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Miriam Gross Returns to Jerusalem

Tears flowed when renowned Fleet Street literary editor Miriam Gross went back to the city of her birth

September 20, 2012 14:20
Literary Editor Miriam Gross

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

13 min read

I was born in Jerusalem a year before the outbreak of World War II. My parents had met there (my mother was married to someone else at the time), both having left Germany in 1933 soon after Hitler came to power.

My mother, who was half-Russian and half-German, had had to abandon her legal studies in Berlin when the Nazis decreed that Jews could no longer practise law. My father (who was 10 years older) had at that time already built up a successful legal practice. He was exempt from the Nazi ban on Jewish lawyers because he had won an iron cross in the First World War. On the other hand he had defended a social democrat, who had been accused of being a Communist, in a high-profile court case: defending “Communists”, whether you were Jewish or not, also disbarred you, under Hitler’s new rules, from continuing as a lawyer. Not that my father would have stayed in Nazi Germany. Both my parents, like many German Jews who could afford to start a new life, left their families behind and set off for Palestine. They married there in 1937.

Neither of them were committed Zionists. On the contrary, my father’s wartime experiences as a soldier in the German army had put him off all forms of nationalism. My mother too was at that time doubtful about the idea of a Jewish state (before the rise of Hitler, she had been in favour of assimilation, believing that the more Jews and non-Jews intermarried, the more likely it would be that the “Jewish problem” would gradually fade away). But they wanted to live in a place where Jews were free.

Nor were my parents religious. In common with many German Jews, they did not observe Jewish customs or traditions in any shape or form. Throughout my childhood I never once entered a synagogue — I barely knew there were such places — and I was brought up in total ignorance even of the most basic tenets of Judaism.
I have often wondered what effect, if any, such a totally secular upbringing has on the development of character. Secular people have never seemed to me less good or kind or honest than believers. But then of course we are all brought up in a Judeo-Christian culture, so there’s no way of telling what we would be like without it. Equally, although I’ve always been aware of a “God-shaped hole”, religious faith of any kind seems to me to be completely irrational. Would I have felt differently if I’d had a religious upbringing? Impossible to know.

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