Abstract

Germans into Jews: Remaking the Jewish Social Body in the Weimar Republic, by Sharon Gillerman. Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2009. 238 pp. $50.00. It was once difficult for historians to escape the shadow of Auschwitz and write a narrative of Jews that did not focus on antisemitism and assimilation. The postwar Zionist assumption was that Jews gave up being Jewish in order to become German, with catastrophic results. Since the 1980s, however, historians have stressed how assimilating involved not discardingjewish life but rather transforming and reaffirming it. This slim book on German-Jewish welfare during the Weimar continues with that revisionist approach. It shows how after 1918 Jews created a vast and extensive network of public assistance organizations. These associations were tightly integrated - ideologically, structurally, and even financially - into the sprawling Weimar welfare state that touched the lives of all Germans. The integration, the author Sharon Gillerman argues, was due to the agreement of Jewish welfare workers with their Christian and secular counterparts that Germany could heal the wounds from the lost war and the economic crises only by invigorating the social body (Volkskorper) - that is, by promoting the health, fertility, productivity, and morality of the population as a whole. Against those who think that being Jewish and being were at odds, Gillerman details how Jewish welfare organizations consciously aimed to redeem and restore the nation. But Jewish welfare also revitalized Jewish communal life. The welfare organizations intervened in the lives of the tens of thousands of needy and wayward Jews, and fostered a Jewish identity by collecting membership dues from close to half of the adult Jews in Germany. Furthermore, because so much Jewish ritual happened in families, welfare organizations that socially supported parents and children had an especially important role in maintaining Jewish life. They accordingly complemented and even rivaled religious institutions in invigotating Judaism. In fact, according to Gillerman, the Central Welfare Agency of Jews, which coordinated the semi-autonomous associations, was German Jewry's most important organization during the Weimar Republic (p. 82). Population policy was of particular concern because the number of Jews had halved over the previous half century in proportion to the general population, a result of the tendency of middle-class Jews to marry late and have few children. According to the workers, the Jewish social body was literally shrinking. The remedy was to intervene more vigorously with welfare: giving better care for orphans; providing early marriage funds; offering medical assistance, especially pre- and postnatal care; encouraging breast feeding and healthy infant hygiene; promoting physical culture; redressing youth delinquency; aiding crippled veterans; retraining the unemployed and finding them jobs; and setting up marriage bureaus to help poor youngjewish women find Jewish husbands (Jewish men often preferred large dowries, even if that meant marrying a gentile). The workers, most of whom were female, also proposed that the new woman - the modern, independent, and sexually loose urbanite allegedly prominent among Jews - should be replaced by the new Jewish mother, who was politically liberated but also committed to aiding the Jewish community and nurturing the Jewish social body. …

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