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Sunday,
August 19, 2:00 p.m.
Discussion of A Journey to the End of the Millennium by
A.B. Yehoshua
In
the waning months of the year 999, Ben Attar, a wealthy Jew from
Tangiers, sets sails for Paris. Armed with his two wives, his Muslim
trading partner, and an Andalusian Rabbi, Ben Attar undertakes the
expedition to salvage his relationship with his beloved nephew Abulafia.
The estranged young man has settled in Paris with his bride, a cunning
woman from a family of renowned Jewish scholars in Ashkenaz. Her
moral repulsion for Ben Attar's bigamy—common in his world,
unheard of in hers—has alienated Abulafia from Ben Attar..
In a compelling
narrative rich with the sights and smells of the Mediterranean and
Medieval Europe, Yehoshua powerfully dramatizes this intellectual
and religious showdown between northern and southern Jews, one full
of moral decrees, human desire, and heartbreak.
Sunday, September 30, 2:00 p.m.
Discussion of Red Cavalry by Isaac Babel
In
1920, Isaac Babel rode with the Red Cavalry into Eastern
Poland as part of Russia's first attempt to spread the glory of
Communism throughout Europe. These brief, trenchant short stories,
drawn from Babel's observations of that disastrous campaign, are
marked by a cool detachment and gift for the arresting phrase: "The
orange sun is rolling across the sky like a severed head."
In Babel's
wartime world, life continues, uneasily but inexorably: whether
it's Lyutov, the young Jewish journalist who cloaks his identity
to blend in with the Cossacks, or the pregnant Jewish woman who
keeps her father's mangled corpse in her sleeping quarters, hidden
under a blanket. ("I want you to tell me where one could find
another father like my father in all the world!" she says.)
Babel's unsentimental stories remain haunting and strikingly relevant,
nearly ninety years after their creation.
Sunday, October 21, 2:00 p.m.
Discussion of Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community
in Jedwabne, Poland by Jan T. Gross
"Until
the outbreak of the war," writes Jan Gross, "Jedwabne
was a quiet town, and Jewish lives there differed little from those
of their fellows elsewhere in Poland." Then, on a summer evening
in 1941, just weeks after Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Polish
residents took up axes, clubs, and torches and massacred all but
seven of the town's 1,600 Jews. The perpetrators, who were brought
to trial in 1949, never received official blame for the massacre,
which instead went to the Nazis. .
Piecing together eyewitness
testimony and trial records with a deft historical imagination,
Gross details the "potent, devilish mixture" that led
Poles to turn on their Jewish neighbors. Originally published in
Poland in 2000, the book sparked a national controversy and led
to a public reconsideration of the Polish role in the Holocaust.
Sunday, November 4, 2:00 p.m.
Discussion of The Assistant by Bernard Malamud
Set
in a failing Brooklyn grocery, Malamud's 1957 novel follows shop
owner Morris Bober as his lightless existence is touched and confused
by hardworking Frank Alpine, an "Italyener" he doesn't
so much hire as inherit. Over the course of Alpine's short tenure,
he steals from Bober, falls in love with his charmless daughter,
and converts to Judaism.
Malamud negotiates his
bleak subject without sentimentality. Like many of Malamud's stories,
The Assistant poignantly (and perfectly) captures the specific struggles
of immigrants in language both plain and poetic.
Sunday,
December 16, 2:00 p.m.
Discussion of Mona in the Promised Land by Gish Jen
In
this rollicking coming-of-age tale, Mona Chang's Chinese immigrant
parents move their family to Westchester for its superior schools
and majestic landscaping, only to find that their daughter develops
a worrisome interest in the religion of her new friends. "Pretty
soon Mona's tagged along to so many temple car washes and food drives...that
she's been named official mascot of the Temple Youth Group."
Jen's fast-paced novel
tracks Mona as she discovers herself and her place in the world:
She decides to convert, crosses racial lines by becoming friends
with the workers in her parent's pancake house, and falls in love
with a boy from the local synagogue who lives in a tepee in his
parent's backyard. With a sly eye, Jen mines the battlefields of
adolescence and assimilation to produce a novel that is as charming
as it is relevant. |