Tuesday, January 24, 2017

America as I love it

 
Norman Rockwell, Going and coming
Frank Capra, It's a Wonderful Life
This is neither about Obama, nor Clinton, nor Trump… It is about America as I dream of it, as it speaks to my heart and to my memory. I see it through movies, songs, books… The list would be too long, but… a few names immediately come to mind: Frank Capra, Charlie Chaplin, Orson Welles, Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, Stanley Kubrick, Woody Allen… Mark Twain, Emily Dickinson, Henry James, John Steinbeck, John D. Salinger… Gershwin, Bernstein, Jessye Norman, Louis Armstrong, Sarah Vaughan, Charlie Parker, Bob Dylan, Simon & Garfunkel, Leonard Cohen, Stevie Wonder… 

Norman Rockwell, Freedom of Speech
Why do I want to evoke this now? First, a few days ago, I was reading an article – I don’t remember where – about fundamental freedoms. It was illustrated by a Norman Rockwell painting. Rockwell was a man who succeeded in showing us America as we love it. I regard him as a genuine artist, a painter rather than an illustrator, as he was usually depicted. Rockwell (1894-1978) is especially known for the covers of the Saturday Evening Post, which he illustrated for more than forty years (1916-1960). If you type his name on Google images, you will be able to admire many of his works.

Then, one or two days later, haphazardly on the Internet, I watched a video that illustrates what, in my mind, makes for the superiority of American pedagogy, at least that of the major universities. It offers a masterly presentation of a work by Beethoven, the third movement of his 15th string quartet (op. 132). A musicologist, a certain Robert Kapilow, speaks to an audience at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He analyzes in very lively manner, with the help of a real (and good) string quartet, this movement, Heiliger Dankgesang (Sacred Song of Thanksgiving), in which Beethoven expresses his gratitude to "the divinity" for his recovery from a serious illness. What a talent!



These are only two small examples, but this is the America we love!

Norman Rockwell, The Runaway
Fiodor


Friday, October 14, 2016

Bob Dylan, Nobel Prize


For those like me who grew up in their youth with the songs of Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul and Mary or Leonard Cohen, we can only rejoice that the Nobel Prize for literature was awarded to Bob Dylan. This is a good time to remember that songs are first of all words, words of poetry ... of literature. And Dylan was a true poet.

I can't help but think that certain will say, « Not another Jew… ».  Yes, and what may be less well-known, Dylan wrote a song, dripping with irony, which speaks of the never-ending hostility that surrounds the State of Israel  and, more broadly, the Jewish people. It's called Neighborhood Bully, from his album « Infidels », published in 1983. Here's the text.

Neighborhood Bully

Well, the neighborhood bully, he's just one man,
His enemies say he's on their land.
They got him outnumbered about a million to one,
He got no place to escape to, no place to run.
He's the neighborhood bully.

The neighborhood bully just lives to survive,
He's criticized and condemned for being alive.
He's not supposed to fight back, he's supposed to have thick skin,
He's supposed to lay down and die when his door is kicked in.
He's the neighborhood bully.

The neighborhood bully been driven out of every land,
He's wandered the earth an exiled man.
Seen his family scattered, his people hounded and torn,
He's always on trial for just being born.
He's the neighborhood bully.
.
Well, he knocked out a lynch mob, he was criticized,
Old women condemned him, said he should apologize.
Then he destroyed a bomb factory, nobody was glad.
The bombs were meant for him.
He was supposed to feel bad.
He's the neighborhood bully.
.
Well, the chances are against it and the odds are slim
That he'll live by the rules that the world makes for him,
'Cause there's a noose at his neck and a gun at his back
And a license to kill him is given out to every maniac.
He's the neighborhood bully.
He got no allies to really speak of.
What he gets he must pay for, he don't get it out of love.
He buys obsolete weapons and he won't be denied
But no one sends flesh and blood to fight by his side.
He's the neighborhood bully.
.
Well, he's surrounded by pacifists who all want peace,
They pray for it nightly that the bloodshed must cease.
Now, they wouldn't hurt a fly.
To hurt one they would weep.
They lay and they wait for this bully to fall asleep.
He's the neighborhood bully.

Every empire that's enslaved him is gone,
Egypt and Rome, even the great Babylon.
He's made a garden of paradise in the desert sand,
In bed with nobody, under no one's command.
He's the neighborhood bully.

Now his holiest books have been trampled upon,
No contract he signed was worth what it was written on.
He took the crumbs of the world and he turned it into wealth,
Took sickness and disease and he turned it into health.
He's the neighborhood bully.

What's anybody indebted to him for?
Nothin', they say.
He just likes to cause war.
Pride and prejudice and superstition indeed,
They wait for this bully like a dog waits to feed.
He's the neighborhood bully.

What has he done to wear so many scars?
Does he change the course of rivers?
Does he pollute the moon and stars?
Neighborhood bully, standing on the hill,
Running out the clock, time standing still,
Neighborhood bully. 

And, for good measure, here's the very young Dylan (21 years old), doing Man of Constant Sorrow, a song from his first album (1962). Enjoy !





Fiodor

Friday, July 1, 2016

A young Israeli Arab expresses outrage



Muhammad Zoabi (18 years old), is the nephew of the Arabic deputy to the Knesset Haneen Zoabi, who is hysterically anti-Israeli. On the contrary, Muhammad, as an Arab and Muslim, is attached to his country and proud to be an Israeli citizen. Threatened with death because he denounced the Palestinian exactions, he had to take refuge abroad during several months. He is back in Israel and expresses himself with courage, especially on his Facebook page. This is a post he published today:


“Yesterday, a 13 year old teenager was murdered by a Palestinian terrorist in the safest place a child should have; sleeping bed in her house.
Today, a father was murdered, yet again, in front of his family at the hands of despicable Palestinian terrorists.
Not hearing any condemnation, nor public rage in the Palestinian society at the horrifying attacks, I ask myself; what state the Palestinians allegedly want to create? What society the Palestinians want their children to live in? What kind of education they want to give to their future generation...?
The answer that we get as a result of their actions is something no democratic, liberal western country should tolerate!
Their radical, extremist and inhumane ideology is something Israel has been fighting for decades! And it is one the western world needs to understand they can't support!”

How can we hope for peace, when such a culture of hatred is maintained, from the nursery school, in the Palestinian population, and when the Palestinian politicians award to the killers the glorious title of "martyr"…?


Fiodor

Sunday, May 15, 2016

The Great “Will”



Immortal for 400 years, William Shakespeare has left us an unparalleled literary treasure. Victor Hugo saw in him, «one of those indomitable geniuses made so by God that they might go fiercely and full-throttled into the infinite». And René Girard who, in his Shakespeare, les feux de l’envie, analyzes his theatrical works in order to support his own theory of mimetic desire, introduces his work with these words: «Whoever would propose a new book on Shakespeare, when thousands of studies on this author already line the shelves of the world's libraries, should began by begging forgiveness. Mine shall be the most banal, that of an irrepressible love for his theater...»

The homage that I would like to render to the great "Will" here is, as well, motivated by a love of his work and the conviction that there lie hidden there incomparable tools for understanding the human heart and the world around us. Dostoevsky, Shakespeare, the Bible: it's all there. You should undoubtedly add to that list Cervantes… who died on the same date – but not on the same day, a question of different calendars being used – as Shakespeare.


Here is a video recorded by the Shakespeare Globe, to animate a memorial walk along the river Thames, between Westminster and the Tower of London, on the occasion of the 400th anniversary. It consists of several quotes from the fourth act of Richard II – The Life and Death of King Richard II. Here one sees King Richard renounce his crown in favor of Bolingbroke, the future Henry IV.


God bless you, William !

Fiodor

Saturday, August 1, 2015

A Pathetic Superman

Nietzsche by Edvard Munch


In the first days of January, 1889, Friedrich Nietzsche collapsed in the middle of the street in Turin, a city where he had been staying since April, 1888. A few days later, he was admitted to a psychiatric hospital in Basel. Until his death on August 25, 1900, he would be without his faculty of reason.

But who is this "prophet of the 3rd millennium", this "most important philosopher since Plato", this Antichrist who promises to be the true God inaugurating a new era? And what if Friedrich Nietzsche, whose thought continues to dominate the contemporary intellectual scene, was a man destroyed by his own immoderation?

A recent book provides a fascinating analysis of the last months before Nietzsche’s breakdown. It is a work of a historian, rigorous and well-documented (more than 30 pages of bibliography and close to 400 book titles). But the originality of this work lies mainly in a confrontation between Nietzsche and the Crucified, hence the title of the book(*).


In Turin, Nietzsche stayed a few hundred meters from the cathedral chapel which shelters the Holy Shroud. Whether or not you believe in the authenticity of the Shroud as a testimony to Jesus crucified, this closeness is striking when one connects the influence that Nietzsche has on the world today and the fact that he was literally obsessed by Jesus during the last months of his lucid life.

Might these last months of sanity, then this decade of breakdown, be the sign of a spiritual struggle in the depths of the one who proclaimed God's death? It was in 1888 that he wrote the Antichrist and Ecce Homo. It was during this period that the name of Christ appears most often in his writings, but only to describe him as an "idiot". In his last letters, in 1889, his signature repeatedly reads "The Crucified". And, on January 3rd, 1889, while pointing to himself, he announced that "God is on earth."

During the same period, the "superman" worried especially about his food; he writes in Ecce Homo, "the salvation of humanity depends on the question of diet much more than on any theologian's old subtlety". He dedicates considerable time and extensive correspondence to the acquisition of a stove from the Nieske company in Dresden. He was passionate about the worldly gossip and funerals of Turinese celebrities. Finally, the man who wrote that "without music, life would be a mistake" and who, as a young man, thrilled over Bach, Palestrina and Wagner, fell to such a low point that his passion focused on La Mascotte, of Audran (whose famous aria clearly demonstrates the heart of its concern: "I like my turkey, I like my sheep, when they make their soft glug glug, when each of them makes bê bê bê..."), and music hall shows!

Anyway, the superman had become quite pathetic. His descent into hell had begun. Would he meet Christ there? Didier Rance assumes so and then proposes a striking parallel with a poem by Baudelaire, Punishment of Pride. Judge for yourself:
(…)
It is said that one day a most learned doctor
— After winning by force the indifferent hearts,
Having stirred them in the dark depths of their being;
After crossing on the way to celestial glory,
Singular and strange roads, even to him unknown,
Which only pure Spirits, perhaps, had reached, —
"Excellent description of Nietzsche’s megalomaniac pride just before the breakdown", writes Rance.
Panic-stricken, like one who has clambered too high,
He cried, carried away by a satanic pride:
"Jesus, little Jesus! I raised you very high!
But had I wished to attack you through the defect
In your armor, your shame would equal your glory,
And you would be no more than a despised fetus!"
"... To the contemptuous 'Jesus, little Jesus' (...) corresponds [Nietzsche’s] retarded Jesus, and parallel insults spring from both mouths! 'Fetus!', 'idiot!' "
After the insulting pride follows madness. The superior intelligence is broken, locked, and the key is lost...
At that very moment his reason departed.
A crape of mourning veiled the brilliance of that sun;
Complete chaos rolled in and filled that intellect,
A temple once alive, ordered and opulent,
Within whose walls so much pomp had glittered.
Silence and darkness took possession of it
Like a cellar to which the key is lost.
And the poem ends with "a description of the fallen proud became a poor lunatic, who looks very much like the crazy Nietzsche during his walks in the streets of Weimar..."
Henceforth he was like the beasts in the street,
And when he went along, seeing nothing, across
The fields, distinguishing nor summer nor winter,
Dirty, useless, ugly, like a discarded thing,
He was the laughing-stock, the joke, of the children.

It was during one of these walks, in Weimar, between 1897 and 1900, that Nietzsche met a little girl who looked at him with big, questioning eyes. He stopped, put his hand on the child's head and told his companion: "Is this not the image of innocence?" Didier Rance recalls that Daniel Halevy, after reporting this episode, says that Nietzsche, like Goethe's Faust, had surrendered himself to the devil. But he wonders where the Marguerite is who will save him by her prayer. The answer will be later suggested to him by a reader: "You ask what voice will pray for Nietzsche? Why not this girl encountered on a Weimar path?"

Fiodor


(1) Didier RANCE, Nietzsche et le Crucifié. Turin 1888, Ed. Ad Solem, 2015, 470 p., 27 €. Let us hope that the book will be translated into English.


Wednesday, July 1, 2015

A giant of charity



On this July 1st, the Roman martyrology and the Byzantine synaxariums (liturgical calendars) commemorate Abba Moses the Ethiopian. This black man, vigorous and tall, was born in Ethiopia in 332. He was a violent nature. Author of several crimes, he fled human justice and arrived in the desert of Egypt. There, he experienced a radical conversion, he dedicated himself to monastic life, and became a disciple of the Desert Fathers, among whom Macarius the Great. Conscious of the mercy with which God had filled him, he became a model of humility, kindness and charity. John Cassian did not hesitate to call him "the greatest among all the saints."

This apophthegm(*) illustrates the merciful wisdom of Abba Moses:


One day, at Skete [region of the desert of Egypt where monastic communities were established and where also lived hermits], a brother committed a fault. They held a council to which Abba Moses was invited. But he refused to go. Then the priest sent someone who said to him: "Come, because everybody is waiting for you." So he got up and left. He took a leaky basket, filled it with sand and carried it. The others, going out to meet him, said to him "What is this, father?" The old man said, "My sins are spilling out behind me and I do not see them, and here I am today coming to judge the fault of another." Hearing this, they said nothing to the brother, but forgave him.

Fiodor

(*) The apophthegms are short sayings, words of wisdom, pronounced by the Desert Fathers. From the 5th century, these words were gathered in collections. They knew a considerable diffusion throughout Christendom and remain astonishingly relevant. Read, for instance: The Apophthegms of the Ancients: Being an Historical Collection of the Most Celebrated, Elegant, Pithy and Prudential Sayings of All the Illustrious Personages of Antiquity, Vol 1 and Vol. 2, Ulan Press, 2012.




Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Thank you, Fadiey Lovsky


Fadiey Lovsky passed away this past May 23 at the age of a hundred years old. As is often the case for those who row against the current, he remains relatively unknown outside the circle of Jewish-Christian relations – and probably even less known in English-speaking countries where, as far as I know, his books have not been translated. Yet this Protestant Christian historian, both big-hearted and spiritual, is one of the most important contemporary authors in the field of Christian anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism, as well as in the field of relations between the Church and the Jewish people.

Born in Paris in 1914, he awoke to the faith at the end of his adolescence. His sensitivity led him towards a pietistic form of Protestantism and to become a member of Union de Prière de Charmes. A professor of history in a high school, he was able to say at the end of his life "I was protected from the temptation of pursuing a career."

Tongue in cheek, he credited "Herr Hitler" with his interest for the Jewish people and his involvement in the Jewish-Christian dialogue. He was also close to Jules Isaac, whom he helped to find a publisher for his book Jésus et Israël (Jesus and Israel, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971) and with whom he was one of the founders of l’Amitié judéo-chrétienne de France (the Judeo-Christian Friendship of France).

Besides holding senior posts in various bodies of the Protestant Federation of France for relations with the people of Israel, he assumed, for some forty years, responsibility for the Cahiers d’Etudes juives (Review for Jewish Studies).

Finally, Lovsky had a passion for the unity of the Church. For him, the division among the various Christian denominations is but the consequence of the original split between the Church and the Synagogue.


His main works, in French, are:
1. On the mystery of Israel, anti-Semitism and the relationship between the Church and the Jews:
- Antisémitisme et mystère d’Israël, Albin Michel, 1955. A digital version is available on Pressbooks.
- L’antisémitisme chrétien, Ed. du Cerf, 1970.
- La déchirure de l’absence. Essai sur les rapports entre l’Eglise du Christ et le peuple d’Israël, Calmann-Lévy, 1971.
2. On the unity of the Church:
- Pauvrette Eglise, Mame, 1992.
- L’unité, une option non facultative, Olivetan, 1999.
3. On his life and his commitments
- an interview with the journalist Robert Masson, La Fidélité de Dieu, Parole et Silence/Cerf, 1998.

The best tribute we can pay him is by allowing him to speak for himself. Here is a page from La déchirure de l’absence (The Rupture of Absence).

“After Hitler, is forgiveness still possible? But is it not precisely when we, Jews or Christians, are reluctant to respond that Hitler in fact triumphs by having made it impossible? And if forgiveness is the key that opens all doors, who is it that must use this key? To whom is it to be offered? To whom is it to be requested? Is it time for us today to propose it to the Jews, we who do not know how to use it? Might it not be the moment for us to be the first to ask this forgiveness from the Jews? And what should we do, if they refuse, for any number of reasons to grant it to us?
We know too well how hard it is to live this grace asked for daily(*) how hard to pass it on, yet how easily, how lightly it is asked from others, as if the grace that is given to us could become a duty that we would propose to them. Still, Christians have nothing else to transmit than a forgiveness that reconciles. If they are unable to speak about it, they can live it, that is to say, as the case may be, to grant it or ask for it.
When it comes to the relationships of Christians with the people of Israel, it is only on the ground of forgiveness that the meeting can take place. Perhaps it wouldn’t be in vain to dot the i's and cross the t's: for this meeting and this dialogue, it is Christians who must first ask forgiveness from God and from the people of Israel, that is to say, from the Jews.”

Fiodor

(*) Allusion to the Lord’s Prayer.