56 Friday, October 13, 1918 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A Biographical Tribute to Dr. Max Nordau (Continued from Page 1) Max Nordau, like Herzl, was a handsome man. A long line of intellectual forebears had shaped his face into fine features. His stature was rather short, but his leonine head and powerful shoulders made him appear taller. His white beard, shining grey eyes, sonorous voice impressed when he rose to speak. Under the severity of his morals, the cold logic of his reasoning, the pitiless accu- racy of his observation, beat the warmest heart that dis- pensed love to all creatures and pardoned weaknesses. He extended a helping hand to all in need. His intuitive, creative mind reached the very depths of the roots of nature. He was at the same time a scientist and an artist, letting feeling guide his actions together with sci- entific accuracy. His will-power drove him to results, his courage never failed. His was the life of a fighter for progress. With all, in everyday life, he was completely unas- suming and his conversa- tion was as humorous as brilliant. Max Nordau, like Herzl, was born in Pest, which was not yet Budapest. His birth took place on July 29, 1849. He was a descendant of an old Jewish Spanish family, which traced its origin back to Isaac Abrabanel, the 15th Century scholar who was at the same time finance minister to the Catholic Kings of Spain. His father was Rabbi Gabriel Sudfeld of Krotos- chin in East Prussia, who had been called to Pest as a teacher of Hebrew and German. His mother was Sara Rosalin Nelkin and came from Riga; she was his father's second wife. Rabbi Gabriel was a scholar, a modest and poor man, who became poorer when the rise of Hungarian nationalism banned the German language and adopted the Magyar tongue as the expression of culture. The family lived in a sur- rounding of working people, mostly Jewish, yet not in a ghetto, which did not exist in Hungary. Max was his mother's only son (his father had children by his first marriage). Two years after him came a daughter, Charlotte. From his early child- hood, Max, whose He- brew name was Simha Meir, showed excep- tional gifts and a highly energetic character which he inherited from his mother, who de- fended her little ones like a lioness. She once even beat a schoolteacher with an umbrella because he had threatened to slap lit- tle Max's face! However, the boy was allowed to pursue his studies, first in a Jewish school, then as a scholarship pupil in the Catholic municipal gym- nasium and finally in the Protestant gymnasium. He then studied medicine and graduated as a doc- tor. From his early adoles- cence, his parents' poverty impelled him to start work- ing in order to help them. He felt himself responsible for them. When he was only 15, a poem of his won a literary contest. Soon after, he started a career as a Maxa Nordau: Her Father's Biographer (Continued from Page 1) turer. Born in Paris, daugh- ter of Max Nordau and Anna Dons, she obtained her BA degree and studied painting in Paris with Jules Adler and in Madrid with Jose Maria Mezquita. She takes part in the Paris Salons, exhibits with groups in Paris, the French provinces and various countries. She took part in the deco- ration of the Palestine Pavilion at the Paris World Fair in 1937 and had one- man shows in Paris, New York, London, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and other cities. Her work can be seen in museums in Paris, Tel Aviv and other places in Israel, in Ovar (Portugal) and also the Jewish Mtiseum in Budapest, and in private collections in a number of countries, including America, Mexico, South Af- rica, England and Israel. She has received many prizes and medals, the latest being the Silver Medal of the City of Paris (1977) and the Gold Medal of the Accademia Italia (1978). She was also in- structor for drawing at the New York City College in the adult education pro- gram. She has lectured in many countries. During her two stays in the U.S. the second lasting five years, she lec- tured several times in De- troit. Together with her mother, she wrote a biog- raphy of her father. journalist. The Pester Lloyd England, even Iceland, took him as a reporter upon which was celebrating the recommendation of a friend. millenium of its union with He was most successful Denmark. Then he traveled until he described one to France, Italy and Spain, morning an orgy which had feeling in the depth of his supposedly taken place in soul his kinship with the one of the big cafes of the land of his ancestors. city. It created a sensation, Meanwhile, his father until the owner of the cafe had died in 1872, leaving flew into a rage and ran into him with a profound sorrow the newspaper's office, and a feeling of greater re- swearing that never had sponsibility towards his anything of the kind hap- mother and his sister. His pened in his select place and half-brothers and sisters threatening to pursue the were much older than he reporter. and were married and inde- Max was of course called pendent. to the office; when he was When he came back from his extensive jour- asked where he had got such neys, he decided to open news, he answered in total innocence: "But I have in- a practice as a gynecologist. But the vented them, as usual! I thought all reporters did the surroundings, although pleasant, were too pro- same." The director was so vincial for his legitimate amused that he did not fire him, but gave him another ambition. Of all the capi- tals he had visited, the department. one that attracted him He became dramatic cri- tic for a magazine called most was Paris. It was at the time the center of cul- "Intermission." He was 15. His reviews were so ap- tural life and freedom of preciated that one evening thought. the director of the theater He left Budapest, to where the famous critic was which he never returned, attending a performance, and with his mother and sis- having heard about his ter transferred his home to presence, wanted to meet Paris. him. He was there with his Having already spent sister and both children some time in the French went to the director's office. capital, he had written his Hearing the name, the di- first book "From the True rector came out and behold- Hand of the Billions" and a ing a slim boy and a young comedy "The Return from girl, he asked them what Paris." Then came, in 1879, they were doing there. Max a book describing his felt offended and answered: travels: "From the Kremlin "You have requested my to the Alhambra." presence yourself! I am Max He had decided to practice Nordau." The director had medicine in Paris and per- such a spell of laughter that he almost fell down. He haps to continue his activi- later apologized and became ties as a journalist, without thinking of literature. He a great friend of the drama- tic critic; but who would had of course to take again have imagined that he was his degrees as a medical doctor and started practic- so young? ing. He was soon much ap- Meanwhile, Rabbi Gabriel himself, who preciated as a gynecologist, but later changed his inter- sensed his son's future, ests to psychiatry. But all he gave him the advice to had seen and lived through, keep the name of Max Nordau, which he himself all his revolt against the sins of the world had to be had found for him as said. more suitable for a He wrote his first writer's career as it was philosophical book: "The much easier to pro- Conventional Lies of Our nounce in all languages Civilization," which ap- than Sudfeld. The name peared in 1883. Overnight, was later legalized and the author became famous. becathe the real surname On the one hand, he was and not a nom de plume. considered as a dangerous When he-had finished his revolutionary; on the other medical studies, before set- hand, for the majority of his tling as a physician, Max readers,he was a redeemer, Nordau decided that he who had at last expressed, wanted to become ac- and how eloquently! what quainted with the world, As they felt in their soul. The a journalist, he was sent to work was translated into all Vienna to the World's Fair, then to Russia, where Em- -languages, even Japanese; and through the years it had peror Franz Joseph paid a 72 editions. visit to the Czar. After that, he visited Two years after the- other countries: Germany, "Conventional Lies" and Denmark, where he met the with some literary essays great Andersen, Sweden, in between, a second book came out with great expectations: "Para- doxes," a critical essay on art, literature, sociology, written with a humorous pen in a paradoxical form. His growing fame did not prevent Max Nordau from attending his patients and continuing his journalistic work. Tribune of Zionism Together with celebrity, Max Nordau had acquired an easier position. He realized his youthful ambi- tion of giving his .mother and sister a better, more comfortable life. But the literary strife, the attacks that went with the praise, made him turn away for some time from his sociolog- ical and literary fights. However, in 1888, he wrote a novel: "The Malady of the Century," which was pro- Bjornstjerne Bjornson, the Scandinavian writer. There he met a tall, slender, beau- tiful young Danish singer, with marvelous grey eyes. She was Anna Dons and she had come to Paris to study her art with the renowned teacher Mathilde Marchesi. Max Nordau was ex- tremely interested in the girl, but he understood that his friend Kaufmann was head over heels in love with her and he did not ate to interfere nor wa. ready at the time to lose his freedom. Some time after, Richard Kaufmann mar- ried Anna, who had just started an opera singer's career. But children came, she had to give up her prima donna's voca- tion (her sister Elizabeth became a leading star in the Opera of Copenha- gen), but she continued singing in concerts and helping Mathilde Mar- chesi with her pupils. . Max Nordau and 1889 Press Pass claimed in Argentina as the best novel of the year, and two dramas. He had meanwhile be- come a great friend of Ce- sare Lombroso, the Italian psychiatrist who was prac- tically the inventor of criminology. He shared most of his views, except that Lombroso considered genius as a degeneracy and Nordau, on the contrary, saw in it the highest sum- mit of human mind in its full sanity. He was so indig- nant with the prevailing literature, art, way of life, snobbishness, decadent manners, that he wrote his most read, most admired and most attacked book: "Degeneration." In it he was the first to detect and point out Nietzsche's madness, Gobineau's dangerous racialism, Wagner's pangermanism and warned mankind against all forms of degeneracy, the more perilous that those he called "the superior degenerates" were more talented. Yet, when Oscar Wilde was jailed, he, together with other personalities, pleaded for his release. The book, of course, pro- voked venomous polemics, one by Bernard Shaw. It in- duced some enemies later to take a vicious revenge dur- ing the First World War. After "Degeneration" came a drama, a novel and a few essays. Meanwhile, when he was in Paris at the Exposition of 1879, Max Nordau was happy to meet again by journalistic chance his friend Richard Kaufmann, whom he had known during his voyage to Iceland. Soon, Richard Kaufmann took him to the home of Max Nordau remained an intimate friend of the couple. Through the years, four children were born. Then, there was the tragedy of Richard Kaufmann's ill- ness and death, leaving his young widow alone with her family. Max Nordau was greatly shocked by his friend's passing. Yet Anna had become free and he sud- denly was aware that since he had met her, he was un- consciously in love with her, kept away from his feelings by his and her sense of duty. Richard Kaufmann had died in Denmark. When Anna came back to Paris, Max Nordau visited her — and he knew that he could no more live without her. In due time, they married and to the last were the most loving and devoted couple. They had a daughter Maxa, who was brought up to- gether with the step- children. Max Nordau had been raised in a very traditional Jewish home. His father, al- though he had no congrega- tion, was a rabbi and his mother was pious. Yet after Max delivered a brilliant Hebrew speech for his Bar Mitzva, he lost his faith. His culture was so uni- versal, his spirit so inti- mately in contact with all forms of intellectual 1. - he was so much .- terested in the fate or all the people of the world, that although the thought of denying his Judaism never entered his mind, the woes of the Jews were for him similar to those of all suffering men. He felt more akin to the Greek and Roman civilizations than to the Hebrew. Then came a turn in his life. * * * (To be continued ... Published in cooperation with the Jewish National Fund of America.)