Broken Heart / Broken Wholeness

About The Book

In the summer of 1947 three years before his death in a labor camp hospital one of the most significant Soviet Yiddish writers Der Nister (Pinkhas Kahanovitsh 1884-1950) made a trip from Moscow to Birobidzhan the Jewish Autonomous Region in the Russian Far East. He traveled there on a special migrant train together with a thousand Holocaust survivors. The present study examines this journey as an original protest against the conformism of the majority of Soviet Jewish activists. In his travel notes Der Nister described the train as the modern Noah's ark heading to put an end to the historical silliness. This rhetoric paraphrasing Nietzsche's historical sickness challenged the Jewish history in the Diaspora which broke the people's mythical wholeness. Der Nister formulated his vision of a post-Holocaust Jewish reconstruction more clearly in his previously unknown notes (Birobidzhan Manifesto) the last that have reached us from Der Nister's creative legacy which are being discussed for the first time in this book. Without their own territory he wrote the Jews were like a soul without a body or a body without a soul and in either case always a cripple. Records of the fabricated investigation case against the anti-Soviet nationalist grouping in Birobidzhan reveal details about Der Nister's thoughts and real acts. Both the records and the manifesto are being published here for the first time.
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