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BOTCHKI
– DAVID
ZAGIER

BOTCHKI
David Zagier
Hardback, February 2000
£17.99, 248pp 1 870015 73 8

“
The one un-Jewish feature about me is the light grey colour of my eyes, but
whether I got this from a twelfth-century crusader, a fourteenth-century
Black Death rioter, or a seventeenth-century Cossack, no one can tell. So
numerous were the offspring of ravished Jewish women that the rabbis in
their wisdom long ago ruled that every child of a Jewish mother is a Jew.
”
These are the opening words of this memoir of shtetl life. Written with
the humour and clear-sightedness of one who loved the shtetl, but who worked
hard to escape it, this book records the rhythms and texture of everyday
life from the early years of the century to 1927.
Life was ruled by religion and the Jewish calendar. The Bible and its
injunctions were their living reality; each commandment was obeyed and
Sabbath observance was so sacred that rabbinic dispensation had to be
obtained before fleeing from the Cossacks on this holy day.
Dovid Zhager, as the author was known in this Yiddish-speaking part of the
world, glories in the details of growing up, he explores every irony, every
twist of fate, every historical fact, as history rushed past this shtetl,
sometimes affecting it, sometimes just passing by. Above all, this memoir is
about his growing rebellion against God who, on the one hand delineates the
horizons of his life and gives meaning to it, and on the other allows so
much suffering, and to such God-fearing people.
Two things emerge most clearly: firstly, the richness of such a devout life
which meant that the life of the spirit took precedence over the grinding
poverty that co-existed with it, and secondly, the shtetl’s lack of
preparedness for anything other than religion — least of all, for the fate
that was later to befall it.
First drafted before the Second World War, completed fifty years later and
now published for the first time, Botchki is a testament to a
vanished world.
‘Botchki is an unusually sensitive, lively and honest account of
life in a pre-war Polish shtetl. It is written with an unsentimental
intelligence and considerable narrative flair; and its affectionate but
candid picture of an Orthodox Jewish milieu illuminates the complexities of
a world which we tend to reduce to quaintness or exoticism.
Eva Hoffman, Author of Lost in Translation, Exit
into History and Shtetl
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