What an absolutely overwhelming and deeply moving and yet highly underrated novel this is. Spanning a period starting before World War I and leading up to World War 2 and set in Poland, Isaac Bashevis Singer tome brings to life the vast family of the patriarch Meshulam Moskat and through him the vibrant, complex, intertwined, often insular, and highly tradition-bound lives of an long-persecuted community that was discovering that its days in its latest haven were also numbered. Conveyed ever so subtly through everyday events and interactions, one observes with horror how the Polish Jews are Othered, misrepresented, harassed, discriminated against and persecuted.
Originally written in Yiddish and Singer's first novel to be published in English, Singer's strength is the immediacy, spontaneity, and naturalness of his dialogues, interspersed as they are with religious references, sharp wit, yiddish terms, and playfulness. At the same time, against the larger canvass of a Europe descending into fascism he creates some truly memorable characters, who despite all their foibles and limitations, are deeply endearing. This 750 page novel flows fluently despite the mundane, everyday nature of many events, simply because they are so compellingly realistic. The novel transports one to the Warsaw of early twentieth century, and helps understand, relate to and empathize with the ways, aspirations and apprehensions of a very different community to the ones one is familiar with. It is the ability to create this human bond across time and space which I regard as the triumph of great literature.
Singer's characters are flawed people, often conflicted, uncertain, sinful, unhappy, and yet also joyful, frequently generous, and capable of loving. He has been critiqued for portraying jewish stereotypes and highlighting failings. I found his depictions sensitive, nuanced and balanced, and hence all the more human and capable of appearing credible and attracting sympathy. The initially largely homogenous community he paints changes with the times as younger generations drift further away from hidebound tradition and orthodox religiosity - attracted to or seeking refuge in zionism, capitalism, communism or other possibilities, as old explanations don't quite fit harsh contemporary realities. At personal levels, many are unhappy in their marriages, commit adultery, or otherwise abandon their responsibilities - but such is Singer's masterful narrative voice that he neither vilifies nor valorizes them; he simply humanizes them.
For me the most memorable and lovable characters is one of Meshulam Moskat's estranged sons in law Abram Shapiro - warm-hearted, garrulous, boisterous, generous, an incurable romantic, an incurable philanderer, unconventional and incredibly witty. His joy for life imbues the otherwise melancholic chronicle with hope and perseverance. In young Asa Heshel Bannet we have a committed philosopher and religious scholar who is one of the book's main characters - a Spinoza reading, moody and deeply thoughtful man whose failures in love and life epitomize the discontent of his entire generation that is torn between two different worlds. Singer deeply explores the ritualistic and religious life of the jews in all its richness, with its various factions and callings, the rigor and exactitude of its traditions, and the consequent distinctive culture of a nation that has lived mostly in exile. He does this once again with as dispassionate a voice as a narrator can adopt. Indeed his ability to give voice to multiple perspectives within the book is what makes it multifarious and profound with its many shades of gray. You find him reverential towards an ancient piety practiced by the rabbis but also quizzical about their ability to comprehend and be adaptable and resourceful to tackle the dire contemporary predicaments faced by their flocks.
The strictly orthodox Chassidim in particular figure prominently, assiduously hanging onto to their particular brand of faith, mystical and seemingly oblivious to the world around them. I found multiple similarities between traditional and ritual bound Muslim communities and the Jewish communities that Singer describes, especially when it comes to encountering modernity, worldliness, gender roles, family values and connections with the past and the present. There are passages that beautifully convey the calm and peace of lives truly being led as lives of devotion; disconnected from external events; always keeping faith and awaiting a miracle. At the same time, Singer also explores how the insularity of certain groups prevented them from vital reaction and necessary self-preservation steps as Hitler's dark shadow loomed large over Europe.
Women - especially confidant young women, figure strongly in the novel - additionally burdened by childbirth, unhappy marriages, economic constraints and social taboos, all combined preventing their freedoms of movement and self-actualization. The willful and beautiful Hadassah, the stoic Adele, and the ideologically driven Barbara Fishelsohn being primary examples. The inner class system within the community is captured by the rise of Kopek Berman - a one time bailiff to Meshulam Moskat, who later marries - or as he himself says inches dotage, steals, - his married daughter Leah as well as a lot of his money, and the resentment extended to him by the Moskat family. Other than the family Moskat, the Koppel, Bannet and Katzenellenbogen families provide additional characters to constitute a rich overall cast.
Like all great novels, The Family Moskat provides granular details of individual and community lives as well as the much bigger canvass of war and its tragedies, the contrast between rural and small town life such as in Terespol Minor (the small place Asa Heshel hails from) and sprawling Warsaw with its various neighborhoods, droshkys and streetcars, palatial parks, palaces and ghettoes. The Family Moskat is a story of decline - of the Moskat family in terms of its internal disintegration as well as the aging and economic hardship of individual family members and also the dispersal of the Jewish community with many heading towards Palestine with dreams of a Zionist state, or to America, Australia, Argentina and other parts of the world. An old way of life is dismantled as with geographical distance also comes distancing from older beliefs and normative systems, even though every emigrant community also holds onto its own ways as much as it can. Singer neither seems to lament nor appears utterly aloof as he creates characters as they exist and justify themselves, erring, repenting, at times unsuspecting victims, and at times plotting their own fall. But a deep sadness does appear to imbue the narrative, and especially harrowing is the degeneration of a relatively accepting Polish society into a bigoted and intolerant one. The more subtle racism and anti-Semitism gradually worsens into blatant forms and outright violence. How many times in human history have certain communities been so badly discriminated by others and how frequently and ironically do they turn themselves into racist and discriminatory communities themselves - like in the Zionist state whose emergence we are provide remote glimpses of in this novel.
While other prominent writers like Nobel laureate Gore Vidal who have written about Jewish community life in America have received far more acclaim I find Singer much the better and more moving writer. Vidal has claims to greater literary prowess and mastery over language. Singer wrote in Yiddish and is less florid and flamboyant in his prose style and use of language - though there are descriptive passages of elegance ad beauty - and far less pretentious as well. But much the better story teller in my opinion and with a larger and richer canvass as well as more compelling characters.
In summation, Issac Bashevis Singer's fabulous magnum opus The Family Moskat is highly relevant today as we witness intolerance, bigotry & hate pushing many in the world towards fascism and violence. Spanning the early 20th century, set in Poland, and focusing on the Jewish community, it could be about any traditional community confronting a rapidly changing, turbulent and increasingly discriminatory world.
The protagonist Asa Heshel epitomizes the deep ideological despair and existentialist dilemmas that gripped his generation as the Nazis launched their war and there seemed to be no escape from doom. Even as the bombs fell the deeply orthodox such as the ever joyful and devotionally dancing Menassah David quoted the scripture and said, ""It is man's duty to bless God for the evil that befalls him, as well as for the good" These are pangs of the Messiah - the wars of Gog and Magog ....It is beginning, just as the Book of Daniel says. Idiots!" But others were in a far darker mood. As one of Asa Heshel's mentors Hertz Yanovar gloomily observed, "The Messiah will come soon ...Death's the Messiah. That's the real truth."