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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
When God Hid His Face, December 28, 1999
This review is from: Yosl Rakover Talks to God (Hardcover)
Yosl Rakover, minutes away from perishing in the Warsaw ghetto, reaffirms his unwavering belief in God, even if this is not what God wants him to do. As Rakover personally relives the nightmare of the Holocaust, he concludes that it is his faith that has made him a man, a human being, a "mentsch", possessing the very attributes with which his tormentors were NEVER endowed; and knowing he must die, he reaffirms his own worth in the cosmos by clinging to that which has made his life so meaningful and dichotomously opposed to that of his murderers, i.e. his belief in God. Here is a terse and extremely powerful response to all those who have wondered where God was during the Holocaust.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rescued, November 24, 2001
On July 18, 1994, a terrorist bomb destroyed the AMIA Jewish community center at 633 Calle Pasteur in Buenos Aires, killing 87 people and injuring more than 100. It also destroyed the library from which, a year earlier, a Jesuit priest had retrieved an original copy of the 1946 publication, in Di Yiddishe Tsaytung, of Zvi Kolitz' Yosl Rakover Talks to God. This is but one of many fascinating details in Paul Badde's 1994 essay on Zvi Kolitz and the separate and mythological life that his 25-page short story took on after its 1946 appearance. One of Badde's friends had searched fruitlessly for the story after reading a 1963 essay about it by the great philosopher Emmanuel Levinas. He finally found a yellowing copy in the Munich State Library, in German, which had been translated by Anna Maria Jokl in 1954. Zvi Kolitz' story is almost as great as Yosl Rakover's monologue. Isaac Bashevis Singer, before he died, called the fictional tale about a participant in the Warsaw Ghetto uprising a "story of a Jew possessed by his faith as if by a Dybbuk." It similarly came to the attention of George Steiner and the theologian Klaus Beger. One can read the story in less than an hour. But it is so great that it was believed for years to have been the work of an actual victim of the Warsaw Ghetto. This book, though short, carries great weight. It is a gift to all serious readers. Alyssa A. Lappen
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Powerful philosophical work about man's relationship to God., January 16, 2003
In 1946, Zvi Kolitz, who was a journalist and an ardent Zionist, wrote a short work of fiction in Yiddish. It was called "Yosl Rakover Talks to God." Kolitz put himself in the shoes of a man who was about to meet his death in the conflagration of the Warsaw Ghetto. Before he dies, Yosl confronts God and pours out his anguish and his testament of faith. Over the years, this short manuscript passed through many hands, and a myth grew up around it. Many people insisted that it was an authentic document written by someone who really lived in the Warsaw Ghetto. Zvi Kolitz was disassociated from the work that he had written. The story itself is touching and very meaningful. Yosl says that no matter what hardships and pain God sends his way, he is proud to be a Jew, and his belief in God is unwavering. He realizes that, for some reason, God has decided to turn his face away from his people. Therefore, the Nazis and their cohorts had few obstacles to overcome in their mission to rid Europe of its Jewish population. Yosl takes the liberty of chastising God for putting the Jewish people through so much suffering. This work is filled with compassion, anguish, deep feeling and a determination to remaining a proud and committed Jew. "Yosl Rakover Talks to God" cannot fail to move anyone who has strong feelings about the Holocaust and man's relationship to God. Following the story is an illuminating essay by Paul Badde, explaining the many twists and turns that this manuscript took since its original publication, and he provides some insights into the life and philosophy of Zvi Kolitz. Although very brief, this little volume is moving and thought-provoking.
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