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Treasure trove of sacred trash

New book tells tale of an incomparable discovery

 
 
 

Solomon Schechter, the man whose name graces Conservative day schools in North Jersey and across the country, was something of a scholarly swashbuckler.

The myriad scraps of Hebrew-scrawled documents he hauled out of a dusty crawlspace in an old Cairo synagogue at the end of the 19th century are the subject of “Sacred Trash: The Lost and Found World of the Cairo Geniza,” by the Paterson-born poet Peter Cole (see sidebar) and the biographer Adina Hoffman (Nextbook/Schocken, 2011, $26.95).

Cole and Hoffman, who maintain residences in Jerusalem and New Haven, just wrapped up a North American publicity tour for their book about the 900 years’ worth of sacred texts, letters, poems, wills, marriage contracts, money orders, trousseau lists, prescriptions, petitions, and magic charms discovered in the Ben Ezra Synagogue Geniza (a depository for worn Jewish texts) by a colorful cadre of adventurer/scholars.

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Biographer Adina Hoffman and Paterson-born poet Peter Cole collaborated on “Sacred Trash: The Lost and Found World of the Cairo Geniza.”

Schechter was among the first to realize the significance of this treasure trove, dubbed “the Living Sea Scrolls,” which is now being pieced together digitally by Tel Aviv University computer scientists with the aid of advanced facial recognition technology. Schechter’s particular delight were scraps of the apocryphal “Wisdom of Ben Sira” (a/k/a Ecclesiasticus), composed around 200 BCE.

The more than 350,000 fragments are now scattered among 67 collections and libraries from Manchester to Budapest. The bulk are at the Cambridge University Library, “tended to with great care and devotion by the director and staff of the Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit (www.lib.cam.ac.uk/Taylor-Schechter/), who have gone to incredible lengths to preserve and catalogue, and generally study and care for, the collection that Schechter hauled back from Cairo,” Hoffman and Cole wrote in an e-mail to a Jewish Standard reporter during their book tour.

“Peter has spent years translating the Hebrew poetry of Muslim and Christian Spain, and many of these poems were discovered in the Geniza, so that was the initial point of contact. Then, some seven years ago, we happened to be in England and were treated to a tour of the vault where the Geniza materials are held — just a few rows over from the Darwin papers — and he was transfixed by the incredibly vivid manuscripts we were shown there.”

When Nextbook Press invited them to write a book together, the Geniza seemed the perfect choice of topic.

The authors went to Cambridge, Oxford, The Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, and even to the bare crawlspace of the Ben Ezra Synagogue to research their subject. “We were able to talk our way up there...and we climbed up a ladder and peered inside — but it takes some real imagination to conceive of what once was there,” they said. “Now it’s just a dark, deep, emptied-out closet.”

Hoffman and Cole emphasized that just as important as the research was the writing itself, “the weaving together of the many strands of this tale. That tale includes biographies of...incredible women and men, as well as the remarkable stories of the manuscripts they discovered.”

The finished product, they said, “is a total collaboration, fact by fact and sentence by sentence. We wrote the book we wanted to write and tried our best to convey our fascination, our enthusiasm, and our sense of discovery.”

Hoffman is the author of “House of Windows: Portraits from a Jerusalem Neighborhood” and “My Happiness Bears No Relation to Happiness: A Poet’s Life in the Palestinian Century,” named one of the top 10 biographies of the year by the American Library Association publication Booklist. She is working on a book about “Jerusalem, the British Mandate, beauty, and ugliness.”

 

More on: Treasure trove of sacred trash

 
 
 

The poet from Paterson

Peter Cole, born in 1957 in Paterson, is the National Jewish Book Award-winning author of three books of his own poems and many volumes of translations of Hebrew and Arabic poetry. “The Poetry of Kabbalah: Mystical Verse from the Jewish Tradition” is forthcoming from Yale University Press.

Cole was not aware of the work of Jerry Nathans of the Jewish Historical Society of North Jersey, who has collected 300 boxes full of documents and paraphernalia now housed at the Barnert Medical Center in Paterson.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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‘Historic partnership’ recalled

Rosenwald Schools had national impact

In the late 1800s, seeking funds to build Alabama’s Tuskegee University — then Tuskegee Normal School — the author and educator Booker T. Washington went up north to solicit help from known philanthropists. Among them was Chicago resident Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears, Roebuck, and Co.

“A lot of northern philanthropists were looking to help out with education in the South,” said Tracy Hayes, field officer and project manager for the Rosenwald Schools Initiative of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

In the end, she said, Rosenwald’s contribution would help not just Tuskegee, but the cause of public education throughout the south — and the nation as a whole. Through his efforts, some 5,000 schools were opened for African American children, some of which still function today.

 

Tending to the liberators

March of Living honors vets, with N.J. doctor in tow

Englewood resident Dr. David Arbit has spent much of his adult life hearing about the Shoah.

“My father-in-law is a survivor,” says the physician, who practices in Fair Lawn. “At every bar- or bat mitzvah, he would get up and speak about his experiences.”

Now, however, Arbit can add many more firsthand accounts to those he already knows. As the physician designated by the March of the Living program to accompany this year’s honorees — some 16 former U.S. servicemen who were among the first to arrive at Europe’s many concentration camps during World War II — the doctor says he now has both new information and detailed verification of his father-in-law’s stories.

 

Tears in Teaneck

Lipstadt keynotes annual Shoah event

It was an emotional, bittersweet Teaneck Holocaust commemoration this year. Perhaps it was because long-time residents Arlene Duker, who lost her daughter to Arab terrorists many years ago, and Rabbi Johnny Krug, a son of survivors and dean of student life and welfare at Frisch High School, read the family names of those who were lost in the Shoah. Among them were Backenroth, Flanzbaum, Malca, Jacobowitz, Adler, Bacall, Goldberg, Greenwald, Morris, Kraar, Taffet, Lewkowitz, Weissler, Rosenberg, Hampel, Stern, and many other familiar names — all neighbors, all second generation, all families with decades-deep roots in Teaneck, tied together by the tragedies of the Shoah and the triumph of survival.

Teaneckers have played an important role in shaping Holocaust education since 1979, so it was appropriate for Deborah Lipstadt, the keynote speaker, to talk about the Adolf Eichmann trial and the politics surrounding it. Earlier in the evening, she told The Jewish Standard that the trial 50 years ago gave the world a universal view of the Shoah, because for the first time, survivors gave testimony.

 

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Weiner quits Congress, apologizes for ‘personal mistakes’

WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Rep. Anthony Weiner resigned and apologized in the wake of a scandal in which he lied about sexually explicit exchanges on social media outlets.

“I am here today to apologize for the personal mistakes I have made and the embarrassment that I have caused,” Weiner (D-N.Y.) said at a news conference Thursday at a home for the elderly in Brooklyn where in the past he has announced his intention to run for office.

 

From praise to anger, Jewish response to Obama’s speech runs the gamut

WASHINGTON – From accolades like “compelling” to accusations like “Auschwitz borders” to radio silence, to label the Jewish response to President Obama’s speech on Middle East policy as diverse understates matters.

The very breadth of the Middle East policy speech — 5,600 words and covering the entire Middle East and decades of history — helps explain the wildly divergent responses from Jewish groups and opinion shapers, even among some who are otherwise often on the same page.

One could as easily pick out points for Israel — slamming the Palestinian Authority’s pact with Hamas as well as its bid for unilateral statehood — as one could the demerits — for many, the most explicit endorsement of the pre-1967 lines as the basis for future borders by any American president.

 

Obama: 1967 borders with swaps should serve as basis for negotiations

WASHINGTON – President Obama said the future state of Palestine should be based on the pre-1967 border with mutually agreed land swaps with Israel.

In his address Thursday afternoon on U.S. policy in the Middle East, Obama told an audience at the State Department that the borders of a “sovereign, nonmilitarized” Palestinian state “should be based on 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps.”

Negotiations should focus first on territory and security, and then the difficult issues of the status of Jerusalem and what to do about the rights of Palestinian refugees can be broached, Obama said.

 
 
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