Franz Rosenzweig photo

Franz Rosenzweig

Franz Rosenzweig's story, like Gershom Scholem and Franz Kafka, was that of a return to the very core of Jewish life from the assimilated periphery. Rosenzweig was born into a wealthy, acculturated family in Kassel, Germany. After studying medicine, his scholastic interest shifted toward philosophy and his dissertation later became a two-volume study entitled Hegel und der Staat [Hegel and the State] (1920), which is displayed in the Bezalel Bookcase. It was at this stage in his life where he was ready to abandon Judaism and convert to Christianity, but only on one condition. Like the earliest Christians, he would enter as a Jew, not a pagan. In 1913, as a last resort, he attended Kol Nidre services. In that orthodox synagogue, he had a religious epiphany that sent him squarely back to Judaism.

As a solider in the trenches during World War I, Rosenzweig composed his seminal work, Der Stern der Erloesung [The Star of Redemption] (1921). Afterwards he moved to Frankfurt, where he created a "particular Jewish sphere" and remained the rest of his life. Beyond the influence of his published scholarly works, his legacy is undoubtedly intertwined with his founding of the Freies Judisches Lehrhaus, an adult academy dedicated to Jewish studies of the highest intellectual standing.

Franz Rosenzweig personified the conflict of many young intelligent Jews, that between the pull of modernity and the practice of traditional Jewish ideals. More than any other German Jew, Rosenzweig helped to build a distinct, modern Jewish culture, while remaining deeply rooted in his German surrounding.

-Gelman Library, http://www.gwu.edu/gelman/spec/kiev/t...


“Jetzt kommt die Pointe aller Pointen, die mir der Herr im Schlaf verliehen hat.”
Franz Rosenzweig
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