2006-05-26—Jews-literature |
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Jewishsightseeing.com, May 26, 2006 |
CORONADO, Calif.—
The Christian
assessment of Judaism in medieval times was that the "New Testament"
superceded the "Old Testament."
In that Christianity needed the Hebrew Bible as justification for the
coming of its Messiah, the Jews preceding Jesus' arrival were good but those
who came in his time and later were no longer good.
Since Jews didn’t accept Jesus, Christians believed it justifiable to
punish Jews. Chrristians often used accounts in the Christian Scriptures to
accuse Jews of being Christ killers.
This
theme was examined by Professor Lisa Lampert,
UCSD Associate Professor of English Literature and Comparative Medieval
Studies, who spoke Wednesday, May 24, at the Police Department in Coronado,
a suburb on San Diego Bay. Her appearance was sponsored jointly by the San
Diego Agency for Jewish Education (AJE), Coronado Friends of the AJE, Ohr
Shalom Synagogue, and Temple Beth Sholom. Many
stories of the Hebrew Bible were read retroactively as harbingers of the story
of Jesus. Among these were the “original sin” of Adam and Eve, the
death of Abel, the binding of Isaac, and on through the prophecies of
Isaiah and others
In such a reading, Hebrew Scriptures were offered as proof that
it was G-d’s plan to bring about Christianity, but it wasn’t until Jesus
that the true trajectory of the “divine vision” became clear. In
the New World, the Spaniards depicted the indigenous populations as the “New
Jews,” again justifying maltreatment.
As Jews were officially banned from places such as Spain and England,
often enough no one ever saw a Jew.
Nevertheless, severe descriptions of Jews grew, their
absence serving to fuel the malevolent way in which Christians pictured them. Several
plays emerged over time depicting the Jew in Satanic terms.
Marlowe’s Jew of Malta in the late 16th century
depicted a trickster, Barabas the Jew, whose daughter was kidnapped and taken
to a convent.
Marlowe’s character however was flat and one dimensional, simply
evil. Shakespeare
followed with
is Merchant of Venice, but in this case he fleshed out his
characters. The
Jew, Shylock, had human traits and feelings, and could and can be
played as a subject of sympathy.
It is because of this and numerous other instances in Shakespeare’s
writings that there is controversy as to his true feelings toward Jews (who
officially did not and could not live in England at that time since 1290. Shakespeare,
according to Lampert, expressed numerous contemporary messages in his plays,
and “Merchant” is no exception.
For example, in Act V, when Lancelot the clown addresses Jessica,
Shylock’s convert daughter to Christianity, he states such conversions, if
multiplied, will cause a rise in the price of pork.
This had resonance in Elizabethan England, which at the time
experienced an influx of foreign immigrants. Shakespeare,
in his contrived setting of Venetian society, expressed through this play a
fear that the developing mercantilism of Britain resulted in decadence, to be
compared of course with a reversion to Judaism! In
an interview following the program, Lampert
agreed that there were two documented communities of “conversos"
in England during Elizabethan times The
Shakear family, precursor to the Shakespeare name, had migrated from northern
Europe, over a century before, and there are hints there may have been Jewish
connections.
Shakespeare, like many others of his time, filled his writings, his
self-designed family crest, even his portrait with ciphers that can be
interpreted as Jewish messages.
True enough, I conceded, Shakespeare was baptized and was married to
Anne Hathaway.
Still he is a mysterious figure in history, with people to this day
proposing theories as to who he secretly might have been. Lampert
didn’t buy any of this!
Furthermore, her conclusion was that Shakespeare was anti-Semitic. |