THE DIASPORA "Large, warm, generous.... Readers who like to level over the proud parade Exhibit Finds Art In Hebrew Manuscripts of Jewish Americans' achieve- ments and customs will find a feast in JEWISH TIMES:' —PHILLIP LOPATE, New York Times Book Review ANDREW SILOW CARROLL Special to The Jewish News N "JEWISH TIMES is a delightful offering of memories often enlightening, always entertaining." —HAROLD KUSHNER, author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People " Extraordinary.... In its constant stream of sur- prises and unique experiences, it moves us to say, 'Yes, this is how it really was:" —DAVID MEHEGAN, Boston Globe A Marc Jaffe Book 4 Houghton Mifflin Company 2 Park Street. Boston, Massachusetts 02108 Houghton Mifflin Company 1988 Jacket design: Robert Anthony LET'S PARTY Complete b'1 BALLOON DECORATING SPECIAL EFFECTS • Arches • Lifts • Drops LIFESIZE CHARACTERS UNIQUE & FUN CENTERPIECES Commercial Weddings • Bar & Bat Mitzvah Promotions 32740 GRAND RIVER AVE. 473-1120 A MI E. of Farmington Rd. in Village Commons Plaza FOR ALL OF YOUR EDUCATIONAL, JUVENILE, We3(74', PUZZLE NEEDS. giAzg CROSSWORD WE ALSO HAVE excluding sale items Village Commons PUZZLE CADDY AND PUZZLE GLUE (313) 471.4141 32726 Grand River Ave. • Farmington, MI 48024 62 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1988 1 j 3 WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE American Heart Association ew York — Jews of medieval Spain called their holy books Mikdashyot, or Sanctuaries of God, as homage to the destroyed Second Temple, and a new exhibition on the history of Hebrew manuscripts shows how literally they interpreted that idea. In the Harley Catalan Bible of the 14th century, on loan from the British Library in London, an artist used a vibrant gold paint on a checkered pink and blue background to depict a varie- ty of sanctuary implements. They include the ark, an altar, a fire pan, pots for ashes, a seven-branched menorah and basins for the blood of sacrifices. As a Sephardic scholar of the 14th and 15th centuries wrote: "As God wanted to beautify His holy place with gold, silver and jewels, so (should it) be properly done with His holy books." The impulse of Jews to beautify their books is richly displayed in "A Sign and a Witness: 2,000 Years of Hebrew Books and Il- luminated Hebrew Manu- scripts," on view through Jan. 14 at the New York Public Library. The exhibit features 185 of what the organizers call the most historically significant and beautiful books in the Hebrew language, culled from collections in the United States, Israel and Europe. The examples are as an- cient as a fragile portion of the Dead Sea Scrolls from 63 BCE, and as modern as a copy of Lamentations printed in Elkins Park, Pa., in 1985. On a recent tour of the ex- hibition, Dr. Leonard Singer Gold, Dorot chief librarian of the library's Jewish division and the exhibition's curator, said there were two main themes guiding his choice of exhibits. "The first is the primacy of the Hebrew book, and that ex- amples of Hebrew literature merit attention in their own right," said Gold. • As an example, he pointed out a page from the San'a Pentateuch, completed in Yemen in 1469. Tiny Hebrew letters, actual- ly Psalms 119 and 121, form the outlines of flowers, moun- tains and schools of swimm- ing fish. "No other tradition that we know of does quite the same thing with mini- writing," he explained. Illustrating a second theme, Gold described a number of exhibits that show how Jews were "always transmitting ideas back and forth with cultures around them. No matter how ghettoized, Jews have never been far from the mainstream." In the Kaufman Mishneh 1295-1296, of Torah Tiny Hebrew letters form the outlines of flowers, mountains and schools of swimming fish. Maimonides' great work is decorated in a manner familiar from Gothic manuscripts. The influence extends to a whimsically drawn "obs- caenium," in which an archer shoots an arrow at another figure across the page, where; in Gold's words, "this poor creature is getting it in the hindquarters?' The traffic was in ideas as well as in artistic styles. In one of the five sections of the exhibition, "Understanding the Universe," there are works included on mathe- matics, astronomy, geography, medicine, classical philosophy and relations with Christians. Only half of the exhibits in "A Sign and a Witness" are illuminated, and Gold acknowledged that 90 percent of history's Hebrew books are not graced with decoration. This was not due to any pro- hibition on illustration — Gold said that contrary to a widely held misconception, a biblical injunction against making graven images was interpreted differently accor- ding to the time and place. For every "Bird's Head Haggadah," completed in Germany around 1300 and depicting characters with the heads of animals, there is a book like the Golden Hag- gadah of 14th century Spain, featuring recognizable human figures. Gold spent four years assembling the exhibition — touring archives, getting per- mission to borrow rare manuscripts and securing grants to offset some $35 million in insurance. Jewish Telegraphic Agency