Chapter Eight. Irving Greenberg and the Post-Holocaust Voluntary Covenant
Author: Morgan, Michael L.
Source: Beyond Auschwitz, October 2001 , pp. 121-141(21)
Publisher: Oxford Scholarship Online Monographs
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Abstract:
In this chapter, and in Chs. 67, and 910, an analysis and examination is made of the writings of the major American Jewish thinkers/theologians. The thinker addressed in this chapter is Irving Greenberg, an orthodox rabbi and deeply traditional figure, but also a bold and radical Jewish thinker. Citations of each thinkers work earlier in the book are capitalized on in order to explore the theme of history and identity as it occurs in their work, and it is shown that these figures struggled with very deep and pressing problems not only about God and the Jewish people, and about human nature and moral purpose but also about the very nature of Jewish belief and its understanding of the world, history, God, and much else. They realized the dangers that accompanied their sensitivity to the Holocaust and their unconditional commitment to an honest and probing encounter with the death camps, and at the same time, they refused to abandon Judaism. In some ways, they appear like other intellectuals of the current era, who realize that we cannot transcend history nor can we be overwhelmed by it, but in other ways, they appear unlike them, for their sense of value and purpose arises out of the horror of the death camps.Keywords: Jewish theologians; Irving Greenberg; American Jews; Holocaust; Jewish thinkers; American writers; death camps; Jewish history; history
Document Type: Research article
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