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Jüdischer Kulturbund

Jüdischer Kulturbund, or (with the definite article) Der Jüdische Kulturbund, was a cultural federation of German Jews established in 1933. It hired over 1,300 men and 700 women artists, musicians, and actors fired from German institutions. According to Jonathan C. Friedman, it grew to approximately 70,000 members,[1] while Saul Friedländer tallies its roster as high as 180,000.[2]

History edit

1933–1937 edit

 
The Kulturbund Deutscher Juden orchestra with conductor Kurt Singer rehearsing for a performance of Handel's Judas Maccabaeus in May 1934

Founded by Kurt Singer, the organization was originally named Kulturbund Deutscher Juden (Cultural Federation of German Jews) in 1933, but in April 1935 the Nazi authorities – forcing the organization to delete the term German from the name – imposed a change of the name into Jüdischer Kulturbund (Jewish Cultural Federation).[3] Also known as the Kubu, the Kulturbund was an institution created by unemployed Jewish performers with the consent of the Nazis for the Jewish population. The Kulturbund was one of the most famous examples of Jewish creativity in response to cultural exclusion. It provided a semblance of leisure for its 70,000 members in forty-nine different locals.[4]

After the exclusion of Jewish Germans and gentile Germans of Jewish descent from participating in almost all organizations and public events, the Kulturbund Deutscher Juden tried to provide some compensation, as tried Israelitisches Familienblatt.

In June 1933, Kurt Singer sent a detailed proposal for the Kulturbund to police and various high-ranking officials within the Ministry of Propaganda. The original proposal stated that the organization would employ only Jewish artists and staff, consist of one theatre troupe and one opera ensemble of approximately 15 members each, a choir of 12 singers, and a chamber orchestra of 25 musicians. The proposal also detailed Singer's repertoire plan, costs, organizational structure, advertising plan, and technical and personnel issues. Hans Hinkel, the newly appointed State Commissioner in the Prussian Ministry of Culture at the time, initially rejected the idea for the organization. Singer engaged in persistent negotiations with Hinkel, culminating in a face-to-face meeting in which Hinkel agreed to approve the organization under the conditions that the Kulturbund programming engaged only Jews and occurred in closed quarters.[5]

The Kulturbund became the center of a debate within Berlin's Jewish community when Singer began to advertise the organization to the public. Zionist journalists wrote about the importance of the theatre to include Jewish nationalist themes in its repertoire and serve as a political outlet for the Jewish population. However, Singer strongly believed that the Kulturbund should remain above politics and focus on art creation and performance. The artists of the Kulturbund grew up as Germans and viewed the organization as a place of work and economic advantage rather than a place to further their Jewishness. In its early development, the Kulturbund battled with choosing repertoire, facing censorship from the Nazi government as well as differing ideological opinions within the local Jewish community.[5]

From 1933 to 1937, the Kulturbund put on theatrical performances, concerts, exhibitions, operas and lectures all over Germany, performed by Jewish entertainers, artists, writers, and scientists who were no longer permitted by the Nazi Party regime to appear before non-Jewish audiences. Thus, Jewish performers could again earn their livelihood, however scarce. The performances took place at authorized segregated venues with "Jewish only" attendance, meaning Jewish Germans and gentile Germans of Jewish descent.

1938–1941 edit

 
Jüdischer Kulturbund - Ilse Liebenthal's member ID card (1938-9)

Following the Kristallnacht pogroms on November 9/10, 1938, the Kulturbund was allowed to continue its activities; however, the discrimination and persecution of Jews had driven many into impoverishment. The number of venues and of ensemble members was reduced.

On December 16 Hans Hinkel, State commissioner for Prussian theatre affairs including the Kulturbund, in Goebbels' Reich's Propaganda Ministry, declared in front of Dr. Werner Levie (1903–1945), a Dutchman and therefore one of the few available members – not in hiding or arrested – of Kulturbund's executive board, that until the end of December all the still existing 76 Jewish German publishing companies were to be shut down or sold to so-called Aryan owners. The few publications, which would still be permitted to appear, were to be directed by a publishing department to be formed within Kulturbund.[6] In January 1939 the Kulturbund's publishing department opened in the offices formerly used by the Zionist Jüdische Rundschau, which had been shut down right after the Pogrom, with its former editor, Erich Liepmann, being the manager of the publishing department. The Kulturbund managed to save a great deal of the book stocks of the to-be-ceased publishing houses from being pulped. Levie reached the concession, that Jewish publishers obliged to liquidate their companies, might export their book stocks on their own until April 1939 if the respective purchasers would pay in foreign exchange to the Reichsbank. However, the publishers would be paid in inconvertible Reichsmarks only.[7]

The Kulturbund's publishing department bought the remaining book stocks from their old proprietors at a discount of 80% to 95% of the original price and would only pay, once proceeds from sales abroad or to German or Austrian Jews and gentiles of Jewish descent would materialise. Also Austria, annexed by Germany in March 1938, was covered by the Kulturbund's publishing department.[8]

The Propaganda Ministry only allowed the Kulturbund to continue to exist, if it would change its statutes to the effect that the minister (Goebbels) may – at any time – interfere in affairs of the executive board, even dissolve the Kulturbund and dispose of its assets. The changed statutes came into effect on 4 March 1939.

The Kulturbund's executive secretary Levie remigrated to the Netherlands at the end of August 1939. He was first succeeded by Johanna Marcus, who soon also emigrated and then by Willy Pless. The Kulturbund's performing activities nonetheless were embraced by the Jewish population who previously were barred from all cultural and entertainment events.

On September 11, 1941, the Gestapo ordered the closure of the Kulturbund, but excepted its publishing department, which was to be taken over by the Reichsvereinigung der Juden in Deutschland.[9]

Fields of activity edit

Publishing edit

The Kulturbund's publishing department sold books from its stock to Jewish Germans and Austrians and thus created a surplus, which partly covered losses in the performing department. A considerable sum was transferred to the Central Office for Jewish Emigration, to pay emigration fees levied on lucky receivers of foreign visas, who, however, were too poor to pay them.

Music edit

The conductor Joseph Rosenstock led the opera department. The first opera was The Marriage of Figaro, 14 November 1933.[10]

Theater edit

The inaugural performance was of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's Nathan the Wise on 1 October 1933 at the Berliner Theater on Charlottenstraße. Director Karl Loewenberg ends the play differently than Lessing's explicit stage directions, which direct the Jewish Nathan (played by actor Kurt Katsch), the Muslim Sultan Saladin, and the Christian Templar (played by Ernest Lenart) to embrace and exit festively together. Instead, Loewenberg leaves Nathan alone and isolated on the stage, with a pulpit and menorah visible.[11][12][13]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Jonathan C. Friedman The Routledge History of the Holocaust 2011 Page 92
  2. ^ Friedländer, Saul (2009). Nazi Germany and The Jews. Vol. 1. HarperCollins. p. 28. ISBN 9780061979859.
  3. ^ Cf. Ingrid Schmidt, "Kulturbund Deutscher Juden – Jüdischer Kulturbund Berlin: Ein Namensstreit?", In: Geschlossene Vorstellung: Der Jüdische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933–1941, Akademie der Künste (ed.), Berlin: Edition Hentrich, 1992, pp. 223–230, here p. 229.
  4. ^ Marion A. Kaplan, Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany, Oxford University Press, 1998, p.46
  5. ^ a b Rovit, Rebecca (2012). The Jewish Kulturbund Theater Company in Nazi Berlin. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 978-1-60938-124-0. OCLC 812831607.
  6. ^ Werner Levie, "Arbeitsbericht des Jüdischen Kulturbundes in Deutschland e.V. vom 1.10.1938 – 30.6.1939", activity report rendered on 12 July 1939, Berlin, published in: Geschlossene Vorstellung: Der Jüdische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933–1941, Akademie der Künste (ed.), Berlin: Edition Hentrich, 1992, pp. 321–340, here pp. 323seq.
  7. ^ Only few publishers succeeded to export their books, because the foreign market for German books was narrow. Impoverished German emigrants couldn't buy but eventually flooded the western markets by even selling their last belongings. Erich Liepmann, the executive manager of the publishing department emigrated to Palestine in summer 1939. There Liepmann became Kulturbund's sales agent for books. The Palestinian Schocken publishing house could buy 90% of the book stock, which earlier its Berlin branch Schocken Verlag had to sell to the Kulturbund. Few other publishers, like Joseph Schlesinger from Vienna, did the same by their foreign subsidiaries in Budapest and Amsterdam.
  8. ^ Henryk M. Broder and Eike Geisel, Premiere und Pogrom: der Jüdische Kulturbund 1933–1941 Berlin: Wolf Jobst Siedler Verlag 1992
  9. ^ Bernd Braun, "Bücher im Schlussverkauf: Die Verlagsabteilung des Jüdischen Kulturbunds", In: Geschlossene Vorstellung: Der Jüdische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933–1941, Akademie der Künste (ed.), Berlin: Edition Hentrich, 1992, pp. 155–168, here p. 166.
  10. ^ Lily E. Hirsch A Jewish Orchestra in Nazi Germany – Musical Politics and the Berlin Jewish Culture League (2010) pp. 42, 164
  11. ^ Rovit, Rebecca (2012). The Jewish Kulturbund Theatre Company in Nazi Berlin. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 9781609381240.
  12. ^ Bonnell, Andrew G. Bonnell (2008). Shylock in Germany: Antisemitism and the German Theatre from The Enlightenment to the Nazis. Tauris Academic Studies.
  13. ^ Zortman, Bruce H. (May 1972). "Theatre in Isolation: The "Jüdischer Kulturbund" of Nazi Germany". Educational Theatre Journal. 24 (2). The Johns Hopkins University Press: 159–168. doi:10.2307/3205805. JSTOR 3205805.

External links edit

  Media related to Kulturbund Deutscher Juden at Wikimedia Commons

jüdischer, kulturbund, with, definite, article, jüdische, kulturbund, cultural, federation, german, jews, established, 1933, hired, over, women, artists, musicians, actors, fired, from, german, institutions, according, jonathan, friedman, grew, approximately, . Judischer Kulturbund or with the definite article Der Judische Kulturbund was a cultural federation of German Jews established in 1933 It hired over 1 300 men and 700 women artists musicians and actors fired from German institutions According to Jonathan C Friedman it grew to approximately 70 000 members 1 while Saul Friedlander tallies its roster as high as 180 000 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 1933 1937 1 2 1938 1941 2 Fields of activity 2 1 Publishing 2 2 Music 2 3 Theater 3 Notes 4 External linksHistory edit1933 1937 edit nbsp The Kulturbund Deutscher Juden orchestra with conductor Kurt Singer rehearsing for a performance of Handel s Judas Maccabaeus in May 1934Founded by Kurt Singer the organization was originally named Kulturbund Deutscher Juden Cultural Federation of German Jews in 1933 but in April 1935 the Nazi authorities forcing the organization to delete the term German from the name imposed a change of the name into Judischer Kulturbund Jewish Cultural Federation 3 Also known as the Kubu the Kulturbund was an institution created by unemployed Jewish performers with the consent of the Nazis for the Jewish population The Kulturbund was one of the most famous examples of Jewish creativity in response to cultural exclusion It provided a semblance of leisure for its 70 000 members in forty nine different locals 4 After the exclusion of Jewish Germans and gentile Germans of Jewish descent from participating in almost all organizations and public events the Kulturbund Deutscher Juden tried to provide some compensation as tried Israelitisches Familienblatt In June 1933 Kurt Singer sent a detailed proposal for the Kulturbund to police and various high ranking officials within the Ministry of Propaganda The original proposal stated that the organization would employ only Jewish artists and staff consist of one theatre troupe and one opera ensemble of approximately 15 members each a choir of 12 singers and a chamber orchestra of 25 musicians The proposal also detailed Singer s repertoire plan costs organizational structure advertising plan and technical and personnel issues Hans Hinkel the newly appointed State Commissioner in the Prussian Ministry of Culture at the time initially rejected the idea for the organization Singer engaged in persistent negotiations with Hinkel culminating in a face to face meeting in which Hinkel agreed to approve the organization under the conditions that the Kulturbund programming engaged only Jews and occurred in closed quarters 5 The Kulturbund became the center of a debate within Berlin s Jewish community when Singer began to advertise the organization to the public Zionist journalists wrote about the importance of the theatre to include Jewish nationalist themes in its repertoire and serve as a political outlet for the Jewish population However Singer strongly believed that the Kulturbund should remain above politics and focus on art creation and performance The artists of the Kulturbund grew up as Germans and viewed the organization as a place of work and economic advantage rather than a place to further their Jewishness In its early development the Kulturbund battled with choosing repertoire facing censorship from the Nazi government as well as differing ideological opinions within the local Jewish community 5 From 1933 to 1937 the Kulturbund put on theatrical performances concerts exhibitions operas and lectures all over Germany performed by Jewish entertainers artists writers and scientists who were no longer permitted by the Nazi Party regime to appear before non Jewish audiences Thus Jewish performers could again earn their livelihood however scarce The performances took place at authorized segregated venues with Jewish only attendance meaning Jewish Germans and gentile Germans of Jewish descent 1938 1941 edit nbsp Judischer Kulturbund Ilse Liebenthal s member ID card 1938 9 Following the Kristallnacht pogroms on November 9 10 1938 the Kulturbund was allowed to continue its activities however the discrimination and persecution of Jews had driven many into impoverishment The number of venues and of ensemble members was reduced On December 16 Hans Hinkel State commissioner for Prussian theatre affairs including the Kulturbund in Goebbels Reich s Propaganda Ministry declared in front of Dr Werner Levie 1903 1945 a Dutchman and therefore one of the few available members not in hiding or arrested of Kulturbund s executive board that until the end of December all the still existing 76 Jewish German publishing companies were to be shut down or sold to so called Aryan owners The few publications which would still be permitted to appear were to be directed by a publishing department to be formed within Kulturbund 6 In January 1939 the Kulturbund s publishing department opened in the offices formerly used by the Zionist Judische Rundschau which had been shut down right after the Pogrom with its former editor Erich Liepmann being the manager of the publishing department The Kulturbund managed to save a great deal of the book stocks of the to be ceased publishing houses from being pulped Levie reached the concession that Jewish publishers obliged to liquidate their companies might export their book stocks on their own until April 1939 if the respective purchasers would pay in foreign exchange to the Reichsbank However the publishers would be paid in inconvertible Reichsmarks only 7 The Kulturbund s publishing department bought the remaining book stocks from their old proprietors at a discount of 80 to 95 of the original price and would only pay once proceeds from sales abroad or to German or Austrian Jews and gentiles of Jewish descent would materialise Also Austria annexed by Germany in March 1938 was covered by the Kulturbund s publishing department 8 The Propaganda Ministry only allowed the Kulturbund to continue to exist if it would change its statutes to the effect that the minister Goebbels may at any time interfere in affairs of the executive board even dissolve the Kulturbund and dispose of its assets The changed statutes came into effect on 4 March 1939 The Kulturbund s executive secretary Levie remigrated to the Netherlands at the end of August 1939 He was first succeeded by Johanna Marcus who soon also emigrated and then by Willy Pless The Kulturbund s performing activities nonetheless were embraced by the Jewish population who previously were barred from all cultural and entertainment events On September 11 1941 the Gestapo ordered the closure of the Kulturbund but excepted its publishing department which was to be taken over by the Reichsvereinigung der Juden in Deutschland 9 Fields of activity editPublishing edit The Kulturbund s publishing department sold books from its stock to Jewish Germans and Austrians and thus created a surplus which partly covered losses in the performing department A considerable sum was transferred to the Central Office for Jewish Emigration to pay emigration fees levied on lucky receivers of foreign visas who however were too poor to pay them Music edit The conductor Joseph Rosenstock led the opera department The first opera was The Marriage of Figaro 14 November 1933 10 Theater edit The inaugural performance was of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing s Nathan the Wise on 1 October 1933 at the Berliner Theater on Charlottenstrasse Director Karl Loewenberg ends the play differently than Lessing s explicit stage directions which direct the Jewish Nathan played by actor Kurt Katsch the Muslim Sultan Saladin and the Christian Templar played by Ernest Lenart to embrace and exit festively together Instead Loewenberg leaves Nathan alone and isolated on the stage with a pulpit and menorah visible 11 12 13 Notes edit Jonathan C Friedman The Routledge History of the Holocaust 2011 Page 92 Friedlander Saul 2009 Nazi Germany and The Jews Vol 1 HarperCollins p 28 ISBN 9780061979859 Cf Ingrid Schmidt Kulturbund Deutscher Juden Judischer Kulturbund Berlin Ein Namensstreit In Geschlossene Vorstellung Der Judische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933 1941 Akademie der Kunste ed Berlin Edition Hentrich 1992 pp 223 230 here p 229 Marion A Kaplan Between Dignity and Despair Jewish Life in Nazi Germany Oxford University Press 1998 p 46 a b Rovit Rebecca 2012 The Jewish Kulturbund Theater Company in Nazi Berlin University of Iowa Press ISBN 978 1 60938 124 0 OCLC 812831607 Werner Levie Arbeitsbericht des Judischen Kulturbundes in Deutschland e V vom 1 10 1938 30 6 1939 activity report rendered on 12 July 1939 Berlin published in Geschlossene Vorstellung Der Judische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933 1941 Akademie der Kunste ed Berlin Edition Hentrich 1992 pp 321 340 here pp 323seq Only few publishers succeeded to export their books because the foreign market for German books was narrow Impoverished German emigrants couldn t buy but eventually flooded the western markets by even selling their last belongings Erich Liepmann the executive manager of the publishing department emigrated to Palestine in summer 1939 There Liepmann became Kulturbund s sales agent for books The Palestinian Schocken publishing house could buy 90 of the book stock which earlier its Berlin branch Schocken Verlag had to sell to the Kulturbund Few other publishers like Joseph Schlesinger from Vienna did the same by their foreign subsidiaries in Budapest and Amsterdam Henryk M Broder and Eike Geisel Premiere und Pogrom der Judische Kulturbund 1933 1941 Berlin Wolf Jobst Siedler Verlag 1992 Bernd Braun Bucher im Schlussverkauf Die Verlagsabteilung des Judischen Kulturbunds In Geschlossene Vorstellung Der Judische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933 1941 Akademie der Kunste ed Berlin Edition Hentrich 1992 pp 155 168 here p 166 Lily E Hirsch A Jewish Orchestra in Nazi Germany Musical Politics and the Berlin Jewish Culture League 2010 pp 42 164 Rovit Rebecca 2012 The Jewish Kulturbund Theatre Company in Nazi Berlin University of Iowa Press ISBN 9781609381240 Bonnell Andrew G Bonnell 2008 Shylock in Germany Antisemitism and the German Theatre from The Enlightenment to the Nazis Tauris Academic Studies Zortman Bruce H May 1972 Theatre in Isolation The Judischer Kulturbund of Nazi Germany Educational Theatre Journal 24 2 The Johns Hopkins University Press 159 168 doi 10 2307 3205805 JSTOR 3205805 External links edit nbsp Media related to Kulturbund Deutscher Juden at Wikimedia Commons Programm des Kulturbunds deutscher Juden MF 1349 Digitized Library Periodical at the Leo Baeck Institute New YorkAlmanach des Kulturbunds deutscher Juden MF 1537 Digitized Library Periodical at the Leo Baeck Institute New YorkKulturbundbuhne des Kulturbunds deutscher Juden B1080 Digitized Library Periodical at the Leo Baeck Institute New YorkJudischer Kulturbund Leipzig Monatsblatter MF B1088 Digitized Library Periodical at the Leo Baeck Institute New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judischer Kulturbund amp oldid 1212976770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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