PURELY COMMENTARY PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Editor Emeritus Rejecting Falsified Messianism, Acclaiming Humanism F or nearly two dec- ades, Jerusalem mayor Teddy Kollek set an ex- ample for all mankind by the fairness with which he treated the world's religions practiced under his ad- ministration with the greatest respect due to all believers of all faiths. A deeply prejudiced group with tactics bordering on bias seeks to undermine the digni- ty with which Kollek ad- ministered Jerusalem for many years. It compelled the unprejudiced Kollek to assert that false messianism has always been a source of trou- ble for the Jewish people. Therefore, the unanimous re- jection of such falsehoods by all in Jewry except the pre- judiced with an added rebuke to those in the Israel govern- ment who encourage it. That Kollek should have found it needful to condemn the prejudiced actions of a limited group of Jews as stupid is cause for dutiful en- dorsement of condemnation of the ignorant. The stupidly prejudiced are seeking sup- port everywhere including the United States. There is expensive advertising in the New York Times in which they appeal for support for an anti-Israel and anti-Zionist campaign. It emerges as anti- Israel and also as Jewish anti-Semitism. What has actually happen- ed is that the ignorant and stupid contributed toward a falsifying of true messianism, thereby reducing the impor- tance of the universality of the messianic ideal. It is im- portant that the human values should be emphasized. The eminent biblical, Talmudic and spiritual authority Rabbi Philip Birn- baum gave an important evaluation of the messianic ideal with this view of the concept: Jewish eschatology is linked with the messianic hopes and the belief in the ultimate regeneration of humanity. The final goal of world history is the transi- tion of man to a higher life and the annihilation of the forces that oppose the mes- sianic reign. Many elements of later Jewish eschatology are already found in the pro- phetic books. Throughout the biblical prophecies the blessings of the future are on this earth. "It shall come to pass in the latter days that the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established as the highest mountain, towering over every hill. All nations shall stream toward it; many peoples shall come and say: Come, let us climb the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob, that he may instruct us in his ways, and we will walk in his paths. Out of Zion shall go forth instruc- tion, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. He shall judge between the na- tions . . . They shall beat their swords into plow- shares, and their spears in- to pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither Jerusalem mayor Teddy Kollek. shall they learn war any more. They shall sit each under his own vine and under his own fig tree, un- disturbed" (Isaiah 2:2-4; Micah 4:2-4). The great event pre- paratory to the messianic reign is kibbutz galuy yoth (the ingathering of the ex- iles) and the return of the - scattered homeless people of Israel to Zion. There is an additional note in the Birnbaum concepts which demands acceptance as an emphasis on its humanism: Describing the messianic era according to Jewish tradition, Maimonides writes: "At that time there will be neither famine nor war, neither envy nor strife. Prosperity will be abun- dant, comforts within the reach of all. The one preoc- cupation of the entire world will be to know the Lord . . . as it is written: The earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the water covers the sear Eschatology in an in- dividual and personal sense deals with the destiny of the soul after death, the nature of future reward and punishment, the resurrection of the body. It has never assumed in Judaism the character of a dogmatic belief. The scene of heavenly judg- ment has been transferred from the hereafter to the annual day of judgment at the beginning of the year. Such is the essence of mes- sianism as the great ideal that is rooted in humanism, that is universal in the treat- ment of and hope for all mankind, without prejudice to any people or faith. In this commitment is imbedded the rejection of the stupid and ig- norant and the granting of just rights to all in mankind. Such is the ideal of faith that is genuinely messianic and is a fulfillment of Zionism that is the redeemed Israel with justice for all. In this concept is incor- porated the hope for a unity among nations. A challenging definition of Continued on Page 40 Memory And Conscience In Facing The Holocaust M emory is the pre- dominant factor in relating the Holocaust accounts. In reconstructing them there are agonies while interpreting the worldwide reactions. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS (US PS 275-520) is published every Friday with additional supplements in February, March, May, August, October and November at 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan. Second class postage paid at Southfield, Michigan and addi- tional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send changes to: DETROIT JEWISH NEWS, 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan 48034 $29 per year $37 per year out of state 75' single copy Vol. XCVH No. 11 2 May 11, 1990 FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1990 Therefore, there is also the conscience of peoples and their commentators. It is inevitable not to ignore the revisionists who deny or would like to reduce the im- mensity of the experiences and the consequences. Judith Miller wrote her One By One By One Facing the Holocaust with a notewor- thy authoritativeness. Not on- ly had she been the head of the Cairo Bureau for the New York Times, but she devoted her research to all the elements involved in the ac- counts she reported. There are times when a summary of a book in an advertising sense emerges with a definitive emphasis. This is the case with the sum- mation of the Judith Miller Facing the Holocaust in which the publishers, Simon and — Schuster, provide important analyses. The countries in which the horrors and the Holocaust aftermath are recorded — Germany, France, Austria, the Netherlands, the Soviet Union and the United States — provide a history deeply moving as indictments. The guilt is revealed in all its heartlessness in the accounts provided in the following: In each of the six coun- tries, Miller offers fresh perspectives on a subject which in so many ways defies comprehension. In Germany, for instance, she focuses on reunions of Holocaust survivors in their former hometowns, where they and their Ger- man hosts have in many cases made considerable progress toward coming to terms with the past. Austria, on the other hand, remains largely unrepen- tant and virulently anti- Semitic, clinging to an in- accurate and self-serving, Guilt in its massive accumulation is preserved in a historical record. self-image as the Nazis' first victim. Even here, however, there are signs that the international out- cry following the election of the former Nazi officer Kurt Waldheim as presi- dent is beginning to affect the country's conscience. In France, the 1987 trial of Klaus Barbie — the in- famous SS officer known as "the Butcher of Lyons" — threatened to demolish with tales of cowardice and betrayal the cherished na- tional myth of a glorious, unified resistance to the Nazis. The threat was never realized, and the French showed much less interest in the trial than had been expected. Indeed, Miller shows us a country which, in the interest of na- tional unity, has sadly chosen not so much to avoid confronting its war- time past as to become in- different to it. In the Netherlands, where Anne Frank has become a national saint and the Dutch like to think of themselves as almost Continued on Page 40