"Man is a being who asks questions of himself" and his first question is "how to turn human being into being human." (Abraham Heschel)
On Holocaust Memorial Day I turn to several Jewish writers whose books and whose lives have influenced the way I look at the world, and how I try to live and be in that world, my world. Elie Wiesel, Viktor Frankl and Primo Levi have plumbed the depths of human suffering and the evil that imagines and enacts evil and suffering upon others. From them I have learned to listen, to repent, and to try harder to be honest with my own moral assumptions, and blindness.
Amy Jill Levine, Jonathan Sacks and Martin Buber are amongst those who in their writings have sought as Jewish thinkers, to exemplify dialogue towards understanding, education against prejudice, a willingness to consider the piety and poetry of a well lived life towards others who are different. Only where there is such dialogic good will, they argue, can there be a navigable road towards understanding, appreciation and respectful reverence towards the ways of being that grow out of people of different faiths, but the same humanity.
Abraham Joshua Heschel is a Jewish Rabbi, philosopher and spiritual teacher whose writings are now woven like a noticeably bright tapestry thread through my mind and the canvas of my ways of thinking. I first discovered Heschel's writing through his magnum opus The Prophets. Then his two classic books on Jewish philosophy of religion, God in Search of Man and Man is Not Alone.
Over the years I've gathered and read his books and articles and a number of the best studies of his life and work. It so happens the latest biography arrived yesterday, and today is Holocaust Memorial Day. I will spend some of my time today reading Heschel, and reflecting on the blessing he has been to those who have tried to turn their human being into being human.
Heschel was within six weeks of being lost to the world in 1939. He managed to escape to Warsaw, then London and finally the United States. His mother and four of his aunts perished at the hands of the Nazis. Heschel never ceased to wonder at the mystery of what it means to be human; likewise one of the dominant notes in his writing is wonder, awe and worship in the presence of the ineffable God of merciful justice and fathomless mystery. The combination of these two convictions, that humanity is in search of meaning, and God is in search of humanity, creates an all but unbearable tension in Heschel's writing. But it results in writing that is one part theology, one part passion and one part testimony. Heschel was a praying philosopher, a doxological theologian, and a prophet of social justice who prayed with his feet.
The Holocaust was always a sombre backdrop in Heschel's thought. "The degree to which one is sensitive to other people's suffering, to other men's humanity, is the index of one's own humanity." The obverse is also true - insensitivity or indifference to other people's suffering is the index of one's own inhumanity. In the face of the incalculable suffering and incomprehensible evil of the Holocaust, Heschel urged against bitterness and hatred, argued that his people's suffering must not be rendered pointless or unproductive. The Holocaust must not be forgotten, neither by indifference that trivialises a people's tragedy, nor in the fog of justifiable anguish that paralyses goodness and nourishes hate. "Life comprises not only arable, productive land, but also mountains of dreams, an underground of sorrow, towers of yearning, which can hardly be utilized to the last for the good of society..." (Abraham Joshua Heschel and Elie Wiesel. You are My Witnesses, Maurice Friedman, New York, Farrar Strauss&Giroux, 1987, p.76)
"True love for man is clandestine love for God." In that simple aphorism Heschel distils so much of his life's thought, convictions and actions. The Holocaust happened for reasons both complex and long in the making. The enduring legacy of mechanised cruelty and state sanctioned genocide on such a scale, is finally inexplicable except by the insistent use of terms such as sin and evil, both individual and structural. Heschel knew that, but his sternest warnings were against indifference. And the opposite of indifference is "the true love of man..." For that he argued and prayed, in such ways he acted and spoke, so that as a public intellectual and a prophetic voice, he echoed the passionate partiality of the prophets for acting justly, loving mercy and walking humbly with God.
On this Holocaust Memorial Day, reflect on these words of Heschel. They don't fully explain why the Holocaust happened; but they signal the why, and they are a warning to later generations to beware the complacency that allows the necessary conditions for history to repeat itself:
"There is an evil which most of us condone and are even guilty of: indifference to evil. We remain neutral, impartial, and not easily moved by the wrongs done to other people...The prophets' great contribution to humanity was the discovery of the evil of indifference." (Quoted in Shai Held, Abraham Joshua Heschel. The Call to Transendence. Indiana University Press, 2013, 171-2. Emphases original)
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