REVIEWS JEWS AND THE SCIENCE FICTION PROBLEM

WASKOW, ARTHUR

REVIEWS JEWS AND THE SCIENCE FICTION PROBLEM ARTHUR WASKOW THE DESTRUCTION OF THE TEMPLE, a novel by Barry N. Malzberg. New York: Pocket Books, 1974. $.95. WANDERING STARS: AN...

...I want to suggest some themes that might provide the basis for some authentically Jewish science fiction: What will be the impact of the full involvement of women in Jewish religious life upon theology, practice, family, and community...
...It is all left unclear...
...Blackout...
...The world, in other words, has the capacity for change, moving both toward good and toward evil, as in the legend that the Messiah is born on Tisha B'Av...
...I Will Be What I Will B e ." Most of the " J e w i s h science fict i o n " in the Dann anthology, to the contrary, makes the statement that the more things change, the more Jews remain the same...
...Maybe, and sardonically, one might choose to see this as a major change from the present, for now identification with Israel is the only universal mitzvah, and no form of religious life, nor even all the forms put together, commands the involvement of most Jews...
...REVIEWS JEWS AND THE SCIENCE FICTION PROBLEM ARTHUR WASKOW THE DESTRUCTION OF THE TEMPLE, a novel by Barry N. Malzberg...
...But if we turn to the new stories, which are, presumably, the reason the book was put together (and the reason it was called "science fiction"), there is more to learn from than to be stirred by...
...It is also significant that for all these writers the Diaspora remains more permanent than the State of Israel...
...In short, what would the dialectic between Jewish roots and one or another really new world create...
...A pity it is not in Wandering Stars...
...There are tales that search the soul beyond all change...
...What this shows is that now, in 5735, this issue of Who is a J ew is uppermost in the minds of these allegedly sensitive social antennae, the science fiction writers...
...That is Hugh Nissenson's "Forcing the E n d , " one of the tales in his In the Reign of Peace...
...William Tenn makes the " n e w " into the easy old, turning Tevye the Milchiger into Milchik the Venus TV-man to tell the story " O n Venus, Have We Got a R a b b i . " The story is funny, and its e c h o e s of Sholom Aleichem are pleasant enough, but there is little else...
...candidate, and his project is a fusion of drama with experimental history—a kind of controlled experiment intended to understand the assassins, the spectator society, and, most of all, the victim...
...The right question, certainly...
...Two in particular, more fantasy than science fiction, are already wellknown: I. B. Singer's "Jachid and Jachidah" and Bernard Malamud's " T h e J e w b i r d . " If you can't locate them some other way, they are probably worth the price of the book...
...But this time he is murdered by right-wing Israel nationalists...
...But the book's very ambiguity and its underlying terror and compulsion to relive a previous terror to some deep purpose strike a Jewish chord, even though the author never elevates that Jewishness to a conscious level...
...Barry Malzberg's novel is a much eerier story than any of those in Dann's anthology...
...Or failed...
...But we are taught only that nothing changes...
...Shudder...
...What would be the impact on Judaism of the achievement by secular means of such Messianic promises as swords-into-plowshares...
...Some of the Kabbalists held that the last possible date to which the Holy One would wait before send-' ing the Messiah—even if we had done nothing to change the world and merit his earlier arrival—is the year 6000 of the creation of the world, the Great Shabbas when the Seventh Day begins, fulfilling the verse from the Psalms: " t o You a thousand years are as a d a y . ' ' But not one of these writers expects the Messiah in the next 265 years—nor even in a thousand...
...From the real Tevye you get a sense of the real agony of the shtetl as it faces the breakup of its whole environment, and of itself...
...Milchik on Venus you get a funny Halachic question about whether creatures called Bulbas who look like walking potatoes can be Jews—and, of course, a funny Halachic answer...
...Interspersed with the director's efforts to make his cast perform the play correctly are flashbacks into the minds of Kennedy, King, Malcolm X and George Lincoln Rockwell just before they are killed: literally, j u s t before the moment of death...
...while the more Jews change, the more things remain the same...
...The " d i r e c t o r " of the play is a Ph.D...
...It is, these writers seem to be saying, the myriad forms of religious Judaism that carry the Jewish people forward...
...That " s o m e t h i n g , " I think, is the sense that history matters, that the world changes, that there can b e cataclysm within the human soul...
...Not one...
...Yet something about Malzberg's novel strikes me as more quintessentially Jewish than all but a few of the stories in the Dann anthology...
...In some stories, in fact, Israel has been explicitly destroyed (by Aliens, not by Arabs), resulting in the Third Exile...
...They regard the religious tradition as stuck at Now, or even at a century ago...
...It poses a latter-day Yochanan ben Zakkai sneaking his way out of a Jerusalem that is equipped with nuclear missiles and is surrounded by Soviet troops—sneaking his way off to Yavneh to start the rabbinical academy again...
...it is also at the heart of things...
...Certainly great Jewish science fiction (even great Prophecy, with the Lord's cooperation) could be written about it...
...If the State of Israel were destroyed but the People of Israel survived, what new theologies, outlooks, holy days, forms of communal life, would emerge...
...Not a single story takes place in an Israel of the future, and in no story is Israel even important...
...But what really bothers me is what is missing...
...Would the rabbinate become vestigial as the priesthood did...
...Another note about these antennaeofthe-present: all of them imagine that J e w i s h n e s s will be defined around its religious component...
...T h e destruction of the t e m p l e " turns out to be a pun, as each of these murdered men was shot through the head...
...The Jewish sense of change is not simply hopeful or fearful, but rather dialectical...
...One of these books proclaims itself as such, coming on Jewishly throughout...
...What kind of collection of twelve Jews do we have here anyway...
...6.95 What is Jewish science fiction...
...Moreover, the process of decision is also " r e l i g i o u s " rather than ethnic or nationalist, because in most of the stories the decision is made more or less according to Halachah...
...He hints that it is these murders, or at least the Kennedy murder, that led to the world of barbed-wire surrounding the cast...
...WANDERING STARS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF JEWISH FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, edited by Jack Dann...
...Perhaps at some unconscious level we are being told that Jewish renewal must come from a return to Jewish roots, but that question could be raised (and has been) very explicitly in contemporary Jewish writing...
...Robert Silverberg, in " T h e Dybbuk of Mazel Tov I V , " shows us a mass conversion of the six-limbed, green-furred Kunivaru...
...If this be the message of Jewish science fiction—that Torah and the galaxy-wide Jewish people will outlive and outweigh the particular form that Jewish life has taken in Israel and in the suburbs of America—it would be one of the great themes of the Jewish imagination...
...the question "Who is a J e w ? " which has haunted Jews for years will still be the central question a thousand years hence...
...He gives you nightmares because he enters so fully into the consciousness of the dead, making the reader, not just the characters, experience Tisha B'Av...
...Our own tragedy lies in the split of consciousness that permits a book of explicitly Jewish science fiction to bubble up to triviality, while keeping Malzberg's Jewishness well-hidden, even as he plunges deep to the roots of his—and our—n ' s h a m a h...
...This idea is strongest in the stories where you would least expect to find it—those that reach explicitly into the future...
...I have read only one story anywhere that deals well with such questions and does it within the forms of fiction so that it creates live people, and shivers the soul in the process...
...New York: Harper and Row, 1974...
...Their tone makes clear that they have written about the religious tradition because it is a richer source of humor than, say, the native Israelis...
...Somebody, about fifty years from now, is trying to stage a mass reenactment of the Kennedy assassination in Dallas...
...For example, what would Jewry look like if the Song of Songs dominated Passover the way the Haggadah does now (or used to...
...he treats the events of the mid-1960's as though they were the destruction of our Temple, the shattering of America's world-view, to be compulsively relived like Tisha B'Av...
...The question is central to several other stories in this collection...
...Malzberg's epigraph reminds us that God sent Jonah to prophesy against Nineveh, "that great c i t y , " in order to save its "six-score thousand persons that cannot discern between their right and left hand—and also much c a t t l e . " Perhaps he hopes that his story can help bring America to repentance...
...From Mr...
...This may be useful sociology about 5735, but it tells us little about 5835 or 6735 or, for that matter, about the deep recesses of the soul...
...Oh well...
...in all of these " W h o is a J e w " stories, sheer ethnicity loses out and the creature in question is accepted because he/she/it is a religiously observant Jew...
...that, finally, the Temple can be destroyed...
...What would happen to world Jewry if it took on the task of rising against the "arrogant e m p i r e s " as the Zealots did against Rome—and succeeded...
...Carol Carr tells how a Martian who looks like a cauliflower and performs menopausal rites in Kopchopee tradition can also be a rabbi...
...Would Judaism finally disintegrate, or move to a new spiritual level...
...But the reach of these writers is much lower...
...The cast is comprised of the inhabitants of great American cities which seem to have been walled off into huge concentration camps...
...The other book gives no indication of Jewish concern aside from its title and its epigraph—a quotation from the final passage of the Book of Jonah...
...And Harlan Ellison struggles with the question of whether an intelligent butterfly can be counted in the minyan...
...But Malzberg has in mind more than that...
...In the final analysis, these efforts at science fiction are really an exercise in nostalgia for the shtetl...

Vol. 1 • May 1975 • No. 1


 
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