Wednesday, November 23, 2011

My People

My father's father was born in Vilna, Lithuania. Yes, he was a Litvak -- a Lithuanian Jew. Certain stereotypes attach to the Litvak.


The stereotypical Litvak is portrayed as unemotional, withdrawn, intellectual, and mercilessly critical; he challenges authority and is by nature skeptical, stubborn, and impatient with, and suspicious of, others. The Litvak’s commitment to tradition is suspect; his Judaism purely intellectual. Hyperbolic expressions of the stereotype maintained that even when he is studying Torah, the Litvak has one leg out the door of the bet midrash (study hall), on his way to inevitable apostasy. He studies Mishnah, Talmud, and halakhic codes publicly, went the stereotype, while at the same time furtively glances into Christian scripture or reads Marx and Tolstoy. The Litvak was called, derisively, tselem kopf—meaning, split the head of a Litvak and you’ll find a cross. There was widespread suspicion among Polish Jews that Litvaks somehow lacked a yidishe neshome, an authentic Jewish soul, and that there was something inherently flawed, “goyish” and lacking in authentic Jewish flavor (yidisher tam), about them—the latter confirmed by the Litvak’s austere diet, which contrasted with the sweeter and more complex foods of Galitsianers. While Polish, Galician, and Romanian Jews would typically sweeten the most popular Jewish staple foods (e.g., gefilte fish or kugel) with sugar, cinnamon, raisins, and the like, Litvaks prepared their food with salt and pepper—appropriate, according to the stereotype, to their bitter personalities. “The Galitsianer’s gut is too big, but he has a small head,” wrote Mendele Moykher-Sforim; “the Litvak’s gut is too small, but he has a big head.”

2 comments:

  1. Famous Litvaks:

    Roman Abramovich, Oligarch and owner of Chelsea F.C.
    Moshe Arens, former Israeli defence minister and foreign minister
    Naum Aronson, sculptor. Born in Kreslavka, worked in Paris. Moved to USA.
    Aharon Barak, President of the Supreme Court of Israel from 1995–2006
    Ehud Barak, Israeli Chief of Staff, foreign minister, prime minister, defence minister and Labour leader
    Erran Baron Cohen, English-born trumpeter and composer
    Sacha Baron Cohen, English-born entertainer
    Roseanne Barr, American actress
    Jillian Becker, South African writer
    Menachem Begin, Israeli Prime Minister from Brest-Litovsk
    Dan Bern, American folk singer, poet, painter
    Sydney Brenner, biochemist, Nobel laureate 2002
    Eli Broad, American philanthropist and investor; founder of KB Home
    Marc Chagall, Russian-born French painter
    Leonard Cohen, Canadian singer-songwriter, poet and novelist
    Aaron Copland, U.S. composer, original family name was Kaplan
    Irwin Cotler, Canadian Minister of Justice and Attorney General from 2003–2006, and international human rights lawyer
    Melvyn Douglas (Melvyn Hesselberg), American actor
    Bob Dylan, U.S. singer-songwriter, author, musician and poet (original name was Robert Allen Zimmerman)
    Yaffa Eliach, Author (wrote Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust)
    Bernard Friedman, South African politician
    Brian Epstein, The Beatles Manager
    Massimiliano Fuksas, Italian architect
    Romain Gary, French writer
    Ivan Glasenberg, South African chartered accountant, CEO of Glencore International AG
    Philip Glass, U.S. minimalist composer
    Leopold Godowsky, composer and pianist
    Emma Goldman, anarchist
    Itamar Golan, pianist
    Nadine Gordimer, 1991 Nobel Prize for literature
    Bernard Gordon, South African businessman and philanthropist, Rand pioneer, founder of Kibbutz Mayan Baruch in Israel
    Lauren Grant, modern dancer, Mark Morris Dance Group. Maternal grandfather from Lithuania, circa 1900.
    Aron Gurwitsch, philosopher in the field of phenomenology
    Laurence Harvey, British actor
    Esther Hautzig, award-winning writer
    Jascha Heifetz, acclaimed 20th century violinist born in Vilnius
    Seymour Hersh, American journalist
    Moe Howard (born Harry Moses Horwitz), Shemp Howard (born Samuel Horwitz) and Curly Howard (born Jerome Lester Horwitz) of the Three Stooges, a U.S. comedy trio

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  2. Jay M. Ipson, founder and president of the Virginia Holocaust Museum in Richmond
    Al Jolson, singer-songwriter, dancer, entertainer
    Ronnie Kasrils, South African communist leader, minister of Intelligence Services
    William Kentridge, acclaimed artist 3rd-generation South African of Lithuanian-Jewish heritage, whose parents and uncles fought in the trenches against Apartheid.[14]
    Joseph Klausner, scholar of modern Hebrew literature and former Israeli presidential candidate
    Aaron Klug, biophysicist, Nobel laureate 1982.
    Hillel Kook, Revisionist Zionist activist, politician, and prominent member of the Irgun
    Tony Leon, South African former opposition leader
    Emmanuel Levinas, philosopher
    Peggy Lipton, U.S. actress
    Jacques Lipchitz, sculptor
    Emmanuel Lubezki, 3 time Academy Award nominee, cinematographer
    Alexander Ziskind Maimon, author and scholar
    Benoit Mandelbrot, mathematician, regarded as the founded of fractal geometry
    Michael Marks, founder of retail network Marks and Spencer
    George Marcus, anthropologist
    Gideon Mer, Israeli scientist who worked on malaria research
    Juliano Mer-Khamis, Israeli actor, director, filmmaker and political activist
    Hermann Minkowski, mathematician (born in Kaunas)
    Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister, original family name was Milikowsky
    Fanny Mikey, Colombian theatre impresario, daughter of a Lithuanian immigrant to Argentina
    Amos Oz, Israeli writer, novelist and journalist
    Pink (Alecia Moore), U.S. musician, mother is of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry
    Maury Povich, U.S. talk-show host
    Shloyme Zanvl Rappoport, author and Jewish folklorist who under the pseudonym, S. Ansky wrote the play, The Dybbuk
    Don Rickles, an American stand-up comedian and actor
    Willy Ronis, photographer
    Jerome David Salinger, writer
    Milton Shapp (b. Milton Jerrold Shapiro), cable TV pioneer and governor of Pennsylvania; parents were Lithuanian Jews
    Ariel Sharon, former Israeli Prime Minister, from a family of Georgian Jews of Lithuanian descent
    Joe Slovo, South African Communist and MK leader, minister of construction in Nelson Mandela's government
    Chaïm Soutine, painter
    Clara Nathanson, sculptor. Lithuanian (Vilnius, b.1887)
    David Suchet, famous English actor
    Helen Suzman, South-African anti-apartheid activist
    Moshe/Michael Tchaban, Lithuanian born singer-songwriter
    Vilna Gaon, preeminent religious leader and Talmudist
    Meir Vilner, Israeli communist leader, the last of the signatories of Israel's declaration of independence to pass away
    Mary Louise Weller, U.S. actress and model
    Harry Dexter White, economist
    Lewis Wolpert, South African born geneticist
    L.L. Zamenhof, founder of the Esperanto language
    Paul Zukofsky, violinist and conductor from New York.
    Andy Zaltzman
    Helen Zaltzman

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