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Israel

TAKING ISSUE: Potency of “place” for Jews

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GEOFF SIFRIN

Taking Issue


 

The move is supported by Trump’s choice for American ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, an Orthodox Jew and outspoken supporter of the settlement movement. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last week moving the embassy would be “great.”

Previous US presidents have refrained from moving their embassy to Jerusalem for political reasons, while declaring it was a long-term goal. Israeli security officials fear relocation now would provoke belligerent reaction from the Arab world and East Jerusalem’s Arab neighbourhoods. Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said it would lead the PLO to revoke its recognition of Israel, demolish the possibility of a two-state solution, and indicate American acceptance of “Israel’s illegal annexation of East Jerusalem.”

Sifrin Geoff HOMESymbolic acts such as relocating the American embassy have few practical implications – it could operate effectively from either Tel Aviv or Jerusalem – but are often more powerful than practical deeds. Depending on the context, they may provoke terrible bloodletting, or comforting, reassuring feelings. The militant nationalist politics rising worldwide today is much about symbolism – people will fight and die for their flag.

A contrasting but equally powerful deed relating to Jewish places and experience is occurring in Hungary, where the Budapest Festival Orchestra has an inspiring plan to perform in the many places in Hungary now devoid of Jews but where a synagogue still stands, “bringing music and life to them and recalling the memory of the annihilated Jewish communities”. Hungarian Jews were almost completely wiped out in the Holocaust – about 500,000 from a population of 800,000. Two years ago, conductor Iván Fischer and the BPO, which he co-founded in 1983, formulated the programme.

These old synagogue buildings are mostly derelict, have been ransacked or are used for other purposes. In some cases they have remained locked since the German occupation.

On December 1 a fundraising concert was held in the magnificent Dohány Street Synagogue, Budapest, which was restored in the 1990s through support from prominent Jews living elsewhere in memory of their forebears. The solo pianist was illustrious pianist-conductor Daniel Barenboim, who played Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No 3 and Chopin’s G minor Ballade, among other pieces. The synagogue is one of the world’s largest, with a capacity of 2700 people, adorned with candelabra, gold leaf, wood, marble and rich ornament, in Byzantine and Romanesque styles. In 1859, the year it opened, Franz Liszt played the organ.

The BPO’s website says: “What’s our purpose? We would like to reduce prejudice and tell the story of how Christians and Jews used to coexist peacefully here… Music brings people closer to each other and purifies memories.” 

The plan resonates with a similar story in a 1988 novel, The Magic We Do Here, by late author and Holocaust scholar Lawrence Rudner, in which a Jewish actor travels through Poland to places where Jews lived before the Holocaust and performs in town squares and streets, re-enacting their lives in front of todays’ non-Jewish Polish residents.

Nationalistic Jews would say moving America’s embassy now to Jerusalem symbolises the return of Jews – in the form of the state of Israel – to where they once lived. Others say it is a premature, provocative act making peace less likely, and should only happen in the framework of a peace agreement.

Symbolic deeds can be reconciliatory or aggressive. The consequences of the American embassy move and the BPO’s performances in old Hungarian synagogues are likely to be vastly different.

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3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Choni

    December 21, 2016 at 3:01 pm

    ‘Sifrin, Is the same Donald Trump you once labelled a bafoon?’

  2. Altekakka

    December 21, 2016 at 7:55 pm

    ‘Didn’t we all, Choni. Didn’t we all’

  3. David B

    December 23, 2016 at 5:06 am

    ‘certainly seems like Trump is taking the ‘bull by the horns’-

       I would imagine that there is very little chance of transferring the US embassy to Jerusalem without very major objections from the global powers that be , including Europe, let alone Russia ,Africa, Arab countries etc. 

       It’s certainly nice to hear that the will is there , but the wherewithal will probably be lacking.

      I notice Choni cannot help having a go at Geoff Sifrin- –  Choni , put your prejudices in your pocket and accept ‘FREE SPEECH’ and differences of opinion for what it is — a privilege that we are so lucky to live with.

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