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GERHARD
BUCK
Idstein-Walsdorf, Hesse
Nominated by Abraham Frank, Jerusalem, Israel; Marjorie Holden, New
York, NY; and John Paul Lowens, Point Lookout, NY
Gerhard
Buck's earliest memory occurred when he was two years old and his parents
took him to see the town synagogue burning. He can still recall the
leaping flames and the "certain idea of destruction" that
Kristallnacht imprinted on his mind. Adding to the trauma is Buck's
life-long doubt as to whether his own mother, when the Nazis came to
her door asking for help, provided matches used to set fire to the building.
"People
often say we didn't know what happened in those twelve years [under
Hitler], but everybody knew," Buck says from his home in Idstein,
a small Hesse town where he's been healing history's wounds his own
way: by dedicating the last quarter century to writing articles and
books that resuscitate the local Jewish past.
Apart
from helping to restore the nearby Steinfischbacher Jewish cemetery,
Buck has also worked tirelessly over the last eight years to build up
a Jewish genealogical database that now encompasses 70 of the more than
200 towns and cities in the Hesse/Nassau regions.
The
"personal, emotional past makes it more inspiring to write about
Jewish history," says Buck, 71. "I am still under the influence
of this terrible time in which many people did cruel things. One starts
thinking about mankind-what mankind does to other people, what is the
character of man-that's what I think about all the time. I was always
caught in this subject of Jews in our town and driving them away."
The
son of an electrician who survived World War II assisting German army
medics behind the front lines, Buck found his passion for history and
languages early on (he learned Hebrew at Gymnasium in order to read
the Old Testament). After studying history and English at universities
in Münster, Tübingen and Leicester, England, Buck earned further
diplomas in social studies and law from Frankfurt University. He established
himself in Wiesbaden as a teacher until 1972 when, married with two
children, he moved to Idstein where "my work as a writing historian
started."
"I
came to a village that was celebrating its twelve-hundredth birthday
and my academic director asked me to help with the research," he
recalls. "Right from the beginning I had the impression that the
noble families-the dukes, the counts, the princes-stood in the center
of all the books and articles that had been published to date. So I
turned to the common man. I wanted to write about the farmers and the
craftsmen, the minority, the people who did not appear in the history
books-and that is how I arrived at the Jews."
In
1988, on the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht, Buck published a revisionist-at
the time controversial-account of local Jewish history entitled "Die
jüdischen Idsteiner, (Jewish Idstein) 1648-1806," which helped
him get elected to the prestigious Historische Kommission fur Nassau
(Nassau Historical Commission?) despite his not having a doctoral degree.
Among the novel claims Buck made, and which he defends passionately
to this day, was the assertion that the Church rather than the Jews
did most of the money-lending in the 17th and 18th centuries. "I
touched the subject in an unconventional way," he says. And it's
for that hard-nosed accuracy as a historian that others have been praising
him since.
"Gerhard's
work has a healing quality," says Abraham Frank, a descendent of
Hesse Jews and coauthor of Buck's 2003 book, "The Eschenheimer
and Nachmann Families." Frank, who saw his own family story "rehabilitated"
by Buck, adds: "He documents his texts with great rigor, but his
work is characterized by a humanistic interest in the life of ordinary
Jews. It preserves the past of the Jews of this region, it supports
the efforts of Holocaust victims and their children to locate their
relatives, [and] it preserves proof through pictures, texts and inscriptions
of a lost way of life."
Indeed,
digging up long-lost details about rural Jewish life-from 18th century
family wills and property lists to what kind of furniture a man owned
and how much wine was drunk at his wedding-is no easy task. For one
reason, Buck says, so many of the historical records no longer exist;
for another, the shift by Jews in the early 19th century from the patronymic
to the family name often means three or four pairs of names can refer
to a single person, complicating matters enormously.
Despite
the obstacles, Buck-who suffered a stress-related vocal cord sickness
12 years ago that forced him to stop teaching-says he manages to scan
through archive documents at a rate of two pages every three seconds,
and continues compiling biographies on 200 new people each week. It's
not just the search for a precise genealogy that drives him. "I
get more than only names-I get life," he says.
"I
want to bring this long historical line back into the minds of the people-to
get back, with the help of archives, to other centuries and to reconstruct
families. In normal history books, there are no Jews on the page. By
researching their names, by getting information about their lives, I
get them back-I get an idea of how the Jews lived."
Motivating
Buck above all else is his desire "to tell the Germans what really
happened-I will stick to Jewish history all through my life."
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