pa •- - 1 THE JEWISH Twenty-four Friday, December 24, 1943 -NEWS •••••--- The Menorah By THEODOR HERZL Translated from the German by Bessie London Pouzzner in Menorah Journal (1915) D EEP in his soul he began to feel the need of being a Jew. His circumstances were not uhsatisfaCtory; he enjoyed an .arri- ple income and a profession that permitted him to do whatever his heart desired. For he was an artiSt. Iis JeWish origin and the faith of his fathers had long since ceased to trouble him, when suddenly the old hatred came to the surface again in a new mob-cry. With many others he believed that this flood would shortly subside. But there was no change for the . better; in fact, . things went from bad to worse; and every blow, even though not aimed directly at him, struck him With fresh pain, till little by little his Soul became one bleeding wound. These sorrows, buried deep_ in his heart and silenced there, evoked thoughts Of their origin and of his. Judaism, and now he did some- thing he could not perhaps have done in the old days because he was then so alien to it—he began. to love this Judaism with an intense fervor. Although - in his own eyes . he could not, at first, clearly justify , this. new yearning, it became so powerful at length that it . crystal- lized from vague- emotions into a. definite idea which he must needs express. It was the conviction that there was only one solution for this Judennot — the return to Judaism. Feared for His Reason - When this came to the knowl- edge of his closest friends, similar- ly situated though they were, they Shook their heads gravely and even feared for his reason. For how could that be a remedy which merely sharpened and intensified the evil? It seemed to hirri, on the other hand, that their moral dis- • tress was so acute because the Jew of today had • lost the poise which Was his father's very being. They ridiculed him for this when his back was turned — many even laughed openly in his face; yet he did not allow * himself to be misled by the banalities of these people whose acuteness of judgment had never before inspired his. respect, and he bore their witticisms and their sneers with equal indiffer- ence. And since, in all other re- spects, he acted like a man in his senses, they suffered 'him gradual- ly. to indulge in his infatuation, Which a number of them soon be- gan to call by a harsher term than idee fixe. He continued, however, with characteristic persistence, to de- velop one idea after another from his fundamental conviction. At this time he was profoundly moved by several instances. of apostasy, though his pride would not permit him to betray it. As a man and as an artist of the modern school, he had, of course, acquired many non- Jewish habits and his study of the cultures of successive civilizations had left an indelible impress upon him, How was this to be reconciled With bis'return to Judaism? Often doubts assailed him as to the Soundness of his guiding thought, his idee waitress, as a French thinker calls it. Perhaps this gen- eration; having grown up under the influence of alien cultures, Was no longer capable of that return Which_he had perceived to be their redemption. But the new genera- tion. would be capable of it, if it were only given the right direction early enough. He resolved, there= fore, that his own children, at least, should be shown the proper path. They should be trained as -Jews in their own home. - - Hitherto he had permitted to pass by unobserved the holiday. which the wonderful apparition of the Maccabees had illumined for thousands of years with the glow of miniature lights. Now, however, he made this holiday an opportu- nity to prepare something beautiful which should be forever commem- orated in the minds of his children. In.their young' souls. should be im- planted early a 'steadfast devotion . to their ancient people: He bought a Menorah, and when he held this nine-branched - candlestick ini his hands for the first time, a stran -$2e mood came over him. In his fa- ther's houSe. also, the lights bad on burned in his youth, now far away, and the recollection :gave=. him a sad and tender feeling for home. • Excited His Interest - The tradition was neither cold nor dead,L-thus it had passed through . the ages, one light kind - . ling another. Moreover, the ancient form of the Menorah had excited . his interest. • When was the primi:- tive structure of . this candlestick fashioned? - Clearly the design was suggested by the tree-,-in the cen- - ter the sturdy trunk, on right. and left four . branches, one below the. other, in one.plane, and. all of equal height. A later symbolism brought with. it the ninth branch . , which projects in front and functions as a servant. What mystery • had the generations which.folloWed one an- other read into this form of art at .once. so simple and natural?' A.n d our artist wondered to himself if it were not possible to animate again • the withered form of the ,Menorah, to water its roots, as one would a tree. The mere sound of the name, which he n o w pronounced every evening to his ,children, gave him 'great . pleas-7 ute. There was a lovable -ring to the wOrd -When came frOm --the„ lips of little dren. On the first night the candle was lit and the origin of the holiday explain- ed. The wonder- f ul incident of the lights that strangely re- mained burning so long, the story of the return from the Babylonian exile, the second Temple, the Mac :. cabees—our friend told :his chil- dren all he knew. It was not very much, to be sure, but it served. When the second candle was lit, - they repeated what he had told them, and though it had all been learned from him, it seemed to him quite new and beautiful. In the days that f011oWed he waited keen- ly for the evenings, which became ever brighter. Candle after candle The Feast of Lights By EMMA LAZARUS (From Poems of Emma Lazarus, Hou g hton, Mifflin & Co., Boston, 1899. Part of this poem has been set to music as Kindle the Taper.) Kindle the taper like the steadfast star Ablaze on evening's forehead o'er the earth, And add each night a lustre till afar An eightfold splendor shine above thy hearth. Clash, Israel, the cymbals, touch the lyre; . Blow the brass trumpet and the harsh- - tongued horn; Chant psalms of victory till the heart take fire, The Maccabean spirit leap new-born. Remember how from wintry dawn till night, Such , songs were sung in Zion, when again On, the high altar flamed the sacred light. And, purified from every Syrian stain, The foam - white walls with golden shields were hung,. With crowns and silken spoils, and at the shrine, Stood, midst their conqueror-tribe, five chieftains sprung From one heroic stock, one seed divine. Five branches grown from. Mattathias' stem, The Blessed John, the keen - eyed Jonathan, Simon the fair, the burst-of-Spring, the Gem. Eleazar, Help of God; o'er all his clan Judas the Lion-Prince, the Avenging Rod, Towered in warrior- beauty, uncrowned king, Armed with the breastplate and the sword of God, Whose praise is: "He received the perishing." They who had camped Within the mountain-pass, Couched on the rock, , and tented 'neath the sky, Who saw from Mizpah's height the tangled grass Choke the wide Temple - courts, the -altar lie Disfigured- and polluted, who had • flung - Their faces on the stones, and mourned aloud And rent their garments, wailing with one tongue, Crushed as a wind-swept ,bed of reeds is bowed. Even they by one voice fired,. one heart of flame, Through broken reeds, had risen, and were men, They rushed upon the spoiler and o'ercame, Each arm for freedom had the strength of ten. Now is their mourning into dancing turned, Their sackcloth doffed for garments of delight, Week-long the festive torches shall be burned, Music and revelry wed day with night. Still -ours the dance, the feast, the glorious Psalm, The mystic lights of emblem and the Word. Where is our Judas? Where are our five-branched palm? Where are the lion - warriors of the Lord? Clash, Israel, the cymbals, touch the lyre, Sound the brass trumpet and the harsh- tongued horn, Chant hymns of victory till the heart . take fire, The Maccabean spirit leap new-born! DR. THEODOR HERZL stood in the Menorah, and the fa- ther mused on the little candles with his children, till at length his reflections became too deep to be uttered before them. Finds Gratification When he had resolved to return to his people and to make open ac- knowledgment of his return, he had never dreamed that he would find in it a gratification Of his yearning for the beautiful. Yet nothing less was his good fortune. The Menorah with its many lights became a thing of beauty to inspire lofty thought. So, with his prac- ticed hand, he drew a :plan for. a Menorah to present to -his children the following year. He made free use of the motif of the right branching arms projecting right and left in one plane from the cen- tral stem. He did-not hold himself bound by the rigid traditional form, but created directly from na- ture, unconcerned by other sym- bolisms also seeking expression. He was on the search for living beauty. Yet, though he gave the withered branch new life, he conformed to the law, to the gentle dignity of its being. It was a tree with slender branches; its ends were moulded into flower calyxes which would hold the lights. The week passed with this ab- sorbing labor. Then came the eighth day, when the whole row burns, even the faithful ninth, the servant, which on other nights is used only for the lighting of the others. A great splendor streamed from. the Menorah. The children's eyes glistened. But for our friend all this was the symbol of the en- kindling of a nation. When there is but one light, all is still dark, and the solitary light looks melancholy. Soon it finds one companion, then another, and another. The darkness must retreat. The light comes first to the young and the poor—then - others join them who love Justice, Truth, Liberty, Progress, Human- ity, and Beauty. When all the candles burn, then we must all stand and rejoice over the achieve- ments. And no office can be more blessed than that of a SerVant of the Light. The features on this page are reproduced from the fascinating book "Hanukah: The Feast Of Lights"' by EMily Solis-Cohen, Jr., With the permission .of copyright.. owners; The Jewish Publication Society of America,