The
Celebrity’s Prayers
Aleinu
(Hebrew: עָלֵינוּ, “upon us”) or Aleinu leshabei'ach (“[it is] upon us to praise [God]”), meaning
“it is upon us or it is our obligation or duty to praise God.” A Jewish prayer
recited at the end of each of the three daily services. It is also recited
following the New Moon blessing and after a circumcision is performed.
—Wikipedia, Aleinu
M |
y
quest for perfect prayer and for spiritual insights evolved, not just at
synagogues on the ground but also one time during my davening on
a jumbo jet flight at an altitude of 39,000 feet and a speed of 565 miles per
hour. That is where, by happenstance on an airplane in 1982, I met Rabbi Meir
Kahane, an American-Israeli Orthodox rabbi, an ultra-nationalist writer and
political figure and, later, a member of the Israeli Knesset.
I recognized Kahane
right away when I saw him on the flight. He was a famous New York Jew. In the
1960s and 70s, Kahane had organized the Jewish Defense League (JDL). Its goal
was to protect Jews in New York City's high-crime neighborhoods and to instill
Jewish pride. Kahane also was active in the struggle for the rights of Soviet
Jews to emigrate from Russia and to immigrate to Israel. By 1969, he was
proposing emergency Jewish mass-immigration to Israel because of the imminent
threat he saw of a second Holocaust in an anti-Semitic United States. He argued
that Israel be made into a state modeled on Jewish religious law, that it annex
the West Bank and Gaza Strip and that it urge all Arabs to voluntarily leave
Israel or to be ejected by force.
It was then, by coincidence, that I traveled with Kahane on a long Tower Air flight to Israel. As was common on flights to Israel, a few hours after takeoff, Jewish men gathered at the back of the plane. As the sun became visible in the Eastern sky, they formed a minyan, kind of an ad hoc synagogue. In this unusual and somewhat mystical setting, I prayed the morning services with the rabbi and others at the back of the jumbo jet.
After that service, I
introduced myself and, during the continuation of the flight, engaged him in
conversation, politely challenging Kahane at length about his radical political
views. After meeting him on the plane, I followed his political career with
some interest.
Kahane was a hardened
nationalist. In 1984, he became a member of the Knesset representing his Kach
party. In 1988, the Israeli government banned Kach as racist. On November 5,
1990, at age 58, after delivering a speech that warned American Jews to
emigrate to Israel before it was too late, Kahane was assassinated in Manhattan
by an Arab gunman. In 1994, Kach was outlawed in Israel and listed by the U.S.
State Department as a terrorist organization.
Bearing all of this
in mind, in my discussion of the celebrity-monotheist archetype of the synagogue,
I call my illustrative character Rabbi Meir.
Let me introduce you
to Rabbi Meir, the celebrity-monotheist. First, let me tell you how he differs
from my five other synagogue friends.
Rabbi Meir is not
much of a scribe. He is not happy just to sit at his desk with his books, to
keep track of his texts and accounts. He is a man in motion, expecting change
in the world at large, provoking it where he can and watching for it all the
time.
Rabbi
Meir is not much of priest, either. He cares, but not a lot, for the priestly
content, the values we associate with the Temple, the precincts of the sacred
or the profane, the lineages and classifications of the kosher and treif.
But he does cast himself very much like the priest in one respect: He
visualizes his role as a designated high profile leader of his people with a
clearly specified public mission.
Rabbi Meir is not a
meditative type of person anchored in the immediate textures of this world of
ours, here in the synagogue building. He is not much of a mystic either,
seeking flights of ascent to know the intimacies of heaven.
Rabbi Meir is not a
well-rounded mythic thinker, either. He doesn’t consider it paramount to relive
the past epochs of the Israelite dramas. Okay, then, where does that leave him?
Meir would rather
participate in a coming drama—to lead the charge in the next and final chapter
of Jewish history. He sees himself as a team captain of the Jews. He will carry
out his leadership roles on the field of battle and in the theater of confrontation,
struggle and war. In the dramatic unfolding of time, as he sees the world, we
are in the metaphoric fourth quarter and the clock is running down. Rabbi Meir
is out there to lead the forces of the one God of the Jewish people as they
celebrate their deserved victory when the time runs off the clock.
And Rabbi Meir fully
expects his team, the Jews, to win the game, the ultimate Super Bowl. That
victory will trigger not just a celebration but a new epoch. The team calls it
the Age of the Messiah, that distant galaxy of wish and fantasy where kingdoms
are restored and created.
Keep in mind, as you
get to know him, that Rabbi Meir is a total fan—a fanatic—of his side. A
celebrity himself, he roots for the other celebrities on his team. He
identifies with them and, when they win, it lifts his spirits. The dual actions
of rooting and competing in the contest are primary to this personality. The
outcome of the game is important, but secondary to Rabbi Meir, because he has
no doubt that victory is at hand.
Our God is
Number One
I |
call Rabbi Meir, the next person
you meet in the synagogue, a celebrity because that is his self-proclaimed
status. Performing on the world’s center stage, he lets us know that he is a
star member of the cast of the Chosen People. He is a confident monotheist who
has an exciting story. As he tells it, the gods now are engaged in a continual
conflict and competition. And, then, at some point in the future, there will be
a final match when idolatry will lose. The victory will go to the one true God
over his false and worthless competitors.
Our
celebrity-monotheist exhorts everyone in the synagogue simultaneously with both
vivid and vague visions of a cosmic war in heaven and on Earth. Rabbi Meir
tells us about the coming state of affairs for the Jewish people. Our destiny
will be fulfilled at the end of time in a promised culmination.
All of this drama is
simply stated in the first section of the Aleinu prayer (which we first cited
above, in connection with the performer in the context of the Rosh Hashanah
services):
It is our duty to praise the Lord of all things,
to ascribe greatness to him who formed the world in the beginning,
since he has not made us like the nations of other lands,
and has not placed us like other families of the earth,
since he has not assigned unto us a portion as unto them,
nor a lot as unto all their multitude.
For we bend the knee and offer worship and thanks before the supreme King of
kings, the Holy One, blessed be he,
who stretched forth the heavens and laid the foundations of the earth,
the seat of whose glory is in the heavens above,
and the abode of whose might is in the loftiest heights.
He is our God; there is none else: in truth he is our King; there is none
besides him;
as it is written in his Torah, “And you shall know this day, and lay it to your
heart that the Lord he is God in heaven above and upon the earth beneath: there
is none else.” (Koren Siddur, p. 180)
Rabbi Meir cheers on,
urging his values on others like that of a team coach or captain in a locker
room before a crucial game. But, wait. There is another important vagary. This
is not yet a real game. In his synagogue prayers, the celebrity-monotheist does
not encourage and exhort his team of worshippers to go out and trample the
identified competing teams. Rather, his call in his liturgy is figuratively to
act out a competition—akin to participating in a fantasy religion league—to
imagine that the ultimate showdown is nigh, to conjure a vision of the minutes
ticking down at the close of the game. The end of time, the end to the struggle
and the ultimate victory of the team of the one true God over the team of the
false Gods is at hand. The conclusion of the Aleinu prayer finally and
forcefully proclaims the details:
We therefore hope in you, O Lord our God,
that we may speedily behold the glory of your might,
when you will remove the abominations from the earth,
and the idols will be utterly cut off,
when the world will be perfected under the kingdom of the Almighty,
and all the children of flesh will call upon your name,
when you will turn unto yourself all the wicked of the earth.
Let all
the inhabitants of the world perceive and know that unto you every knee must
bow, every tongue must swear.
Before you, O Lord our God, let them bow and fall;
and unto thy glorious name let them give honor;
let them all accept the yoke of your kingdom,
and do you reign over them speedily, and forever and ever.
For the kingdom is yours, and to all eternity you will reign in glory;
as it is written in your Torah, “The Lord shall reign forever and ever.”
And it is said, “And the Lord shall be king over all the earth: in that day
shall the Lord be One, and his name One.”
Let me measure the
dimensions of this archetype. Like those of the mystic and meditator, he is a
powerful personality type without any specific proclivity of status or
profession. I could have called this archetype a “triumphalist.” That labeling
bears a pejorative connotation when it is used by social scientists to describe
a type of leader or his groups. So, rather than use that term, which is the
best existing label, I chose to make up for him a new name without any baggage,
that is, the celebrity-monotheist.
And, indeed, this is
the most potentially controversial and even negative archetype of those ideal
people whom you meet in the synagogue. He may turn out to be a forceful
competitor with combative rhetoric. And there is the danger that his friends
could hear his bellicose cheering and cross the line. They could potentially be
cajoled into going beyond enthusiastically rooting for a hoped-for fantasy
victory leading to a Messianic Age. They could be moved beyond argumentative
rhetoric to take up antagonistic actions to bring about their hoped-for
triumph.
Misdirected and
misguided, religion in a triumphal mode can—and, sadly, often does—breed
violence and terrorism.
In relation to the
other archetypes of the synagogue, I associate this archetype in one respect
with the priest, who is somewhat of a public and political personality. But the
priests are entrenched in their world of present day discipline, their
recollections of the Temple rites and all that attends to them—those notions
that we spelled out in our previous chapter on the priest’s prayers. They do
not care much for the way that Rabbi Meir tries to turn the attention of the
synagogue to a distant dream of salvation. They offer a viable set of saving
graces through acts of worship, religious institutions and the worldview that
surrounds those core values. When they do reluctantly buy into the celebrity’s
messianic message, it takes a recognizably priestly form. They accept a vision
of the age of redemption that includes for them a complete package deal: the
rebuilding of the city of Jerusalem and the Temple, and the restoration of the
sacrificial service.
As I note, Rabbi Meir
shares few values with Rav Aharon the scribe or with the ideal type of Deborah
the meditator. Neither of these personalities particularly wants to divert the
focus from his or her day-to-day religious habits, conceptions and values and
turn instead to primarily await the messiah and the end of days. When those
archetypes do accept elements of a vision of the transformation at the end of
time, it takes a specific shape; they see it as an era of peace and not war, a
tame time of tranquility when the predator will befriend the prey. The priest’s
vision of political and religious triumph, and the rebuilding of the Temple,
takes a back seat to their notions that the redeemer will change the natural
order of things and bestow a universal peace upon the land. Rather, it will be
the perfect future age in which the scribe and meditator can practice their way
of life based on the Torah—just as they do in the present—but, finally, in the
new age, they can do all that without fears or disruptions.
In our ideal
synagogue, the celebrity articulates his agenda of a dramatic public and
political Messianic Age and the priests, scribes and meditators hear a
different model. The celebrity’s message of the end of days comes to wider
expression in multiple layers of narrative. The other archetypes attach what
they want onto the articulation of the universal recognition of our one God.
They append onto the vision of the celebrity their expectations of the
rebuilding of Jerusalem, the city and the Temple, of the change of the natural
order and, also, of the mystical resurrection of the dead.
As I get know the
celebrity Rabbi Meir better, I understand that his core formative principles
coincide with the essence of a generic warrior archetype—a character who, in
fact, is mainly absent as an attendee at the synagogue. As I said earlier, in
the synagogue’s incarnation, the combatant does not do any actual fighting. An
imagined mythic conflict is conducted on his behalf by a god who will vanquish
the enemy idols at the end of days. “Our God will be number one” is the
signature cheer of the essential narrative of this archetype.
In sum, the
celebrity-monotheist shows confidence and derives pride from his sense of being
one of the chosen and in his certainty in ultimate triumph. He speaks boldly of
the moment of his group’s inevitable victory, couched as his faith in his God’s
ascendancy and superiority. And, as I showed above, the Aleinu serves as a
pristine liturgical case in point for this archetype.
Not
surprising, in speaking about that prayer in a roundabout way, some rabbinic
interpreters tried to tell us this. They explained the prayer’s origin in
history instead of enlightening us more fully about how this prayer promises us
a future conflict and conquest. The rabbis suggested that the victorious
biblical warrior-prophet Joshua composed the Aleinu in the distant past during
one of his triumphs, either when he crossed the Jordan to enter the Promised
Land or after his victory at the battle of Jericho. [See Arugat ha-Bosem,
ed. by E. E. Urbach, 3 1962, 468–71.] The spectrum of time merges for the
rabbis as they talk about their theory of the origins of the prayer so as to
shed light on what this celebrity-monotheist’s prayer tells us about his
expectations for the future.
The stories
referenced in the celebrity-monotheist’s prayers—the hints and suggestions in
the synagogue about the messianic redemption—are not only about confrontation,
conflict and victory. There are alternatives in the prayers of the synagogue
that touch on the messianic theme in a more peaceful manner, one more
acceptable to the scribes and the meditators.
To help make this
clear, I introduce you briefly to Beruryah—a hybrid variety of
celebrity-monotheist combined with elements of other archetypes. While Beruryah
is equally certain of the starring role of the Jews and of their God in the
script of world history, she is more irenic, more peaceful in her visions of
the future, of the final act of the drama.
In the Talmud, there
are a few stories about a morally admirable woman named Beruryah, who was the
wife of an ancient Rabbi Meir. She stands out as a rare woman-scholar in the
male-dominated rabbinic culture. To give you a flavor for what the Talmudic
Beruryah stood for, here is one of the traditions about her from the Babylonian
Talmud, tractate Berakhot 10a:
Certain brigands who were
in the neighborhood of Rabbi Meir used to trouble him greatly. He prayed that
they die. Beruryah his wife said to him, “Why do you pray this way?
“Because it is written
(in Psalms 104:35), ‘Let sins cease...?’ Is ‘sinners’ written? Rather ‘sins’ is
written.
“Furthermore, cast your
eyes to the end of the verse, ‘And they are wicked no more.’ Since sins will
cease, the sinners will be wicked no more.
“So pray that they repent
and be wicked no more.”
He prayed for them, and
they repented.
Much like the
Talmudic figure of that name, my imaginary character Beruryah encapsulates a
moral superiority. In addition, we attribute to her some of the prophet
Isaiah’s anti-war visions of salvation at the end of days, which we judge to be
a morally superior vision of the end-times. After some supernatural
transformation of the nature of humankind, scripture reports in Isaiah chapter
two, “…and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into
pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they
learn war anymore.”
Although this model of the age of redemption is not spelled out
unequivocally in the prayers, you do find echoes of such notions in several
places, including the Kedushah for Shabbat in the Shaharit service, as follows:
Reader — We will sanctify your name in the world even
as they sanctify it in the highest heavens, as it is written by the hand of
your prophet: And they called one unto the other and said,
Cong. — Holy, holy, holy is the
Lord of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory.
Reader — Then with a noise of great rushing, mighty
and strong, they make their voices heard, and, upraising themselves toward the
Seraphim, they exclaim over against them, Blessed.
Cong. — Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his
place.
Reader — From your place shine forth, O our King, and
reign over us, for we wait for thee. When wilt thou reign in Zion? Speedily,
even in our days, do thou dwell there, and forever. May you be magnified and
sanctified in the midst of Jerusalem your city throughout all generations and
to all eternity. O let our eyes behold your kingdom, according to the word that
was spoken in the songs of your might by David, your righteous anointed:
Cong. — The Lord shall reign
forever, your God, O Zion, unto all generations. Praise you the Lord.
Reader — Unto all generations we will declare your
greatness, and to all eternity we will proclaim your holiness, and your praise,
O our God, shall not depart from our mouth forever, for thou art a great and
holy God and King. Blessed art thou, O Lord, the holy God.
The liturgy does not
negate directly the triumphal celebrity monotheist’s vision. What it does,
however, is present a more morally balanced and less confrontational scenario
by intermixing mystical concepts with messianic themes in formulating elements
of the ultimate praise of God.
Another articulation
in the synagogue of the celebrity’s views is the special Kaddish that is
recited in the funeral service at a cemetery. This is the Kaddish that is said
by the mourning children after the burial of their parents. This prayer has no
explicit irenic intent. Rather, it’s an interesting amalgamation—an olio, if
you will—of some messianic notions with the priestly images of Temple and
Jerusalem, its city, along with the mystic’s idea of the resurrection of the
dead at the end of days:
Mourners
— May his great name be magnified and sanctified in the world that is to be
created anew, where he will quicken the dead, and raise them up into life
eternal; will rebuild the city of Jerusalem, and establish his temple in the
midst thereof; and will uproot all alien worship from the earth and restore the
worship of the true God. O may the Holy One, blessed be he, reign in his
sovereignty and glory during your life and during your days, and during the
life of all the house of Israel, even speedily and at a near time, and say ye,
Amen.
Cong. and Mourners — Let
his great name be blessed forever and to all eternity.
I find yet another
instance of a messianic medley of expressions of the celebrity-monotheist in a
passage from the beginning of the central part of the Musaf, the Additional
Service Amidah for Rosh Hashanah:
Now,
therefore, O Lord our God, impose your awe upon all your works, and your dread
upon all that you have created, that all works may fear you and all creatures
prostrate themselves before you, that they may all form a single band to do
your will with a perfect heart, even as we know, O Lord our God, that dominion
is yours, strength is in your hand, and might in your right hand, and that your
name is to be feared above all that you have created.
Give then glory, O Lord,
unto your people, praise to them that fear you, hope to them that seek you, and
free speech to them that wait for you, joy to your land, gladness to your city,
a flourishing horn unto David your servant, and a clear shining light unto the
son of Jesse, your anointed, speedily in our days.
Then shall the just also
see and be glad, and the upright shall exult, and the pious triumphantly
rejoice, while iniquity shall close her mouth, and all wickedness shall be
wholly consumed like smoke, when you make the dominion of arrogance to pass
away from the earth.
And you, O Lord, shall
reign, you alone over all your works on Mount Zion, the dwelling place of your
glory, and in Jerusalem, your holy city, as it is written in your Holy Words,
The Lord shall reign forever, your God, O Zion, unto all generations. Praise be
the Lord.
The prayer repeats
the familiar themes and announces new sub-themes, namely that wickedness and
arrogance will be banished at the end of days; gladness and a shining light
will characterize the new era, an age that will be imposed with awe and dread.
The dour, even
militant tenor of the last two examples, and the mainly peaceful tendency of
the one that precedes it, show us that there are different flavors of the
celebrity-monotheist visions.
These contrasts are
more dramatically and bluntly juxtaposed in another illustration, in a ritual
at the Seder meal. On Passover night, we hope and expect with joy that the
prophet Elijah will visit the Seder at every Israelite house. And, so, we pour
a cup of wine for the prophet, the herald of the coming of the end of days and
of the transformation of conflict into peace.
During the Seder,
right before the recitation of the psalms of the Hallel, when we open the door
to greet Elijah, the precursor of the peaceful messiah, the instructions in the
Haggadah prescribe, “The fourth cup is poured and the door is opened. Say the
following”:
Pour out
your wrath upon the nations that do not acknowledge you, and upon the kingdoms
that do not call upon your name. For they have devoured Jacob and laid waste
his habitation. Pour out your indignation upon them, and let the wrath of your
anger overtake them. Pursue them with anger, and destroy them from beneath the
heavens of the Lord.
Here, then, outside
of the synagogue, in the Seder recited at home, a sentiment about the coming
age is stated most strongly. The liturgist calls on God to confront his foes,
to vent his indignation, wrath and anger, and to destroy those who do not
recognize our God.
Prayer-jacking and Martyrs
W |
hen you hijack a plane, you violently take control of the whole entity and
fly it to the place you choose. When you hijack a liturgy, you try to do the
same. The celebrity-monotheist tried to hijack the Unetanneh Tokef prayer, a
liturgy of the scribe and mystic from the High Holy days that we discussed
above. He tried to make it his own, by writing a story about its authorship and
origin.
I’ve emphasized how I
judge that, in all cases, prayer origins are secondary to their essences.
Certainly, here, in the case of such a powerful poem, thinking about who was
its ancient writer detracts from it and distracts us from the impact of the
complex religious messages embedded in the prayer.
Rabbi Reuven Hammer summarized the
strange authorship story of this liturgy. As we recall, it speaks dramatically
about how God decides on Rosh Hashanah who shall live and who shall die. Hammer
calls the origin account for this liturgy a “legend”:
It is little wonder that this
poem gave birth to legend. It is said that it was recited by Rabbi Amnon
(Mainz, c. eleventh century), who had failed to reject a proposal of apostasy
immediately and instead asked for three days to consider it. When he did not
agree to give up his faith, he was taken away and tortured brutally. It was Rosh
Hashanah, and he asked his disciples to take him to the synagogue, where he
interrupted the service and recited this prayer in order to sanctify the name
of God. Upon completing the recitation, he died. Later, the legend continues,
he appeared to Rabbi Kalonymus in a dream and asked that this prayer be recited
each year. Moving as this legend is, it should not distract us from the piyyut itself, the subject of which is
not martyrdom, but human responsibility and the possibility for change, as we
face the judgment of our creator.
Sadly, in real Jewish
history, martyrdom did occur many times. However, imposing a gory martyrdom
background origin-story on this particular liturgy is a violent means of taking
us away from the inherent mystical and scribal images of the prayer and its
potent meanings.
The celebrity’s
darker side comes to the forefront here. The description in the authorship
legend is actually more graphic than what Rabbi Hammer recounts. In the full
version of the legend, the Christian authorities dismembered the martyr and
delivered him back to the synagogue without limbs. In his us-versus-them world,
the celebrity archetype sometimes uses a gruesome means to stir his team’s
emotions against his imagined enemy.
In
fact, while we are on the subject, there is a poignant martyr’s prayer recited
on Yom Kippur in the Musaf service. The prayer begins, “These I recall,” in
Hebrew, Eilleh Ezkrah.
It’s an old and venerable narrative account from the time of the Crusades in
the Middle Ages. It tells us about the much earlier torture and killing of ten
rabbis by the Romans in Israel after the Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE.
At his death at the
hands of the Romans, with his last breath, Rabbi Akiva recited the Shema. The
scribe-martyrs of Eilleh Ezkrah chose to recite the Shema with their last
breaths, to perish with their declaration of the love of God, his Torah and
their loyalty to his commandments.
The martyrdom account
of Rabbi Akiva mournfully describes, “As they scraped his skin with iron combs,
he recited the Shema, accepting the yoke of the sovereignty of heaven… His soul
left him as he uttered the word ‘One.’”
Other
accounts of medieval martyrs have them reciting the Aleinu as their last
utterances. In 1171, at Blois France during the Crusades, Barry Freundel (Why we Pray What we Pray,
NY 2010, p. 228, citing Raphael Posner, et. al., ed., Jewish Liturgy: Prayer and Synagogue Service through the Ages,
Jerusalem, 1975, p. 110) tells us the following:
…thirty-four Jewish men
and seventeen Jewish women were burned at the stake because they refused to
accept Baptism. The contemporaneous records of this act of martyrdom tell of
these Jews singing Aleinu with a “soul-stirring” melody as they gave their
lives to sanctify God’s name.
These were
celebrity-martyrs, who elected to die proclaiming the ultimate triumph of one
God. No doubt, the victims at Blois loved Torah and commandments. And, for
certain, the rabbis tortured to death who recited the Shema were confident in
the ultimate victory of God and in the coming of the Messianic Age of
redemption for the Jews and all humankind. But, when you choose your dying
words, that comes from the essence of your identity. The core of your being
rules the priorities of your choices. The creators of martyr accounts formulate
matters simply. When a Jew faces martyrdom, he chooses as his last prayer that
which embodies the essence of his personality. A rabbi-scribe in Roman times
will recite the Shema. A resisting-celebrity in the Crusades will recite the
Aleinu.
Are the accounts of
martyrdom accurate to what happened? We cannot know more than what the later
narrators elect to tell us about our ancient and medieval martyrs.
Sadly,
we have had multitudes more tragedies in modern times. Official synagogue
representation of the modern martyrs of the Holocaust, in text or ritual, has
been rare. But, recently, American Conservative Judaism did choose to develop a
Kaddish for death camps. Based, in part, on the last passages of Andre
Schwarz-Bart’s novel, The Last of the Just
(New York, 1960), this ritual and text was originally incorporated into the Yom
Kippur Martyrology of the 1972 Mahzor for
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur of
the Rabbinical Assembly.
Rabbi
Jules Harlow, editor of the Mahzor,
described the impetus for the innovation as follows:
The text of the Martyrology
incorporates rabbinic narratives about some of the martyred rabbis as well as
words from the Psalms and from modern authors, including Bialik, Hillel Bavli,
Nelly Sachs, A.M. Klein and Soma Morgenstern. At the conclusion of the
narrative recalling martyrs of various times, we wanted to articulate the
tension between faith on the one hand and, on the other, the questioning doubt
which arises out of our confrontation with even the recollection of the murder
of those Jews. And we did not want to articulate that tension in an essay or in
a footnote . . .
We chose the statement of faith par excellence in Jewish tradition, the
Mourner’s Kaddish. After the death of a family member, when a Jew has perhaps
the strongest reasons to question God, he or she is obliged to stand in public
to utter words in praise of God.
Harlow explained to
me the motives of the liturgy in a personal letter (March 2, 1989):
We interrupt these words,
this statement of faith, with the names of places where Jews were slaughtered,
places which therefore cause us to raise questions, to have doubts. The tension
is resolved, liturgically, by the last four lines, whose words are
uninterrupted by the names which give rise to questioning, thus concluding in a
framework of faith.
Harlow
added that there are intentionally seventeen places named, signifying that
life, represented by the Hebrew Chai,
numerically eighteen, “…can never be complete, can never be the same, after
such slaughter.” This is not noted in the prayer book.
In the new Kaddish,
the original Aramaic text alternates with a register of sites of extermination
in this compound liturgy:
We rise
Yitgadal
Auschwitz
ve'yitkadash
Lodz
Sh'mei raba
Ponar
b'alma di v'ra khir'utei,
Babi Yar
v'yamlikh malkhutei
Maidanek
b'hayeikhon u-v'yomeikhon
Birkenau
u-v'hayei d'khol beit yisrael,
Kovno
ba-agala u-vi-z'man kariv,
Janowska
v'imru amen.
Y'hei sh'mei raba m'vorakh l'alam
u-l'almei almaya.
Yitbarakh v'yishtabah
Theresienstadt
v'yitpa'ar v'yitromam
Buchenwald
v'yitnasei v'yit-hadar
Treblinka
v'yit'aleh v'yit-halal
Vilna
sh'mei d'kudsha,
Bergen-Belsen
brikh hu l'ela
Mauthausen
min kol birkhata v'shirata,
Dachau
tushb'hata v'nehemata
Minsk
da-amiran b'alma,
Warsaw
v'imru amen.
Y'hei sh'lama raba min sh'maya
v'hayim aleinu v'al kol yisrael,
v'imru amen.
Oseh shalom b-m'romav, hu ya'aseh
shalom aleinu v'al kol yisrael,
v'imru amen.
I
cite here the Kaddish of the Siddur Sim Shalom
(edited by Jules Harlow, 1985, pp. 841-843). The more extensive Kaddish of the
Martyrology of the Day of Atonement is not limited to communities and camps
where the Jews were killed during the Second World War. It includes Kishinev,
Hebron, Mayence, Usha and Jerusalem, places where Jews were slaughtered in
other historical eras.
The special Kaddish
is an intermixed text with no narrative. It creates an intrusion into the set
liturgy, thus wanting to depict the disruption of death within the static
reality of the people. It is a violent representation. Names of locations of
destruction, in language read from left to right, confront the doxology of
praise, in the liturgy recited from right to left.
The new Kaddish
confuses and traumatizes the soothing cadence of the expected traditional
prayer. This unconventional form of the prayer breaks the somber beat of the
chant of the Kaddish, one of the sure rhythms and universally recognized
prayers of the synagogue.
It also mixes the
main elements of a martyrology into a quintessential prayer of the mystic.
Those tragic ideas and recollections are more comfortably situated in the
prayers and personality of the celebrity.
Writing
this prayer was a bold idea, a valiant try at getting recognition of the mythic
meaning of the Holocaust into the standard service of the synagogue. But it
failed, because it chose too freely to mix the notions of the celebrity
archetype of prayer into the Kaddish, the doxology of the mystic. The current
conservative Mahzor, Lev Shalem,
published in 2010, omits the prayer from the service.
The
celebrity-monotheist, as you easily can tell, is not my favorite among the
archetypes I meet in the synagogue. He is, however, a legitimate, vocal and
dramatically substantial member of our congregation. We do
need to meet him, to know him, to respect the integrity of his messages and try
to direct his powerful energies to positive spiritual and cultural goals.
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