uncategorically. Singer suggests that the
golem enjoys an afterlife of love with Miriam.
Elie Wiesel
(b. 1928) shows the most respect and affection for his golem, and the greatest
amount of confidence that Jews can, when necessary, successfully negotiate
violence as tactic. Of the three authors treated here, his experience of
anti-Semitism is the most extreme. As a child, he was taken from his native
Romania to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He has become one of the great
chroniclers of the Holocaust and a Nobel Peace Prize winner. Wiesel's text contains
a hint that his own experience may be the cause of his exceptional attitude
toward the golem: "I truly liked him ... to us he was a savior ... He was
said to be a fool ... I do not agree. He was a saint. May I burn in hell if I
am lying ... As a member of the Holy Brotherhood, I know the fragility of life
and the power of death."
[113] The Holy
Brotherhood Wiesel refers to is those who bury the dead.
Like other
golems, Wiesel's golem is possessed of apparently crude qualities, qualities
that allow him to pass as a gentile.
[114]
In Wiesel, however, these golem qualities, when shepherded by Rabbi Loew, are
evidence of greater, rather than lesser, humanity. His golem is not verbal; his
muteness becomes an intelligent, challenging force of its own. Wiesel treats
his golem's violence and divorce from tradition with admiration rather than
with Singer's raucous humor, comic book garishness, and parental fretting.
Since he never talked, and
since he always seemed to surprise you, to shock you, to force you out of the
ordinary, to break your habits, some people would get impatient with him. But
he, like a sleeping or walking statue, exhibited total indifference. Almost
unapproachable, he allowed no one to offend him. If he was ridiculed, he
ignored it. If stones were thrown at him, he did not react. There was almost no
way of getting him angry. Only the godless enraged him; his brothers could do
anything. In spite of what you think, he was not less human than we, but more
human.
[115]
Wiesel
stresses that his golem is a "fully accomplished being" and refutes
that notion that to be physical, one must be crude.
In your own mind he looks
like a monster. You imagine him excessively strong, tall, heavy, dragging his
body like lead -- some kind of human beast that nature put on earth to mock or
frighten you. Well, let me tell you, you are mistaken.
I, who have seen him in my
childhood, I remember him perfectly ... His bearing was awkward and yet
astonishingly agile. Riveted in the ground, but floating in the air. Strange,
mysterious, he seemed to plow earth and heaven all at once. Sure of himself, he
moved ahead inexorably. Nothing could stand in his way. Without pity for the
wicked, fierce towards our enemies, he was charitable and generous with us. I
should add that he was blessed with both intuition and intelligence. On the
street you would have turned to look at him, not because of his appearance, but
because of something else, and I do not know what; he radiated a force which
overwhelmed you, moved you, flooded you with emotion.
[116]
Facing the
page of this passage is an illustration of Rabbi Loew, wrapped in a prayer
shawl, walking a street of sixteenth-century Prague. A full moon overhead
castes two shadows, though only Loew's figure is seen. The illustrator and
Wiesel thus communicate that, inherent in all the Jews who could not or did not
fight back, was today's Jew who could and does, and who has not lost and will
not loose the intellectual and spiritual traditions of his ancestors. He can
"plow heaven and earth at once."
Wiesel
stresses a theme that receives passing reference in Singer. In Wiesel,
especially, the violent golem is a manifestation not of the fated Jews' hubris
in taking upon themselves the work of God in saving themselves, but of God's
will. "God will hear us, I promise you,"
[117]
the Maharal tells his people, knowing full well that he is going to animate the
golem. When doing so, he tells his golem, "You will succeed, my dear
little Yossel, because you have never failed before; it is God's will that you
thwart the fatal plans of our enemies"
[118]
This is, of course, the opposite of the theme of Leivick's work, in which Jews
are punished for usurping God's timing and the role of the Messiah.
In the end,
Wiesel's golem is not destroyed in a spirit of tragic grief, like Leivick's,
nor in exasperation, like Singer's, but merely decommissioned, and perhaps only
temporarily. In the final sentences of the novella, we are told: "And he
is waiting to be called."
[119]
Wiesel's
final sentences inform his readers that Jews are capable of fighting back, and
of doing so successfully. The contested choice of some Jews to meet violence
with violence is no longer just a theme in legend, but of daily headlines. Like
the legendary golem, sabras can be seen as creations of shtetl Jews, and
projections of repressed energies. Gonen writes that most sabras are the
product of Ashkenazic parents, and the sabras' behavior might be interpreted as
"the parents' vicariously living the actions of the children by
encouraging them, consciously or unconsciously, to carry out hidden impulses
and wishes which reside in them rather than their children."
[120]
As with
golems, the sabras' physicality and relative divorce from tradition were often
seen as more gentile than Jewish. Sabras were called "Jewish Goys" by
Yiddish-speaking Jews.
[121]
Evidently the parent
generation was surprised -- not always pleasantly -- by some of the unexpected
results of rearing a first generation of Jews "born free," so to
speak ... the surprise was at the sight of masculine, sunburned daredevils ...
as perceived by their parents; they seemed like "Hebrew Tarzans."
They were not ... knowledgeable about world literature and European history ...
In short, they had ceased to be Jews ... this perhaps represented a step
backward in terms of culture and sophistication, but certainly a great leap
forward in terms of ability to survive and have a proud masculine image.
[122]
The sabras
are not completely out of touch with their ancestors' story, Gonen reports:
after the Six Day War, "'If the six million could see us now!'" was
heard in Israel.
[123] With
time, sabras have been assessed as being more and more like the stereotype of
their ancestors. Like the folkloric golem, they are described as wanting to be
loved by their creators, wanting to belong, and holding inherent in them their
ancestors' most loved qualities.
There are growing examples
from literature and from conversations with sabras which indicate that the
older sabra characteristics of daredevil blatancy is receiving an infusion of
the sensitivity, introspection, empathy, and ideological mindedness that
typified the mentality of the Galut -- with fruitful results.
[124]
All are not
so sanguine about new characterizations of Jews. Many sharply condemn Israel
when that nation responds to threat with violence. Some see this criticism as
evidence of a double standard; Jews, it has been surmised, are expected to be
philosophical, not active, to be victims, not soldiers. Such a double standard,
it has been argued, is rooted in anti-Semitism.
[125]
Jews
themselves, however, have often expressed the desire to see other Jews conform
to a standard of non-violence. When Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
assassinated by a fellow Jew in 1995, Jews asked: "Has Israel created a
new kind of Jew who can kill?" an Ashkenazic Jew from Hungary said:
"When I was growing up in Europe, we knew exactly what it is to be a Jew
and what it isn't. Murder was never a part of it."
[126]
One
prominent American Jew, Woody Allen, characterized himself as very like the
shtetl stereotype in his response to the Palestinian uprising of a decade ago
on the op-ed pages of the New York Times. "I'm an uninformed coward,"
he said. "I prefer to sit around in coffee houses and grouse to loved ones
privately about social conditions, invariably muttering imprecations on the
heads of politicians. My mind turns to more profound matters: man's lack of a
spiritual center ... the empty universe, along with eternal annihilation,
aging, terminal illness, the absence of God in a hostile, raging void."
[127]
The golem
has no memory of suffering and the rich culture that grew out of persecution.
He has no past of spirituality and righteousness to refer to. He gets hurt; he
hurts back. The title of Allen's article is, "Am I Reading the Papers
Correctly?" The answer is yes, Woody, you are, and if you had read
Leivick, Singer, or Wiesel, you would not be so surprised.
[1]
Blood libel is an accusation made by gentiles against Jews. It alleges that an
individual Jew or several Jews have tortured, perhaps crucified, and/or
sacrificed a Christian child as part of a religious ritual. Blood libel is
first recorded in England in 1144. The most notorious recent accusation
occurred in Kielce, Poland, in 1946. Blood libel has been responsible for the
deaths of countless numbers of innocent Jews at the hands of gentile mobs.
Arnold
L. Goldsmith, The Golem Remembered, 1909
- 1980 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1981), p. 11
[3]
Alida Allison, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? The Golem as Family Member
in Jewish Children's Literature," The
Lion and the Unicorn; A Critical Journal of Children's Literature 14:2
(1990): 92-97, p. 92.
[4]
Jay Y. Gonen, (A Psychohistory of Zionism
New York: Mason Charter, 1975), p. 317.
[5]
Moshe Idel, Golem: Jewish Magical and
Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid. (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1990), p. 3-4.
[6]
Arnold L. Goldsmith, The Golem
Remembered, 1909 - 1980 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1981), p.
19.
[7]
Emily D Bilski, editor. Golem! Danger,
Deliverance, and Art (New York: The Jewish Museum, 1988), p. 66; Byron
Sherwin, The Golem Legend : Origins and
Implications (New York: University Press of America, 1985), p. 43; Gershon
Winkler, The Golem of Prague. (New
York: The Judaica Press, 1980), p. 19.
[13]
Gershon Scholem, On the Kabbalah and its
Symbolism (New York: Schocken Books,
1965), 184.
[15]
Scholem, On the Kabbalah and Its
Symbolism, 159.
[17]
Gershon Scholem, Kabbalah (New York:
Quadrangle, 1974), 353; Sherwin, 17;
Bilski, 13; Winkler, 20; Idel, 207-212.
[18]
Idel, 233; Sherwin, 16; Bilski, 6; Scholem, On
the Kabbalah, 199.
[19]
Gershon Scholem, The Messianic Idea in
Judaism, (New York: Schocken Books, 1971), 338.
[20]
Norma Comrada, "Golem and Robot: A Search for Connections," Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts
7:2-3 (1996): 244-54; Jane Davidson, "Golem - Frankenstein - Golem of Your
Own" Journal of the Fantastic in the
Arts 7:2-3 (1996): 228-43.
[21]
Carl Schaffer, "Leivick's The Golem and the Golem Legend," p. 139, in
Patrick Murphy, editor,Staging the
Impossible: The Fantastic Mode in
Modern Drama (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1992).
[22]
Scholem, Kabbalah, 352.
[24]
Neil W. Russack, "A Psychological Interpretation of Meyrinks's The Golem, " pp. 157-164 in Gareth
Hall, et. al., editors, The Shaman from
Elko: Papers in Honor of Joseph L. Henderson on His Seventy Fifth Birthday
(San Francisco: Jung Institute, 1978).
[25]
Arnold L. Goldsmith, "Isaac Bashevis Singer and the Legend of the Golem of
Prague," Yiddish 6:2-3(1985):
39-50, and, Arnold L. Goldsmith, "Elie Wiesel, Rabbi Judah Lowe, and the
Golem of Prague" Studies in American
Jewish Literature 5 (1986):15-28.
[26]
Lester D. Friedman, "The Edge of Knowledge: Jews as Monsters, Jews as
Victims" MELUS 11:3 (1984):
49-62.
[27]
For a good example of an anal creation analysis of traditional narrative, see:
Alan Dundes, "Earth Diver: Creation of the Mythopoeic Male," American Anthropologist 64
(1962):1032-50.
[28]
Isaac Bashevis Singer, The Golem (New
York: Farrar, Strauss, Giroux, 1982), p. 66.
[29]
Gershon Scholem, On the Kabbalah, 163-164.
[30]
Elie Wiesel, The Golem: The Story of a
Legend (New York: Summit Books, 1983), p. 45.
[31]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered, p. 30.
[32]
Vladimir Sadek, "Rabbi Loew; Sa Vie, Heritage Pedagogique, et sa
Legende," Judaica Bohemiae XV
1(1979):27-40. Praha: Statni Zidovske Muzeum, p. 33. "Loew's pedagogic
reform represents an important boundary between the Middle Ages and the modern
era in the realm of pedagogy, its forms and methods."
[34]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered , p. 22.
[35]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered, p. 40.
[37]
Sadek, 36. "through the influence of a Talmud haggadah connected to the
Biblical character Bezalel who was able to put together the letters that
created the heavens and the earth.... the two names ... Belazel -- Yehouda Liva
ben Bezalel -- [the similarity of the two names] may have played a certain
role."
[39]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 65-68.
[40]
"The presentation of spurious and synthetic writings under the claim that
they are genuine folklore," Richard Dorson, "Fakelore." in American Folklore and the Historian
(Chicago: Univesity of Chicago Press, 1971), 3-14.
[41]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered, p. 40.
[42]
František Cervinka, "The Hilsner Affair," pp. 135-161 in Alan Dundes,
editor, The Blood Libel Legend: A
Casebook in Anti-Semitic Folklore (Madison: The University of Wisconsin
Press, 1991).
[44]
Alan Dundes, "A Study of Ethnic Slurs: The Jew and the Polack in the
United States," Journal of American
Folklore 84 (1971): 186-203.
[45]
Ewa Morawska, For Bread with Butter ;
The Life-Worlds of East Central Europeans
in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1890-1940 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1985), pp. 39-49.
[46]
Nathan Ausubel, A Treasury of Jewish
Folklore (New York: Crown Publishers, 1948), p. 120.
[49]
Thomas Gladsky, "The Polish Side of Singer's Fiction," Studies in American Jewish Literature 5
(1986), p. 6.
[50]
Hayyim Nahman Bialik, Selected Poems
(New York: Bloch, 1948), p. 118.
[54]
Elie Wiesel, A Beggar in Jerusalem
(New York: Random House, 1970).
[59]
Dinah Pladott, "Casanova or Schlemiel? The Don Juan Archetype in I.B.
Singer's Fiction," in Joseph C. Landis, Aspects of I.B. Singer (New York: Queens College Press, 1986),
pp.55-71, p. 60.
[64]
Israel Bartal, "Non-Jews and Gentile Society in East European Hebrew and
Yiddish Literature: 1856-1914" Polin
4 (1989): 53-69.
[65]
M. Rosman, "A Minority Views the Majority: Jewish Attitudes towards the
Polish Commonwealth and Interaction with Poles" Polin 4(1989):31-42.
[66]
Encyclopedia Judaica Jerusalem:
Keter, 1971, pp. 542-546.
[67]
Wladyslaw T Bartoszewski,The Convent at
Auschwitz (New York: G. Braziller, Inc., 1991), p. 109.
[68]
Bialik, in Penueli, S. and A. Ukhmani, eds. Anthology
of Modern Hebrew Poetry 1966.
[69]
Isaac Bashevis Singer, Three Complete
Novels: The Slave, Enemies, a Love Story, Shosha (New York: Avenel Books,
1982), p. 5-6.
[70]
Singer, Three Complete Novels, p.
325.
[71]
Ewa Korulska, "O Chlopie -- Bez Tytulu" [On Peasants--Untitled]Polska Sztuka Ludowa: Konteksty [Polish
Folk Art: Contexts] 48:3-4(1994), 127.
[73]
Singer, The Golem, p. 7-8.
[74]
Singer, The Golem, 9.
[75]
Singer, The Golem, 10.
[77]
Avigdor Dagan, "Jewish Themes in Czech Literature" in The Jews of Czechoslovakia: Historical
Studies and Surveys volume I: 456-467 (New York: Society for the History of
Czechoslovak Jews, 1968), p. 463.
[79]
Mieczysl/aw Inglot, "The Image of the Jew in Polish Narrative Prose of the
Romantic Period," Polin: A Journal
of Polish-Jewish Studies 2(1987):199-220, p. 200, 214.
[80]
Jirina Sedinova, "Old Czech Legends in the Work of David Gans" Judaica Bohemiae XIV 2 (1978):89-111.
Praha: Statni Zidovske Muzeum, p. 108.
[81]
Goldsmith, "I.B. Singer," p. 44.
[86]
Isaac Bashevis Singer "The Golem is a Myth for Our Time" The New York Times 12 August, 1984, 2;1.
[87]
Jay Jacoby, "The Golem in Jewish Literature," Judaica Libraianship 1(1984):100-104, p. 101.
[88]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered, p. 41.
[89]
Halper Leivick, "The Golem, A Dramatic Poem in Eight Scenes," pp.
217-356 in Joseph C. Landis, editor, The
Dybbuk and Other Great Yiddish Plays (New York: Bantam, 1966), p. 217-220.
[90]
Goldsmith, Golem Remembered, 75.
[96]
Leivick, pp. 303- 304.
[104]
Singer, The Golem, p. 23.
[105]
Singer, The Golem, p. 36.
[107]
Singer, The Golem, p. 72-75.
[108]
Singer, The Golem., pp. 68, 71.
[109]
Singer, The Golem, p. 52-53.
[110]
Singer, The Golem, p. 62
[111]
Singer, The Golem, p. 83.
[112]
Singer, The Golem, p. 67.
[113]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 12.
[114]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 57.
[115]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 31-34.
[116]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 31-32.
[117]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 22.
[118]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 29.
[119]
Wiesel, The Golem, p. 96.
[120]
Gonen, 1975, p. 111-112.
[125]
e.g.: Sidney Zion, "If Israel Put a Bounty on Arafat" The New York Times 15 January, 1990,
A:17; A. M. Rosenthal, "The Double Standard" The New York Times 22 October, 1991, A:23.
[126]
Pam Belluck, "Jews Say Their Values Were Torn by a Bullet" The New York Times 6 November, 1995, A9.
[127]
Woody Allen, "Am I Reading the Papers Correctly?" The New York Times 28 January, 1988, A
27.
I do not think that we should publicize Elie Wiesel, as he was thoroughly anti-Polish and anti-Christian.
ReplyDeleteIn his book, THE HOLOCAUST IN AMERICAN LIFE, American Jewish author Jack Novick faulted Wiesel for equating the Nazi genocide of Poles with the thieves crucified on the side of Jesus Christ (on the presumption that the Nazi genocide of the Jews is somehow equivalent to the crucifixion of Christ.)
In addition, Wiesel repeated the old saw about Poles being responsible for the Nazi German death camps on their soil. As if the German conquerors of Poland sought permission, from the despised Polish UNTERMENSCHEN, for the siting of the camps!
Hello Mr. Peczkis,
ReplyDeleteWe should not speak ill of the dead, but You have indirectly raised an important issue.
Americans (not just American Jews) often use words: "Poles allowed the Holocaust to happen". That is unfair, ignorant and hypocritical. My grandparents were defensless peasants. They spend the war living in poverty and fear. Now some well-fed, well-off dorks feel entitled to insult their memory.
We have a saying in Poland- zapomniał kogut jak jajkiem był (a cock forgot how he had been an egg). It's used when someone acts sanctimoniously despite his past transgressions.
Some Americans have planks in their eyes.
On another topic.
Jonny Daniels, founder of From the Depths foundation, wrote an article about 75th anniversary of Jedwabne pogrom. Link below. Text in Polish.
http://wiadomosci.onet.pl/tylko-w-onecie/jedwabne-75-lat-pozniej/21p6m9
To avoid any misunderstandings, Mr. Daniels is a friend of Poland.
Apparently neither of the two gentlemen posting on this blog bothered to read the blog post itself, and are merely using this space to grind their own axes.
ReplyDeleteActually, I have read this article several years ago. There is an entire collection of Your writings on one website. I haven't read them all yet, but I intend to.
DeleteI, too, have read the blog before posting. My reasoning is simple: I do not consider what Elie Wiesel said about the golem anywhere nearly as important as his anti-Polish and anti-Christian statements. How many American readers even know what a golem is?
ReplyDeleteSpeaking ill of the dead? Wiesel is a historical figure, and people speak ill of historical figures all the time. Besides, Polonophobes freely speak ill of dead Poles.
To Lukasz: I have read the Jedwabne article. The author is no friend of Poland. He is oblivious to the evidence of active German involvement in the Jedwabne crime, and is completely silent about the crimes of his own people.
"The author is no friend of Poland."
DeleteBut he IS a friend of Poland. This article was meant for Poles. There is no need to mention the Germans. We know they were there. It's the participation of some Poles that is difficult to understand.
And why should a British Jew apologise for some commie Ostjuden? They would have killed him. He's a "rotten Western capitalist".
"How many American readers even know what a golem is?"
There are many Jewish people in the USA. Is there no cultural exchange?
Well, if the Germans were the main killers at Jedwabne, and the usual line is to unilaterally blame the Poles, then the nonmention of the Germans is inexcusable. And why exactly is this "friend of Poland" so excited about the Polish participation while silent about the German participation. Sounds like very selective indignation to me.
DeleteIf a British Jew wants to identify with the Polish Jew (at Jedwabne), then you bet that the British Jew should take ownership of the crimes of Poland's Jewish Communists. He cannot have it both ways.
Elie Wiesel is not well known for his views about the golem, but is very much well known as the spokesman for the remembrance of the Holocaust. For this reason, his Polonophobic and anti-Christian statements are all the more odious.