Thursday, July 9, 2026

Proud Zionist


Now that Zionism has become more a knee-jerk accusation than description, a visit to the Museum of Jewish Heritage:  A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in Lower Manhattan provided a useful lesson about what the term meant a century ago, when Israel was an aspiration, not a right-wing government that I abhor as much as our own. Realpolitik has transformed the dream into a nightmare.


Had the Garden of Stones been open, I would have been able to see the Statue of Liberty from the second floor as well as the Staten Island Ferry.  The museum is impressively--and symbolically--situated.  I'd meant to visit when artifacts from the Anne Frank house were exhibited last year, but missed the opportunity, perhaps because I'd already seen them in Amsterdam twenty-five years earlier.


Art of Freedom: The Life & Work of Arthur Szyk finally got me in the door for the first time even though the museum has been open for more than two decades. His name recognition may have faded, but his life as a proud Pole, Jew, Zionist and American remains exemplary. The British and Polish-in-Exile governments, recognizing his illustrative talent and the power of his political cartoons, dispatched him to North America 1939 as a propagandist against the Axis powers. 

"Bubbe" from Celebration of Life (1936)
"Schmoozing" from Celebration of Life (1936)
"Poland on a Platter" (1939)
Shortly after his arrival in New York City in late 1940, he pulled out the venomous stops. There's a LOT going on in this work, just 14" x 13," but the perfect size for reproduction on a magazine cover.  Can you find Mussolini, Goebbels, Göring and Tojo?

"Anti-Christ" (1942)
The museum has enlarged the detailed painting considerably--making the tiny skulls in Hitler's eyes more apparent--and provided a key helpful in spotlighting less obvious details. Szyk embedded the Latin phrase "vae victis" (which means "woe to the vanquished") in the dictator's slicked-back hair. The banner in German held above the skeleton's head at the top declares "Europe is ours today, tomorrow the whole world."  


There's nothing subtle about Szyk's caricatures which appeared in Esquire and Collier's magazines, often on the cover.  To its credit, the museum connects the dots between his racist and dehumanizing depictions of the Japanese and Germans to the interment of American citizens whose ancestors immigrated from those countries.  Sometimes, the ends do justify the means.

"December 7, 1941" (Esquire, 1942) 
This wartime public service advertisement from Young and Rubicam informs readers that "By means of a series of sly rumors and clever propaganda, the Nazis are attempting to pit class against class, race against race in America." It exhorts American companies to appoint "rumor wardens," something we need just as desperately in Trumpian America, where some people believe that Haitian immigrants dined on cats in Springfield, Ohio, fake news that no doubt made their subsequent loss of Temporary Protection status more palatable.  


"Detour on the Glory Road" (Esquire, 1942)
I'm really surprised I didn't see this stirring work reproduced in the Warsaw Rising Museum.   It's as if Szyk had illustrated Mila 18, a novel by Leon Uris published a decade after his death.  Uris did for the Jews in best-selling fiction what Szyk accomplished in art.

"The Repulsed Attack (Warsaw Ghetto)" (1943)
Szyk's work may remain better known in the United States than Poland.  When I searched the website for the Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews, I found only a single item in its collection, his illustrated edition from 1928 of the Statute of Kalisz, a decree that made Poland one of Europe's most welcoming places for Jews in the Middle Ages.  Szyk highlights his tribe's contributions to Polish life with this depiction of tradesmen and craftsmen.  His father worked as a textile factory director until a worker threw acid at his face during the Łódź insurrection,  permanently blinding him when Szyk was just 11 years old.  
 

In 1948, the year Szyk became an American citizen, he published The Holidays, looking back at his roots in Łódź.  The paintings feature the likenesses of his parents and other family members, the only time he ever incorporated a personal element into his work.  I recognized Purim because of the hamantaschen in the lower right-hand corner.  An orthodox Jewish printing company I once worked with for years delivered a batch to my office every spring.  Yum!


The museum's permanent collection documents Jewish life before, during and after the Holocaust.  Much of the material presented was familiar from previous visits to Jewish museums in Amsterdam, Berlin and Krakow, as well as numerous concentration camps.  But I was particularly struck by this 1921 photograph of young Zionists gathered around the grave of Theodor Herzl in a Vienna cemetery.  These vigorous young men look less like oppressors than idealists, a group in search of a land (which migh have been Uganda!) where they could thrive and observe their holidays without being treated like second-class citizens. They also don't seem like victims which is the unfortunate stereotype that I have come to associate with most early 20th century Jews as a direct result of "Never Forget."


In fact, eighteen-year-old Szyk had spent six months touring Palestine with other writers and artists to observe nascent Jewish settlement efforts when World War I began.  Forced to return to Poland, he was conscripted in the imperial Russian army which sought to invade Germany during the Battle of Łódź.  No doubt the idea of establishing a Jewish state became even more appealing as a result.  Is it any wonder that in the wake of the Holocaust the much older and wiser artist--whose mother and brother were killed by the Nazis--used his propagandistic skills to support the creation of Israel by any means necessary, including Biblical allusions and guns?

"The Modern Maccabees" (1942)
These virile young men--who gave me Tom of Finland vibes--personify rival Jewish militias that fought together in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War which resulted in the Nakba, a perspective with which it has taken me more than 70 years to become familiar, thanks largely due to New York City's last mayoral election. Haganah (center), formed in 1920 with funding from both Poland and the United Kingdom to defend Jewish settlers from attack by Arabs, initially wasn't as militant as Irgun and the Sternists but after World War II it, too, attacked the British occupiers of Palestine who had begun turning away Holocaust survivors and other Jews with nowhere else to go.  Once Israel finally became an independent country--with the support of the United Nations--these militias comprised the Israeli army, long respected throughout my lifetime for its sill and ferociousness.

"Irgun, Haganah, Sternists" (1947)
When Israel declared its independence on May 10, 1948, Szyk said it was the happiest day of his life.  He promptly set to work illuminating the document in Hebrew.


By then, he and his family had settled in New Canaan, Connecticut where he remained until his death three years later.  Illuminating the U.S. Declaration of Independence was one of his final projects although he also continued to produce work that reflected his unease with the social injustices of his adopted country.  The House Un-American Activities Committee eventually accused him of communism.  



Sunday, July 5, 2026

Red, White & Blue on Dartmouth Green

Desi and Della will likely be around for the nation's Tricentennial.  Imagine what their world will be like (or don't, if you're a half-empty glass kind of guy like I am).

"Hoarfrost with Rabbit" by Kiki Smith (2014), Hood Art Museum
We happened upon an Independence Day parade in Hanover, New Hampshire while checking out Dartmouth College where Victor, my former Pines housemate, is an alumnus.  

Watching the small-town parade made me feel a lot better about life in America than anything I read in the newspaper.  I felt the same way after driving to Seattle and back three summers ago.  Polarization is less apparent in person.

Wrapped samples of Red Kite Candy, tossed from this tiny Fiat, definitely elevated my blood sugar level, but in a really good way.  If the store hadn't been closed, I would have bought a box of melt-in-your-mouth caramels and I'm not usually a candy guy.

A fierce bull painted on a blue pick-up served as a reminder that they're not all like Ferdinand whom Thom and I had visited on the drive to Quechee.


Dartmouth's Hood Museum of Art commissioned this work for a nearby building's exterior. Artist Ellsworth Kelly says its architecture reminded him of symmetrical Renaissance arches. Alumnus and private equity investor Leon Black paid for it before he was besmirched by the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.

Dartmouth Panels (2012)
Victor's college experience must have been considerably different than mine, not only because the campus is somewhat rural and isolated.  Dartmouth has the Ivy League's smallest undergraduate enrollment and a reputation for conservatism.  Both of these buildings face the Green, a large town square where the paraders and locals celebrated the sweat-inducing holiday.

Dartmouth Hall
Brauner Library
Somehow, I can't imagine a petting zoo on the South Lawn.


Local firefighters displayed their trucks and equipment and gave away some red plastic hats.  Too bad Dagny was at sleep away camp for her first time.  Kids really do grow up so fast . . . 

Della always manages to find a way to provoke.  Nobody else was shouting out the British capital on their tees!

The Tricksters, a New England wedding band, really, REALLY rocked.  I never realized how much Shake It Off owes to Hey Ya!

Dartmouth is full of surprises, like this oddly tricked-out car.

We assembled for a Semiquincentennial photo op with the Founding Fathers and Abigail Adams, both a founding mother and wife if anyone's asking.

Occasional showers did not dampen Desi's enthusiasm for the pool later that afternoon.  He does love his binky.

Despite her raspberry, Della was enthusiastic about the new summer outfits Thom bought for the D-Kids.  Dagny's awaited hers in Boston.

 

I gave Desi one last spin prior to our departure Sunday morning.  Blind Moofy wanted to get in on the dizziness, too.



Friday, July 3, 2026

LieCENTENNiAL


“It is unpatriotic not to tell the truth whether about the president or anyone else,” said President Theodore Roosevelt in 1918.

“Broadly put, nationalism is about allegiance to one’s own kind; patriotism is allegiance to a creed,” said Jon Meacham, a presidential historian. “The Age of Trump — and that is what historians will have to call this — is a nationalistic one.”

“​His [Trump's] version of patriotism is rooted in his narcissism,” said Chad Williams, a historian and professor of African American and Black diaspora studies at Boston University. “It’s self-aggrandizing on the one hand, but it’s also deeply ahistorical, and I think this entire commemoration has been reflective of this.”  

“He’s completely engineered the weight and the power of the executive government to tell Americans how they should conceive of their past,”  said David W. Blight, a professor of American history at Yale University.  (New York Times, July 9)

Bullish on Ferdinand


The Story of Ferdinand, an iconic children's book by Munro Leaf, didn't enter my consciousness until adulthood when, attracted by the bright red cover, I bought it as a gift. But Robert Lawson's illustrations are so artful that I asked Thom if we could stop in Amherst to see the originals en route to Quechee for Independence Day.



The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art is celebrating the 90th anniversary of the book's publication with Under the Cork Tree: The Story of Ferdinand. Founded in 2002 by the man best known for writing and illustrating The Very Hungry Caterpillar, the museum also served as a cooling station and picnic site on a brutally hot day.


Nobody read to Thom as a child but he enjoyed the exhibit enough to purchase a sleeved copy of the book for a future grandniece or nephew.  Actually, Ferdinand reminds me a lot of Thom who always has insisted on going his own way, although he has never been a shade-seeker.

Nearly a century after the book's publication--which coincided with the Spanish Civil War--it can be a little hard to discern the intentions of the book's creators.  Does the presence of a vulture atop a tree marking Ferdinand's growth suggest he doesn't have long to live because his destiny is a ring where he likely will be gored to death?  Or does it symbolize the rise of fascism in Europe?  Neither Franco nor Hitler had any doubt:  they both banned the book.

Ferdinand leaves the head butting and ground pawing to other young bulls but he ends up in the ring anyway because of a roving band of matadors, his enormous size and a random bee sting.  Lawson illustrates the events almost cinematically in a sequence that could have been storyboarded by Alfred Hitchcock.  Text isn't even really necessary.

"Ferdinand knew that they wouldn't pick him and he didn't care."
Then, in tight close-up, a bee appears, positioned between his rump and swinging tail.

"He didn't look where he was sitting..."
Cut to Ferdinand's face as he experiences the initial shock of the sting with widened eyes and flared nostrils

"Well, if you were a bumble bee and a bull sat on you what would you do?"
. . .  before he jumps reflexively

"Ferdinand jumped up with a snort."
. . . attracting the attention of predatory matadors who mistake his actions for a fighting spirit and take him away to Madrid.   

"The five men saw him and they all shouted with joy."
But instead of charging a red flag in the ring, Ferdinand prefers sniffing the flowers protruding from the women's hats.  The matadors send him back to pasture.   While I embrace pacifism philosophically, the story can just as easily be taken at face value--in a world of random events, remaining true to yourself is a good thing--which explains why the charismatic bull became a 20th century commercial juggernaut with lots and lots of merch!


Pinning a tail on Ferdinand seems inadvisable considering his reaction to the bee sting.



Walt Disney broadened the book's appeal with a short animated film in which he voiced Ferdinand's mother in a fluting voice.  It won an Oscar in 1938.  You can watch Lawson's unique artistry sanded down into slapstick and stereotype on You Tube.  Disney, whom some accused of Nazi sympathies (he gave Leni Riefenstahl a tour of his studios), eliminated the vulture.  Just sayin'.

Production Sketch (1938)
Or maybe Uncle Walt feared political controversy would reduce sales of his "own game."


The illustrations are on loan from the Morgan Library, where Mary Flager Cary donated them. She's the granddaughter of the man responsible for the development of south Florida and the settlement of Palm Beach in particular.


We checked out the other galleries, too, including another terrific exhibit, Soul, Sound & Voice: The Art of Jerry Pinkney. His work embraces both the imagined

"The Grasshopper and the Ants" (2015)
. . . and the seldom-seen realistic.

"The Sunday Outing"  (1994)
Carle himself drew this cat

 
and painted the bright murals that decorate the lobby.

(detail)