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  • 2020-2024  (35)
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Language
Years
Year
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  • 1
    Article
    Article
    In:  Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 65 (2020) 107-126
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 107-126
    Keywords: Jewish leadership ; Jews Political activity 20th century ; History ; Zionism History 20th century ; Poznań (Poland)
    Abstract: This article analyses the role of the Jüdischer Volksrat—the Jewish People’s Council—in Posen/Poznań between 1918 and 1920. In establishing this institution, Zionist activists gained a significant amount of influence in a traditionally German-acculturated Jewish space during the period of transition from German to Polish rule in the city. Claiming to represent the city’s ‘third nation’ and making demands for Jewish national autonomy, the Jüdischer Volksrat was instrumental in reshaping intercommunity relations and the Jews’ place in society, winning the support of sizeable sections of the Jewish population. This article argues that these successes can be attributed not to the reception of grand ideological concepts of Jewish nationalism, but rather to the fact that Jüdischer Volksrat activists played a central role in people’s everyday lives. They provided economic support, food deliveries, legal aid, and collective security, thereby placing themselves at the centre of the community. The article shows, however, that contrary to activists’ hopes, support for the Volksrat did not necessarily mean an immediate acceptance of Jewish-national concepts. As the debates around the establishment of a Jewish school illustrate, support for national claims and institutions was primarily situational and related to immediate local pressures.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 127-144
    Keywords: Heidegger, Martin, Political and social views ; Judaism and philosophy ; Antisemitism Philosophy
    Abstract: This article deals with some unexplored Jewish responses to the volkish elements in Martin Heidegger’s philosophy. Heidegger’s idiosyncratic and deeply philosophical account of volkism stood at the heart of his political support of National Socialism and of his exclusion of the Jews from the ontological task of thinking. This article demonstrates, however, that some of Heidegger’s Jewish readers identified with volkish moments in his philosophy and found these to be pertinent to their own condition as Jews in the modern world. This was made possible by the fact that, within the intellectual climate in which Heidegger’s thinking took shape, the volkish lexicon (Volk, Gemeinschaft, ‘fate’, ‘destiny’, and even ‘struggle’) was commonplace, indicated no clear association with any certain political view, and, indeed, was a central organ through which Jews made sense of their own existence and historical and political situation. Thus, while Heidegger’s volkism led to a philosophical marginalization of Jews, the multifariousness and widespread currency of volkish thinking brought some Jewish readers to recognize their shared conceptual horizon with Heidegger and to differentiate between Heidegger’s practical politics, which were anti-Jewish and loathsome, and his volkism, which was seen as fitting and useful for the Jewish case.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 71-87
    Keywords: Zweig, Stefan, ; Jewish children History 20th century ; Jewish children in the Holocaust ; Jewish refugees Social conditions 20th century ; Jewish authors Biography ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: In late 1933, Stefan Zweig stood before a committee to aid German Jews, and pleaded for immediate action to help German-Jewish children find new homes abroad. This article examines Zweig’s call to accept refugees within his larger quest to promote a humanist and universalist Europe. His goal was not merely intended to help individual Jewish children enjoy happier childhoods in other parts of the world, but a collective task to combat hatred. Stefan Zweig’s humanism and cosmopolitanism expressed themselves in a pedagogic and educational mission that was based on a particularly Jewish commitment to Bildung and took two major forms—a literary one (as seen in his historical-biographical writings) and an activist one (in his speeches, interviews and newspaper writings). The two expressions worked in tandem and reflected the same message and concerns. Moreover, both reflected his general aim to promote and help realise an alternative, humanist Europe; one in which the healthy and happy future of Jewish youth (and others) would be ensured.
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  • 4
    Article
    Article
    In:  Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 65 (2020) 167-184
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 167-184
    Keywords: Zentralrat der Juden in Deutschland ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Influence ; Collective memory ; Bitburg (Germany)
    Abstract: President Ronald Reagan and Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s visit to the military cemetery at Bitburg in May 1985 was covered extensively by the international media, and gave rise to a vigorous debate about the place of the National Socialist past in German memory, as well as the dignity accorded to Holocaust victims and survivors. The Jewish voices in this debate were overwhelmingly North American. However, what few have considered thus far is why a perceived insult to Jewish memory in Germany should not also have affected Jews who were living in Germany. Consequently, this article looks at the Bitburg debate from a German-Jewish perspective. What role did the Zentralrat der Juden in Deutschland (ZdJ) play in the debate? And what effects, if any, did it have on Jewish life in West Germany, and on the emergence of a new Jewish activism in Germany over the longer term?
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  • 5
    Article
    Article
    In:  Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 65 (2020) 3-35
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 3-35
    Keywords: Jews History ; Oath more judaico ; Jews Persecutions ; Jews Legal status, laws, etc. ; History ; Jews History Middle Ages, 500-1500 ; Nuremberg (Germany)
    Abstract: In many territories of the Holy Roman Empire, Jews had been obliged to take a special oath during certain interactions between Jews and Christians since the medieval era. The 1484 Nuremberg Jewry Oath was probably the first Jewry Oath ever to be printed, and it became the dominant model for oath formulas until the eighteenth century. This article explores the legal, historical, and social background of the Jewry Oath, and its role in the history of Nuremberg during the transitional period between manuscripts and early printing. It looks closely at the elements and the conception of the 1484 Jewry Oath, and shows that it was incorporated as rather an afterthought into Die Reformation der Stadt Nürnberg, the city’s innovative, elaborately printed legal code. While its inclusion and careful wording were an acknowledgement that interactions with Jews were vital, and needed a legal framework that was valid for both Christians and Jews, the fact that it was less integrated than other legal rules suggests that its future removal was envisioned. This question is explored in the context of the expulsion of Jews from Nuremberg in 1498–99 and the 1503 edition of Die Reformation der Stadt Nürnberg.
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 65 (2020) 55-70
    Keywords: Rosenzweig, Franz, Family ; Rosenzweig, Adele Alsberg, ; Jewish families ; Mothers and sons Biography
    Abstract: The Jewish family was foundational to philosopher and theologian Franz Rosenzweig’s understanding of Jewish life. This article examines his view of the Jewish family in the light of two memoirs, only recently translated into English, written by his mother, Adele Alsberg Rosenzweig, with whom he had a very close yet contentious relationship. The memoirs illustrate the historical contexts of both Adele’s and Franz’s generations, as well as the personal, familial contexts in which Franz was raised, and are thus a good starting point from which to examine the significance of the Jewish family in his experience and thought.
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 67,1 (2022) 20-36
    Keywords: Herder, Johann Gottfried, Criticism and interpretation ; Herder, Johann Gottfried, Political and social views ; Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc, ; Jews Public opinion ; Jews History 18th century ; Anthropology History 18th century
    Abstract: Buffon’s ‘Histoire naturelle de l’homme’, published in volumes two and three of the Histoire naturelle (1749), was key to the development of a new material history of humankind with scientific ambitions that wanted to understand humans as part of natural history and eventually would be called ‘anthropology’. Buffon understands humanity as consisting of one species, to which the same natural laws apply as for any other species. He understands human diversity as the product of space and time; because of geographical and climatological factors, humans develop differently in different parts of the world. Among German intellectuals, Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803) is a key figure in promoting Buffon’s thinking, in particular by assigning a central role to the concept of ‘culture’. The following essay focuses on the role the image of Jews plays in the emerging intertwined discourses of natural history and anthropology during the second half of the eighteenth century as it manifests itself in Herder’s writings. Herder’s views of Jews are highly contradictory. While he is respectful of their history and culture, he also refers to them in derogatory terms, calling them twice in the Ideen zur Philosophie der Geschichte der Menschheit a ‘parasitic plant’. To understand Herder’s ambiguity, his views of Jews are traced back to the premises underlying his thinking in natural history and anthropology.
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  • 8
    Article
    Article
    In:  Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 67,1 (2022) 3-19
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 67,1 (2022) 3-19
    Keywords: Marḳus, Shelomoh ; Jews History ; Jews Social conditions ; Jews Biography ; Prussia, East (Poland and Russia) ; Dąbrówno (Województwo Warmińsko-Mazurskie, Poland)
    Abstract: From roughly the first half of the eighteenth century, Jewish life in East Prussia was mostly concentrated in Königsberg, the capital city of the province. In 1811, for instance, there were eight hundred and eight Jews in East Prussia, six hundred and fifty of whom were living in Königsberg. In Tilsit, Memel and Gumbinnen, other main cities of the province, there were thirteen, twenty-five, and fourteen Jews respectively. The tiny remainder was spread out among small towns; in the villages there were almost no Jews. While the history of the Jews of Königsberg has been well researched and the Jewish presence in other cities of East Prussia synthesized in several anthologies, that little bit of Jewish life in the small East Prussian towns and villages remains unknown. Considering the insignificant number of Jews who once lived in the East Prussian countryside, this lack of research is understandable.On the other hand, studies on small communities—or, even more accurate in the case of East Prussia, on individual families—can complete the general picture of Jewish life not only in East Prussia, but in the entire Prussian territory. The accuracy of these studies complements overviews intended mainly to develop an understanding of general processes and happenings. A micro-study can therefore add to existing research—even if only used as a tool with which to confirm or question a more wide-ranging thesis. This essay, an examination of one individual Jewish life in East Prussia, is one such micro-study. It is the story of Salomon Marcus, a small-time Jewish merchant who lived in Gilgenburg, a small town in East Prussia in the Osterode District, in the last three decades of the eighteenth and the first two decades of the nineteenth century.
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  • 9
    Article
    Article
    In:  Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 67,1 (2022) 79-99
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 67,1 (2022) 79-99
    Keywords: Jews Legal status, laws, etc. 1933-1945 ; History ; Citizenship History 1933-1945 ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: This article reconsiders the process by which Jews were excluded from the National Socialist state in the 1940s by analysing its administrative preconditions. It focuses on the identification of those individuals in the ‘Altreich’—pre-war German territory—who were defined as Jewish or of ‘mixed blood’ by the 1935 Reichsbürgergesetz (Reich Citizenship Law). Due to the prior absence of criteria, the number and identities of this group were unknown to the authorities. After summarizing historiographical discussions about the involvement of statisticians in the identification and registration of German Jews, this article argues that the hitherto neglected Volkskartei (People’s Card Index) was as important for the localization of Germany’s Jews prior to the deportations as the 1939 census was for their identification. Only the coordinated interaction of both devices made it possible to aggregate and provide the required information to facilitate National Socialist deportations.
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book
    Angaben zur Quelle: 67,1 (2022) 155-173
    Keywords: Schocken, Salman, ; Jewish philanthropists Biography ; Book collectors Biography
    Abstract: After Salman Schocken’s death in 1959, public portrayals and obituaries praised the entrepreneur and philanthropist’s accomplishments. In 1967, Salman Schocken’s son Gershom Schocken wrote an essay reframing these earlier portraits. It took the accomplished journalist eight years to come to terms with this task, in his newspaper Haaretz, on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of Salman Schocken’s birth. Some months later, an extended version of the text appeared in the German monthly Der Monat, translated into German by Gershom Schocken himself. Provided here is an abridged English translation of the German version of Schocken’s memories, accompanied by a brief commentary explaining the text’s relevance in the context of the Year Book’s special section on Salman Schocken’s collections.
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