The
painting below is Moritz Oppenheim’s "The Return of the Volunteer from
the Wars of Liberation to His Family Still Living in Accordance with Old
Customs." It was the painting I wanted to have on the cover of my
book, Assimilation and its Discontents, but was overruled by the publisher in favor of a post-modernist monstrosity.
[Assimilation and its Discontents, a history
of Jewish assimilation and identity debates, can be found here. For downloading instructions see the end of this article.]
The
painting shows a Jewish soldier who had fought for Prussia against
Napoleon. Now the war was won, the land liberated, and he returned home
to his family, presumably in 1814.
He
is the center of attention for, presumably, his loving parents, two
older sisters, and younger brother. The second brother is examining
something else. I’m also surprised to see, in this Orthodox Jewish
family, a cat emerging from under the table.
So
even if they still follow the “old customs,” that is a pious Judaism,
they have modernized already to some extent. Notice the clothing which
is quite contemporary and the furnishings. This is a German middle class
family very much attuned to the surrounding society which is also an
Orthodox Jewish family.
Thus
it is not quite true that Oppenheim, one of the greatest German
painters, sees them as fully traditional. Of course, by saying the “old
customs,” he is implying that they are outdated customs. The theme of
the painting is the contrast between the two role models, the two paths
that Jews could take: complete modernization, secularization, and German
patriotism versus a traditional Jewish life, built around religion and
keeping some distance from the surrounding society.
Yet
Oppenheim thought it possible to combine the two. He was highly honored
by both the existing German elite, during a time when antisemitism was
at a relative low, and the intellectual leaders of Jewry.
Oppenheim
was born in Hanau in 1800 and died in Frankfurt in 1882. In his own
life, he balanced out the Jewish and German worlds. At the time,
the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement which sought
to study Judaism with scholarly methods to both preserve and modernize
it. While those involved didn’t know it, by rethinking Jews as being a
people with secular aspects, too, they were forerunners of Zionism.
The New York Jewish Museum’s description of the painting points out two significant factors.
First,
he has been wounded in the defense of his country, thus having shed his
blood for his country. And he is wearing the Iron Cross, a German
medal but also as a cross a symbol of the conflict between his
Jewishness and the Christianity of the state he has served.
Second,
he has just arrived home by
travelling on the Sabbath, thus breaking a major tenet of Jewish law.
His family, delighted to have him back alive, doesn’t seem to care about
that point.
The
painting was made in 1834, at a time when anti-Jewish forces were
beginning to rise again and seeking to restrict Jewish rights as
citizens. It was intended as a pointed reminder of Jewish services and
loyalty to Germany, of attempts to assimilate without necessarily losing
their distinctive characteristics. It was not making a case for
Multiculturalism but rather for pluralism.
At
any rate, the project of German Jewish assimilation failed, in part
because it was too successful, and German
Jewish sacrifices in World War One did not avail them two decades
later. Indeed, Adolf Hitler's lieutenant during the war was a Jew, who
the Nazi dictator later did spare.
There
are, however, two additional ironies related to the painting’s story.
Napoleon was, in fact, the liberator of the Jews and Prussia was the
oppressor. The soldier proved his patriotism while fighting against his
real interests. As soon as the Prussians had won, they began restoring
discrimination against the Jews.
The
second is a story that fascinates me and I think should be emblematic
for these issues. It concerns a young man who was the real-life
contemporary of
the soldier in the painting, Moritz Itzig.
One
day in 1811, Itzig’s aunt, Sarah Levy, a highly cultured woman with
many connections among Christians, held a concert in her home. One of
the guests was the wife of Ludwig Achim von Arnim, a 30-year-old
Prussian writer. Von Arnim came to pick up his wife and insulted several
Jewish guests with antisemitic slurs.
Itzig,
then 24 years old, wrote a letter challenging von Arnim to a duel. The
aristocrat rejected the challenge, responding with a bunch of signed
statements from his peers that since a Jew had no honor he could not be
engaged in a duel and adding additional insults.
One
afternoon, Itzig came up to von Arnim and beat the larger man with his
cane. Von Arnim, who whined for help rather than defending himself,
turned over the matter to a court, which ruled that since Itzig had been
provoked he was not guilty of any crime. Itzig’s family even persuaded
some of those who had provided von Arnim with letters to retract them.
When
war with Napoleon restarted, Itzig volunteered to fight for Prussia and
was killed in 1813. Von Arnim stayed on his estate and did not fight at
all. He lived until 1831.
The
irony of the patriotic Jew and the cowardly poser who hypocritically
impugned the former’s noble nature and love of country has been repeated
many times. In fact, I can think of some good contemporary examples in
another country across the seas from Germany.
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1. Please go to: http://www.gloria-center.org/pt_free_books/.
2. Select the book you want & click on the PDF icon under download formats.
3. Open it & then right-click click save as.
4. Alternately,
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In addition,
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Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International
Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
Forthcoming Book: Nazis, Islamists, and the Making of the Modern Middle East (Yale University Press)
The Rubin Report
blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22

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