64 Friday, April 1, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Rabbi Says Christians and Jews Have Much to Learn from Easter By DR. IRVING GREENBERG Director, National Jewish Resource Center Most Christians, and Jews also, would be stunned at the thought that Easter celebrates one of the bol- dest, central affirmations of Judaism, that life will to- tally overcome death. Classic Judaism claims that existence is grounded in God, who is an infinite source of life, energy and goodness. Since life is nur- tured by infinity, it will ex- pand and continue to de- velop until every possible perfection of life will take place. The ultimate logic is that life will vanquish death; in the words of Isaiah (25:8), "He will destroy death forever." The rabbis went one step further. They made it a fundamental principle of Jewish faith that death will be retroactively un- done. All who died will come to life again. This is the classic Jewish teaching of resurrection. Despite its dreams, Judaism is realistic. Of course, the world as we know it now is full of evil, suffering and death. Only when all of existence — political, economic, social, physical — is perfected, can the total triumph of life be accomplished. Therefore, resurrection will take place in the Messianic moment when total perfection is realized. Jews were alerted to look for resurrection as the signal that the mo- ment of final redemption is at hand. Therefore, only a group of Jews who were anticipating the Messiah could have con- cluded that Jesus' empty tomb was not the ulti- mate degradation — i.e., that their spiritual mas- ter was not even worthy of final rest and burial in a Jewish grave — but the beginning of the ultimate triumph — resurrection for humanity. It was the report of resur- rection that confirmed Paul's hope that Jesus was the Messiah. Christianity could only have been born among Jews. Paradoxically enough, Easter is a funda- mentally Jewish day. Christians owe it to us. Why, then, did the Jews not accept Easter and Christianity? It is not be- cause Jews were blind or spiritually dead or any of the other cruel distortions which Christians inflicted on Judaism to justify their own religion. On the con- trary, Jews were desper- holiday, the Jewish brought the assurance of ately looking for a new Mes- Exodus/Passover idea of God's love and hope to bil- siah to bring relief from the simultaneous freedom and lions of people, which had to oppression and hardship of spiritual liberation is happen if Judaism is to be Roman rule. turned into a celebration of truly realized. If, from the But Jews understood that spiritual resurrection Jewish perception, Easter is such a total triumph over which makes the body/ too one-sidedly spiritual, death could only come earthly existence secon- Easter nevertheless when the whole world was dary, ultimately irrelevant. brought surcease of sorrow transformed. What kind of But is not the very es- and pain for billions, an ac- Messiah would only save sence of resurrection the complishment Jews can himself, leaving the rest of point that not only the soul celebrate with gratitude. In humanity subject to slav- but the body of human be- fact, in millions of other ery, disease, poverty and ings is infinitely precious humans, Easter's spiritual spiritual torment? - Jews and worthy of dignity, free- models unleashed the very were too honest, too faithful dom and eternal life? Is not hopes or demands for politi- to reality to let their great our existence as humans an cal liberation that Judaism hopes for perfection over- amalgam of body/soul in affirms. whelm their commitment one concrete person? We are DR. IRVING GREENBERG If only Christians would that it would happen in the not just sparks of God, stop putting down or hurt- real world. grains of infinity whose par- Christians saw the con- ticular existence is an acci- religion to be turned into an ing Jews, then Jews, too, "opiate of the masses" can appreciate this day, not tradiction in the fact that dent. - whose spiritual promises as the day of fulfillment of the world was still unre- Judaism teaches that deemed after Jesus' every human being — and joys narcotized people the total Messianic hope for career. To resolve the you, me, living in a into passivity, to exploita- all humanity but as the an- tion and deprivation. More ticipation of the final per- clash between ideal and specific body, in a reality, Christians cut re- specific time and space — and more, Christians have fection. demption loose from is the image of God, come to see that, far from As Shabat is the earthly existence. "The endowed with infinite superceding Judaism, foretaste of the world to Christianity must recover come which is totally Kingdom of God is within value, worthy of dignity Passover and the stubborn Shabat — total peace, you" they taught. and freedom. So redemp- Those who believe in tion must come for my Jewish insistence on total joy — so is the dream Christianity are spiritually body and my soul; the earthly redemption in order celebrated by Christians free and all conflicts are re- world's political, eco- to complete Christian pur- on this day the foretaste solved even if they are still nomic and physical poses and achieve the true of the sweet totality of life actually enslaved. The soul wounds must be healed, goals of perfection. That is which all humans will exactly what the idea of the someday enjoy. is given eternal life even if also. the body is still flawed with Indeed, the Christian Second Coming tacitly ad- "On that day the Lord will cancer, physical rot and ex- spiritualization of redemp- mits. be One and the Lord's name tinction. tion led to neglect of social For their part, Jews can will be One." (Zechariah In Easter, the Christian justice and too often allowed recognize that Easter 14:9.) The Landsberg DP Camp Inspired a Jewish U.S. Major The American Jewish Archives, supplementary to its role of gathering factual Jewish historical material, is now the publisher of an important documentary that adds invaluably to the study of post-Nazi era con- ditions in the displaced per- sons camps. "Among the Survivors of the Holocaust, 1945" is a diary in the form of letters written from Sept. 19 through Dec. 6, 1945, by Major Irving Heymont, who was placed in charge of the Landsberg DP Camp. The sympathetic account of experiences with the sur- vivors who found haven in ready accumulated about this camp, which continued the displaced persons and to function until 1951 before their camps. its disbanding, is unusual in Major Heymont intro- many respects. It portrays duces the story with the ex- life in the camp, the atti- planation that he had tudes of the survivors, their known little and was not religious devotions. much interested in Jewish They published a life and in Jews until then. newspaper and for lack The DPs moved him into of Hebrew type the Yid- this declaration in a post- dish text had to be trans- script to his accumulated literated into the Latin letters: characters. Thus, the "Landsberg made me a name of the paper ap- conscious Jew again — not a peared as Landsberger religious Jew, seeking the Lager-zeitung. ways of the Lord — but an The many functions pro- affirmed member of the vide an interesting Jewish people. In the years addendum to the facts al- preceding, I had drifted away from Judaism. In fact, few, if any, of my Army col- leagues knew that I was Jewish. Some probably sus- pected it because my wife and I were from New York City and never attended any church services. "During the period at Landsberg no one at the camp knew I was Jewish. Intuitively, I knew that my efforts at the camp would be handicapped if it were known that I was Jewish. On the Army side, my actions could be subject to criticism — Displaced persons in the Landsberg camp staged fairly or not — on, the a strike and this rally in the Landsberg town square to grounds that I was prej- protest Great Britain's restrictive immigration udiced. On the other sinter policies for Palestine. there would be percep- 0 tions that I should take certain actions because I was a fellow Jew. - "Although my stay at Landsberg lasted only a few months, there are many reasons why the DP camp affected me so deeply. Up- permost in my mind was the thought that had my father not fled Russia to avoid service in the Czarist army, my family might have been inhabitants of the camp — had we been fortunate enough to survive. "I also sensed it would be a sardonic success for Hitler if the Jews disappeared by assimilation, either intent or indifference. Studies, after the war, gave me a de- eper appreciation of the wonder of the survival of the Jewish people and of our contributions to mankind." This paperback has an- other important aspect, its having been edited by Ab- raham Peck, associate di- rector of American Jewish Archives. In his preface to this book, Peck recalls his own childhood. He was born in the Landsberg DP Camp, located near Munich. • Peck relates that his parents, who were mar- ried in the Lodz Ghetto, were separated by the Nazis shortly after their marriage. He was born there in May 1946, after Heymont had already left. Peck makes this comment in his pre- face: "The publication of these letters marks the appear- ance of a most important set of historical documents. It is our hope that this encounter between Irving Heymont and the Holocaust survivors of Landsberg will have an impact upon those who read about it. "It is a most extraordi. nary encounter, that of a young American soldier to whom Judaism is of little importance with a group of European Jews robbed not only of their Jewishness but of their basic humanity. The story ends in December of 1945 as the young Ameri- can regains his sense of Jewish identity and the Holocaust victims continue to reaffirm their Jewish- ness and to reclaim their humanity. "I am convinced that in this story there lies an im- portant clue about what it means today to be a Jew, to be a human being and to live in the shadow of the Holocaust, an event whose consequences continue to affect us all." In all of these ex- pressions, in the por- trayal of the DPs' dedica- tion to Israel and their settlement there and the other aspects of the life of the survivors, "Among the Survivors of the Holocaust, 1945," is a re- markable book. A score of illustrations, of the DP camp and the sur- vivors, adds to the interest created by the involvement of an author who gave so much concern to an historic occurrence. —P.S. UN Anti-Semitism Litany By ARNOLD FORSTER (Editor's note: This ar- ticle by Forster, who is associated with the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith, is excerp- ted from the current issue of Penthouse magazine.) Not surprisingly, the senseless but evil UN for- mula that Zionism is racism has become a standard tool in the hands of Israel's UN enemies. More than a dozen resolutions have since re- ferred approvingly to the definition, and it has been used unceasingly by Arab, Soviet, and Chinese prop- agandists to justify anti- Semitism and hatred of Is- rael. But this canard is only the most successful of a long list of anti-Semitic asser- tions in the United Nations. Some others are that the Jews are an imaginary people who never existed in fact, do not now exist, never experienced the Holocaust, and — since they are a non-people — are not entitled to the rights ac- corded genuine nations. This undisguised hatred is easy to find in the publi- cations of the UN special uni4- that services the Pales- tinian Committee. It is also to be found in documents of the UN Commission for Western Asia, which ac- cepts the PLO as a member state while rejecting Israel. And it can be found in the once hallowed halls of the Security Council, where the late Saudi Arabian ambas- sador, Jamil Baroody, once declared that the Nazi Holocaust was simply fic- tion and Anne Frank's diary a transparent forgery.