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March 31, 2013

Q&A: Philip Roth and the Jews

Hana Wirth-Nesher holds the Samuel L. and Perry Haber Chair on the Study of the Jewish Experience in the United States at Tel Aviv University, where she is also professor of English and American studies, and director of the Goldreich Institute for Yiddish Language, Literature, and Culture. She is the author of 'City Codes: Reading the Modern Urban Novel' (Cambridge) and of 'Call It English: the Languages of Jewish American Literature' (Princeton). She is also the co-editor of the Cambridge Companion to Jewish American Literature.

With a long standing interest in the novels of Philip Roth, Prof. Wirth-Nesher has been reading, teaching and writing about Roth's work for many years.   

 

At 80 years of age, it seems that Roth has an 'air of respectability' to him which stands in stark contrast to how he was perceived in his earlier wilder years. While much of this could be attributed to societal shifts and a far more relaxed public attitude towards sexuality, is the evolution of Roth's work itself also 'responsible' for this change? Has it become more 'serious' –in subject matter and in style- over the years?

The question of public perceptions-of respectabilities and how justified they are- is a tricky one of course, but changes have definitely taken place throughout Roth’s career.

There’s early Roth and late Roth the way there is early James and late James.  The early Roth is a social satirist aiming to be provocative, the later Roth continues in that vein but with greater sophistication, a darker streak, a preoccupation with the aging body and death, and a more developed historical sense.  In American Pastoral Roth becomes a truly profound writer along with his abiding features of sharp humor and provocative prose.

Ironically, this “air of respectability” came about as a response to Roth’s sense of having been wounded by his readership. He turned his reception into one of the major themes of his work, so that his outraged readership actually became a source of angry inspiration for much of the complex work that he produced later.

While Roth is probably the most well known Jewish writer of our times, he has had a famously bumpy relationship with the American Jewish community, one which he often mocked and parodied in many of his books. Were the early accusations of stereotypical stock Jewish characters completely farfetched though? Does Roth not utilize- especially in the early Zuckerman novels and in Portnoy's Complaint- a great deal of two-dimensional characters (not only Jewish ones)? What does that say about him as an artist?

Well, Roth’s work has definitely featured its fair share of Jewish stereotypes: it’s difficult to ignore the overbearing Jewish mother, the henpecked and emasculated Jewish husband, and the 'shikse obsessed' young Jewish men…All that this says, though, is that he is a brilliant satirist, that he always had an ironic distance on these types, that he never subscribed to them as social truths or as “authentic” attributes of Jewish American life. Exaggerated types are the essence of satirical writing, and his readers, often in their outrage and paranoia, forget that he is writing satire.

An interesting Jewish literary prototype which Roth may have actually created himself is that of the hard working stoic 'Jewish Father', one who slaves away selling insurance only to get 'screwed over by the goyim', domineered by his sturdy wife and looked down at by his better educated children (Zuckerman, Portnoy, Kepesh, Roth). This seems to be a recurring theme in many of his novels. Is this simply autobiographical or does it signify something?

It is both autobiographical and significant. The only sacred subject in Roth’s world, I think, is decent hardworking responsible men, who are comfortable in their male bodies, who maintain dignity in a world of snobbery and pretension. The best illustration of this occurs in Patrimony, when Roth’s aging father leaves his tefillin in the locker room of the Jewish community center, because he knew that sweating Jewish males would see to it that the tefillin would be safeguarded.

Furthermore, Roth shows us that there is nothing more American than first and second generation Jewish American immigrants trying to improve their and their children’s lots by hard work.

Roth has done a lot of experimenting with literary forms over the years, playing with autobiographical alternate histories, therapeutic monologues and (a great many of) alter-egos. Is there any literary tradition you would comfortably place him in? What was his most creative contribution to the art of the novel?

I think Roth’s main contribution is not so much in the invention of this or that literary form or device, so much as in giving us an exceptional number of deep, original and beautifully creative explorations of some important subjects at the center of the Jewish, American and human experience:  

American Pastoral is a brilliant take on how the Emersonian ideal of American individualism is not compatible with the Jewish experience of being in history and not aspiring to transcend it. Operation Shylock is a dazzling exploration of post-modern identity, of multiple selves, of the self always being generated in opposition to its other as it defines that other (for American Jews, it can be Europe’s Jews, Israelis, American gentiles, etc.). The Plot Against America is a highly original dystopia, a counter history which asks some important questions about the basic assumptions we have about American democracy.  Portnoy’s Complaint is a fierce satire of the Freudian moment, of therapeutic culture and stand-up as two sides of the same coin.

How has Roth influenced younger generations of Jewish writers? What role has Roth played in the story of Jewish American literature?

He has influenced them in the paradoxical way that great writers influence those who come after them—by forcing these writers to come up with entirely new and different styles.  Roth, like Hemingway or James, can be easily mimicked and parodied, a sure sign of originality.  Any younger writer trying to sound like Roth will come across as a weak copy.  So Chabon, Foer, Krauss, Englander, Stollman, Stern (among my favorites)—none of them sound like Roth and they are also dealing with different issues in keeping with their own generation.  

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Jewish Business Ethics: Proper Marketing and Selling

There is a famous business concept called caveat emptor (buyer beware). In secular society, as long as a seller does not blatantly lie or actively conceal a defect, it is the full responsibility of the buyer to exercise due diligence and to inspect what is being purchased. Jewish law takes a totally different approach: It is presumed that no defects or problems exist in a product or property if they are not disclosed explicitly by the seller.

We are well aware of fictional examples in literature and old movies of the quack doctor who promises miracle cures. This goes further back than you might think, and was prevalent in the entire Western world. One of the more famous comic Italian operas is Gaetano Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore (“The Elixir of Love”), in which quack Dr. Dulcamara (“Bittersweet”) touts an elixir that cures everything from apoplexy to diabetes, though it is actually just repackaged Bordeaux wine. In this country, the creation of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 1906 regulated the drug industry in a helpful way, so that drugs no longer contained dangerous substances like cocaine, heroin, and opium. However, new marketing schemes have continued to emerge and flourish as long as people were unaware of the deception. In the ” target=”_blank”>Nestlé’ Waters’ 5-gallon bottles of water come from the municipal tap water of Woodridge, Illinois, while Aquafina (owned by PepsiCo) also bottles its water from municipal tap water. Even worse, a Coca-Cola subsidiary makes “Vitaminwater,” which sounds like healthful, vitamin-fortified water, but at 130 calories and 33 grams of sugar it is quite the opposite. To make matters worse, several government- and privately-sponsored studies have concluded that tap water is more closely regulated than the bottled water industry. (Additional benefits of drinking tap water instead of bottled water include less waste disposal and lower spending.) In our search for healthy food products, we see labels such as “natural” as well as “organic.” The U. S. Department of ” target=”_blank”>FDA has not developed a definition for use of the term natural or its derivatives.” Thus, all those pesticides, genetically modified food, and “sewage sludge” that are excluded from organic food may well be in “natural” food, and ” target=”_blank”>“low sodium” is often the best option, as it means 140 mg of sodium or less per serving (don’t forget to check the serving size as well). “Reduced sodium” means at least 25 percent less than the regular product. Thus, if a “normal” soup contains a staggering 900 mg of sodium per cup, the reduced sodium version can have 675 mg per cup, which in a 2.5-serving can would still give you nearly 1,700 mg of sodium, already more than the daily suggested serving for children, older adults, and people with diabetes or advanced kidney disease.

In consumer cases, the “>Uri L'Tzedek, the Senior Rabbi at Kehilath Israel, the Founder and C.E.O. of “>Jewish Ethics & Social Justice: A Guide for the 21st Century.” In 2012 and 2013, Jewish Business Ethics: Proper Marketing and Selling Read More »

JIMENA interviews L.A.’s Iranian and Sephardic Jews for new websites

Earlier this month perhaps one of the most important efforts to document the tragic loss of life and property that Jews from North Africa and the Middle East experienced during the 20th century took placed here in Los Angeles. Members of the San Francisco-based “Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa” (JIMENA) gathered at local Sephardic synagogues to video interview 10 L.A. area Jews who escaped their native lands in North Africa and Iran when those countries had turned violently against their Jewish populations during the last century. While the world has been obsessed with the “right of return for Palestinian Arabs” that were supposedly “exiled” in 1948 and 1967 from Israel, no one seems to care about the near 1 million Jews expelled from Arab lands during the same period. What about the loss of property, finances and life Jews from these Islamic lands and Iran suffered? What about the thousands of Jews who were forced to leave their assets behind in Iran or had their assets confiscated  by the new Islamic regime in Iran after 1979? Who is speaking out on their behalf and speaking up for justice for their right of return? The answer is simple; JIMENA!

JIMENA was founded by Regina Waldman and Joe Wahad, a Jewish woman born in Libya and a Jewish man born in Egypt, after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. The new JIMENA websites tell the stories of Jews from each of the Islamic lands using videos, photographs and written narratives. They also include oral history testimonies of Jews who fled Arab countries for North America.

I recently had a chat with JIMENA’s director, Sarah Levin about her organization’s efforts to document the stories of the injustice Sephardic Jews experienced in their native lands during the 20th century. This was her most compelling statement about the process was; “L.A. has large Mizrahi and Sephardic populations of Jews who come from all over the Middle East and North Africa and their stories of material losses, displacement, and  fractured identities, have not been documented. I think it’s fair to assume that Jews from Arab countries and Iran now residing in Los Angeles had at least hundreds of millions of dollars of property and assets confiscated by Arab governments and Iran. Their losses, both financial and cultural, have never been quantified and acknowledged”.

The information regarding the escapes and experiences of Iranian Jews following the horrific 1979 Iranian revolution can be found on JIMENA’s new site here.

The following are just some photos of those individuals interviewed by Jimena in Los Angeles earlier this month…

 

 


 

(Iranian Jewish immigrant Abe Berookhim interviewed by JIMENA at L.A.'s Kahal Joseph synagogue, photo by JIMENA)

 

 


 

(Moroccan Jewish immigrant Andre Chriqui interviewed by JIMENA at  L.A.'s Em Habanim synagogue, photo by JIMENA)

 

 


 

(Moroccan Jewish immigrant Max Barchichat interviewed by JIMENA at  L.A.'s Em Habanim synagogue, photo by JIMENA)

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Historic Damascus synagogue looted and burned

The 2,000-year-old Jobar Synagogue in the Syrian capital of Damascus was looted and burned to the ground.

The Syrian army loyal to President Bashar Assad and rebel forces are blaming each other for the destruction of the historic synagogue, according to reports on Sunday.

The synagogue is said to be built on the site where the prophet Elijah anointed his successor, Elisha, as a prophet. It had been damaged earlier this month by mortars reportedly fired by Syrian government forces.

The rebels said the Syrian government looted the synagogue before burning it to the ground, Israel Radio reported Sunday.

The government said the rebels burned the synagogue and that so-called Zionist agents stole its historic religious items in an operation that had been planned for several weeks, the Arabic Al-Manar Television reported, citing the Arabic Syria Truth website.

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The Organized American Jewish Community’s Response to President Obama’s Jerusalem Speech

President Obama’s Jerusalem speech has been praised by most American Jewish Organizations for his eloquent support of Israel, its security, his respect for the historic Jewish attachment to the land of Israel, his tough stand against the Iranian nuclear threat, and his desire to help the parties resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict.

e I should be happy with this praise, but I am instead worried, not for what most of these organizations said in their press releases following Obama’s Middle East visit, but by what they did not say.

In reading the statements of the American Jewish Committee (AJC), the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism (RAC), the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA), and J Street, in all but the RAC and J Street statements something important was missing.

The AJC quoted Obama as “reaffirming the US supported goal of a negotiated two state-solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict” and calling “on the Palestinians to return to direct talks with Israel…” noting that the President praised “Abbas as a partner for peace.

The ADL said that “The President conveyed a deep understanding of important challenges facing Israel, including the peace process…” and “that the peace process can only be achieved through negotiations without preconditions…”

AIPAC noted that both Obama and Netanyahu “share the view that direct talks should resume between the Israelis and Palestinians without preconditions, with the objective of two states for two peoples.”

The ZOA made no mention of a two-state solution because it does not support a two-state solution.

Here are the relevant remarks in the RAC and J Street statements that are missing from all the others:

The RAC, quoting Obama, repeated: “Israelis must recognize that continued settlement activity is counterproductive to the cause of peace and that an independent Palestine must be viable, with real borders that have to be drawn. I’ve suggested principles on territory and security that I believe can be the basis for these talks.

J Street said: “[Obama] also laid out the moral case for peace with the Palestinians, based on full recognition of their national right to self-determination and their right to build their lives free of the daily humiliations of military occupation. The President also made it clear that peace is possible and that Israel does have partners in …Abbas and…Fayyad…who are committed to negotiations and to a peaceful solution.

It seems to me that in their press statements the organized American Jewish community ignored most of the 20 minutes of the President’s 49 minute address that spoke directly and compassionately to the Israeli people about the plight of the Palestinians under occupation and their legitimate rights to a national home of their own side by side with Israel.

Here are a few of the most important lines of Obama’s speech that were not alluded to except by the RAC and J Street:

“[T]he Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and justice must also be recognized. Put yourself in their shoes – look at the world through their eyes.

Neither occupation nor expulsion is the answer. Just as Israelis built a state in their homeland, Palestinians have a right to be a free people in their own land.

Peace is possible. It is possible. I’m not saying it’s guaranteed. I can’t even say that it is more likely than not, but it is possible.

Let me say this as a politician, I can promise you this: political leaders will never take risks if the people do not push them to take some risks. You must create the change that you want to see. Ordinary people can accomplish extraordinary things.

Today, as we face the twilight of Israel’s founding generation, you – the young people of Israel – must now claim its future. It falls to you to write the next chapter in the great story of this great nation.”

What concerns me is the potentially obstructionist role that some in the organized American Jewish community might take (as has happened in the past) when President Obama and Secretary Kerry put concrete proposals on the table about borders, settlements, security, Jerusalem, and refugees. I hope that what is missing in their press statements are merely oversights. I hope as well that the organized American Jewish community will support President Obama fully in his efforts without second guessing him and without partisan rancor in order to help the Israelis and Palestinians find an end of conflict two-state solution without getting in his way.

If this occurs in this next year, come Pesach 2014 we will truly be able to say – Dayeinu!

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Honoring Teachers of Freedom on Pesach

In this season, when we celebrate freedom and the honor of obligation, let’s remember two rabbis who exemplified those values.  The two teachers I have in mind were contemporaries and, for a while, neighbors.  Orthodox Rabbi Sabato Morais and Reform Rabbi David Einhorn led congregations in Philadelphia in the years leading up to the USA’s Civil War.  At a time when few rabbis dared (or maybe cared) to do it, these tzadikim condemned slavery forthrightly, drawing on Jewish tradition.

Sabato Morais, in his 1864 Thanksgiving sermon to Congregation Mikveh Israel said, “Not the victories of the Union, but those of freedom, my friends, do we celebrate.  What is Union with human degradation?  Who would again affix his seal to the bond that consigned millions to [that]? Not I, the enfranchised slave of Mitzrayim.

David Einhorn, in a 1861 Passover sermon, later expanded and published as War With Amalek, wrote, ““Is it anything else but a deed of Amalek, rebellion against God, to enslave human beings created in His image, and to degrade them to a state of beasts having no will of their own? Is it anything else but an act of ruthless and wicked violence, to reduce defenseless human beings to a condition of merchandise, and relentlessly to tear them away from the hearts of husbands, wives, parents, and children…?”

These teachers were unified on one of the key moral questions facing spiritual leaders of their time despite their disagreements about many other important things.  Morais, a founder of Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS), was determined to maintain a halachic standard for American Jews, believing that the principles he expressed in his sermon were indissoluble from the web of study and ritual that binds Jewish communities into a people.  Einhorn, a leader in American Reform Judaism advocated a Judaism rooted in prophetic discourse and a rejection of ritual commandments (hukim) in favor of the ethical ones (mishpatim).  Yet each man, recalling our central narrative of redemption from slavery, responded to oppression of American slaves with the same moral clarity.

Their fates, for a while, were different, although, at the end, each was honored.  It was Morais, the more traditional Jew—and, in his time, a liberal who spoke out, not only for the end of slavery, but also for the importance of women’s education, Native American rights and worker’s rights and who battled prayer in public schools and all attempts to construct the United States as a Christian nation—who kept his congregation.  Despite some threats on his life and safety, Morais stayed on his bimah at Mikveh Israel where he had a lifetime contract.  Thousands attended his public funeral.

Einhorn had taken up his Philadelphia pulpit at Knesset Israel, because he had, in 1861, been driven from his Baltimore pulpit at Har Sinai for his anti-slavery stance by a mob that threatened to tar and feather him.  He eventually left his new congregation to settle in New York, where he led Congregation Adas Jeshurun, which would eventually merge with another synagogue to become Congregation Beth-El.  There he retired and, he too, was mourned by his large Jewish community when he died.

Each left a legacy.  Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, a lion of the JTS, was among those rabbis who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Junior and resolutely opposed America’s role in the Vietnam War.  The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were drafted on the premises of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism.  More broadly, Orthodox Judaism, with which Morais identified is alive, and continues to sprout vigorous debates and tendencies.  Conservative Judaism, for which JTS serves as a seminary, is still a halachic movement, one which sees halachah as a living, evolving tradition; and Reform Judaism continues to regard living Torah as the basis for a Jewish life.  While they don’t always land on the same side of every question, each Jewish movement maintains its obligation to respond to the key issues of its day.

The USA has, more or less, caught up to Rabbis Morais and Einhorn on the question of slavery, but we should never forget how much courage it must have taken for them to speak out when they did.  How can we emulate their example?

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