Saturday, 5 December 2020

How to Desintegrate. To be Full Again

There is so much to say and write, on an intellectually critical note about how the Jewish life in Germany was set up but there are not too many intellectuals to create a critical mass against the mainstream.

On my side, I will mention one single event: it is the day when it takes place the so-called Long Night of Religions (Lange Nacht der Religionen). Once the year, usually somewhere at the end of the summer, for one night, the places of worships in Berlin are open to visitors. People come in large groups to visit various churches, mosques and synagogues. On one of those occasions, I was in the synagogue, for the end of Shabbat. Suddenly, a group entered the praying space, started to look around taking pictures (although they were told that Orthodox people on Shabbes don´t fancy such hobbies). They stayed longer for the seuda shlishit - the third required meal on Shabbat. Happy, they took another batch of people, observing how Jews are eating and singing and clapping their hands. They are alive, you see, let´s call it a day!   


Max Czollek belongs to a new generation of Berlin Jews. Born in Berlin at the end of the 1980s, he went through the full cycle of Jewish education. He doesn´t owe anything to anyone, in order to confirm his status as a Jew. He´s out of the everyday instrumentalisation of his identity for absolving the guilt of the majority. 
Desintegriert euch! is an honest account of the institutionalized game with memory on display in Germany, with Jews playing the main role according to a script which legitimizes the Leitkultur - dominant culture. It is a scenario which outlines what belongs and what not to Germany and where the Jews need to offer a ´perspective´ to the majority for excusing their historical excesses. For instance, let´s the Jews say their opinion on Luther´s antisemitism and call it a debate. 
There is a script for everything, but issued by the majority in order to push the minorities to conform. The Gedächtnis Theater - theatralisation of the commemorations - re-enacts the Shoa, among others, in a way which disconects the time slots. I´ve often heard young Germans complaining that ´enough is enough´ and it is about time to stop talking about the past, that past that ended up with the murder of 6 million people. Does AfD appear in a void? What about the neo-Nazis who are part of the everyday life for decades? My questions that owed me a dismissal.
But there is a lot more in the book and even a lot more to be said about how you are expected to think and behave as a Jew - and a non-German member of a minority group - in Germany. I am glad the circle of conformity is being broken. Itis about the time to take the floor.
I´ve had access to the book in audio format, read by the author.  

Rating: 5 stars

 

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