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Jim
Simmerman
Bob
Hicok
Alice
Friman
Albert
Goldbarth
G.
K. Wuori
S.
Gruen
John
Brehm
David
Kirby
Lesley
Quinn
Christine
Garren
Natasha
Sajé
Roy
Jacobstein
Rebecca
McClanahan
Naeem
Murr

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Lisa Lieberman
The Public Jew
MY COLLEAGUE MEYER used to stand up at the first faculty meeting of
the year and announce the dates of the Jewish holidays. Rosh Hashanah
falls on September 10 and 11, he would intone, his voice taking
on a sepulchral cadence. I would have to resist the impulse to bow my
head. Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, begins at sundown on September
19. Some of our Jewish students may choose to observe these Holy Days
at home with their families. Please be considerate of the beliefs and
traditions of the Jewish members of the college community when scheduling
exams and assignments.
Meyers performance always made me uncomfortable.
And I was not the only Jew in the room who felt this way. I would look
around and notice the reaction of other Jewish colleagues to the yearly
speech. Some looked embarrassed. Others smirked. One made a show of
not listening, nudging his neighbor to whisper some (no doubt) irreverent
comment in her ear. I do not know exactly why Meyers announcement
made us squirm. It may have been merely the fact that it was Meyer who
delivered it. As director of Judaic Studies, a position he had held
for some twenty years by the time I was hired, he was certainly entitled
to serve as spokesman for the Jewish community. That he played the part
with gusto was only to be expected. And yet, I never felt that Meyer
spoke for me. For whom, then, did Meyer speak? For the handful of Jewish
students who observed the High Holy Days? I do not think so. Meyer spoke
on behalf of all Jews, living and dead, when he reminded the non-Jews
in the audience of their obligation to honor our Holy Days. He spoke
especially for those who could not speak: the silent victims of persecution.
Meyer spoke in the name of Jews who had perished in the Holocaust.
The solemn tone was the giveaway. On public
occasions, Meyer put on his public persona. He was The Jew, after
all; it was his job. Whenever a Jewish opinion was needed, a Jewish
member required to serve on a college committee, a Jewish presence deemed
politic at a gathering of alumni donors, Meyer was there. The rest of
us were free to define our identities for ourselves, choosing to be
political scientists or evolutionary biologists, Shakespeare scholars
or Marxist-oriented economists who happened to be Jewish. Our faith
was our own business; in the studiously tolerant environment of the
liberal arts college, religious differences are not supposed to matter.
And for the most part, they do not. Having a Jewish last name is no
guarantee that you are an observant Jew. For many of us, embarking upon
an academic career meant drifting away from the faith of our mothers
and fathers. I still remember the thrill of discovering Plato during
my sophomore year in college. The Phaedrus satisfied my metaphysical
yearnings more profoundly than any of the Jewish texts I had studied
in religious school. Montesquieu, Zola, Camus: in the company of these
writers, I have probed my soul and acquired my sense of moral responsibility.
For Meyer, being Jewish mattered, and being
different was not beside the point. It was the point. Meyer personified
difference; he was the outsider, par excellence, the visible
exemplar and devotee of a minority creed. His faith was not entirely
his business, and he was not at liberty to define his own identity.
Meyers Jewishness was defined by others, by non-Jewish others,
and it was defined in broad strokes so as to give the others something
to get a fix on. But looking back on Meyers performance, I realize
that it contained an element of self-parody. At the very moment he was
summoning his authority to announce the dates of the Jewish holidays,
Meyer would pause to make jokes, stupid jokes that undermined the seriousness
of his message. Jewish history dates back to 3760 BC. The Chinese
trace their civilization to 1122 BC, I recall him saying. This
means that Jews had to wait 2,638 years for Chinese food.
I have no idea what prompted Meyer to tell such
jokes. Did he feel a need to soften up his audience before reminding
them of their obligations? Or were the jokes evidence that Meyer himself
was uncomfortable in the role of Public Jew? The fact that his wife
was a practicing Catholic would surely have given devout Jews pause;
I know Meyer was troubled by the contradictions that intermarriage entailed.
On a personal level I suspect he felt conflicts about his Jewish identity,
but these conflicts could never be shown in public. In public Meyer
was required to maintain an unambiguous front. His credibility depended
on it. Perhaps it was Meyers hearty assertion of his Jewishness
in the face of his doubts that made the rest of us Jews uneasy.
MY FIRST TEACHING JOB was at a small college in the Midwest that had
not wholly succeeded in shedding its Baptist past. Jews there kept a
low profile, not through fear of anti-Semitism but out of a kind of
modesty that seemed in keeping with the Midwestern ethos. I remember
being buttonholed by a Christian colleague at a cocktail party in 1988,
during the height of the intifada. Whats Shamir doing,
sending soldiers to kill children? I was asked. In a roomful of
Jews, I might very well have raised the question myself. My college
roommate, a woman who had flirted with the idea of making aliyah
in the 1970s, stopped speaking to me after I criticized the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon. Standing in the kitchen of my department chairmans
home, clutching a plastic cup of Chardonnay, the only Jew in the room,
I hesitated to express my true opinion. How should I know?
I retorted. Do you think every Jew in America has a hotline to
the Israeli prime minister?
Why did I say that? I could have told him the
truth: that I was as shocked as he was by Israels actions in the
Gaza Strip and West Bank. In all honesty I ought to have confessed that
I was upset by Israels treatment of its Arab citizens and dismayed,
too, by the military occupation of southern Lebanon. I didnt like
to see Israel in the role of aggressor, hated the evidence that Israel
was behaving like a colonialist oppressor. The events in Lebanon and
the occupied territories were forcing me to confront my assumption that
a nation founded by victims of persecution would be more righteous than
other nations. It might have been difficult to admit these doubts to
my colleague,although I could have tempered my criticism by pointing
out that the policies of Israels ruling coalition did not represent
the attitudes of all Israeli citizens. Liberal Jewish Israelis were
demonstrating against the Shamir government precisely because of its
heavy-handed response to the intifada, I might have said. An
answer along these lines is most likely what my colleague expected;
I dont think he viewed me as a hard-line Zionist. Why did I respond
in anger?
At the time I believed my resentment was due
to the hostile undertone of my colleagues question, with its implication
that American Jews ought to answer for the misguided policies of the
Israeli government. I see now that there was more to it. I was unwilling
to play the role of Public Jew at a cocktail party. And yet my refusal
to express my doubts about Israels handling of the intifada
in front of my non-Jewish colleague suggests that I was all too conscious
of myself as The Jew in his mind. A Public Jew despite myself,
I could not show anything less than a united front with my people.
My dilemma at that party cuts to the heart of
what it means to be a Public Jew, the costs and benefits of letting
others define you. The costs are clear: it is difficult to maintain
your integrity when someone else is writing the script. But there are
undeniable benefits to being The Jew, temptations that few among
us can resist. Public Jews have power. Centuries of persecution have
invested Jews with authority, a tragic nobility born of the suffering
we as a people have endured. In a predominantly Christian culture that
glorifies suffering, Jews occupy the moral high ground. We are presumed
to have learned wisdom or, at the very least, humility. We have much
to teachlessons drawn from our pain, truths steeped in our sorrowsand
since the Holocaust, we have not lacked for pupils. But ours is a fragile
authority, entirely contingent on the needs and expectations of our
non-Jewish audience. In fact, these expectations cannot fully be satisfied
because they are irreconcilable. At one and the same time, the Public
Jew is required to prick the conscience of his listeners and to confer
forgiveness, to stand in perpetual judgment over the others while absolving
the guilty from blame. I would like to explore this contradiction by
looking at two examples of Public Jews created by non-Jews prior to
the Holocaust, when it was still possible to believe in the progress
of civilization and the humanitarian reforms this would inevitably entail.
DURING THE ENLIGHTENMENT, the German critic and playwright Gotthold
Ephraim Lessing based his play Nathan the Wise on his dear friend
Moses Mendelssohn, the Jewish philosopher who translated the Torah into
German, easing the passage of German Jews into the mainstream culture.
Probably best known as the grandfather of the Christian composer Felix
Mendelssohn (all but one of Mendelssohns six children converted
to Christianity), Moses Mendelssohn was an outspoken champion for the
cause of Jewish emancipation; his argument supporting freedom of conscience
so impressed the Prussian ruler, Frederick the Great, that he granted
Mendelssohn the status of Protected Jew, enabling him to live outside
the ghetto in Berlin.
The play is set in eighteenth-century Jerusalem
and tells the story of Nathan and his adopted daughter, Rachel, who
falls in love with the Christian Knight Templar who saves her life.
Initially the knight denies his feelings for Rachel because of her Jewish
upbringing, but after meeting her father and realizing what a good man
he is, the young man overcomes his reservations and asks to marry the
girl, promising to save her for all eternity by bringing her into his
faith. Nathan is not offended in the least by this proposition. Disdain
my people, as much as you like. For neither you nor I chose his heritage,
he tells the knight. Are we our people? What is a people? Are
Jew and Christian sooner Jew and Christian than man? Although
he lost his wife and sons in a massacre perpetrated by Christians, he
bears no malice toward members of this religious group. On the contrary
he endures the hatred of his enemies without a trace of resentment,
serving throughout the play as a symbol of acceptance and forbearance,
a poster child for the cause of religious toleration. Nathan is above
the anti-Semites: nobler, gentler, and more astute. By never descending
to his adversaries level, he succeeds in rekindling their better
instincts and restoring them to virtue.
The function of The Jew in Lessings
play was to reconcile diverse religious traditions, to efface difference
rather than to preserve it. Nathans wisdomand ultimately
his moral powerresided in his ability to transcend bigotry and
remind the audience of the essential oneness of all human beings, regardless
of their religious heritage. His example served to inspire Christian
and Moslem characters alike to a new appreciation of their own most
cherished values, but Nathans victory was achieved at the price
of his own survival as a Jew. At the end of the play, Rachel and the
knight are revealed to be siblings, and Muslims to boot: lost offspring
of the Sultans brother. There will be no children to carry on
Nathans teachings, no heirs to preserve his traditions. Lessings
Public Jew was created expressly to disappear; though representative
of a liberal strand within eighteenth-century thought, a progressive
statement for its time, the play makes the case not for accepting religious
difference but for removing the barriers to assimilation, for making
everybody the same. This realization explains the high regard in which
Nathan the Wise was held in a nation not renowned for its love
of Jews. The illustrious Goethe, a great admirer of Lessing, was openly
anti-Semitic, as were many cultivated Germans throughout the nineteenth
century. It was possible to appreciate Nathan, the magnanimous Jew who
belied all the negative stereotypes, precisely because he was an exception
to the rule. One could even hope that more of his fellow Jews would
become like him, which is to say, that they would cease to cling so
stubbornly to those vestiges of their faith that made them different
and kept them aloof from non-Jews, let bygones be bygones, and get on
with the business of accommodating themselves to the codes and conventions
of the gentile world.
A similar paradox emerges out of the Dreyfus
Affair, the morally righteous cause célèbre in late nineteenth-century
France. Alfred Dreyfus was a Jewish army captain accused of selling
secrets to Germany in the early 1890s. Evidence was manufactured to
prove his guilt, and in 1894 he was convicted of treason by a military
court and sent to Devils Island. Four years later the writer Emile
Zola defended Dreyfus in a famous pamphlet, JAccuse,
portraying the Jewish officer as a victim of a corrupt system of justice,
a martyr to the forces of anti-Semitism. France, the great and
liberal cradle of the rights of man, will die of anti-Semitism if it
is not cured of it, proclaimed Zola. In a provocative passage
he portrayed Dreyfuss conviction as an assault on truth and freedom
and showed himself willing to risk his own freedom in order to ensure
that the truth be told. I have but one goal: that light be shed,
in the name of mankind which has suffered so much and has the right
to happiness. . . . Let them dare to summon me before a court of law!
Let the inquiry be held in broad daylight! I am waiting.
Zola turned Dreyfus into a Public Jew and rallied
liberal France behind him. In the process the real Dreyfus ceased to
exist. The real Dreyfus, in fact, was not up to the part that Zola had
written for him and ended up disappointing his supporters when he accepted
the state pardon granted in 1899 instead of holding out for his complete
exoneration. Not that it mattered; by this time he had served his purpose.
The Third Republic was purged of anti-Dreyfusards, and liberal French
people congratulated themselves on having seen justice done. Barely
forty years later, however, France interned 75,000 Jews and deported
them to Auschwitz, and none of the outrage that Zola had stirred up
on Dreyfuss behalf was summoned in their defense. Even as the
Dreyfus Affair continues to stand as a hallmark in the struggle to achieve
the civil rights enshrined in the French Revolution, anti-Semitism remains
alive and well in France today. To the personal costs entailed in being
The Jew must be added the likely prospect of seeing ones cause
embraced in the abstract and forgotten in reality.
I do not think this forgetting is incidental.
Admittedly, it is difficult to sustain the soul-searching that Public
Jews provoke. The demands are great, on performer and audience alike.
The same questions asked repeatedly, the same stories told over and
over again: with time, even the most horrible events lose their power
to disturb. The monstrous becomes conceivable, familiar, unexceptional,
if not quite mundane. From here it is but a short step to forgetting.
Then, too, the conciliatory role that The Jew is expected to
playwhich is, after all, a condition of his employmenterodes
his edge over time. All of this is only natural, I realize, but is it
acceptable? In taking on a symbolic role and exercising the moral power
that being a Public Jew requires, do we not betray our cause as well
as ourselves?
I am reminded of the ethical conundrum that
is the focus of Simon Wiesenthals book The Sunflower. Wiesenthal
was pulled out of a work detail in a Polish concentration camp and brought
to hear the confession of a dying SS soldier, a young man tormented
by guilt over the murders he had committed. This dying man looked
on me as a representative, as a symbol of the other Jews whom he could
no longer reach or talk to. And moreover he showed his repentance entirely
of his own accord, Wiesenthal acknowledged, and yet he could not
bring himself to bestow forgiveness, despite knowing that by this refusal
he was depriving the SS man of peace. Later, he asked his comrades in
the Lager if he had done the right thing. Believe me, it was right,
the most thoughtful among them hastened to reassure him. You have
suffered nothing because of him, and it follows that what he has done
to other people you are in no position to forgive. It was fitting
that the SS man died in torment, the memory of the crimes he committed
festering like an open wound, fitting that absolution was withheld,
Wiesenthals comrade asserted. Forgiveness cannot be granted by
proxy, nor should the deep wound of the Holocaust be permitted so easily
to heal.
THE YEAR AFTER Meyer retired from my college, an important lecture
series was scheduled on Yom Kippur. In dismay I complained to the administrator
responsible for the decision; I would have liked to participate with
my students in the events surrounding the lecturers visit to our
campus. Fully expecting an apology for what I continued to believe was
an honest mistake, I was unprepared for the insensitive response I received.
The administrator informed me that the lecture dates had been proposed
by the speaker herself. The key address of the series had actually been
rescheduled to begin half an hour later, at the close of services on
Yom Kippur, a concession for which the administrator clearly believed
I should have been grateful. In vain did I point out that observant
Jews would be breaking their twenty-four hour fast at the conclusion
of the holiday. The administrator was neither concerned nor embarrassed
over her ignorance of how Yom Kippur is celebrated. As for the events
scheduled on the Day of Atonement itself, I was asked to understand
that rescheduling these would disappoint others.
Not long after my exchange with the administrator,
I ran into Meyer, who was back in town for a visit. Together we shook
our heads over the fiasco. Hadnt they learned anything after twenty-eight
years of hearing his announcements? Meyer wondered. He seemed genuinely
surprised that his message had not gotten through. For my part I wondered
if our non-Jewish colleagues had not felt released of the obligation
to learn about our traditions, as long as Meyer was around to tell them
what they needed to know. Lessings audience could be moved by
Nathans plight, sharing the playwrights hope that an era
of religious toleration would someday come about, while continuing to
hate Jews in their day-to-day lives. The generation aroused by Zolas
words to fight for the rights of a single Jew who had been unjustly
punished for a crime he did not commit, along with subsequent generations
of French citizens, could take pride in belonging to a nation that stood
for human rights while closing their eyes to the tens of thousands of
innocent men, women, and children who were being sent to death for no
other reason than because they were Jewish. In each case it seems to
me that a symbolic involvement with the fate of a Public Jew took the
place of a sincere engagement with the situation of real Jewish people.
Half a century after the devastation of Hitlers
Final Solution, the role of the Public Jew has become both easier and
more problematic. On the one hand his position is officially sanctioned.
With the establishment of Holocaust Studies as a domain of inquiry,
the victim has been given a voice; never have audiences been more willing
to listen and to examine their responsibility for the wrongs committed
against the Jews. But at the same time that he is invited to express
grief and outrage against the Nazis and all those whose activity or
passivity caused the deaths of six million innocent people, todays
Public Jew is still expected to confer forgiveness, to reconcile himself
with the past, thereby helping his listeners to achieve closure. Balancing
these two functions is no small feat; it seems to me that they are mutually
exclusive. Yet even those of us who would prefer to relinquish the power
that comes with our historical status cannot evade our responsibilities.
Whatever he chooses to do, Elie Wiesel writes in A Jew
Today, the Jew becomes a spokesman for all Jews, dead and
yet to be born, for all the beings who live through him and inside him.
To identify oneself publicly as a Jew today means that others will expect
you to take on the burden of Jewish victimhood, a burden made all the
more cumbersome by the need to address the tremendous injustice of the
Holocaust.
HOLOCAUST STUDIES CAME OF AGE in the I970s, its legitimacy confirmed
by a spate of scholarly conferences devoted to the subject, the creation
of endowed chairs and programs of study at universities across Europe
and North America, and an explosion of published memoirs, histories,
and documentary reconstructions of the destruction of European Jews.
Survivors accounts had begun to appear as soon as the war ended,
with some, such as André Schwarz-Barts The Last of the
Just and Elie Wiesels Night immediately attaining the
status of classics. These works stood out as isolated events, however;
in the first two decades following the liberation of the camps, there
was little attempt to compile these tales into a coherent literature,
no synthetic effort on the part of critics or scholars to see the whole.
Perhaps the stories were too recent, the atrocities they described too
appalling, to be taken in all at once. Or it may have been that readers
were not ready to listen to what survivors had to say, particularly
when the readers themselves felt implicated in the narration. Critical
testimonies, including Primo Levis Survival in Auschwitz
and the accounts of French deportees returned from Dachau or Ravensbrück,
fell on deaf ears, published in limited editions and soon forgotten,
while works that skirted the full horror of the Holocaust, works described
as upliftingAnne Franks diary being the prime
exampleattracted inordinate attention.
The creation of a Holocaust Studies field meant
that interpreters, some survivors themselves, others who had narrowly
escaped the fate of their fellow European Jews by emigrating to the
United States, England, or Palestine, and an increasing number of scholars,
both Jewish and non-Jewish, now assumed responsibility for telling the
story of the Holocaust and compiling the data to explain exactly how
it happened. Experts by virtue of their own suffering, or through the
hard work of reading and thinking about the subject, these people were
imbued with a singular mission: to ensure that the Holocaust would always
be remembered and that such a crime against humanity would never happen
again.
It has not been easy. In the first place the
Holocaust is not readily understood, least of all by those who survived
it. Indeed, Elie Wiesel has maintained that the meaning of the Holocaust
is and should remain unfathomable. But Primo Levi attempted to explain
the incomprehensible. His writings lay bare the rationale behind the
Final Solution, pursuing the logic of its implementation in the camps
and furnishing the context within which even seemingly gratuitous violence
against Jews makes sense. Why were Jewish bodies subject to medical
experiments in the camps, experiments whose results in many cases could
have been deduced from tables? Why was the hair of Jewish women destined
for cremation sold to German textile companies for use as stuffing?
Why were the old and sick rounded up with the young and healthy for
deportation to Dachau? Wouldnt it have been more efficient
to leave them to die where they were? In an essay entitled Useless
Violence, one of the very last things he wrote, Levi explains
with terrifying lucidity the reason for inflicting such pointless indignities
upon the Jews: Before dying the victim must be degraded, so that
the murderer will be less burdened by guilt.
Levis reflections on the meaning of the
Holocaust are profoundly disturbing. The truth, here, does not set us
free. The truth is unbearable, and the dispassionate tone in which Levi
delivers his truth makes it worse. May I be forgiven the cynicism,
he says in the midst of justifying, in Nazi terms, the extermination
of Jewish men, women, and children; I am trying to, reason with
a logic that isnt mine. Levis answers raise larger
questions in the readers mind, questions that cannot be resolved
without painful self-examination. Why were Nazi doctors so eager to
carry out those medical experiments? Why did German textile companies
buy that hair? Why did ordinary citizens, Germans, French, Poles, Ukrainians,
Austrians, Czechs, Hungarians, Romanians, Dutch, Greeks, and Italians,
stand by while their Jewish neighbors were rounded up and sent to their
deaths? Why did the world collude in the deaths of millions of people?
In posing these questions, Levi does not spare
himself from blame. On the contrary, his reflections open a window onto
the survivors world of tormented memory and self-hatred. If Levi
and other survivors, victims all, were unable to prevent the deaths
of their fellow victims, neither can they escape responsibility for
those deaths. To their eternal shame they managed to secure extra rations
or indoor work: small advantages, to be sure, but advantages nonetheless.
Advantages that made the difference between life and death. What Levi
and other survivors had experienced, the sins they committed unwillingly
but in order to survive, could never be cleansed or forgotten. If there
a lesson to be learned from suffering, it is not the life-affirming
message of Anne Frank or the film Life is Beautiful. Rather it
is the somber realization [that] the human specieswe, in
shortwere potentially able to construct an infinite enormity of
pain; and that pain is the only force that is created from nothing,
without cost and without effort.
The conclusion of the essay in which these words
appear pertains not to the past, but to the present. The Holocaust,
in Levis view, was not so singular an event as other survivors
have insisted. To the question of whether Auschwitz will return, whether,
that is, other slaughters will take place, unilateral, systematic, mechanized,
willed, at a governmental level, perpetrated upon innocent and defenseless
populations and legitimized by the doctrine of contempt, Levi
replies in the affirmative. These factors can occur again and
are already recurring in various parts of the world, he tells
us. It is our unwillingness to see, to listen, and to act that allowed
Pol Pot to carry out his reign of terror in Cambodia. This is the shame
of the world, and Levi the survivor, the reluctant spokesman for the
dead, would not allow his readers to forget it, would neither heal nor
forgive in the name of others. Mussolinis
racial laws and Auschwitz made Levi a Jewthey sewed the
star of David onto me, and not only onto my clothes, he once saidbut
when Levi chose to be a Public Jew, he did so on his own terms. Reading
his published interviews, I have the impression of a man who never spoke
off-the-cuff, so conscious was he of the use to which an unguarded remark
might be put. The same statements, a turn of phrase here, an anecdote
there, keep turning up again and again. Not surprisingly he preferred
to work from a list of questions submitted in advance of the interview
and would revise the transcript if given the chance. On those rare occasions
when he spoke out politically, as he did in the summer and fall of 1982
following the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon, Levi voiced his
conflicts and doubts, as an individual, while also drawing upon his
authority as an internationally famous writer and Holocaust survivor
to criticize Israeli policy. I am torn apart, also, he said
in a newspaper article calling for Prime Minister Begins resignation,
because I know very
well that Israel was founded by people like me, who
were less lucky than
I was. Men with the Auschwitz number tattooed on
their arms, without
homes or countries . . . who found a home and a
country over there.
I know all this. But I also know that this is Begins
favorite argument.
And I do not recognize that argument as valid.
The care he took to maintain his personal integrity
and to avoid turning the Holocaust into an abstract object lesson is
also apparent in Levis commentary on the Sunflower story.
Wiesenthal should not have forgiven the SS soldier, Levi contends; to
do so would have been dishonest. Leaving aside the larger ethical question
of whether the survivor has the right to speak in the name of the dead,
Wiesenthal himself did not feel that the dying man was innocent. And
what of the SS man? Everything would lead one to believe that,
had it not been for his fear of impending death, he would have behaved
quite otherwise: he would not have repented until much later, with the
downfall of Germany or perhaps never. Indeed, the act of having
a Jewany Jewbrought to him, under circumstances that he
must have known would endanger the life of his confessor, suggests that
the soldier did not truly regard Wiesenthal as a human being. Once
again, the Nazi was using the Jew as a tool, Levi asserts. His
action, examined in depth, is tinged with egoism, since one detects
in it an attempt to load onto another ones own anguish.
Given his vigilance in defending his own identity,
and his bravery in challenging symbolic renderings of the Holocaust
that served either to distort its meaning or to obscure the relevance
of the issues it raises, I am uncomfortable with the legend that has
grown up around Levi in the fourteen years since his death. There is
the ambiguity of the death itself: was it an accident or a suicide?
Despite recent attempts to prove, through painstaking calibrations of
the ratio between upper- and lower-body mass, that a man of Levis
size could easily have lost his balance when leaning over a stairway
railing, I do not think we can ever know for sure whether he fell or
jumped from his third-story landing. But the possible suicide of a Holocaust
survivor, like that of any artist or intellectual, imbues that persons
work with significance, a poignancy that publishers and reviewers of
Levis books have found difficult to resist exploiting. The blurb
on the back cover of the British edition of The Drowned and the Saved,
for example, encourages readers to join an unnamed some
who argue that [Levi] killed himself because he was tormented
by guiltguilt that he had survived the horrors of Auschwitz while
others, better than he, had gone to the wall. In Italy commemorating
Levi has taken on a ritual aspect. I wonder how he would have felt when
demonstrators against neo-Nazism brandished banners bearing the number
of Levis Auschwitz tattoo, whether he would have been flattered
or dismayed by the founding of a Primo Levi University for Senior Citizens
in Bologna and the schmaltzy all-night television special on the tenth
anniversary of his death. The film version of The Truce, Levis
account of his difficult journey home from Auschwitz, opened that same
year with a burst of publicity, though it did not play in theaters long.
I cannot help thinking that Levis death turned him into the kind
of Holocaust symbol he most detested: a hollow memorial of no value
except to those who would appropriate it for their own use.
THE PUBLIC JEW who is a Holocaust survivor is engaged in a constant
struggle to defend his identity. One lapse and his moral authority is
compromised, along with the legitimacy of the cause he represents. Helene
Flanzbaum captures the difficulty quite well through an illustration
she provides in the introduction to the collection of articles she edited,
The Americanization of the Holocaust. What does it mean,
for instance, she asks, when Elie Wiesel receives the honor
of throwing the ceremonial first pitch of the New York Mets 1988
home season? Is it a tribute to Wiesels suffering? Or does it
naturalize the Holocaust in an absurd fashion? Wiesel has always
been wary of allowing others to co-opt his memories, insisting that
only those who were present at the end of the world have the right to
speak of the ordeal. At the same time he has resisted all efforts to
draw comparisons between other tragedies and the Holocaust, hoping in
this way to preserve its searing truth. The Holocaust no longer
evokes the mystery of the forbidden; it no longer arouses fear or trembling,
or even outrage or compassion, he has written. For you,
it is one calamity among so many others, slightly more morbid than the
others. You enter it, you leave it, and you return to your ordinary
occupations. Wiesels task has been to keep the pain of the
Holocaust alive, to counter what he views as the cheapening of the event,
to prevent us from turning the page on this terrible chapter in human
history. And so he has persistently refused to permit the suffering
Jews experienced to be subsumed within the Christian concept of redemption,
refused to let Catholics and Protestants forget the historic part they
played in murdering six million Jews. In Auschwitz all the Jews
were victims, all the killers were Christians, is his uncompromising
verdict. Wiesel is clearly averse to being the
kind of Public Jew who confers forgiveness. Nevertheless, in ways both
large and small, he has conceded ground to those who would trivialize
the event, effectively bringing about the reconciliation he has worked
so diligently to withhold. It is not merely the gesture of throwing
out the first ball at a Mets game, although I join with Flanzbaum in
wishing that Wiesel had declined this particular invitation. But when
Wiesel moves beyond his self-defined role as survivor and witness to
speak out about matters unconnected to his Holocaust experience, affixing
his imprimatur to causeshowever worthwhileabout which he
lacks intimate knowledge, when he brings his moral weight to bear on
Israeli politics, say, or Americas role in world events, he gives
others the right to challenge his jurisdiction over his proper domain.
As the preeminent spokesman for Jewish victims of the Holocaust, his
status confirmed by a Nobel Prize, he has become trapped in the role
of Public Jew, his slightest move fraught with significance, his every
utterance bearing meanings he may not intend. Such is the plight of
all celebrities, to be sure, but Wiesels celebrity is of a different
order because it is composed of so many facets. Witness, judge, victim,
Jeremiah, the moral conscience of his century: certainly it is not possible
to be all of these things at all times, nor is it fair of Wiesels
audience to expect so much of one man. And yet, for all his efforts
to protect the memory of the Holocaust, to control the manner in which
the event is represented by guarding against inappropriate readings
and facile comparisons, it seems to me that Wiesel has lost control
over his own identity. The man whose mission has been to make
the world more human has inadvertently relinquished his own right
to show human weakness.
Sadly I see no escape from the dilemma. The
impulse to look away, to heal, or to forget the trauma of the Holocaust
is so strong. How can the Public Jew keep from becoming an agent in
this process? How can The Jewthe others creationremain
true to himself? In the preface to the 1977 reissue of his book of essays,
At the Minds Limits, the Austrian writer and survivor Jean
Améry announced his unwillingness to close the moral chasm between
the victims and perpetrators of Nazi crimes. My book is meant
to aid in preventing precisely this, Améry asserted. For
nothing is resolved, no conflict is settled, no remembering has become
a mere memory. What happened, happened. But that it happened cannot
be so easily accepted. Ten years earlier, when At the Minds
Limits first appeared, Améry was not so pessimistic. The
preface to the first edition ends with the hope that the painful self-examination
he chronicles will help his readers, among whom he pointedly includes
non-Jews and Germans, to live together as fellow human beings.
What caused him to give up this hope was the reemergence of the familiar
vice of anti-Semitism in Germany and elsewhere in a new form: the anti-Zionism
of the Left. Against this evil Améry chose to fight as a Jew,
to wage what he knew to be a losing battle in the spirit of the Warsaw
ghetto fighters who took death into their own hands and, though
powerless and unarmed, became avengers. Their heroism lay in their
willingness to turn death into a form of revolt, he argued. The lesson
of the Warsaw ghetto, as he made clear in his essay In the Waiting
Room of Death, was revenge. What makes it so singular and
irreducible was the freedom of choosing death, which was opposed
to death as a decree by the enemy and made into reality.
Améry chose revenge as well. The
impossibility of being a Jew becomes the necessity to be one, and that
means: a vehemently protesting Jew, he wrote in the preface to
the 1977 edition of At the Minds Limits. I rebel,
he went on to proclaim. I rebel: against my past, against history,
and against a present that places the incomprehensible in the cold storage
of history and thus falsifies it in a revolting way. A year later,
Améry killed himself. In his discourse On Suicide: A Disclosure
on Voluntary Dearth, published after a failed attempt at taking
his life in 1976, he had presented suicide not as an act of self-annihilation,
a passive succumbing to grief or despair, but as an active assertion
of self. Améry chose death because it was the sole means of reclaiming
his dignity in the face of the worlds indifference to what he
and his fellow Jewish victims had suffered in Auschwitz. His suicide
was intended to fix permanently his identity as a Jew who had lost his
trust in the world, a Jew who forgot nothing and denied for all time
the possibility of reconciliation.
Primo Levi saw much of himself in Améry
and was shaken by the other mans death. The Intellectual
in Auschwitz was his attempt to refute the argument of Amérys
suicide and to defend himself from the charge leveled against him by
Améry in a letter to a mutual friend: the accusation that Levi
was a forgiver. I dont consider this either an insult or
praise but an imprecision. I am not inclined to forgive, I never forgave
our enemies of that time, Levi insisted, but he himself was unable,
he said, to trade punches or return the blows. By nature,
he was not a fighter. Even in the Lager, where Améry was apparently
preoccupied by thoughts of death and revengehis proudest memory
was of punching a Polish Kapo in the faceLevi found ample distraction
in the daily battle to stay alive. The aims of life are the best
defense against death: and not only in the Lager, is the note
on which The Intellectual in Auschwitz concludes.
Consoling words. I will admit that I have allowed
myself to be consoled by Levis words. And yet, Levi did have dark
moments when he doubted himself and wished he were stronger. Like Améry
he deplored the ceremonies and celebrations, monuments and flags that
had come to take the place of real mourning and commemoration. Where
he diverged from his fellow survivor was over the ends to which each
thought his protest should be put. Amérys death was meant
as a statementa closing argument, in effectto which no rejoinder
was possible. The world, which forgives and forgets, has sentenced
me, not those who murdered or allowed the murder to occur.... Time did
its work, very quietly, he accused in the essay he titled Resentments,
an essay that still has the power, after many readings, to make me uncomfortable.
Soon we must and will be finished. Until that time has come, we
request of those whose peace is disturbed by our grudge that they be
patient.
Primo Levi fought not for revenge, but for accuracy
and honest remembrance. His objective, as he confessed in the preface
to The Drowned and the Saved, was to resist the stylization that
hardened memory, the excessive simplifications that turned
commemoration into an empty ritual, a symbolic gesture that obscures
truth. Believing that Auschwitz could return, that similar atrocities
were, in fact, occurring, he turned to his audience and asked, What
can each of us do, so that in this world pregnant with threats, at least
this threat will be nullified? Levis answer was dialogue,
a give and take between equals who enter into the exchange not to preach,
but to listen. In his brave willingness to acknowledge his doubts in
public and his refusal to deny his human complexity for the sake of
his Jewish identity, and above all in his effort to engage readers to
think for themselves, I see a way out of the impasse, a solution to
the seemingly irreconcilable contradictions inherent in the role of
Public Jew.
LAST SEMESTER, Yaron Svoray, Israeli commando and author of In Hitlers
Shadow, an exposé of the growing neo-Nazi movement in Germany,
was invited to speak at our college by a Jewish student organization.
I was not involved in the decision to bring Mr. Svoray to campus and
chose not to attend the lecture. My reasons were political: it troubled
me that the organizers of the event did not consider the implications
of inviting an Israeli commando to speak in the midst of the current
intifada, given the Israeli armys history of injustice toward
the Palestinians. The publicity for the event praised Svorays
book for revealing the vast network of middle-class citizens who
subscribe to the Nazi platform of racial hatred and superiority, anti-Semitism
and Holocaust denial. Certainly the neo-Nazi movement in Germany
merits concern, but invoking the Holocaust, I believe, feeds a paranoia
that justifies right-wing Israelis in portraying themselves as an embattled
minority who are entitled to employ any means in order to ensure their
nations security. Still, I respect the right of student groups
to choose their own speakers and would have been content to keep my
protest private, had I not learned, in conversations with colleagues
who were present at the lecture, of the intolerant nature of Mr. Svorays
remarks. The speaker apparently felt no hesitation in attributing to
Germans in general the anti-Semitic attitudes he observed among the
members of the neo-Nazi groups he infiltrated. What is more, the sensational
thrust of his presentation, which elicited audible gasps from the audience
at several points, made it impossible for anyone to express a dissenting
opinion in the question and answer period following the lecture.
I found myself in the same predicament I faced
at that cocktail party years ago, but this time I felt compelled to
speak out, to oppose Mr. Svorays invective, and to do so from
my insiders position. I felt compelled, that is, to protest as
a Jew. In a letter addressed to my friends in the German Department,
I explained why I was personally offended by the ethnic stereotyping
in which Mr. Svoray indulged and invited them to share their reactions
to the event. My objective was not to speak on behalf of others, and
least of all to protest in the name of Hitlers victims; far from
presenting a unified front with my fellow Jews, I sought to dissociate
myself from the anti-German sentiment that so often accompanies the
tendency to define ourselves against the Holocaust. If there is any
justification for taking on the symbolic function of the Public Jew,
it is to open a dialogue between Jews and non-Jews by acknowledging
the conflicts within my community and within myself. This is my acknowledgment.
LISA LIEBERMAN is the author of Leaving You: The Cultural Meaning
of Suicide (Ivan R. Dee), a portion of which originally appeared
in the Autumn 1998 issue of The Gettysburg Review.
The Public Jew first appeared in our Summer
2001 issue.
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