WIZO REVIEW SPRING-SUMMER 334 May, 2014 | Page 14

WR Interview Meeting Germany’s Jews In an in-depth interview, WIZO Germany President Diana Schnabel discusses the emerging Jewish community in Germany – the fastest growing in the world – and how she’s keeping WIZO’s finger on its pulse Zohar Friedman “Today, my children say they are German Jews,” explains Diana Schnabel, President of WIZO Germany, “whereas I used to say I am a Jew living in Germany.” Diana is describing the changing identity of Jews in Germany – or German Jews – a small but significant distinction that touches at the very heart of the self-identification issue facing the community. Today, amid a host of changes – a considerable influx of post-Soviet Jews, a favourable economic climate, and the emerging infrastructure for Jewish life including schools, synagogues and communal organisations – the Jewish community does not merely exist in Germany, it is truly thriving and growing. As the child of Polish Holocaust survivors, a German citizen and a passionate but critical Zionist, there is no better person to acquaint us with this community-in-transition, its burgeoning identity and the role WIZO does – and can – play in this revival of Jewish life. A post-war childhood “Growing up as a Jew in Germany was something special,” Diana Schnabel says of her childhood – which although special, was not at all simple. Before moving to Germany as a toddler, Diana lived briefly in both Poland – the country of her birth – and Israel, where her family moved in 1956, just at the outbreak of the Suez Crisis. By 1958, the young family moved to Germany after Diana’s father accepted a compelling job offer. But Israel always remained in the family’s heart. Her parents were deeply haunted by the knowledge that “had Israel existed, their lives would have been different.”The home was strongly Zionist, with Diana and her brother participating in the local Zionist youth movements. They were also instilled with strong Jewish values, such as tzedaka (charity). “No matter how little we had, my parents always gave to tzedaka.” As Diana speaks, a picture begins to emerge of a young Jewish family in transition: the parents raising their children to speak Polish, love Israel, value justice, have a deep understanding of Jewish values and culture, and all the while absorbing 14 I SPRING/SUMMER 2014 I WIZO RE VIE W German language and culture from their surroundings. Growing up in this myriad of languages, cultures and often conflicting feelings did not always impact Diana and her brother positively. “When we were young, I was maybe 15 or 16, we accused our parents: ‘How could you have come back here? How could you have raised us here?’” Diana attending a WIZO Berlin Gala evening. (l to r) Jaqueline Rosenkranz, Dagmar Schwarzer, Simone Graumann, Michal Gelerman, Maya Urseanu, Diana Schnabel, Annie Karolinski-Donig, Marina Polewski, Tatiana Friedberg-Semmler here is one of the best. It’s not difficult to raise a nice family – and we have all the facilities for Jewish life.” Furthermore, Diana points out, the numbers are compelling. “The Russian Jewish immigration to Germany in the 1990s raised the Jewish population from around 35,000 to around 100,000.” Diana Schnabel Today, however, Diana’s perspective has changed: growing up in such close proximity – both geographically and temporally – to one of the most horrific crimes committed against the Jewish people, filled Diana and her contemporaries with a finely tuned moral compass and the conviction to speak up in the face of injustice. “We were brought up as fighters. We were told to voice our opinions. If there is injustice, we must speak up. This is very typical of my generation. I’m not afraid of anyone. I say what I think. Growing up as a Jew in Germany – it is something special.” One example stands out: “In 1986, there was a big protest about an anti-Semitic play. I was among a group that stormed the theatre, we occupied the stage, we spoke up. I was WIZO Aviv then and WIZO had an important role in activating the protest. We rallied the WIZO women to get involved. Self-dependency was – and still is – very important for Jews in Germany.” While the melding of the German Jewish and Russian Jewish groups wasn’t seamless, there are signs that the two groups are beginning to constitute one strong, cohesive community. “It will take time, but it’s happening. I think the Russian immigration is very positive. We have communities that didn’t exist before – and that’s thanks to the Russian Jews.” As an important institution in the Jewish community, WIZO women were involved in assisting Russian Jews integrate into Germany. One incident in particular stands out, when newly arriving Russian families, temporarily living in hotels in Frankfurt, made a plea for assistance in caring for their children during after school hours. “Within two weeks, we [WIZO chaverot] organized a hot meal for the kids in the Jewish community centre. We helped them do homework and waited with them until their parents could pick them up. This was WIZO. We continued until they had everything they needed – until the schools caught up to accommodate them and the families found apartments of their own.” The changing face of WIZO Germany Germany’s emerging Jewish community Similar to the changes facing the larger community, the attitudes of WIZO Germany chaverot have also undergone something of a revolution – both in how they fit into the larger WIZO family and how they self-identify. When asked about the long-term viability of a Jewish community in Germany, Diana says, “I see a future in my children’s generation. Many of the younger ones who study abroad come back. They find jobs – the economic situation “In 1961, after WIZO Germany was re-established after the Second World War, the federation’s first executives were not officially introduced at WIZO conferences, and were not given official name tags or place