The Star of Return: Judaism after the Holocaust
By (Author) Dow Marmur
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
296.8346
Hardback
176
At the heart of this sustained meditation that touches on aspects of the history, present state, and possible future of Judaism is Rabbi Dow Marmur's conviction that Judaism is in the midst of a paradigm shift. Rabbi Marmur contends that whereas the Holocaust marked the beginning of the tragic end of the old paradigm of exile, so the establishment of the State of Israel points to the beginning of something new. The Jews' return to the land of Israel has great religious significance in that "halakhah", the Jewish legal tradition, has been superseded by "mitzvah", the Jews' covenantal response to divine call, as the cohesive force in contemporary Jewish life. Accompanying this shift of emphasis from "halakhah" to "mitzvah", Rabbi Marmur finds that the categories of hope, power, and righteousness are beginning to dominate Jewish thought and Jewish life. "The Star of Return", a liberal post-Holocaust era, looks at this profound transformation in terms of the individual Jew's relationship to Israel and establishes that relationship within the context of traditional Judaism. The volume's three major sections encompass the topics of heresy, transformation, and renewal. Part I primarily discusses issues arising from the interface between institutional aims and individual alienation. In Part II, an investigation of the transformative process, Rabbi Marmur builds on Franz Rosenzweig's model of the Magen David and reminds readers that the unique biblical covenant between God and Israel was made with individuals. The final section, "Renewal", written from the point of view of a committed Zionist and Reform Jew, offers a dissenting perspective on the central issues of hope, power, righteousness, community, and covenant that at the same time strongly affirms the covenant's message. This thought-provoking work with its lucid articulation of Jewish purpose today, is aimed both Jews and non-Jews concerned with the evolution of Jewish thought.
DOW MARMUR is the Senior Rabbi at Holy Blossom Temple, Toronto, Canada. His special concern is contemporary Jewish thought. He defines himself as a teacher and a popularizer, not a scholar. His previous books, Beyond Survival and Walking Toward Elijah were published in 1982 and 1988, respectively. His journal articles have focused on the Holocaust, antisemitism, and the relationship between Christians and Jews.