Rabbi Jeff Marker's synopsis of Arthur Green's talk on Abraham Joshua Heschel and Hasidism.
"For Heschel the most significant mitzvot areFirst of all, Green said, Heschel would have hated the title of the talk. He did not like divisions in Jewish life. He bridged worlds and was critical of all of them. He wrote about many of them.
Heschel was a living link to the lost world of Jewish Europe. In his first real appearance on the public stage in Americal, at YIVO in 1944, he spoke about that lost world. He later expanded this into his book “The Earth is the Lord’s.” Around the same time, in 1943-44, he reclaimed his middle name. Before that he was known, and wrote as, Abraham Heschel. After this he was Abraham Joshua Heschel. This was the name of his famous great great grandfather and reflected his Hassidic identity. His family was from the Ukrainian school of hasidism which was a kind of peasant hasidism. His father was an immigrant to Warsaw which was generally dominated by the Ger/Kutsk school, which was more rational and skeptical of miracle workers and similar stories. There were no yeshivas reflecting his heritage, and his early education was under the influence of Ger. Heschel later said he lived between these two worlds, Medzibush and Kutsk.Heschel grew to see the Hasidic world as “small minded” and wanted a secular education. It would have been a scandal for him, scion of a Hasidic dynasty, to go to a secular gymnasium in Warsaw. His tutor arranged for him to attend a gymnasium in Vilna, a center of the anti-Hasidic misnagdim. After a year he enrolled in university in Berlin. He also wrote poetry. In time he learned to speak in Biblical language which was accessible to both Jews and Chrisitians.So, what did Heschel learn from Hasidism? Green says five things, and he will especially expand on the fifth.A sense of wonder - “The whole world is full of God’s glory!”There is nothing you can prove
Apr 14th 2011 | from the print edition
The evolution of language
Babel or babble?
Languages all have their roots in the same part of the world. But they are not as similar to each other as was once thought
Video portrait by John Feldman of artist Helen Frankenthaler commissioned by Purchase College School of the Arts for the 2008 Nelson A. Rockerfeller awards.
NY Times critic's notebook: Two Artists Who Embraced Freedom
My political prediction for 2012 (based on absolutely no inside information): Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden swap places. Biden becomes Secretary of State — a position he’s apparently coveted for years. And Hillary Clinton, Vice President.
So the Democratic ticket for 2012 is Obama-Clinton.
Why...
Thanks to a change in the publication date of one of the books I have two reviews published on the same day. Both are novels in translation, one from Italian and the other from French.
“The Break is reminiscent of Italian neo-realist cinema of the late 1940s and is enthusiastically recommended to all readers. Kudos to Howard Curtis for a wonderful translation.” This paperback is printed on high quality paper with a handsome wrap-around cover.
“Because Underground Time’s prose largely lacks the delicious density of the best literary fiction in translation, it appears to target a middlebrow readership. But readers with highbrow tastes may want to make an exception to their usual literary fare on account of its social criticism.”
Read these and my other book reviews on New York Journal of Books.
“Your wife is killed by a cashew (anaphylactic shock), but there isn't time to grieve because your toddler son is always at your heels—wanting to be fed, to be played with, or to sleep next to you all night long. A change of pace seems necessary, so you decide to visit your parents in order to attend your twenty-year high school reunion. What begins as a weekend getaway quickly becomes a theater for dealing with the past—a past that you will have to re-imagine in order to have any hope of a future for you and your son.”--Mark Yakish, A Meaning for Wife
“Toward the end of the novel there is a gutsy shift in narrative tone that lends the ending a sense of closure. In recent years, women writers such as Joan Didion and Meghan O’Rourke have published nonfiction memoir accounts of grief. In his debut novel Mr. Yakich provides the male perspective. Recommended to anyone who has experienced loss.”Read the rest of my review in New York Journal of Books
An interesting and engaging blog post from last March on otherness, ethnic and racial identity:
Passing for White: Other-ness and Judaism
Fall foliage, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, NY.