An American Bicentennial Literary Gem WSU Press Issues Dr. Jacob R. Marcus' Three-Volume Historical Record, 'The Colonial American Jew 1492-1776' Jacob Rader Marcus is a name so indelibly recorded among the most noted his- torians of our time, his life's labors in perpetuating the basic facts about the history of .American Jews is so in- timately linked with the American nation as a whole, that whatever studies will be made of the subject he has honored will inevitably refer to him. Wayne S t a to University Press, therefore, shares a great honor by publishing his three- volume "The Colonial American Jew 1492-1776." It is really-only part of a much vaster and all-inclusive his- tory he has compiled, .cover- ing the decades and centuries that followed the Colonial period. Meanw:iile, in this vast work, Dr. Marcus provides a positive answer to a question posed at the outset in the preface to this voluminous effort. He - has given proof that 'American Jewry does have a distinctive, significant history. Appearing at this time, when the nation prepares to celebrate the American Bi- centennial, the publication of this notable work is timely. It marks one of the initial contributions to the celebra- tion. Prof. Marcus' collective works are not new. The present three-volume ency- clopedic history has been published before. Dr. Mar- cus's introductory chapter prefacing the work was written in 1967. But appear- ing together, the previous works now available in a single trilogy provide an im- mense opportunity for stu- dents of American Jewish history to have the available data in a single compilation. A previously quoted state- ment by the eminent his- torian defining his views on Jewry historically is worth reusing. Dr. Marcus de- clares: -"The basic premise, the essential fact to which I am committed in my work, is that the Jews constitute a 'people.' Since their earliest days on these shores, they have been an organized group, united by common in- stitutions, traditions, beliefs, an inspiring past, and an un- usually strong sense of kin- ship. Where ,ier possible, they have tended to live in close proximity to one another. As a tightly-knit fellowship, they have shared common experi- ences, and the totality of these makes up' American Jewish h is tory. For a proper introduction into the tory of the Ameri- can Jew, it is essential that the hist r i c background should be fully known and understood. Therefore, Dr. Marcus devotes a good por- tion of the first of these three volumes to the earliest Jew- ish. periods in Palcstine and Mesopotamia, leadirw 1p to the £71:11e. to :iti! migrations, tO, the Spaniy.... period and • 56 — Friday, May 24; 1974 DR. JACOB R. MARCUS the role of the Marranos who came to the Americas. Thus, the remarkably total coverage of the records of Jews who settled in South American countries make the Marcus volumes doubly valu- able. He has provided not only a history of the Ameri- can Jews but of the Jewries of all of the Americas as well. were attained, the freedoms that distinguished the colo- nies, provide fascination as the reader reaches the sec- ond volume in which the readers are introduced to the economics of the new era, to the industrializations in which Jews played their roles, to the social life and the re- ligious experiences of Amer- ican Jewry. That's the road he has trekked to reach the colonial settlements that formed the beginnings of U. S. Jewry. All of the 13 Colonies are under review, the struggles of the JeWs to attain religious and political freedom. The summation, about the franchises and how they What did American Jewry actually produce in litera- ture? How effective has been the religious involvement? Who were the leaders in the several spheres involving the spiritual - cultural role of American Jewry? The sec- ond volume offers evaluative information to serve the re- searchers, the students of history and literature, Amer- icans of all faiths—not Jews alone — who are interested and involved in knowing the story of America as related to a progressive element whose activities have left in- delible marks on this land. Jews in all walks of life are depicted in the process of integration in the periods under review in these works, and the third volume covers the vast sphere of Jewish acculturation. The distinguished person- alities who emerged in the Colonial period, the battle to overcome prejudices and the triumphs in attaining roles of dignity in American life, Haftmann's Chagall': Notable Abrams Art Work "Chagall" is the enchanting name and Harry N. Abrams is the very enterprising pub- lisher of art works who makes available, under that title, one of the most impres- sive works about the great artist. It is an immense book of 160 pages, with 140 reproduc-* tions of Chagall's paintings, line drawings, charcoals and characterizations. In addition, there is a real treat in the 49 large full color paintings that truly glorify the book. The running story about Mark Chagall is by Werner Haftmann, director of the Na- tionalgalerie of Berlin, and the translations from the German are by Heinrich Bau- mann and Alexis Brown. The book was published to mark Chagall's 85th birthday, July 7, 1972. The Haftmann stories — in addition to the major essay about Chagall's life, struggles, achievements —each of the colorplates is accompanied by an explana- tory article defining the art, the color effects, the effects, that had stimulated Chagall's theme. While in some respects the descriptive aspects may be subjected to criticism, some of the themes may even be viewed as injecting Christo- logical views which may or may not have been in the mind of the great artist, in its totality the Haftmann story is effective and impres- sive. Primarily, Ha f t m a n n sought to give a proper ac- count of the Jewish back- ground in Chagall, and it should be stated that he did succeed. Tracing the hasidic a id other influences, Haft- mann comments: "Chagall does not care for too much emphasis to be laid on the religious aspect, yet it must not be left out of considera- tion, because it concerns his specific outlook on life and the specific store of images from which his paintings came into being. The matter must also be seen in a wider context: it is with and through Chagall that Juda- ism, which for thousands of years had eschewed all pic- torial art, found its own indi- vidual artistic expression in pictures. Out of special cir- cumstances of modern paint- ing, which generally was turning from outer to inner inspiration, he helped to cause the buried springs of imagery in the Jewish soul to flow at last, and Jewish per- ception of the world, which had been confined to words, to be released in visual ex- pression. This is an achieve- ment of secular rank, and is there for all to see in the stained glass windows of the Hadassah synagogue near Jerusalem." It was inevitable that Haft- mann's view thus evaluating Chagall's Jewishness should be fortified by the frontis- piece, the Chagall Hadassah synagogue window "The Tribe of Benjamin," as well as many other Jewish Cha- gallisms. There is, as another ex- ample, the full color magnifi- cent "Jew in Green." The in- teresting full-page essay that faces this gem, which is ac- companied by Hebraic quota- tions from Scriptures, con- cludes: "In a discussion with Jac- ques Lassaigne, which Las- saigne recalls in his book published in 1957, Chagall himself, with special refer- ence to 'Jew in Green,' has described the circumstances of the painting very precise- ly: 'I start from the initial shock of something actual THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS MARC CHAGALL and spiritual, from some def- inite thing, and then go on towards something more ab- stract . . . This is what hap- pened to "Jew in Green," whom I- painted surrounded by Hebrew words and script characters_ (this is no sym- bolism, it is exactly as I saw it, this is the actual atmos- phere in which I found him) . . . I believe that in this way I arrive at the symbol, with- out being symbolistic or liter- ary.' " Another of the remarkable full color large paintings, "Moses Receiving the Tab- lets of the Law," also has sig- nificant annotation in the ac- companying Haftmann essay, which explains in part: "In the shadows of the rock are two singular figures. To the right sits a Jew with the Torah scroll. He has every right to be there, because in the Torah the archaic Law is preserved and completed. But at the lower left we find the painter himself, em- braced by a figure from his pictures. He too has a place in the golden circle of the di- vine Law; although it is very obscure and marginal, it is still nearer to the holy one than that of the marveling people in the light. The same is true for the man with the Torah. This metaphorical marginal note shows us how much the painter as a person felt himself involved in the religious picture of his cycle. Out of the close interaction between life and faith, as the enveloping aura of existence, an art, which grows out of both, has developed the strange personal iconography which distinguishes Chagall's religious pictures and makes him unique in the history of religious art." "Clowns at Night," "Land and the Village," "The Holy Coachman," "The Promen- ade" and the other full color pictures all invite similarly valuable explanations. Spe- cial attention must be given, however, to "White Crucifix- ion." It is the great protest, the condemnation of the per- secutions by the Nazis, of an- ti-Semitism everywhere, in- cluding France where Cha- gall made his home after leaving the Russian shtetl and where he created nearly all of his great works. To Haftmann this represents the "symbol of the martyred Jewish people," and there is this partial explanatory note from the essay about the pic- ture: "The Hebrew inscription, `Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews,' together with the loincloth cut from a Jewish prayer shawl, points to the Jewish origin of the crucified. Hence we find at the foot of the cross the Jewish temple candelabrum in shining glory, and floating above the cross lamenting figures from the Old Testament." The painting is much more than that: the flight of the Jews depicted here, the at- tempts to rescue the Torah scrolls, the burning Jewish homes and synagogues, attest to the protest in "White Cru- cifixion." The immensity of the Ab- rams-published Haftmann-au- thored "Chagall" makes it a volume to be cherished. It enriches the art libraries. * * Rattner at Work Harry N. Abrams has just issued another notable work— "Abraham Rattner" by Allen Leepa. Painter, poet, protester and prophet are all excellent de- scriptions of Abraham Ratt- ner. Rattner draws his narra- tive (sometimes semi-ab- stract and sometimes corn- bined with superb calligra- phy) from contemporary events. Old Testament themes and the endless panorama of the human condition. In an age that dehumanizes, Ratt- ner paints our highest hopes and aspirations as well as our tragedy and despair. Illustrated in this new vol- ume are over 200 of the art- ist's finest and most repre- sentative works; 50 full-color, hand-tipped plates transmit the undiluted power of his color and bold forms. The author, Allen Leepa, professor of art at Michigan State University and noted artist in his own right, is Ab- raham Rattner's son. are among the elements of significance described in the third volume. A summation of extreme interest winds up a story filled with drama, deter- mination, creativity. Describ- ing the "no choice" condi- tions for Jews who were compelled to leave the ''''' - a- ropean lands of tortur search for freedom, and traveled westward, Dr. Mar- cus outlines the procegses Jews went through in estab- lishing their new American homeland. He is realistic. He envisions the facts and they denote the difficulties that were encountered. In the early years, prior to 1776, Jews did not enter the medical profession or practice law, "Jews would not have been permitted to practice in the courts." There was no literary creativity, "the typical colonial syna- gogue goer, an immigrant, was too busy learning the language and making a liv- ing to achieve any facility or distinction in English let- ters." To the non-Jews, then, "Jew" was still a dirty word "and it was hardly rare to see the Jews denigrated in the press." Cemetery dese- crations were not uncommon and on one occasion a funeral cortege was attacked. When Christians learned to know them, they accepted the Jews: "Christians in the vil- lages and towns of the coun- try discovered, sometimes to their dismay, that the. Jews did not wear horns, and that if they had devil's tails and cloven feet, they certainly were not visible." Did the Jew accept Amer- ica? The logical answer is defined and Dr. Marcus de- scribes how the Jew who came to this country from Slavic and Germanic coun- tries "learned to dispense with Slavic obsequiousness and Germanic servility. There was no need for him to be submissive." The new- comer "moved Europe across the Atlantic . . . Syna- gogues, schools, charities, a `community' were trans- ferred here . . . A dozen families in 17th Century New York laid the foundation for a 20th Century community of nearly 6,000,000 Jews . . . The pioneers of the 18th Cen- tury succeeded in making an exemplary transition from a still medieval European ish life to the new Ame world of modernism and personal freedom." Thus the story, if unfolded, portraying the Jew in Amer- ica through the middle of the 18th Century, providing an introduction to the American Jewish community of today with its more than 6,000,000 members. Dr. Marcus's encyclopedic work is a distinct contribu- tion to Jewish history and is major in delineating the American Jew. In the Bi- centennial of the land, it emerges as one of the chief contributions to 'American scholarship.