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JOHANNES
BRUNO
Speyer, Rheinland-Pfalz
Nominated by Florence Covinsky, Scottsdale, AZ; and Gunther Katz,
Encino, CA
It's hard to know
exactly what to call him. Teacher. Author. Activist. Historian. Journalist.
Guide. Johannes Bruno is a mixture of all those things-and when his
friends and colleagues in Speyer started to simply use the name "Juden
Bruno," or Jewish Bruno, it was easy to see why they would describe
a Christian in such a way.
Since moving to
this Rhineland city more than 30 years ago, the Italian-born Bruno has
been central to the revival of its Jewish memory. From the books and
articles he has written to the Holocaust memorial he promoted; and from
his school lectures and city tours to his work restoring Germany's oldest
and largest mikvah, or Jewish ritual bath, Bruno remains a vital presence
reawakening Speyer residents to their past.
"The Jews were
once a part of this town and their history is part of its whole history,"
Bruno says, citing the long heritage of Jewish scholars, philosophers
and merchants in Speyer that dates back nearly 1,000 years. "They
belong to it-and I don't want history to be forgotten. I want to remind
people how important the Jews were and what they achieved here, so that
they feel responsible for what's left over."
Bruno himself learned
about responsibility early on in life. Born in Rome in 1933, he remembers
having contact with the Jewish families that lived in his apartment
building-particularly the family his mother saved by hiding them from
the Germans in 1943. After an observant Catholic upbringing, Bruno felt
drawn to history and religious studies. He moved in 1958 to Germany
where he completed his education and started teaching high school. Then,
years later, his focus on Judaism started to evolve: first as a hobby,
after he read books like Heinrich Graetz's "History of the Jews,"
then as a passion when he discovered the Speyer archives and immersed
himself in its newspapers, documents and literature. Bruno spent decades
in research and wrote articles for local papers before publishing his
first book in 2000-a 300-page history called "Schicksale Speyerer
Juden 1800 bis 1980" (The Fate of Speyer's Jews, 1800-1980). Four
years later, his meticulous study of medieval Jewry appeared under the
title, "Die Weisen von Speyer oder Jüdische Gelehrte des Mittelalters
an dera hiesigen Talmudschule " (The Sages of Speyer or The Jewish
Scholars of the Middle Ages at the Local Talmud School).
"I was amazed
at the depth and breadth of [Bruno's] knowledge of Jewish history, Jewish
customs and the synagogue service," Gunther Katz, a Speyer-born
survivor of the Holocaust, said of the book, and commended Bruno for
his "tireless work to memorialize the contributions of the Jewish
population of Speyer from ancient times to the present."'
Beyond his writing,
Bruno is best known for leading tours-and overseeing last year's restoration-of
the historic mikvah is the central feature of Jewish Speyer. He has
guided thousands of foreigners underground in recent years to view the
12th century bathhouse; and in his tours of the city above ground, he
shows visitors the shops once owned by Jews, the houses where they once
lived, the ruins of the ancient synagogue and the cemetery.
Not to mention that
he leads them past the memorial he himself helped build-and which he
had to fight to have placed in its prominent position, across the street
from the former synagogue-honoring 71 Speyer Jews killed in the Holocaust.
"I always
looking forward to the tours," Bruno says. "I like to talk
to people, and I like them to ask questions. I try to explain that we
come from the Jewish religion; that the Jews and Christians have common
roots and that we belong together."'
Not surprisingly,
his activities have been received with wide support.
"Mr. Bruno's
work has been very important for the rediscovery of Jewish contributions
to the city," says Matthias Nowak, a spokesman for the Speyer mayor's
office who collaborated with Bruno on the mikvah restoration and other
city projects. "For a long time, Jewish achievements seemed almost
forgotten in Speyer. Bruno dedicated himself to researching and making
that history accessible."
Which is not to
say that each of his plans has succeeded-like, for example his recent
attempt and failure to get one of Speyer's streets named after a former
Jewish teacher, shop owner and local "personality" named Betty
Blum.
Needless to say,
Bruno's work is continuing. In addition to guiding tours and writing
articles about Jewish events in the local press, he has now started
to engage Speyer's Russian Jewish community-which numbers about 300-to
see about possibilities of building a new synagogue.
But away from his social work and back in his study, Bruno has done
something even more impressive: at 73, he has finished his third book,
which is due out in 2007, entitled "Das Mahnmal fur die Judischen
Opfer der Naziverfolgung 1933-1945 Chronik der Speyerer Gedenkstatte"
(The Memorial for the Jewish Victims of Nazi Persecution, 1933-1945:
A Chronicle of the Speyer Memorial). In it, he has written a personal
biography for every Speyer Jew who perished in the Holocaust-and in
doing so, recaptured one more piece of his adopted city's history.
"I don't want these people to be forgotten," Bruno says. "I
want to keep their memory alive so that everybody can remember what
happened, so that it never happens again."
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