<div dir="ltr">RPr.LL wrote:<br>> Rav Schwab did not distance himself from RSRH's talk marking the<br>> 100 anniversary of Schiller's birth.<div><br></div><div>Actually, he did. This is from an essay of mine published in a Festschrift in Switzerland a couple of years ago. <br>
<br>However, R. Schwab, pondering the contrast between the high esteem in which Jews held <br>German culture and the German barbarity during the Nazi period, concludes that, after the <br>Holocaust:<br><br>"Let us admit it. Our grandparents subscribed to an illusion – an imaginary faith in the <br>
civilizing result of a liberal education encompassing art, poetry, music, and theater. It was <br>thought that man's inhumanity to man was a matter of the deep, dark past. Some still did <br>not awaken from this vision until the smoke began to rise from the burning shuls and <br>
sefarim, and until this illusory silence was broken by the shattering of windows [during <br>Kristalnacht AF] and the screaming of frightened children in the night. ... Should <br>someone tell you of knowledge, of science, of wisdom among the nations – believe him. But <br>
if he tells you of Torah among them – don't believe him.<br>"True – there is science, technology, law, medicine, political science, history, languages, <br>psychology et al. Our tradtion of Torah 'im Derekh Eretz applies to that too ... we respect <br>
the accomplishments of science and most areas of human knowledge. ... We do not extend <br>Torah 'im Derekh Eretz to include philosophy, ethics, morality and humanism. The <br>teaching of what is right and wrong, what is noble and ignoble, what is decent and <br>
indecent, this is not in the realm of the umot ha'olam (nations of the world). ... No longer <br>are we going to seek our Schiller to teach us about humanity. It no longer interests us.31"<br><br></div><div>Note 31 reads: 1 R. Shimon Schwab, “Kristalnacht: A Historical Perspective” in “Selected Writings” (New Jersey, 1988), pgs. 81-87.<br>
<br></div><div><br>You may download the entire essay here: <a href="http://ariefolger.wordpress.com/2014/03/25/culture-a-foundation-for-torah/">http://ariefolger.wordpress.com/2014/03/25/culture-a-foundation-for-torah/</a><br>
</div><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div dir="ltr">Arie Folger,<br>Recent blog posts on <a href="http://ariefolger.wordpress.com/" target="_blank">http://ariefolger.wordpress.com/</a><br>* Wieviel Feste feiern wir an Sukkot (Audio-Schiur)<br>
* Die ethische Dimension des Schma Jissraëls (Audio-Schiur)<br>* Ein Baum, der klug macht?! (Audio-Schiur)<br>* Podiumsdiskussion “Jüdische Religion zwischen Tradition und Moderne”<br>* Great Videos from the CER in Berlin<br>
* A Priest Returns to his Faith<br>* The CER Berlin Conference in Pictures</div>
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