Great Jewish Cities of Central and Eastern Europe: A Travel Guide & Resource Book to Prague, Warsaw, Crakow & Budapest available in Hardcover
Great Jewish Cities of Central and Eastern Europe: A Travel Guide & Resource Book to Prague, Warsaw, Crakow & Budapest
- ISBN-10:
- 0765760002
- ISBN-13:
- 9780765760005
- Pub. Date:
- 03/01/1999
- Publisher:
- Aronson, Jason Inc.
- ISBN-10:
- 0765760002
- ISBN-13:
- 9780765760005
- Pub. Date:
- 03/01/1999
- Publisher:
- Aronson, Jason Inc.
Great Jewish Cities of Central and Eastern Europe: A Travel Guide & Resource Book to Prague, Warsaw, Crakow & Budapest
Hardcover
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$110.00Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780765760005 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Aronson, Jason Inc. |
Publication date: | 03/01/1999 |
Pages: | 538 |
Product dimensions: | 6.59(w) x 9.59(h) x 1.39(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Today's visitor to Prague encounters one of the richest Jewish museum collections on the entire continent. No less than three synagogues and a ceremonial hall have been converted into sprawling showcases of objects depicting Jewish history and tradition. Because of the enormity of the exhibition, one is tempted to credit the museum's origins to Jewish prosperity in Bohemia or to the charity of a great philanthropist. In fact, almost all the collections of the Jewish Museum in Prague were assembled from 1942 - 43 by the infamous "Museum of an Extinct Race," administered by the Nazis. This is why Prague's former Jewish Town escaped destruction during the war. It was to be both playground and exhibition center of a post-war museum. Thus while the Nazis destroyed the physical landmarks of Judaism throughout Europe, they actively guarded the synagogues and cemetery in the Josefov district of Prague. Due to their methodology, the sites, if not the people, were to be protected and saved in Jewish Prague.
The "Museum of an Extinct Race," as it was later called, has been blanketed in mystery since its origin. There has been no definitive history written on the topic. However, the major outlines of this most bizarre period in Prague Jewish history are known. When large scale transports to death camps began in 1942, a wealth of Jewish property was left behind. It occurred to several Jewish scholars to save all specifically Jewish objects from theft or destruction through the creation of a special Museum in Prague. The new museum would continue the work of the original Jewish Museum founded in Prague in 1906. Of course, operating as it was in the eye of the Holocaust, the museum's priorities were unique: it would focus on collecting and cataloging the sediments of Jewish life. It thus became the mandate of the wartime museum to preserve as much as possible of Jewish civilization even as that civilization was being destroyed.
It was when the scholars presented their idea to the Nazis that the Jewish Museum became a perverse partner to genocide. The Nazis accepted the proposal, on the condition that they would dictate the orientation of the Museum. They had no intention of creating a memorial to Jewish life, but rather an exhibition to justify genocide: After the war, the collections of Judaica culled from Bohemia, Moravia, Slovakia, and elsewhere would form the core of a Museum that would illustrate the supposed barbarism of the Jewish people. Here the visitors would silently rejoice over the progress of civilization. The Czech Jewish writer Jiri Weil, who worked for a short time in the wartime museum, later described it as follows: "The museum was supposed to be a victory memorial, for the objects displayed here belonged to a race scheduled for annihilation. Nothing would remain of that race but these dead things." (Jiri Weil, Mendelssohn Is On The Roof) The exhibits would be situated in the former synagogues in Prague, thus maximizing the contextual experience intended for the visitors.
As envisioned by the Nazis, the Museum would work like this: Aryan tourists, on vacation in Prague, would be able to step into the world of a long-exterminated people. From the ancient Jewish cemetery to the sundry synagogues in Prague, the visitors would wander through a caricatured microcosm of that which had been destroyed. The streets of Josefov would be converted, once again, into a teeming "Jewish Town" that would feature tourist entertainment mixed with historical artifact. In this way it would resemble the colonial village at Williamsburg, Virginia, or an Epcott Center of Jews, or - more precisely, since the Jews would be extinct - the Jurassic Park of Judaism. According to one account, the Nazis even planned to hire Czechs to dress up as Hasidic Jews and to walk the streets of Jewish Town a la Mickey Mouse, making the experience all the more tangible for European tourists whose only glimpse of Jews would be in picture books.
As the war progressed and more and more Jewish homes and synagogues were emptied of their inhabitants, the collections of the Central Museum flourished. Even after most of the curators were murdered toward the end of the war, thousands of ritual objects continued to flow into the Central Jewish Museum. By the end of the war the Museum had expanded from one Jewish community building to eight. It housed more than 30,000 objects and over 100,000 books from all over Europe, but particularly from the 153 decimated Czech-Jewish communities. More than 50 warehouses were filled with the inanimate objects of Judaism.
In 1950, the Jewish Museum was nationalized; it was only restituted to the Jews in 1994. Nonetheless, the Museum continues to be haunted by its past legacy. Today, the Jewish Museum possesses six priceless Torah curtains for every registered Jew in Prague. As you walk through today's synagogue-museums in Prague, it is important to keep in mind the tainted origin of the otherwise luxurious items. The dual-perspective of this museum - on the one hand, the objects are treasures; on the other hand, they are stained with blood - creates a murky trial for today's visitor to Jewish Prague. Where relevant, I have given a brief account of each synagogue's wartime exhibition.
In the years following the demise of Communism, Prague's Jewish Quarter has become one of the most popular tourist attractions in the city. One wonders why these tourists seem starved for a glimpse of Jewish civilization. Perhaps the visitors come from cities whose Jewish quarters have long since been destroyed; perhaps they are moved by guilt pangs for the crimes of an earlier generation. Regardless of the reason, it has become a bizarre irony of history that the "Museum of an Extinct Race" is flourishing today.