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BUBER
– PAMELA
VERMES

BUBER
Pamela Vermes
Hardback, 1988
£10.95, 132pp, 1 870015 08 8

Paperback, 1988
£5.95, 132pp, 1 870015 07 X

On 13 July 1965 more than 2,000 people crammed into the memorial service for
Martin Buber.Yet, during his lifetime, some had said his work was esoteric,
impossible for most people to understand, and he was branded a dubious
interpreter of Jewish values.
Who was he then, this gifted man whose studies ranged from philosophy to
education, to psychology, to politics, to biblical studies and further? He
denied that he was a philosopher or theologian. He refused to accept the
feasibility of union with God
–
the declared
aim of the mystic. His role was that of a guide rather than an instructor.
‘I demonstrate reality,’ he insisted. ‘I have no doctrine. I conduct a
conversation.’ He found it intolerable that religion should be a thing
apart, a sacred speciality, and called for the recognition of divine
Presence in everyday life. From the Bible and from Hasidism, Buber, an
existential interpreter, drew and reformulated truths which Jews and
non-Jews alike recognize as necessary to the development and wholeness of
the individual.
That he was a Zionist there is no doubt though he belonged to a minority
which sought a compromise with the Palestinian Arabs. He abhorred bloodshed
and sought a peaceful co-existence between the two peoples.
Pamela
Vermes is the author of
Buber on God and the Perfect Man
(Scholars Press, 1980) and the literary editor of the Journal
of
Jewish Studies.
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