Here is an article from the New York Times (2009) about the revival of the Golem legend in Prague.
May 10, 2009
Hard Times Give New Life to Prague’s Golem
By DAN BILEFSKY
PRAGUE — They say the Golem, a Jewish giant with
glowing eyes and supernatural powers, is lurking once again in the attic of the
Old-New Synagogue here.
The Golem, according to Czech legend, was
fashioned from clay and brought to life by a rabbi to protect Prague’s
16th-century ghetto from persecution, and is said to be called forth in times
of crisis. True to form, he is once again experiencing a revival and, in this
commercial age, has spawned a one-monster industry.
There are Golem hotels; Golem door-making
companies; Golem clay figurines (made in China); a recent musical starring a
dancing Golem; and a Czech strongman called the Golem who bends iron bars with
his teeth. The Golem has also infiltrated Czech cuisine: the menu at the
non-kosher restaurant called the Golem features a “rabbi’s pocket of beef
tenderloin” and a $7 “crisis special” of roast pork and potatoes that would
surely have rattled the venerable Rabbi Judah Loew ben Bezalel, the Golem’s
supposed maker.
Even the first lady, Michelle Obama, paid her
respects, when she visited Rabbi Loew’s grave last month and, following Jewish
tradition, placed a prayer on a piece of paper and put it near his tombstone.
Eva Bergerova, a theater director who is staging
a play about the Golem, said it was no coincidence that this Central European
story was ubiquitous at a time of swine flu and
economic distress. “The Golem starts wandering the streets during times of
crises, when people are worried,” Ms. Bergerova said. “He is a projection of
society’s neuroses, a symbol of our fears and concerns. He is the ultimate
crisis monster.”
Rabbi Manis Barash, who oversees an institute
here devoted to Rabbi Loew’s work, said that “because of the financial crisis,
people were increasingly turning to spirituality for meaning.”
Others, like Jakub Roth, a derivatives trader
and a leader of the Jewish community, noted that the Golem had contemporary relevance because he
protected sacred values from imminent dangers. “In the past this was
anti-Semitism,” Mr. Roth said. “Today it is global recession, Islamic
fundamentalism and Russian aggression.”
The surge in popularity of the Golem also
anticipates the 400th anniversary in September of Rabbi Loew’s death in 1609,
at nearly 100. A Jewish mystic and philosopher who a leading scholar of the
Talmud and kabbalah and wrote at least 22 books, he was known widely as the
Maharal, a great sage.
Few here dispute that the Golem, who is often
depicted as either a menacing brown blob or an artificial humanoid, has become
a lucrative global brand. But it is also a profound irritation to Prague’s
Jewish leaders that Rabbi Loew’s legacy has been hijacked by a powerful dunce
whom the Talmud characterizes as a “fool.”
“I am frustrated by the legend of the Golem in
the same way I am frustrated that people buy Kafka souvenirs on every street in
Prague but don’t bother to read his books,” Rabbi Karel Sidon, the chief rabbi
of the Czech Republic,
lamented. Alluding to the recent rise of neo-Nazis in the Czech Republic and
elsewhere, however, he hastened to add, “We like the Golem because he protected
the Jews.”
Rabbi Barash emphasized that in the Talmud, the
Golem was considered a dumb klutz because he was literal-minded, could not
speak and had no “sechel,” or intellect. “If in school,” he said, “you didn’t
use your brains, the teacher would say, ‘Stop behaving like a golem.’ ”
According to one version of Prague’s Golem
legend, the city’s Jews, under the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, were being
attacked, falsely accused of using the blood of Christians to perform their
rituals. To protect the community, Rabbi Loew built the Golem out of clay from
the banks of the Vltava River.
He used his knowledge of kabbalah to make it
come alive, inscribing the Hebrew word emet, or truth, on the creature’s
forehead. The Golem, whom he called Josef and who was known as Yossele,
patrolled the ghetto; it is said he could make himself invisible and summon
spirits from the dead.
Eventually, the Golem is said to have gone on a
murderous rampage — out of unrequited love, some explain. Fearing that he could
fall into the wrong hands, Rabbi Loew smeared clay on the Golem’s forehead,
turning emet into met, the Hebrew word for death, and put him to rest in the
attic of the Old-New
Synagogue.
Though a quintessentially Jewish tale, the saga
of the Golem, popularized here in a 1950s fairy tale film, has long been
regarded as a Czech legend. Benjamin Kuras, a Czech playwright and the author
of the book “As Golems Go,” said the fighting figure of the Golem had appeal in
a nation traumatized by centuries of occupation and invasion.
“After living through the Austro-Hungarian
Empire, Nazism and decades of communism, the Czechs are drawn to a character
with supernatural powers that will help liberate them from oppression,” Mr.
Kuras said. “Many here don’t even realize he is a Jewish monster.”
Such is the pull of the Golem that Rabbi Sidon
said he received dozens of requests each year for visits to the Golem’s attic
lair — requests he politely declined. During World War II, it was rumored that
Nazi soldiers broke into the synagogue, and Rabbi Loew’s Golem ripped them
apart, limb by limb.
“We say the Golem is in the attic, up there,”
Rabbi Sidon said. “But I have never gone there. I say that if the Golem was put
there 400 years ago, then today he is dirt and dust and can’t do anything to
disturb anyone.”
Asked if the Golem was fact or fiction, Rabbi
Sidon shrugged and sighed. “It’s possible he is real,” the rabbi said. “I just
don’t know.” But he noted that there had been several cases of sage rabbis who
had supposedly created golems.
Rabbi Sidon recalled that in the late 1990s, an
elderly Jewish woman asked him where the Golem was. “I told her he was in the
attic,” Rabbi Sidon said. “ ‘Not that one, the real one,’ ” he said
the woman replied, insisting that she had been at the synagogue a year earlier
and had met Mr. Golem, a lanky figure with ruddy cheeks.
Recognizing the description, the rabbi said, he
confronted the synagogue’s shamash, or attendant, a man called Josef, who
shares the Golem’s first name. Josef eventually confessed that he had been
telling visitors he was the Golem’s great-grandson.
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