72 Friday, December 11, 1981 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Potok, Kushner Books Shed Light on Meaning of L By BETTE ROTH In Chaim Potok's newest masterpiece, "The Book of Lights" (Knopf), he ven- tures into areas as yet barely touched in American Jewish literature, namely, the Jewish involvement in the production of the atom bombs that destoyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the experiences of indi- vidual Jews in Southeast Asia, immediately follow- ing the Korean War. The two central charac- ters of the novel, Gershon Loran,a. New York born and bred Orthodox Jew, and Ar- thur Leiden, the Boston bred son of one Charles Leiden, a member of the Manhattan Project, are sent to Korea by their yeshiva to serve as chaplains to the Jewish soldiers stationed there. "Lights," symbols of energy, are the unifying focus of this book, be they CHAIM POTOK the mystical kabalistic lights to which Gershon seems to be inexplicably drawn, the brutal, catas- trophic lights produced by the explosions of the bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the harsh, frigid sunlight of a Korean winter, or the always-too-bright lights in any room in which Arthur Leiden finds him- self. Both Gershon and Ar- thur are young men who cannot come to terms with the pain and de- struction they have found in the "real world." Arthur is tormented with the fact of his father's in- volvement in the creation of the Bomb, and Ger- shon becomes more and more troubled with the reality he finds in Korea. Neither he nor Arthur can reconcile themselves to the evil they find in a world created by God. How they struggle with this profound teleological problem becomes the narra- tive of this very thoughtful novel. But Potok makes it clear that this struggle is not only confined to two young men trying to mature in a world they fail to understand. For he uses Charles Leiden's voice to articulate his own concern: " 'Fermi,' says Charles, `probably attends synagogue.' " 'Albert (Einstein) be- lieved in Spinoza's God and helped raise money for Is- rael. Teller may end up teaching in a Jewish paroc- hial school. Szilard has the soul of a Jewish prophet. And we tinker with light and atom bombs, with the energy of the universe. " 'Do you wonder that the world doesn't know what to make of its Jews? No one is on more famil- iar terms with the heart of the insanity of the uni- verse than is the Jew, and no one is more frenetic and untidy in the search for an answer. " 'We are always in a de- sperate rush. We offer apocalypses in a pushcart, messiahs in tobacco-stained caftans . . . Kosher dishes hardly constitute a solution to the problem of our species 71 7 Rabbi Kushner, the laws of physics enabling man to make such transformations are cause for celebration and awe. "The River of Light," Kushner's most scholarly work to date, brings to- gether the Zohar, Talmud, psychology and physics to explain to the reader the inner world of the body and the mind, the almost un- fathomable world of the cosmos, and the place of God in both remarkable realms. It is the author's thesis that we all have within us a genetic memory of eternity, erased by the fall of Adam. Somehow, all matter and energy are expressions of one unity so that the past and the future are only con- structs of the human mind. Rabbi Kushner leads us through five stories in the Bible, providing his own unique interpreta- tion: the Creation, Adam in the Garden, Abraham at Machpelah, and Moses at Sinai and the Red Sea. In the most engaging BETTE ROTH way, these stories are teleological answers, only told in the context of more probing questions for physics, molecular biol- the reader, prodded into ogy and psychotherapy, deepest reflection by the au- all within the greater thor's most provocative context of a grand tele- ological design: Creation, words. * * * death and rebirth. Teleology is the central And for this unabashedly concern of yet another mystical author, God's hand new book this fall, Rabbi is everywhere. As he says at Larry Kushner's brilliant' the beginning of the story: monograph, "The River "A consciousness glistens of Light" (Harper and within each creature and Row). Both Kushner and each creature's creation, Potok turn to the Zohar, even as it guided the hand of both deal with the as- the One who spoke and the tonishing acceleration of world came into being. man's knowledge of and Rabbi Oshaya, at the be- ability to use energy, but ginning of 'Genesis Rabba,' with two opposing points reminds us that when even of view. a king builds a castle, he For Potok, man's ability uses a blueprint. to change matter into "So the Creator too, re- energy has only been a turns again and again to means for accelerated de- that underlying pattern of struction of the species; for being. Arrangements of mo- . . "The problem of our species," how to "cure" the insanity of the universe, is then, Potok's latest and largest theme. The atom bomb was created, accord- ing to Potok, as a response to Hitler and was used then, not against the Germans but against the Japanese, an ironic twist for Potok. For in trying to prevent in- sanity, the Jews seems to create only more insanity. This novel produces no tion that organize and ani- mate all being. This is reali- ty's dream. Organizing motif beneath the apparent surface The plan the Creator used reappears everywhere: from the most erudite contemporary cos- mological theory to the opening sentences of Genesis, it is the same." Each page of this little monograph is so filled with facts, psychological and physical, celestial and cellular, that the reader feels almost into- xicated with so many charming new thoughts. RABBI KUSHNER For example, Rabbi how once it, too, was part Kushner tells us, "We all of a great unity that had issue from One Being. One no parts . . ." undifferentiated Being. The Consciousness, for Rabbi soul of all souls. YEHIDO SHEL OLAM, 'the Only Kushner, is defined as tele- ological memory, a "river of One of the Universe.' "The memory of this light," a genetic memory of primordial unity is recorded paradise or eternity. Each of in the chromosomes that us has the ability to glimpse shape our bodies. It is that eternity for ourselves. transmitted unconsciously But he warns us that any and genetically, and for this "spirituality that claims to reason it is observable forever - transcend, escape, everywhere throughout the or otherwise transgress this everyday world is a fraud." universe. "Thus it is only natural He takes us through a jour- for the legend to tell of how, ney to eternity but he tells when we die, we shall catch us that "if the searcher a glimpse of this primordial chooses to remain with Adam and how it was possi- eternity the searcher loses ble for Adam to behold all eternity! If the searcher the generations. Just as chooses the finite world, the each tiny thing carries searcher is rewarded with within it the potential de- eternity. This is expressed scription of the whole of in a slightly different way which it is a part. The iris of by saying that the pious are the eye. Handwritten not in paradise, paradise is words. Our descriptions of in the pious . . ." an ink blot . . . Or any ran- Chaim Potok's characters dom dream's fragment. renounce the "real world" to Each tiny piece to the eyes bury themselves . in the and ears of one well-trained study of Kabala. Rabbi tells all about the whole. Kushner continues to study "Everything is organi- and urges us to do so as well cally connected to every- but while "The Book of thing else in such a way Lights" is an expression of that nothing is irretriev- despair, "The River of ably and only a thing. Ev- Light" is a joyous affirma- erything is part of a tion of the "real world," the single organism. And universe into which we each part 'remembers' were born. Ability to Relate to Arabs Set Dayan Apart from Other Statesmen By SIMON GRIVER World Zionist Press Service JERUSALEM — It was Moshe Dayan's military prowess that captured the world's imagination and hoisted him to the forefront both of Israeli politics and of international fame. But it was in his less publicized ability to relate to the Arabs that he made a vital con- tribution towards paving the way for peace with Egypt and the signing of the Camp David accords. Among the mourners as Dayan was laid to rest this fall at Nahalal were not only an Egyptian delega- tion headed by Foreign Minister Butros Ghali, but representatives of the local El-Mazeib Bedouin tribe. Before Dayan was six he knew how to use a gun if attacked, but he also be- friended those Arabs Who wanted to coexist with the Jewish settlers and as a child - his first deep friend- ship was with a local Be- douin boy. Dayan, along with Yigal 4,111on, was one of few Sabras who achieved power in the first genera- tion of Israel's indepen- dence. Born in 1915 on Degania, the first kibutz, he moved with his pa- rents to Nahalal, the first moshav (agricultural smallholders' coopera- five village) when he was six-. Almost every eulogy depicted Dayan as the tunistic world of party symbol of the new, unin- politicians, where the con- hibited, brave and de- tradictions of Dayan's voted Israeli. However, policies sometimes seemed such a portrayal under- too deep to be bridged. plays the man's unique When Prime Minister individualism. Levi Eshkol died in office in It was Dayan's 1969, Dayan, still bathing "maverick" behavior that in the glory of the Six-Day probably deprived him of War, could not win the full the chance to be prime confidence of the Labor minister and left him at his movement and Golda Meir death in the political wil- stepped in. derness. His strength was Dayan was among the his weakness. In 1951 he leading Laborists who fol- drew a cartoon representing lowed Ben - Gurion in 1965 himself as a fox, the animal into the Rafi Party. If this he most admired — the lone split was recognized as a hunter. These fox-like qual- legitimate political re- ities served him well in bat- alignment, his second defec- tle but always left him tion after Menahem Begin's somewhat mistrusted as a electoral victory in 1977 politician even in the oppor- when he accepted the Foreign Ministry in a Likud government was considered as treacherous. Former President Jimmy Carter recalled that when negotiations stalled at Camp David it was Dayan who suggested new pos- sibilities. It was Dayan who is said to have had MOSHE DAYAN secret talks with Egyp- tians to set up Sadat's os- tensibly spontaneous de- cision to come s to Jerusalem. And if Dayan, the military mastermind, had recommended that the Camp David agree- ment was too great a sec- urity risk for Israel, then Begin would probably not have signed. But inevitably it is Day- an's military triumphs that will be closest associated with his name. Imprisoned by the British for his ac- tivities against Arab insur- gents, he fought for them in World War II, losing an eye but gaining the patch that gave him the image of a swashbuckling pirate. In the eccentric British Gen- eral Orde Wingate, who fer- vently backed the Jewish cause in the late 1930s, Dayan found an ingenious mentor. It was from Wingate that Dayan learned the maxim that "attack is the best form of defense." As Chief of Staff during the Sinai campaign of 1956 and as Minister of Defense in 1967, Dayan used the tactic to deva - ing effect. That record NA, blemished by the Yom Kip- pur War. However, the Ag- ranat Commission, the de- tails of which have never been published, did not blame Dayan for the unpre- paredness of Israel's forces when the Egyptians at- tacked in 1973. Indeed one of its leading members, Yigael Yadin, favors publi- cation in order to set the re- cord straight, possibly im- plying that Dayan's name would be cleared in this way.