Jewish Literature by Gustav Karpeles - HTML preview

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These certainly are abundant proofs that the Jew has a share in all the

phases and stages of culture, from its first germs unto its latest

complex development--a consoling, elevating reflection.

A learned

historian of literature, a Christian, in discussing this subject, was

prompted to say: "Our first knowledge of philosophy, botany, astronomy,

and cosmography, as well as the grammar of the holy language and the

results of biblical study, we owe primarily to Jews."

Another historian,

also a Christian, closes a review of Jewish national traits with the

words: "Looking back over the course of history, we find that in the

gloom, bareness, and intellectual sloth of the middle ages, Jews

maintained a rational system of agriculture, and built up international

commerce, upon which rests the well-being of the nations."

Truly, there are reasons for pride on our part, but no less do great

obligations devolve upon us. I cannot refrain from exhortation. In

justice we should confess that Jews drew their love of learning and

ability to advance the work of civilization from Jewish writings.

Furthermore, it is a fact that these Jewish writings no longer excite

the interest, or claim the devotion of Jews. I maintain that it is the

duty of the members of our Order to take this neglected, lightly

esteemed literature under their protection, and secure for it the

appreciation and encouragement that are the offspring of knowledge.

Modern Judaism presents a curious spectacle. The tiniest of national

groups in Eastern Europe, conceiving the idea of establishing its

independence, proceeds forthwith to create a literature, if need be,

inventing and forging. Judaism possesses countless treasures of

inestimable worth, amassed by research and experience in the course of

thousands of years, and her latter-day children brush them aside with

indifference, even with scorn, leaving it to the sons of the stranger,

yea, their adversaries, to gather and cherish them.

When Goethe in his old age conceived and outlined a scheme of universal

literature, the first place was assigned to Jewish literature. In his

pantheon of the world's poetry, the first tone uttered was to be that

of "David's royal song and harp." But, in general, Jewish literature is

still looked upon as the Cinderella of the world's literatures. Surely,

the day will come when justice will be done, Cinderella's claim be

acknowledged equal to that of her royal sisters, and together they will

enter the spacious halls of the magnificent palace of literature.

Among the prayers prescribed for the Day of Atonement is one of

subordinate importance which affects me most solemnly.

When the shadows

of evening lengthen, and the light of the sun wanes, the Jew reads the

_Neïlah_ service with fervor, as though he would "burst open the portals

of heaven with his tears," and the inmost depths of my nature are

stirred with melancholy pride by the prayer of the pious Jew. He

supplicates not for his house and his family, not for Zion dismantled,

not for the restoration of the Temple, not for the advent of the

Messiah, not for respite from suffering. All his sighs and hopes, all

his yearning and aspiration, are concentrated in the one thought: "Our

splendor and our glory have departed, our treasures have been snatched

from us; there remains nothing to us but this Law alone." If this is

true; if naught else is left of our former state; if this Law, this

science, this literature, are our sole treasure and best inheritance,

then let us cherish and cultivate them so as to have a legacy to

bequeath to our children to stand them in good stead against the coming

of the _Neïlah_ of humanity, the day when brethren will

"dwell together

in unity."

Perhaps that day is not far distant. Methinks I hear the rustling of a

new spring-tide of humanity; methinks I discern the morning flush of new

world-stirring ideas, and before my mind's eye rises a bridge, over

which pass all the nations of the earth, Israel in their midst, holding

aloft his ensign with the inscription, "The Lord is my banner!"--the one

which he bore on every battlefield of thought, and which was never

suffered to fall into the enemy's hand. It is a mighty procession moving

onward and upward to a glorious goal: "Humanity, Liberty, Love!"

WOMEN IN JEWISH LITERATURE

Among the songs of the Bible there are two, belonging to the oldest

monuments of poetry, which have preserved the power to inspire and

elevate as when they were first uttered: the hymn of praise and

thanksgiving sung by Moses and his sister Miriam, and the impassioned

song of Deborah, the heroine in Israel.

Miriam and Deborah are the first Israelitish women whose melody thrilled

and even now thrills us--Miriam, the inspired prophetess, pouring forth

her people's joy and sorrow, and Deborah, _Esheth Lapidoth_, the Bible

calls her, "the woman of the flaming heart," an old writer ingeniously

interprets the Scriptural name. They are the chosen exemplars of all

women who, stepping across the narrow confines of home, have lifted up a

voice, or wielded a pen, for Israel. The time is not yet when woman in

literature can be discussed without an introductory justification. The

prejudice is still deep-rooted which insists that domestic activity is

woman's only legitimate career, that to enter the literary arena is

unwomanly, that inspired songs may drop only from male lips. Woman's

heart should, indeed, be the abode of the angels of gentleness, modesty,

kindness, and patience. But no contradiction is involved in the belief

that her mind is endowed with force and ability on occasion to grasp the

spokes of fortune's wheel, or produce works which need not shrink from

public criticism. Deborah herself felt that it would have better become

a man to fulfil the mission with which she was charged--

that a cozy home

had been a more seemly place for her than the camp upon Mount Tabor. She

says: "Desolate were the open towns in Israel, they were desolate....

Was there a shield seen or a spear among forty thousand in Israel?...

I--unto the Lord will I sing." Not until the fields of Israel were

desert, forsaken of able-bodied men, did the woman Deborah arise for the

glory of God. She refused to pose as a heroine, rejected the crown of

victory, nor coveted the poet's laurel, meet recognition of her

triumphal song. Modestly she chose the simplest yet most beautiful of

names. She summoned the warriors to battle; the word of God was

proclaimed by her lips; she pronounced judgment, and right prevailed;

her courage sustained her on the battlefield, and victory followed in

her footsteps--yet neither judge, nor poetess, nor singer, nor

prophetess will she call herself, but only _Em beyisrael_, "a mother in

Israel."

This heroine, this "mother in Israel," in all the wanderings and

vicissitudes of the Jewish people, was the exemplar of its women and

maidens, the especial model of Israelitish poetesses and writers.

The student of Jewish literature is like an astronomer.

While the casual

observer faintly discerns single stars dotted in the expanse of blue

overhead, he takes in the whole sweep of the heavens, readily following

the movements of the stars of every magnitude. The history of the Jewish

race, its mere preservation during the long drawn out period of

suffering--sad days of national dissolution and sombre middle age

centuries--is a perplexing puzzle, unless regarded with the eye of

faith. But that this race, cuffed, crushed, pursued, hounded from spot

to spot, should have given birth to men, yea, even women ranking high in

the realm of letters, is wholly inexplicable, unless the explanation of

the unique phenomenon is sought in the wondrous gift of inspiration

operative in Israel even after the last seer ceased to speak.

Judaism has preserved the Jews! Judaism, that is, the Law with its

development and ramifications of a great religious thought, was the

sustaining power of the Jewish people under its burden of misery,

suffering, torture, and oppression, enabling it to survive its

tormentors. The Jews were the nation of hope. Like hope this people is

eternal. The storms of fanaticism and race hatred may rage and roar, the

race cannot be destroyed. Precisely in the days of its abject

degradation, when its suffering was dire, how marvellous the conduct of

this people! The conquered were greater than their conquerors. From

their spiritual height they looked down compassionately on their

victorious but ignorant adversaries, who, feeling the condescension of

the victims, drove their irons deeper. The little nation grew only the

stronger, and its religion, the flower of hope and trust, developed the

more sturdily for its icy covering. Jews were mowed down by fire and

sword, but Judaism continued to live. From the ashes of every pyre

sprang the Jewish Law in unfading youth--that indestructible,

ineradicable mentality and hope, which opponents are wont to call

unconquerable Jewish defiance.

The men of this great little race were preserved by the Law, the spirit,

and the influences and effects of this same Law transformed weak women

into God-inspired martyrs, dowered the daughters of Israel with courage

to sacrifice life for the glory of the God-idea confessed by their

ancestors during thousands of years. Purity of morals, confiding

domesticity, were the safeguards against storm and stress. The outside

world presented a hostile front to the Jew of the middle ages. Every

step beyond Ghetto precincts was beset with peril. So his home became

his world, his sanctuary, in whose intimate seclusion the blossom of

pure family love unfolded. While spiritual darkness brooded over the

nations, the great Messianic God-idea took refuge from the icy chill of

the middle ages in his humble rooms, where it was cherished against the

coming of a glorious future.

"Every Jew has the making of a Messiah in him," says a clever modern

author,[25] "and every Jewess of a _mater dolorosa_," of which the first

part is only an epigram, the second, a truth, an historic fact.

Mediæval Judaism knew many "sorrowful mothers," whose heroism passes

our latter-day conception. Greece and Rome tell tales upon tales of

womanly bravery under suffering and pain--Jewish history buries in

silence the names of its thousands of woman and maiden martyrs, joyously

giving up life in the vindication of their faith.

Perhaps, had one woman

been too weak to resist, too cowardly to court and embrace death, her

name might have been preserved. Such, too, fail to appear in the Jewish

annals, which contain but few women's names of any kind.

Inspired

devotion of strength and life to Judaism was as natural with a Jewess as

quiet, unostentatious activity in her home. No need, therefore, to make

mention of act or name.

Jewish woman, then, has neither found, nor sought, and does not need, a

Frauenlob, historian or poet, to proclaim her praise in the gates, to

touch the strings of his lyre in her honor. Her life, in its simplicity

and gentleness, its patience and exalted devotion, is itself a Song of

Songs, more beautiful than poet ever composed, a hymn more joyous than

any ever sung, on the prophetess's sublime and touching text, _Em

beyisrael_, "a mother in Israel."

As Miriam and Deborah are representative of womanhood during Israel's

national life, so later times, the Talmudic periods, produced women with

great and admirable qualities. Prominent among them was Beruriah, the

gentle wife of Rabbi Meïr, the Beruriah whose heart is laid bare in the

following touching story from the Talmud:[26]

One Sabbath her husband had been in the academy all day teaching the

crowds that eagerly flocked to his lectures. During his absence from

home, his two sons, distinguished for beauty and learning, died suddenly

of a malignant disease. Beruriah bore the dear bodies into her sleeping

chamber, and spread a white cloth over them. When the rabbi returned in

the evening, and asked for his boys that, according to wont, he might

bless them, his wife said, "They have gone to the house of God."

She brought the wine-cup, and he recited the concluding prayer of the

Sabbath, drinking from the cup, and, in obedience to a hallowed custom,

passing it to his wife. Again he asked, "Why are my sons not here to

drink from the blessed cup?" "They cannot be far off,"

answered the

patient sufferer, and suspecting naught, Rabbi Meïr was happy and

cheerful. When he had finished his meal, Beruriah said:

"Rabbi, allow me

to ask you a question." With his permission, she continued: "Some time

ago a treasure was entrusted to me, and now the owner demands it. Shall

I give it up?" "Surely, my wife should not find it necessary to ask this

question," said the rabbi. "Can you hesitate about returning property to

its rightful owner?" "True," she replied, "but I thought best not to

return it until I had advised you thereof." And she led him into the

chamber to the bed, and withdrew the cloth from the bodies. "O, my sons,

my sons," lamented the father with a loud voice, "light of my eyes, lamp

of my soul. I was your father, but you taught me the Law." Her eyes

suffused with tears, Beruriah seized her grief-stricken husband's hand,

and spoke: "Rabbi, did you not teach me to return without reluctance

that which has been entrusted to our safekeeping? See,

'the Lord gave,

and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.'"

"'Blessed be the name of the Lord,'" repeated the rabbi, accepting her

consolation, "and blessed, too, be His name for your sake; for, it is

written: 'Who can find a virtuous woman? for far above pearls is her

value.... She openeth her mouth with wisdom, and the law of kindness is

upon her tongue.'"

Surrounded by the halo of motherhood, richly dowered with intellectual

gifts, distinguished for learning, gentleness, and refinement, Beruriah

is a truly poetic figure. Incensed at the evil-doing of the unrighteous,

her husband prayed for their destruction. "How can you ask that, Rabbi?"

Beruriah interrupted him; "do not the Scriptures say:

'May _sins_ cease

from off the earth, and the wicked will be no more'?

When _sin_ ceases,

there will be no more _sinners_. Pray rather, my rabbi, that they

repent, and amend their ways."[27]

That a woman could attain to Beruriah's mental poise, and make her voice

heard and heeded in the councils of the teachers of the Law, and that

the rabbis considered her sayings and doings worthy of record, would of

itself, without the evidence of numerous other learned women of Talmud

fame, prove, were proof necessary, the honorable position occupied by

Jewish women in those days. Long before Schiller, the Talmud said:[28]

"Honor women, because they bring blessing." Of Abraham it is said: "It

was well with him, because of his wife Sarah." Again:

"More glorious is

the promise made to women, than that to men: In Isaiah (xxxii. 9) we

read: 'Ye women that are at ease, hear my voice!' for, with women it

lies to inspire their husbands and sons with zeal for the study of the

Law, the most meritorious of deeds." Everywhere the Talmud sounds the

praise of the virtuous woman of Proverbs and of the blessings of a happy

family life.

A single Talmudic sentence, namely, "He who teaches his daughter the

Law, teaches her what is unworthy," torn from its context, and falsely

interpreted, has given rise to most absurd theories with regard to the

views of Talmudic times on the matter of woman's education. It should be

taken into consideration that its author, who is responsible also for

the sentiment that "woman's place is at the distaff,"

was the husband of

Ima Shalom, a clever, highly cultured, but irascible woman, who was on

intimate terms with Jewish Christians, and was wont to interfere in the

disputations carried on by men--in short, a representative Talmudic

blue-stocking, with all the attributes with which fancy would be prone

to invest such a one.[29]

Elsewhere the Talmud tells about Rabbi Nachman's wife Yaltha, the proud

and learned daughter of a princely line. Her guest, the poor itinerant

preacher Rabbi Ulla, expressed the opinion that according to the Law it

was not necessary to pass the wine-cup over which the blessing has been

said to women. The opinion, surely not the withheld wine, so angered his

hostess, that she shivered four hundred wine-pitchers, letting their

contents flow over the ground.[30] If the rabbis had such incidents in

mind, crabbed utterances were not unjustifiable. Perhaps every

rabbinical antagonist to woman's higher education was himself the victim

of a learned wife, who regaled him, after his toilsome research at the

academy, with unpalatable soup, or, worse still, with Talmudic

discussions. Instances are abundant of erudite rabbis tormented by their

wives. One, we are told, refused to cook for her husband, and another,

day after day, prepared a certain dish, knowing that he would not touch

it.

But this is pleasantry. It would betray total ignorance of the Talmud

and the rabbis to impute to them the scorn of woman prevalent at that

time. The Talmud and its sages never weary of singing the praise of

women, and at every occasion inculcate respect for them, and devotion to

their service. The compiler of the Jerusalem Talmud, Rabbi Jochanan,

whose life is crowned with the aureole of romance, pays a delicate

tribute to woman by the question: "Who directed the first prayer of

thanksgiving to God? A woman, Leah, when she cried out in the fulness of

her joy: 'Now again will I praise the Lord.'"

Under the influence of such ideal views, and in obedience to such

standards, Jewish woman led a modest, retired life of domestic activity,

the help-meet and solace of her husband, the joy of his age, the

treasure of his liberty, his comforter in sorrow. For, when the

portentous catastrophe overwhelmed the Jewish nation, when Jerusalem and

the Temple lay in ruins, when the noblest of the people were slain, and

the remnant of Israel was made to wander forth out of his land into a

hostile world, to fulfil his mission as a witness to the truth of

monotheism, then Jewish woman, too, was found ready to assume the

burdens imposed by distressful days.

Israel, broken up into unresisting fragments, began his two thousand

years' journey through the desert of time, despoiled of all possessions

except his Law and his family. Of these treasures Titus and his legions

could not rob him. From the ruins of the Jewish state blossomed forth

the spirit of Jewish life and law in vigorous renewal.

Judaism rose

rejuvenated on the crumbling temples of Jupiter, immaculate in doctrine,

incorruptible in practice. Israel's spiritual guides realized that

adherence to the Law is the only safeguard against annihilation and

oblivion. From that time forth, the men became the guardians of the

_Law_, the women the guardians of the purity of _life_, both working

harmoniously for the preservation of Judaism.

The muse of history recorded no names of Jewish women from the

destruction of the Temple to the eleventh century. Yet the student

cannot fail to assign the remarkable preservation of the race to

woman's gentle, quiet, though paramount influence by the side of the

earnest tenacity of men. Among Jews leisure, among non-Jews knowledge,

was lacking to preserve names for the instruction of posterity. Before

Jews could record their suffering, the oppressor's hand again fell, its

grasp more relentless than ever. For many centuries blood and tears

constitute the chronicle of Jewish life, and at the sources of these

streams of blood and rivers of tears, the genius of Jewish history sits

lamenting.

Whenever the sun of tolerance broke through the clouds of oppression,

and for even a brief period shone upon the martyr race, its marvellous

development under persecution and in despite of unspeakable suffering at

once stood revealed. During these occasional breaks in the darkness,

women appeared whose erudition was so profound as to earn special

mention. As was said above, the first names of women distinguished for

beauty and intellect come down to us from the eleventh century, and even

then only Italy, Provence, Andalusia, and the Orient, were favored, Jews

in these countries living unmolested and in comparative freedom, and

zealously devoting their leisure to the study of the Talmud and secular

branches of learning. In praise of Italy it was said:

"Out of Bari goes

forth the Law, and the word of the Lord from Otranto."

It is, therefore,

not surprising to read in Jewish sources of the maiden Paula, of the

family Deï Mansi (Anawim), the daughter of Abraham, and later the wife

of Yechiel deï Mansi, who, in 1288, copied her father's abstruse

Talmudic commentary, adding ingenious explanations, the result of

independent research. But one grows somewhat sceptical over the account,

by a Jewish tourist, Rabbi Petachya of Ratisbon, of Bath Halevi,

daughter of Rabbi Samuel ben Ali in Bagdad, equally well-read in the

Bible and the Talmud, and famous for her beauty. She lectured on the

Talmud to a large number of students, and, to prevent their falling in

love with her, she sat behind lattice-work or in a glass cabinet, that

she might be heard but not seen. The dry tourist-chronicler fails to

report whether her disciples approved of the preventive measure, and

whether in the end it turned out to have been effectual.

At all events,

the example of the learned maiden found an imitator.

Almost a century

later we meet with Miriam Shapiro, of Constance, a beautiful Jewish

girl, who likewise delivered public lectures on the Talmud sitting

behind a curtain, that the attention of her inquisitive pupils might not

be distracted by sight of her from their studies.

Of the learned El Muallima we are told that she transplanted Karaite

doctrines from the Orient to Castile, where she propagated them. The

daughter of the prince of poets, Yehuda Halevi, is accredited with a

soulful religious poem hitherto attributed to her father, and Rabbi

Joseph ibn Nagdela's wife was esteemed the most learned and

representative woman in Granada. Even in the choir of Arabic-Andalusian

poets we hear the voice of a Jewish songstress, Kasmune, the daughter

of the poet Ishmael. Only a few blossoms of her delicate poetry have

been preserved.[31] Catching sight of her young face in the mirror, she

called out:

"A vine I see, and though 'tis time to glean, No hand is yet stretched forth to cull the fruit.

Alas! my youth doth pass in sorrow keen, A nameless 'him' my eyes in vain salute."

Her pet gazelle, raised by herself, she addresses thus:

"In only thee, my timid, fleet gazelle, Dark-eyed like thee, I see my counterpart; We both live lone, without companion dwell, Accepting fate's decree with patient heart."

Of other women we are told whose learning and piety inspired respect,