
Albert Meyer and Rabbi
Yehuda Teichtal |
Jewish Community
Reborn In The Reich
 N the first day of Rosh Hashana, the
Jewish New Year in September, four smartly uniformed police officers
escorted some 50 Jews from the Judischen Gemeindehaus (Jewish
Community Center) of Berlin. They marched six blocks down Fananen
Strasse toward an urban stream.
I watched in awe as they cast Jewish sins into
German water. I was unnerved by the thought that similar groups of
Jews once were marched through the streets to have their bodies,
sins and all, cast into the crematorium.

Kurt Weill Center,
a Bauhaus treasure in
Dessau |
Under the guarded gaze of the German polizei, Rabbi
Yehuda Teichtal, head of the Berlin Chabad Center, led his flock – some with tzitzit fluttering in
the air – dancing in the streets to the words of Am Yisroel
Chai [the Jewish people lives].
I did not realize how much normative Jewish life had
returned to the home of the Reichstag until I embarked on a two-week
tour of eastern Germany. Berlin is the site of a burgeoning revival
of a recently extinct Jewish community.
"If you want to live a full Jewish life, you
could," said Rabbi Chaim Rozwaski, formerly of Suburban Park
Jewish Center in East Meadow, Long Island, and now rabbi of Synagoge
Pestalozzi Strasse in the heart of Berlin.

Police guard Jewish Community Center of
Berlin |
"We have a cultural life and adult education. I
came here six years ago to open a day school for the Lauder
Foundation. And Touro College, which I helped bring here, is
starting its first year this semester."
The Jewish population is organized as the Jewish
Community of Berlin, with 12,000 registered members out of an
estimated 25,000 living here.
Albert Meyer, a prominent real estate lawyer and
president of the Jewish Community, said the federal government
contributes 25 million Euros toward his budget of 27 million. The
rest comes from the Jewish members who are each taxed 8 percent of
income. As many are poor and unable to pay their dues, there is
always a deficit.
"The Jewish population is divided," Meyer
said. "There are the old members and there are the recent
immigrants from Russia. The newcomers separate themselves. They act
like they’re still in Russia. They speak Russian, read Russian
language newspapers and refuse to integrate."

Rochus Graf zu Lynar and
his grandparents |
As for anti-Semitism, Meyer maintains there is no
problem with the Germans. There may be individual attacks by
skinheads and neo-Nazis, but nothing organized.
"The Germans are not anti-Semitic," Meyer
said. "Anti-Semitism is imported. It’s a reflection of the
Middle East conflict. Physical attacks on the street are committed
by Arabs."
The synagogues I visited were well protected with
police officers outside and metal detectors and Israeli security
guards at the entrance.
While Jewish vitality is evident in Berlin, there is
not much Jewish activity apparent in other parts of the former East
Germany.
On a boat ride exploring the Spreewald – that lush
blooming forest preserve in Saxony – we spotted one of the few
synagogues that were not torched on Kristallnacht. Our gondolier
told us what happened.

Congregation of
empty chairs
stands as memorial to the
Great Synagogue of Leipzig
destroyed in Kristallnacht 1938 |
The white round structure originally served the 400
Jews of Dessau (today only 50 Jews are here). When a Nazi mob
arrived on that fateful night of Nov. 9, 1938, the faithful
non-Jewish caretaker locked them inside the synagogue and said,
"Do what you want, but we’re staying inside together."
The Nazis sat down, drank beer and then left.
In the Spreewald town of Lubbenau I met Count Rochus
Graf zu Lynar. He returned from Portugal, after the 1990 demise of
Communist control of East Germany, to regain the family castle that
had been confiscated first by the Nazis and then the Communists.
The family had fled after his grandfather, Wilhelm
Friedrich, was implicated in the failed Hitler assassination plot of
1944 – and hanged.
Rochus is transforming the well-manicured grounds
and magnificent palaces into a tourist hotel, restaurant and
facilities for business conferences.
In Dessau, birthplace of the Bauhaus movement of
design and architecture, a Kurt Weill Festival is being planned for
Feb. 25-Mar. 3 to honor one of the town’s greatest Jewish
celebrities.
Weill, composer of Three-Penny Opera in 1928
(with playwright Bertolt Brecht), fled the Nazi terror five years
later. He made his home in New City, N.Y., until he died in 1950.
In 1993, three years after reunification, Dessau
reclaimed its former scorned countryman by establishing the Kurt
Weill Center, which is becoming a popular tourist magnet.
Dresden, a city that was firebombed almost out of
existence by British and American planes, has reinvented itself
miraculously. Modern structures have supplanted the destroyed
buildings, and historical landmarks have been reconstructed in their
original style.
Of the 11,000 Jews in 1933, today there are only 500
– mostly immigrant Russians. There is a memorial at the site of
the Great Synagogue, destroyed in the 1938 Reichspogromnacht.
Interestingly, Dresden’s world famous 14th
century Frauenkirche, or Church of Our Lady, was restored in June
with a contribution from a British Jew. Anisch Papur, originally
from India now living in London, designed the elaborate church
altar. The official opening and consecration will take place on Oct.
13, 2005.
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