Judenhass (2008) Art by Dave Sim |
(from Comics International #207, 2008)
Literally translated as "Jew Hatred", Judenhass'
release coincides with the 60th Anniversary of the founding of the
state of Israel. On the dedicated website, Sim writes, “I decided some
time ago that the term Anti-Semitism… is completely inadequate to the
abhorrent cultural phenomenon which it attempts to describe… It seemed
to me that the term [Judenhass] served to distil the ancient problem to
its essence, and in such a way as to hopefully allow other non-Jews
(like myself) to see the problem “unlaundered” and through fresh eyes.
Europe and various other jurisdictions aren’t experiencing a sudden
upsurge in “Anti-Semitism”. What they are experiencing is an upsurge in Judenhass.”
The
pages depicting the Holocaust or Shoah – the bleak barracks of
Auschwitz in their full, freezing horror, and the gaunt faces of their
skeletal occupants crammed onto stacks of hard, wooden racks – are
accompanied by a calm, considered explanation of why Sim believes that
every creative person should consider embarking on such a work,
particularly those who aren’t Jewish:
““Lest
we forget”… “Never again”… are fine and noble-sounding sentiments which
have attached themselves to the historical remembrance of what was done
to these innocent individuals and millions of others like them. But it
seems to me that the words are largely meaningless if (as has been the
case to now) in movies, in books, in plays and in documents of the
historical record they are expressions largely if not exclusively being
enunciated by Jews. If there is a chance of systemic Jew Hatred being
eliminated from our society, it can’t just be Jews who speak out against
it.”
Some things bear repeating, because some things do not bear being repeated.
He
also points out that but for “geographical happenstance” the comicbook
field “created, developed and built primarily by Jews, painstakingly,
one comicbook at a time” could have lost Joe Simon, Jack Kirby, Stan
Lee, Joe Shuster, Jerry Siegel, Will Eisner, Bob Kane, Max Gaines or
Sheldon Mayer.
That’s precisely what Joe Kubert set out to explore in Yossel,
published in 2003. Joe moved to America with his Jewish parents and
sister when he was only a couple of months old, despite them being
rebuffed earlier when his mother was pregnant. In Yossel,
Joe puts himself in the place of a boy who hadn’t left Poland before
its Nazi occupation. What follows is forced evacuation, incarceration,
starvation and a systematic deprivation of comforts, communication,
heating and clothes – a freezing endurance test without either hope or
respite – and then it gets worse.
Kubert was one of the select few sent early copies of Judenhass and who have lined up to praise it, including Jean Shuster Peavy (Joe Shuster’s sister) and Marv Wolfman. Neil Gaiman wrote: “Judenhass is an astonishing piece of work. Painful and real and unflinching. I don't remember the last comic I read that made me cry, but this did."
Indeed visitors to the Judenhass website should be warned, if only for parental guidance, that the animated
introduction with its haunting soundtrack and terrible, echoing cracks
of gunfire is as profoundly harrowing as the on-site preview.
The website also acts as a compendium to the comic, providing background
research, some shockingly Anti-Semitic screeds from unexpected sources,
and essays on the production process. In one of those Sim talks about
the effect his detailed portraiture had on himself:
"At least temporarily I was able to individualize the victims for myself, personally, to differentiate each one as much as possible back into the individual he or she had been before the catastrophe of the Shoah had overtaken him or her."
"My people did this. That is, all of these individual Jews, all of these individual human beings, none of them very old, most in the prime of life came to the state in which I was capturing their likenesses through the actions of the non-Jews like myself. To set myself the task of capturing likenesses and expressions meant that I couldn't look away or see the Shoah through distanced overview, impersonally. How could I? Each death had been experienced personally, each death had been individual, each death had ended in a final eloquent...and horrific... expression. The only thing to me more horrific than those final expressions was the all-too-human urge to look away."
"How dare I? How dare any of us?"
Stephen Holland is the co-founder (with Mark Simpson) of one the UK's leading comic stores - Page 45.
1 comment:
When I first read Judenhass and came to that page featuring all the comic book creators it made quite an impression. I think it was so effective because of the impact of the work of those men on my early life and their continued influence.
The largest impact the book made on me was when Dave Sim featured it on Cerebus TV and took questions from high school students and was faced with an anti-Israel question from one of the students. He teared up as he explained his opinion that Israel had a right to exist and a right to defend itself from those that would seek to destroy it. I never have and I never will understand the hatred of Jews and I am glad that I have Judenhass to help explain that position if I need to.
David Birdsong
Post a Comment