Jumping across the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe |
A thoughtful article, by Michel Gurfinkiel, via 3 Quarks Daily, in the Mosaic magazine, August edition.
Vibrant jewish communities were reborn in Europe after the Holocaust.
Is there a future for them in the 21st century?
Samuel Sandler, an aeronautical engineer and head of the Jewish community in Versailles, France, announced a few weeks ago that he’d had the local synagogue registered as a national landmark. “My feeling is that our congregation will be gone within twenty or thirty years,” he told friends, “and I don’t want the building demolished or, worse, used for improper purposes.”Related: the perilous position of jews in Scandinavia
Once the seat of French royalty, Versailles is now among the tranquil, prosperous, and upscale suburbs of Greater Paris. Among the townspeople are executives employed in gleaming corporate headquarters a few miles away. They and their churchgoing families inhabit early-20th-century villas and late-20th-century condominiums set in majestic greenery. Among the townspeople too, are a thousand or so Jews of similar economic and social status who have made their homes in Versailles and nearby towns. In addition to the synagogue and community center of Versailles itself, a dozen more synagogues dot the surrounding area.
So what makes Sandler so pessimistic about the future? Read on....