A Song Of The Golem Beginning June 20 and running through June 27, the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit is sponsoring a MusicFest that will feature a golem of sorts. Annette Ezekiel in the Golem band explains how the group came up with the name: "We were on a kind of monstrous rampage through the old Jewish music, making the music sound new and modern while still revering the tradi- tion," she says. This is hardly the golem's first appearance in the fine arts, so to speak. In 15th century Germany, both Jews and gentiles were intrigued by the golem, and so the creature often was mentioned in books and poetry of the time. In the 19th century, when Jewish communities throughout Europe were murdered as part of the blood libel (Jews were said to be killing Christian children to use their blood for matzah), the golem again became a popular fig- ure in books. The Miraculous Deeds of Rabbi Loew with the Golem was written, perhaps, as a warning to the gentile community. Here, the golem was a creature said to protect the Jews from their enemies. Though no one in recent memory has recounted reviving the golem, the creature continues to fascinate. Rudolf Lothar, of Austria, wrote short stories, Der Golem, in 1904, while a collection of verse on the subject, written by Hugo Salus, was popular during World War I. In 1928, Bavarian author Gustav Meyrink, who spent much of his life in Prague, wrote a haunting tale of the golem, reflecting equally on what hap- pened to a society driven to despair by the pressures of modernity. In 1920, the golem made a film appearance in a silent film in Germany and saw its debut in an opera in 1936 in Der Golem. Apparently the golem could even be quite agile. In 1962, Vienna was host to a ballet, Der Golem, by Francis Burt and Erika Hanka. Most recently, authors from Isaac Bashevis Singer to Cynthia Ozick and Michael Chabon have written stories featuring the golem, while Pete Hamill's Snow in August has a 1940s Brooklyn golem. Some believe the golem was the inspiration for Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. A golem has appeared on The X-Files, and the next time you're in Prague you can visit the Golem Museum. ❑ SAVE 25% TO 50% OFF ORIGINAL PRICES GOING ON NOW THE SOMERSET COLLECTION 248.643.3300 NEIMANMARCUS.COM Savings off original prices. Interim markdowns may have been taken. Selected merchandise only. No adjustments for prior Neiman Marcus® sales. Merchandise at Last Call' Clearance Center stores not included. 6/11 2004 69