It's said that the "truth will set you free," but when an intrepid Israeli reporter browbeat Dr. Daniel Brown (name has been changed) into going public five years ago, the aftermath was traumatic. "I had always been open about my identity with both my family and friends," he recalls, "and no one had ever been less than supportive and warm. But this particular Israeli newspaper misrepresented its agenda to me. I didn't know that it intended to publicize or sensationalize my interview the way it ultimately did. The story was printed in the weekend edition of the paper, and all day long on Thursday and erev Shabbat radio commercials continually blasted every 15 minutes: Hitler's nephew's grandson -- right here in Israel -- and a Jew! The repercussions left my family shaken."
Brown's sons -- enrolled in a modern Orthodox yeshivah in Jerusalem -- were spat upon by several of their classmates and called "Nazis." A handful of neighbors studiously avoided Brown when they encountered him on the street. And in shul the Shabbat after the story aired, a number of social acquaintances who normally greeted him with hearty handshakes turned the other way.
"How could it be that children of Nazis live right here in Israel and no one knows about them? Impossible!"
"To these people, who had known me as Jewish for 25 years, I had become -- overnight -- a pariah," says Brown. "I thought I was sharing a valuable lesson with others: that the past can be recreated and that a person always has the opportunity to change. But actually, it was I who was taught the lesson: Some people will never let you change." (Not surprisingly Brown wanted to use a pseudonym in this article.)
Still, the incident becoming a litmus test for the varieties of human behavior, the responses were not uniformly negative. "In the same synagogue that Shabbat, I was also the recipient of a clearly symbolic act of acceptance," says Brown. "I was given the first aliyah. This told me in no uncertain terms that the majority of the shul members regarded me as a full Jew and an accepted member of the community. Sadly, however, the decency of the majority didn't nullify the crude conduct of the minority. We were badly wounded by what happened.
"Now I understand why most of my counterparts hide their identities," says Brown. "Many Israelis are uneasy about our genealogy; they don't know how to react or what to do with us."
Perhaps that is why in a country still scarred by the Holocaust, a country whose very existence still trembles on the foundations of the ash and bone of the Six Million, very few people are aware of what I like to call "The Penance Movement": a subculture of hundreds of children of Nazis who have embraced their own dark past in the most extreme possible way. They have not only aligned themselves with the group of people their parents sought to annihilate, they have cast off their former identities and themselves become members of that very group. The majority of them have converted according to Jewish law, live as Orthodox Jews and reside in Israel. This, I believe, is one of the last great, untold chapters of the post-Holocaust era. It's a story that speaks to humanity's quest for meaning in life, our capacity for goodness and our potential to reshape identity and destiny. Yet, when I contact government officials, rabbinic courts and Israeli journalists themselves asking about this phenomenon, most seem shocked by my inquiries. "Are you sure?" they ask, some surprised, others skeptical. "It's an urban legend," many insist. "How could it be that children of Nazis live right here in Israel and no one knows about them? Impossible!"
Interestingly, a disproportionate number of the German converts are distinguished academicians -- most notably, in the field of Jewish studies. Brown has followed this trajectory himself and chairs the Jewish studies department at one of the country's leading universities. In his engagement with rabbinic and Talmudic literature, Brown is joined by Rabbi Dr. Aharon Shear-Yashuv (formerly known as Wolfgang Shmidt and one of the few converts who grants me permission to use his real name), chairman of Jewish studies at Bar-Ilan University, and many others including the chairman of the Jewish studies department at a Southern university in the United States and a professor of rabbinic literature at an Ivy League college in the United States. But it is clearly Brown who possesses the most interesting antecedents of all.
"My grandmother's name was Erna Patra Hitler. Hans Hitler -- her second husband -- was the Fuhrer's nephew."
"My grandmother's name was Erna Patra Hitler," says Brown. (After the War, she dropped the "t," changing her name to 'Hiler.') "Hans Hitler -- her second husband -- was the Fuhrer's nephew, but he didn't resemble him in any discernible way. He was soft and gentle. But what my step-grandfather lacked in vitriol was more than made up by the fierceness of my grandmother who was a sworn Nazi. She believed in the Nazi ideology before, during and even after the War. She was proud that her father-in-law was Hitler's brother, although he kept away from politics. Instead, he managed a cafe in Berlin, and because everyone knew that he was the Fuhrer's brother, all the Nazi elite patronized his establishment. This made his family and him -- including my grandparents -- local 'nobility.'
"When [my grandparents] visited us, they arrived in a black Mercedes, which was then a novelty and status symbol. It was a big deal when the Mercedes arrived in the working-class neighborhood where my mother and I lived."
Brown was born in Frankfurt in 1952 to Protestant parents who had both served in the Wehrmacht. His father, an ardent supporter of the Nazi party, divorced his mother shortly after his birth, and promptly disappeared from their lives. Brown was raised by his mother, who scrambled to make a living in post-War Germany. She received neither financial nor moral support from Erna Hitler, whom Brown describes as "indifferent to the pain and suffering of others." Brown's childhood years were marked by deprivation and hardship, as his debt-ridden mother struggled to keep them afloat. They were constantly on the go, moving from one apartment to another, leaving when frustrated landlords forced them out for lack of payment. Still, in one respect that would have profound reverberations for his future, Brown was fortunate. His mother always told him the truth.
Today, there are Germans who complain that they are "sick and tired" of the "endless talk" about the Holocaust, but in the immediate years after the War, there was only silence and denial, explains Brown. "In school, history teachers taught German history only up until World War I, in accordance with governmental legislation," he says. "The government was afraid that if these teachers had a Nazi past or had been supporters of Hitler's regime, they would not be objective in the classroom. So, actually, this law was borne of good intentions. But as a result, we remained largely ignorant about what had happened only a few years before. I remember having conversations with classmates who refused to believe in Germany's accountability. Their parents had glossed over the details or lied outright. But my own mother hadn't."
Instead of the elaborate fabrications concocted by his friends' parents to conceal the truth, Brown's mother showed her son her cache of documents (which bore seals of the Reich with accompanying swastikas), letters and photographs of family members -- including herself -- wearing Wehrmacht uniforms, which testified to their complicity. She told him that she had been stationed in the Polish city of Lodz, where they hung Jews in the center of the city. "It was awful," his mother told him. "I needed to pass through the center of town everyday in order to get from my house to headquarters and back. But I couldn't bear to see the Jews strung up like that, so I took a long detour around the city each day to avoid this terrible scene. I never got used to it."
Brown was horrified by his mother's account. He felt the room go black as he rifled through the physical evidence of her past, but his mother's genuine remorse provided him with some small measure of comfort. "When I asked her why she kept following orders, why she didn't resist, she answered simply, but with deep shame, 'I was afraid.' I believed her," says Brown.
Although Brown tried to share his mother's revelations with his school friends, they couldn't accept them as true; they told him that he was making it up. "So I tried to block it from my mind," says Brown.
I couldn't remain apathetic to what I read. I know my encounter with it shaped my future to a large extent."
But when he was a high school student his destiny came calling again by way of an inheritance from his biological grandfather -- his grandmother's first husband -- who had willed him a carton of books, among them his personal copy of Mein Kampf. "I had never seen Hitler's infamous book before, and I read it thoroughly," says Brown. "I was absolutely enraged by what he wrote. I kept on writing comments in the book's margins, comments that countered Hitler's claims. I still have this book in my library, because it served as a major catalyst in my life. I couldn't remain apathetic to what I read. I know my encounter with it shaped my future to a large extent."
The future of every young German in the post-War period included a mandatory stint in the army, but largely as a result of his encounter with the Holocaust, Brown had become a pacifist. "I was expected to join the army as soon as I graduated [from] high school, so I cast about for ways to get out of this civil obligation," he says. "I learned that the two groups that were exempt from military service were the clergy and students of the Catholic Church. So when I opted to become a theology student, it was originally out of opportunism, not spiritual concerns. But way leads on to way, and that's precisely what happened to me.
"Theology students are required to take several courses in Judaism and Hebrew, and I became increasingly fascinated by what I was learning," says Brown. "While studying Judaism, I saw more and more things that troubled me about Christianity. For example, the concept of the Holy Trinity bothered me a lot ... how [could] God be three? Another thing that I didn't understand was the idea that a Christian has to suffer in order to be redeemed. The Jewish approach manifested by Yom Kippur made much more sense to me.
"The vast theological differences between Judaism and Christianity created a schism inside myself, and I was beginning to feel schizophrenic," Brown continues. "In 1977, I decided to go to Israel to further my studies at Hebrew University where I ... took classes in Hebrew literature and Jewish philosophy. I fell in love with Israel and lengthened my stay from one year to two." Ultimately, Brown ended up studying at Yeshivat Mercaz HaRav.
Brown makes short shrift of my "Penance Movement" hypothesis -- that children of Nazis convert to Judaism as atonement -- maintaining that he converted for theological reasons, not out of penance for his parents' sins. "Maybe there are unconscious psychological reasons that drove me to Judaism," he allows, "but since I am a critical thinker and very cerebral, on a conscious level at least, I believe that I came to Judaism from a place of pure intellect." He does, however, concede this: "I believe that whoever is willing to take this step [conversion] must have a very deep identity crisis preceding the conversion itself. He's not able to return to the identity that he was born into. I understood that I was not happy in the place where I was born, and I made a decision to go to another place.
"The fact is that during the seventies and eighties many young Germans who wanted to detach themselves from the previous generation, the generation that was complicit in the Holocaust, left Germany. And the percentage of German converts in Israel is not insignificant. I converted mainly because I had a theological criticism of Christianity. Is this a rationalization I gave myself? My grandfather didn't have any educational or cultural influence over me, but it still makes me feel awful that this is the background I come from. It sharpens the identity questions that I am so busy with.... My identity is not taken for granted. It is something that I must continually deal with."
Brown converted to Judaism in 1979, and married another German convert who is also an academician. Although his wife's parents in Stuttgart cut off all contact with their daughter, his own mother (who died seven years ago) accepted him as a Jew and visited him several times at his home in Israel. "Perhaps she was afraid that if she didn't accept my conversion, she would lose her only child," says Brown. "Whatever the reason, she dealt well with my Jewishness. She attended my three sons' Bar Mitzvahs and participated in our Passover Seders. I once even suggested that she come live with us in Jerusalem and not remain alone in Germany, but she said, 'You don't plant an old tree in a new place.' But up until her death, we remained very connected."
"I stood in the camps and thought about how the grandfathers of all of my friends had been inside, while my grandfather had been outside."
Brown is strictly halachic, identifying with Centrist Orthodoxy. Still, as a German convert, there are a few areas that give him pause, such as participating in Yom HaShoah ceremonies; emotionally it is too turbulent for him. "I usually stay home." Brown and his wife have worked hard to create a home that is warm, loving and supportive. "I wanted to make sure that my children have a path, a direction, a value system, not the muddled and complex dysfunction I myself experienced as a child," he says. "But as much as I've tried to protect them from their schizophrenic legacy, there are things I can't control. For example, when my son Yisrael traveled to Poland with his school several years ago, his reaction was completely different from his classmates. 'Everything felt weird,' he told me. 'I stood in the camps and thought about how the grandfathers of all of my friends had been inside, while my grandfather had been outside. My classmates came to those camps with their pasts; I just came to watch. I was caught in the middle -- it felt screwed up.'
"I also feel utterly helpless when my sons' classmates say mean and hurtful things to them -- comments which have accelerated since the interview in the Israeli newspaper was first published," Brown says. "Last year, for example, during a ceremony on Yom Hazikaron, several students whispered to my youngest son that they were going to beat him up because he's a Nazi. I refused to send him to school for a week until the principal took care of the problem."
Brown has had his share of ugly run-ins himself. "I have always tried to be open and honest about my roots; I have never hidden my background like many converts from Nazi backgrounds," he says. "Most of the time, people are accepting and tolerant. Once in a while, though, someone will say something offensive. Recently, after sharing some biographical details with my university students, one of them told me: 'Imagine! Your grandfather might have turned my grandmother into soap.'"
Brown guesstimates that there are approximately 300 German converts in Israel, but most are averse to publicity and remain relentlessly reclusive. Still, as the Holocaust recedes into history, an increasing number of these converts are coming forward with their stories. Recent newspaper articles published in both Europe and Canada have detailed the extraordinary metamorphoses of people like Katrin Himmler, great-niece of SS Commander Heinreich Himmler, who married an Israeli and Oskar Eder, a former member of the Luftwaffe who changed his name to Asher, married a Holocaust survivor and currently works in Israel as a tour guide.
The astonishing trajectories of these personalities, and people very much like them, demonstrate for Brown the powerful message that "nothing is immutable. The meaning of my story, of my counterparts' stories, is that things can be changed: You can change your behavior, your location, your faith. Being and becoming is what we are doing every day."
Reprinted with permission from Jewish Action, the magazine of the Orthodox Union.
(136) Mike, May 6, 2015 9:19 AM
Hollywood and real life
I do have my doubts concerning these people.
And I don't like how the man doesn't want to understand the reactions of other people and that he portrays himself as a victim.
Many antisemites secretly admire the Jews. And maybe some 'Jews' turn out to be erev rav at some point. It has happened before...
Many people have said that what is in order is support, love, understanding and brotherhood.
I sincerely hope that you will invest just 1% of those feelings to help people who everyone agrees are Jews, and who do not come from Nazi backgrounds.
What I mean is that I am starting to get the impression that in such cases there are people who have endless supplies of understanding, but I do wonder if that applies to every Jew, and in every-day life.
Just 1%.
It would do a lot to solve our every-day misunderstandings and baseless hatred.
Those who are kind to the cruel will be cruel to the kind.
I think we can all agree on that
Anonymous, May 15, 2017 9:14 AM
He is a Jew and should be treated as such
With all due respect, there is no allowance in Jewish law for mistreating a convert. In this case it is even more absurd since he himself did nothing. It was grandfather's step uncle's actions, not his own. He is in fact a victim. From the article, it is clear that he had a conversion according to halakhic standards He is no less Jewish than a born Jew. Perhaps he lacks a shavet, but he is certainly a Jew.
(135) Ted, October 21, 2014 3:21 PM
Children of Nazis converting to Judaism
It sadden me to read how Mr.Brown was treated by
fellow Jews upon the revelation of his family linenage.
Children,let alone grandchildren, do not inherit the
sins of the parents.
(134) Kiel, October 27, 2013 7:41 PM
Being and becoming
A remarkable story and an inspirational one too. Likewise, the comments below the article. Dr Brown’s memento is wise and reassuring: "nothing is immutable. The meaning of my story, of my counterparts' stories, is that things can be changed: You can change your behavior, your location, your faith. Being and becoming is what we are doing every day."
(133) Sarah Vorchheimer, June 20, 2013 3:32 AM
Jews descended from our erstwhile enemies over the millenia
בס"ד
The Talmud mentions a number of historic figures who had been regarded as enemies of the Jews whose descendants converted to Judaism and became great rabbonim. Nero, even, is said to have converted to Judaism in his old age (when he disappeared fromt he Roman scene). Onkelos was, of course, a prominent Roman soldier, (general?) Aquila. I understand that also Bilaam's descendants became Jewish.
(132) Harold, May 29, 2013 10:53 PM
Souls of converts
On the last day of Moses' life, he gathered all the Jewish people together who had wandered with him in the desert. There, God spoke to the entire nation of Israel, and said, "Not with you alone do I seal this covenant, but with whoever is here, standing with us today before the Almighty our God, and with whoever is not here with us today." (Deuteronomy 29:13)
Therefore according to the Talmud, the souls of all converts were actually present at Mount Sinai when the torah was given (Talmud - Shavuot 39a).
"Although the nations rejected the Torah, Individual members of those nations sought to accept it. Only the refusals of their peers prevented them from realizing their aspirations. The souls of these individuals appear in every generation as converts." - Abraham ben Abraham
(131) Yisroel Settenbrino, May 29, 2013 1:13 PM
Torah is not a Monopoly
Nebuzaradan although he slayed thousands of Jews he felt remorse. and became a convert (Gittin 57b).
Abraham the first Jew was an iconoclast and so to kindred spirits of converts as well as many great leaders, men and women of Israel. One need not ponder the question of why G-D directs Jewish souls to rise through the challenge birth families and society’s paradigms. Torah is not a monopoly and the G-D of Israel is the G-D of the whole world. Unlike other Abrahamic faiths, righteousness and works trump dogmatic belief. Do well and join and connect in this world and the next. No eternal damnation for rejection of a particular way.
“Go and learn Laban wanted to uproot all” and yet he is a progenitor of the Tribes of Israel. Haman’s grandchildren learned Torah in Bnei Brak and they were Shmayah & A'vtallyon. Who gave the Mesorah – tradition as the predecessors of Hillel and Shamay. Ruth, Yael, Rebbe Meyer, Rebbi Akiva and Onkelos were either converts or descendants of converts who enriched Judaism, Israel and the world at large, in their defiance of popularly held beliefs and accepted world perspectives. Dr.Brown is an inspiration to step beyond stark limitations and courageously stake a claim in Torah. May he and his progeny be blessed to rise in their devotions and contributions to all of Israel.
(130) Ferenc Karpule, May 29, 2013 12:37 PM
I share it in hungarian too.
I shared your story on my facebok page. I translated it in hungarian. Thank You very much!!
Karpule from Hungary
(129) Ferenc Karpule, May 29, 2013 12:33 PM
Continue of life conditions the love and forgiveness
Dear Yitta Halberstam!
Thank You for your AMAZING story of these people.I believe that the one appropriate way is the FORGIVENESS and acceptance of the nazi's children if they denied their past.The Life can go so good forward if we show love and life before them and not the hate because the hate is same thing what the nacism did. Karpule from Hungary
(128) Josh K, May 28, 2013 10:37 PM
"Descendants of Haman taught Torah in Bnei Brak... descendants of Sisera taught children in Yerushalayim" (Gitin 57b)
(127) Zvi Weiss, May 28, 2013 2:50 PM
How very sad that Jews still violate such serious prohibitions...
The prohibition(s) regarding the abuse of the "Righteous Convert" are quite explicit. It is heartbreaking to read that "Orthodox Jews" are so careless regarding such a serious matter. How can we expect to receive (at the minimum) respect from others if we do not show such respect to those who have received a "mandate" from the Torah for respect and compassion?Regardless of the horror of the Nazis and their ilk, the one who converts sincerely must always be regarded as a true righteous one who has truly been "born again" in the best sense of the word.The only thing more horrifying to me is that the Newspaper involved acted in such a callous manner -- no doubt violating the prohibition of Lashon Harah and Rechilus in a most public and horrific fashion...When will we ever learn?
Anonymous, May 29, 2013 3:21 PM
Good point
Thank you for your insight. Beyond the emotional response to such inexcusable behavior, this last point is important & I hope it reaches some who truly are violating a number of halachic prohibitions, probably a vast amount with the pain inflicted upon his family. This person is heroic. IyH' when the final Geula arrives, my understanding at least is that we will be zoche to see things as they really are & the shallow nonsense which fragments us will iyH' be merely a memory & atoned for. Instead of, as was mentioned, our gift of speech being misused by leshon hara, "ulshoneinu rina/our tongue with joyous song" & "ha'yinu k'cholmim/we will have been like dreamers," (psalm 126) awakened from this dark galus/exile iyH soon.
(126) IrisB, May 28, 2013 11:54 AM
I had to control my emotions
About 25 years ago, I participated in a focus group on white bread. I mentioned that growing up, we never had white bread in the home because we kept kosher and many commercially made white breads were made with milk and therefore could not be eaten with every meal. Sitting opposite me was a woman named Ingrid, whom I could tell from her accent, was German. She said, "I thought that was only during certain times of the year,". ( She was probably confused and thought about Passover and got her facts mixed up.)
My first, gut reaction to her was "You Nazi b --, if your people did not kill my people, there would be enough Jews in Germany today for you to know that Jews refrain from eating meat and milk together!" Fortunately I kept that to myself. She was far too young to have any part of the Nazi regime, having been born in the 60's to be accosted with any blame. She should not suffer for what was perpetrated by her elders.
I grew up in Washington Heights, in upper Manhattan. Many of my Jewish neighbors were German refugees or survivors. I heard German spoken almost as often as I heard English fom them. No one looked at them askance.
I truly feel badly for Mr. Brown and his family. They should not be abused for the sins of their ancestors.
(125) marcia wolfish, May 28, 2013 11:25 AM
Kol Hakovod.
I read the article and I felt such a wonderful feeling for Dr Brown. Don't let any of the idiots who insult you and ignore you control you. You are a Ger Tzeedek and Your conversion is welcomed by G-d. Welcome home!
(124) Anonymous, May 27, 2013 3:22 PM
Ruth
Ruth the Moabite was also treated with disdain, despite her modesty and her marriage to a righteous man. She proved them all wrong by giving birth to royalty.
People will speak about repentence but not truly believe it.
But you, Dr Brown, might just be the next father of royalty!
(123) Marnie, May 27, 2013 3:33 AM
very interesting
Very Interesting article. Thank you so much for your story. You are an amazing individual with an inspiring story.
(122) shimon, May 27, 2013 2:52 AM
this is our victory over evil
when you have gerei tzedek that come out from the ashes of evill ,that is the ultimate victory of the jewish people. it happend during the roman days as well..
or how about a muslim terrorist that converted in israeli jail after serving 12 years. this is hashem way of taking revenge from the enemies of the jewish people.
and sometimes they are very high soles that hashem brings them from the back door to help and guid the jewish people. i wish them all the best.
(121) Debra Michels, May 27, 2013 1:36 AM
treat baalei tshuvah w/love and respect
I read this article with great interest - fascination, really! I think people with closed minds and hearts need to work on those, not just be angry and judgmental towards others. Didn't God say "He" holds each generation responsible for its deeds/misdeeds, not the next generation?
(120) Alexis, May 27, 2013 1:32 AM
welcome home
Dr. Brown, clearly your soul has found its way home. Welcome. You are an asset to the Nation.
(119) Vlad Seder, May 26, 2013 11:12 PM
Jewish Descendants of Hitler
It is said that according to some opinions the ultimate punishment for Hitler in the World to Come would be to sit in Beth Midrash among the Jews learning Torah- for eternity. Yet, it seems like HaShem has even better idea: these Jews learning Torah would be his and his followers' own descendants!
(118) Vlad Seder, May 26, 2013 10:59 PM
From Haman to Bnai Brak
Was not it written "descendants of Haman learned Torah in B'nai Brak"? (Gittin 57b, Sanhedrin 96b)
(117) Anonymous, May 26, 2013 10:03 PM
This was one of the most fascinating article I have read at Aish.com.
Dr Brown, I pray for you and your family's happiness.
No-one can be blamed and punished for the decisions made before they were born, no one can be punished for the crimes of their ancestors. May you find peace in the Torah-life and in G_d.
(116) Sally, May 26, 2013 9:02 PM
Very ggod story and thanks for posting it. I love Torah and I am of German decent and not sure if any of my relatives were involved with the Hitler regime or not and I hope none were! That is something the world will never forget, ever! Many are saying that never even happened!
Torah is Life!!!
(115) Deborah Bach, May 26, 2013 6:52 PM
The past cannot be recreated, we can create the present and future
And I am saddened to hear that more than one Jew mis-treated Dr. Brown. One would have been too many, but there's always one. It seems so clear to me that these Jews did not behave in a halachic way that's very sad, too.
(114) Beatrice Singer, May 26, 2013 5:54 PM
We are not given a choice when we are born. Whether it is family or religion. I personally think that the nazi regime was a bunch of barbarians who somehow by-passed. G-d and became the killing machine in Europe. I think the world stood still and in shock. Germans who were not involved in nazism can not be held responsible for those atrocities. I would happily accept Dr brown and his family. I think the people that reject them are not much better than the ones who committed crimes against humanity.
(113) Tzvi, May 26, 2013 5:30 PM
I Salute You
Dr. Brown,
As a Torah Jew and a firm believer in appreciating the sacrifices of veterans- I say that you are a true warrior for Torah and- I salute you. The ultimate thumb in the eye of the Nazis and a testimony to the eternal truth of Hashem's Torah- you are the embodiment of it all. And once again-I salute you. You are in excellent company- namely Onkelos, Rabbi Akiva, and descendants of Haman who taught Torah in Bnei B'rak. As one person told me,- the Torah is perfect, Hashem is perfect- but Hashem gave the Torah to humans and we are not perfect. The next time my family and I travel to Israel, it would be my HONOR to meet you and salute you face to face. Your story is as old and special as that of the Jewish People itself.
Dr. Brown, May Hashem bless you and your family in all areas spiritual, physical, and financial. You are important parts of Klal Yisrael. May Hashem send Moshiach very speedily in your noble Zechut.
Respectfully,
Tzvi
Bruce McNair, May 27, 2013 3:32 AM
Yes
I firmly second that strong vote of confidence and support, Tzvi
(112) Yael, May 26, 2013 5:16 PM
A Jew is a Jew
A Jew is a Jew. How dare anybody harass "Dr. Brown"?! He is just as authentically Jewish as they are.
(111) anon, May 26, 2013 4:20 PM
a bit strange
1. The nephew was DB's stepgrandfather, thus there is no direct link.
2. Maybe what DB calls "being open and honest" is actually a bit too much for most people. He comes from a lineage of Nazis, not directly from yimach shmo, so why is he going round telling people that he is a relative when he is not? Also, in Jewish circles one never knows when one might be talking with a survivor or a descendent of a survivor, so a bit of discretion and sensitivity might be in order. I'm really having a hard time feeling any sympathy for DB, and I don't like the tone of the article. There are many converts who are happily integrated. The problem is that DB"s nazi past is a big part of his identity and he feels the need to share it with others. Unsurprisingly many Jews are just not equipped to deal with it, especially when it is just sprung on them unawares. Hence the soap comment.
3. I'm not condoning any abuse DB might have suffered, but in life one needs to be smart, not just right. He should have thought about this for himself and especially for his children, and maybe kept a bit quiet about it.
(110) Anonymous, May 26, 2013 11:25 AM
Fascinating.
Thank you for sharing. A powerful lesson about the power to change. Thank you.
Randy Settenbrino, May 26, 2013 6:29 PM
Transformations
Nebuzaradan although he slayed thousands of Jews he felt remorse. and became a convert (Gittin 57b). Abraham the first Jew was an iconoclast and so to kindred spirits of converts as well as many great leaders, men and women of Israel. One need not ponder the question of why G-D directs Jewish souls to rise through the challenge birth families and society’s paradigms. Torah is not a monopoly and the G-D of Israel is the G-D of the whole world. Unlike other Abrahamic faiths, righteousness and works trump dogmatic belief. Do well and join and connect in this world and the next. No eternal damnation for rejection of a particular way. “Go and learn Laban wanted to uproot all” and yet he is a progenitor of the Tribes of Israel. Haman’s grandchildren learned Torah in Bnei Brak and they were Shmayah & A'vtallyon. Who gave the Mesorah – tradition as the predecessors of Hillel and Shamay. Ruth, Yael, Rebbe Meyer, Rebbi Akiva and Onkelos were either converts or descendants of converts who enriched Judaism, Israel and the world at large, in their defiance of popularly held beliefs and accepted world perspectives. Dr.Brown is an inspiration to step beyond stark limitations and courageously stake a claim in Torah. May he and his progeny be blessed to rise in their devotions and contributions to all of Israel.
(109) Barbara, May 29, 2011 7:33 AM
GOD LOVES THE CONVERT!!!
Can this angry minority of Jews find it within their hearts to recall that Abraham was NOT born Jewish!?? That the long history of Judaism is peppered with many converts from an astonishing variety of backgrounds? That to convert, as Dr Brown did, took both conviction and courage?? That God LOVES the convert - ie, a Jew- by -choice, and therefore they are privileged to know him and his family!!!??
(108) marci shulman, May 10, 2011 2:39 AM
I recall Ann Frank who said: I still believe that people are good
I am ashamed at the behavior of some of the people toward this man and his family. He chose to be a Jew, an observant Jew. He, himself, was not a Nazi. Why should he be punished for being born into such a family? I applaud him and his love of Judaism. He deserves to be respected.
(107) Anonymous, April 15, 2011 9:57 PM
Congratulate Dr. Brown on his courage
Dear Ms. Halberstam, Please pass on my congratulatory sentiments to Dr. Brown for his courage, intelligence and thought-provoking comments about his life. He has truly found the spiritual beauty in Judaism and his life experiences are a reminder to us all to respect those that can learn from the past and help to repair the world.
(106) Ana, April 15, 2011 12:50 PM
Did people actually read even the first portion of the misguided title?
"Dr. Brown was the grandson of Erna Patra Hitler whose SECOND husband, Hans Hitler was Hitler's nephew BUT NOT Dr. Brown's grandfather. Erna, Dr. Brown's grandmother, was a "sworn Nazi" and her father-in-law was Hitler's brother, therefore, he wasn't in direct lineage Hitler's nephew's grandson as stated by the article. Nephew or not, lines directly quoted from Dr. Brown are just an ecco of his past and intimacy with the Nazi ideology.
(105) Anonymous, March 14, 2011 2:31 AM
Sceptical
I sympathise with your plight. Of course one should not be held accountable for the actions of a parent or grandparent, but the child of a perpetrator - willing or not - of the Holocaust is no less marked than the child of a victim of that catastrophe. I can imagine many reasons for choosing the life you did, some more noble than others. However, I'm puzzled as to why, having been 'open and honest about [your] roots', your and your children's acquaintances turned against you. I'm also surprised at the banality - and in some respects inaccuracy - of your statements about Judaism and Christianity, the more so since you are a theology scholar To embrace Judaism for theological reasons, to the best of my understanding, does not require an official conversion, nor residence in Israel, which is for many of its inhabitants a refuge from generations of oppression and persecution. In my view, it was insensitive at best, and an intrusion, to choose Israel as your place of residence because you were 'not happy in the place you were born'. I trust you have also managed to live there as a 'pacfist'. I can't help wondering about your concern for 'the pain and suffering of others'.
Chana, May 14, 2013 6:55 PM
I agree with this poster. He could have become a dedicated Noahide. I'm uncomfortable with this and there are loops in his story as you noticed too.
(104) Lorna Cohen, March 12, 2011 4:03 AM
Powerful,Amazing revelation.
Amazing story of change and tolerance and intolerance. Only in Israel is their such justice.
(103) Steve Schwartz, March 11, 2011 4:16 AM
Hitler's turning over in his grave
How ironic a descendent of Hitler a Jew.It brings such delight to my heart.Whatever motivation he is a Jew and rather than be reclusive he and his family and fellow converts should go around the world and celebrate are their Jewishness.Through these Jews can once again stand tall and live their Jewishness in a healthy normal way.There will always be people in the world who are intolerant but fortunately there are people who live their values rather than just study them..Welcome to being a Jew and all that goes with it.How many times did God want to destroy us,how many times did the prophets condem our behavior.The Bible teaches us so many wonderful things.Hopefully God will inspire us to lead noble lives.May God bless us all from a Jew who continues to search as all Jews do for our ultimate purpose in our short time on this thing called earth
(102) sima aronowicz, March 7, 2011 2:20 PM
I am extremely moved and am weeping, as I have to forgive. ninety per cent of our family were in Treblinka concentration camp.
Good Shabbes to you . I dind your story remarkable, and I am grateful that you turned Jewish and religous and live in Israel. There is goodness out there. Sima Aronowicz
(101) Hannah, January 26, 2011 5:09 PM
Why metamorphosis? Is a child of a criminal automatically a criminal? I think the story is amazing but the title is wrong. As if each human being is not a separate human being. As for attonenment as motivation to convert, its also wrong: if you haven't doen anything, you cannot atone. Of course post war Germans should learn from history for their own sake, but assume responsiblity for something that happened prior to their birth? I suspect that due to German history more Germans are able to look critically at antisemtic bias and end up reading about Judaism, hence there is a higher percentage who may end up conveting (if the Jewish community allows it, which is another question).
(100) Anonymous, January 20, 2011 6:42 PM
A lesson for us all
I am so upset that Jews should attempt to make a sincere convert and his children the subject of hostility and guilt. Once converted he should be judged on his own merits not those of his ancestors . He is 100% Jewish and we should be ashamed of our fellow Jews by birth who chose to persecute Jews by choice. Sinat chinam has not gone away and we are in danger of being judged for it .
(99) ruth housman, January 16, 2011 9:43 PM
roots and branches
It must be an enormous shock for anyone who is humane, and who is brought up with a value system about humanity, compassion, love, to find out that within their family tree there are skeletons of that "other past", something so heinous, it's hard to contemplate. Those who choose to change their religious views and identities for these reasons, or for reasons of love for Judaism itself, is a deep strength, and as for what was, it is hard to know about this, but it is also a deep lesson in love and forgiveness to accept people as they are, now, and to realize they cannot be responsible for what their ancestors did, that was truly beyond terrible.
(98) susannah garbutt, January 15, 2011 4:17 AM
correct definition of schizophrenia
A request to the author of the above article. Although it's a very interesting and hope-giving article, I am afraid that the author has made the common error in regard to the use of the term - 'schizophrenia'. As a sufferer of schizophrenia for most of my life, I am always annoyed by the fashionable, but incorrect, use of the term by writers referring to split personalities (which do not exist, there is no such entity as split personality, only multiple personality), or a split in their minds about something, which could better be expressed as being 'in two minds' about the topic/s referred to. The disorder of schizphrenia is a psychosis, a major mental illness,involving a disorder of thinking, feeling and perception, sometimes involving hallucinations - auditory, sensory, visual or other senses. Loss of social skills is common, along with lack of insight into the illness by the sufferer, directly affecting compliance with medications. Many aspects of one's life eg social skills, executive functions of the brain, decision-making and lack of ability to manage one's life effectively is common, meaning that few sufferers are able to work and support themselves in the broader community, even though mental illness sufferers are mostly of higher intelligence than the general community. The mind can be 'foggy' and thinking 'woolly'. A glance at history can reveal a lot of brain fog and woolly thinking in those who are not ill, too - eg warlike people who crave power over others and will stop at nothing to acheive it. Many people do things that end up hurting others quite badly in order to fulfil their urges, but most mentally ill people are harmless, locked in their own private hell. A good example of what that is like is illustrated by Munsch's painting 'The Scream'. Once again, I would urge all authors to be more accurate in their writings and confer with their dictionary when using psychiatric terms. Yours sincerely Susannah Garbutt.
(97) Renée, January 14, 2011 6:54 PM
Ariel
Do you feel sorry for King David? He was the descendant of a converted Moabite! There's certainly no reason to question the motives of a sincer ger who is living his life faithfully as a commited Jew. Would these few hundred have converted if their parents weern't Nazis? I don't know. Perhaps not. And perhaps that is the reason G-d sent them to be born to Nazi parents--so that in rejecting their parents' past conduct they would accidentally be exposed to Torah Judaism. I once spoke to a man who converted before marrying a Jewish woman with whom he had fallen in love before he knew anything about Judaism. He had a hard time explaining to people that he wasn't converting for her but for himself because it did look suspiciosly like the only reason he was converting was so that he ould marry the woman he loved. The truth as he saw it was that he was always meant to be Jewish but didn't know it until he had met and fallen in love with a Jewish woman. (And she became religious because of his conversion! So she also credits G-d with bringing thm together for her sake if not for his.) Good Shabbes!
(96) Regina, January 14, 2011 1:48 PM
We must evaluate the Person
Who wouldn't want to get as far away as they could from an ancestral line like this? While one could question his motivation for conversation, ie, rejection of Catholicism, I suppose the logical choice following such a realization is Judaism. As far as hiding their German roots, I think it took an incredible amount of courage to ever reveal them to ANYBODY. I, too, would have difficulty if my child wanted to marry into this family - but, again, our job - the tikkun, if you will - is about loving and accepting based on the actual qualities/middot of the person. These people have chosen GOOD - assuming they actually live a righteous life, it's our obligation to love and accept them.
(95) ariel, January 14, 2011 4:28 AM
confusing
What would have been the chance of converting to Judaism had these people not been relatives of Nazis? It would seem really small, and yet they claim that their conversion was purely motivated by theological reasons? Sounds not very credible to me; their motives seem very questionable. I am also not sure if the word penance is the correct word. What penance are talking about? Penance for themselves? Because they are tired of being associated with their past? Aren't these people simply trying to run away from their ancestor's crimes? It sure seems more easy to be a descendant of the victim than to be the descendant of a war criminal and murder, so why not join the party of the victims? No wonder that they so ardently try to hide their German roots and names. I think these people would have been better off at a psychologist, instead of twisting their identity under the guise of "theological motives" and hiding their true identity. Ultimately, one can never completely rid oneself of one's roots completely, no matter hard one tries. I feel pity for the children of these converts; it's a nightmare to think that one of my children would marry the converted grandson of an SS henchman..
sam, May 26, 2013 2:53 PM
nightmare?!
the Talmud says that a convert descendant of the uber-"Nazi" Haman as the great sage Rav Shmuel bar Shilas! if a ger is sincere, then it is honor to have them as fellow Jew! The Rambam wrote a long letter extolling the "lineage" of geirim that heir "father" is no less than our father Avraham!
(94) Phil, January 14, 2011 3:38 AM
to Nathan (comment 90)
Nathan, why do you want to belittle Dr. Brown for "sharing a valuable lesson with others: that the past can be recreated and that a person always has the opportunity to change"? If you call that "flaunting", then you have an unusual definition of "flaunting."
(93) Regina, January 14, 2011 3:10 AM
understand ALL the feelings expressed
I find this story astonishing. While I champion this man for doing what he has done and I don't condone the hatred he and his family encountered, I do understand where those feelings came from. I am a child of holocaust survivors - I ask myself how I would have responded if this man lived next door to me and I learned of his family background. Shock, distress, confounded sensations - I hope that I would have had the ability to speak to him openly after I had digested the news, to cry with him for what our people have endured. I suppose it represents an exquisite piece of forgiveness despite the lack of this person's actual participation in any nefarious acts. I was once receiving a facial from a young Polish woman and, when I found out that she was from Tarnow, the town that my parents were from, I sat straight up! (as a reflex). When I explained my own family background, she said, "We'll work it through"; I thought to myself, "You don't get it." I never went back to her again. What a terrible situation for his children to be in on a school trip to Poland - I'm not even sure how a counselor would approach such a matter. As so many other people have commented, we are obligated to treat these people with kindness and respect. I suppose that's the work to be done here - yes, to love and forgive the sins of the ancestors. Once again, an exquisite piece of healing that will hopefully herald the coming of Moshiach.
(92) Anonymous, January 13, 2011 4:16 PM
2 OF THE commentaries are very disturbing. This man has gone a very long way. And being an orthodox jew means he lives according to his choices and inner beliefs. You don't chose your family, you do chose the path you re going through in your life. He deserves respect and his own place in the community, for him and his family. The fact that his conversion started with theological thoughts shows the reflection and not only emotional and historical reaction.
(91) refael holtzberg, January 13, 2011 5:36 AM
we love you
I love this Jew - he is so sincere and straightfoward. (I thought the connection to Hitler was weak - his grandmother married a brother in second marriage? not exactly "decendants of Haman learning Torah in Bnei Brak". Still cool, though). Sorry some people are quite ignorant of the true Jewish perpesctive.
(90) nathan, January 12, 2011 10:15 PM
not impressed
i think this man is grossy insensitive. why does he find it surpising that people react badly? not that i neccessarily agree with them but you cant be the grandson of the biggest monster in modern history, who wiped out 6000000 people in the most horrifi way, tell the ntire nation about it and be suprised that some people see an injustice here and find it hard to deal with. i actally think that the fact that he writes on a natioanl public level about who he is in itself shows gross insesitivity. he shold be keeping it quiet, not flanting it. where is his shame? not impressed.
(89) Anonymous, January 12, 2011 9:41 PM
The roots of the enemies of the Jews grandchildren returning is in Jewish thought
It says in Megilliah that Haman's grandchildren studied torah! Rabbi Akiva was supposed to have his roots all the way back in Sisera. R Meir was the decendent of Nero! There is a Kabbilistic idea of this (it is explained very well by Rabbi Nasson Maimon on Likueti Mohranan torah 17). Best wishes!
(88) Nicole Estella, January 12, 2011 10:00 AM
Light in all the dark places
Congratulations for writing the truth. I live in Israel and most people do not accept converts - it must be especially hard for this man, coming from where he comes from. We as Jews need to be more aware of what our religion teaches and act accordingly. We mustn't let our nation become as anti non Jews as Nazi Germany was antisemitic. Unfortunately Israel as a nation is this, but it's in the hands of individuals who live here to do better and tikkun our people, just like this wonderful Jewish brother did.
(87) Lisa, January 11, 2011 7:13 PM
Where is his love for his fellow Jews?
The tone of this article disturbs me very much. "I converted mainly because I had a theological criticism of Christianity." Where is his love for his fellow Jews? Also, he doesn't go to Yom Hashoah services, and sees himself and his kids as victims (of their mean Jewish classmates who have the audacity to be disturbed by being so close to the children and grandchildren of Nazis). I don't see any Ahavat Yisrael - love of the Jewish people - here!
(86) Peter, January 11, 2011 4:46 PM
What a courageous man
What a courageous man and what a beautiful story. May Hashem bless his whole family. I am ashamed about those Jews who mistreat him and his family. It just goes to show that just because someone cloaks themselves in religiousness does not mean they are a good person.
(85) Anonymous, January 11, 2011 5:33 AM
Light In All Darkness...
All Jewish people should be always humble and forgiving, because they were told to be a role model or " Light unto the nations ".
(84) David Kaufman, January 11, 2011 1:30 AM
We have a commandment to love the convert.
Jews welcome converts and have numerous commandments to treat them with love, respect and honesty. No where does it state in the Torah to love the convert - except children whose parents were Nazi's. Therefore, those who oppress these converts are violating the Torah and require some soul searching.
(83) Char, January 11, 2011 12:37 AM
A Jew is a Jew
He is a Jew, lives the life of a true Orthodox Jew, raises his children Jewish. He cannot help where he came from. If he had a choice, he would have selected a different family. Lashon hara of a fellow Jew is never acceptable. He is deserving of love, respect and dignity as my other fellow Jews.
(82) shaul, January 10, 2011 10:41 PM
binyamin dr .brown had nothing to do with it
This man is a ger tzedek. He had nothing to do with the maniac,s plans to annialate the jews. NEBUCHADNEZZER,S general repented and became a ger tzedek himself. What those indfividuals who treated him badly was wrong -and violated 29 different torah laws-aswell as rabbibinic ordinances
(81) Talya, January 10, 2011 9:59 PM
Haman's descendants learn Torah
Response to Binyomin (75) The Gemara says that Haman's descendants learned Torah in B'nei Brak. Here is the modern day reality of that. Baruch Hashem I think it is amazing! Chazak ve'amatz.
(80) Jonathan Keefe, January 10, 2011 9:09 PM
You are a very heroic person
I understand the pain that causes people to say or do terrible things to you. I'm sorry you've had to endure such treatment. I am in awe of your great strength. You should have tremendous Yiddishe Nachas from your offspring.
(79) Frieda, January 10, 2011 7:48 PM
Re-incarnation
Dr. Brown's Neshama is a re-incarnation of a jewish Neshama which went to a body of a Natzi child. Through this proccess, the neshama yearned to come back to Judaism. God Bless Dr. Brown
(78) Anonymous, January 10, 2011 6:37 PM
Reb Binyomin- I am so sorry for the very deep anguish you and your wife, families and indeed all of klal yisroel feel at this darkest time in our recent history. I would certainly never, ever attempt to apply any healing salve to this kind of pain and anger. May the Master of the Universe shield you and the rest of his children from this kind of suffering anymore.
(77) Anonymous, January 10, 2011 6:23 PM
V''Ahavta es HaGer -- Love the convert
Dear Mr. Brown, You and I together can have only pity for those who don't realize that Hashem loves the Ger and that when they start up with you and yours they are in fact messing directly with Avinu Shebashamayim. Since you were accepted for conversion according to Jewish law you as much a full fledged Jew as any and possibly more than some who don't even realize that their lineage could be questionable. I wish I was able to mitigate your pain in being treated this way by our brethren and to protect you in some way. I just wanted to add my statement to what you already know - we are not all like that. Hashem loves the Ger and directs us to do the same. However Hashem chose to bring you into this world was not of your choosing but to join His people certainly was and He, and therefore we, are happy to have you among us.
(76) Marc Mansour, January 10, 2011 6:22 PM
Stockholm Syndrom in reverse
As much as the Stockholm Syndrom describes captives identifying with their captors, the reverse may also be true; captors identifying with their captives. In one of the episodes of the old TV show "Kung FU", the master tells his student. Grasshopper, that while a spider captures flies with his web, he is also captive of his own web.
(75) Binyomin, January 10, 2011 5:30 PM
Jews have a very hard time with this
Mr. Brown is no ordinary convert. He is the nephew of the maniac himself! I have a very dificult time with this. The maniac and his followers killed 80 members of my family and about the same in my wife's family. This is no small matter. There would be about 5000 more Jews alive right now if they had all lived. I would like to know once and for all that all of amalek's line has been wiped out and that all of man kind will be free of them.
(74) Anonymous, January 10, 2011 5:19 PM
This man and his family's journey graciously being made public should serve each of us as inspiration in what ever private challanges we navigate alone. His raw emotional introspection and ability to transend his roots and turn his life's path into one of spiritual growth is inspiring on numerous levels. Which of us doesn't have private pain that we have to or choose to deal with alone? This man has chosen to make his private challanges public to give chizuk to many. We should concentrate on appreciating his efforts and not ripping him or each other apart.
(73) craig, January 10, 2011 5:13 PM
Astonished at the chutzpah of those who malign "Brown's" family
I am astonished that the Brown family is not being viewed as anything but heroic. Dr Brown has nothing to do with the actions of his lineage. what Dr Brown has done is the kind of thing that he didn't have to do. no one called upon him to do it. his religion did not ask it of him. he left everything in the name of truth. he displayed a dazzling sense of courage and clarity that is rarely seen. Anyone who maligns him or his family will not be looked upon kindly in the heavens... Dr. Brown. Kol Ha Kavod to you.
(72) gedaliah, January 10, 2011 1:47 PM
How sad
It is always disappointing when Jews, especially those dressed as Torah Jews, fall so short of what the Torah asks of them. The Torah says 13 times "love the convert", in fact, the Talmud points out that some of the greatest of all Rabbis in Jewish history from Rebbe Meir to Rebbe Akiva from from converts who were sworn enemies of the Jewish people. The Talmud points out that the generations of Haman learn Torah in Bnei Barak. Dear Dr. Brown and your family - I apologize on behalf of Torah Jews who have hurt you. I welcome you and with an open soul, and stand humbled before the amazing path you have endured
(71) sina, January 10, 2011 11:11 AM
Ger - Repentence
I don't recall anywhere in the article claiming that Dr. "Brown" converted for anything to do with repentance. Repentance is personal. Only the person commiting the transgression can repent. I also oppose hearing that a person is a "Ger" or "Ger Tzedek". As was mentioned below - once a person converts he / she is 100% Jewsih and WE are forbidden to remind them (or anyone else) otherwise. We need to work on this.
(70) Rabbi Shimshon Nadel, January 10, 2011 7:43 AM
For further discussion
I spoke about this case when I gave a class entitled, "Exploring the Limits of Teshuvah: How Far Must We Go in Accepting the Penitent? The Nazi Who Wanted to Convert to Judaism, A Case Study" If you are interested you can listen to it here: http://torahfromtzion.com/jewishtought/exploring-the-limits-of-teshuvah/
(69) eva, January 10, 2011 4:02 AM
wow, just amazing. can you think of a better revenge on Hitler?
(68) Dan, January 10, 2011 12:50 AM
Mercedes
"When [my grandparents] visited us, they arrived in a black Mercedes, which was then a novelty and status symbol. It was a big deal when the Mercedes arrived in the working-class neighborhood where my mother and I lived." So can someone explain why some Jewish people revel in driving such German cars?? Shame on them!
(67) Bina, January 9, 2011 11:21 PM
Slapping Hitler
Your conviction is admirable. Although you didn't do it intentionally, you and other German converts like you, slap Hitler like no one else can. If Hitler knew about this, he would flip in his grave. Yasher koach!
(66) Kathleen, January 9, 2011 10:16 PM
Another name
Some people who have the last name Frankenstein have also changed their name.
(65) Ricky Prizant, January 9, 2011 5:52 PM
Convert children of NAZIs
First I want to express my total support for Dr. Brown in all his endeavors. Don't let the ignorance of a few deter you from your love of G-d and Judaism. For those who are uninformed, remember that the Talmud speaks of descendants of Haman, who became Jewish leaders. As it says: "...descendants of Haman learned Torah in B'nai Brak;" (Sanhedrin 96b)
(64) Thea Kramer, January 9, 2011 5:40 PM
Never mind the negative comments from some of us. Maybe they hurt or are just fools. I am so proud of you, for the change in your eyes, ears, thoughts and heart. Its a big change being Jewish. I was raised with no jewish education. The Holocaust kept me Jewish. Because I had to understand. Good Luck to you and your family and WELCOME to the TRIBE
(63) Irwin Ruff, January 9, 2011 2:53 PM
Teshuva!
My reaction to this account (which I have read before) is puzzlement as to how some members of Jewish congregations could act in the way they have. Do these people know nothing about Yom Kippur? Have their Jewish studies never included the concept of teshuva? And even if they perhaps feel that the repentance of these Germans is not sincere (which they cannot KNOW, what about the precept of judging every person favorably? I realize that I myself am approaching the aveiros that I am denouncing, but I am ashamed that Jews, especially observant Jews, would approach a German convert in such a manner, simply because his relatives were involved in atrocities that were done before he was born.
(62) DR ANDREW NORMAN, June 29, 2009 3:56 PM
ERNA PATRA HITLER
Please, who were Hans Hitler's parents? Thank you.
(61) Fernando Bisker, September 5, 2008 12:35 AM
Incredible
It's amazing to see how people can change their lives to make what they see as the right decision to be done. I met the price of Swaziland, that decided to become Jew, leaving behind him his future as the next King. Tks Fernando Bisker
(60) Moises A. Mizrachi, September 17, 2007 10:01 AM
Extraordinary emotional
Never Have I read such a story related to germans converts who were relatives of high Nazis during the war.
(59) Anonymous, August 23, 2007 5:19 PM
Haman's Grandchildren were Jewish also
"Bney Bonov Shel Homon Lomdu Torah Bibney Brak", it is bought down in the Gemarah (Talmud).
(58) barbravitz, October 10, 2006 4:10 PM
Hitler's relatives convert to Judism was very intersting
this was a very heartwarming story
(57) ClaudiaGrubman, September 17, 2006 3:17 PM
The gift of God
Sure this is much astonishing, but also explains for itself why some jewish people are mistreated during the aliah process in Israel especially if they come from certain south american countries or some others from the lately and usually called third world. There's no room for us, but for those honorable men. Perhaps I should never have written but it's quite too much. I want to express my feelings to you israelis, may the Almighty bless you all and protect you from yourselves.Certainly reading about descendants from nazi germans converted to judaism living in Israel must prove by itself that this is a gift of him, whoever he is.
(56) aNNERUPE, September 11, 2006 1:00 PM
excellent
I liked reading about things that are new to me.
(55) chanasharfstein, September 10, 2006 11:12 AM
Thank you Yitta halberstam for a fascinating article
I just returned from a visit to Scandinavia. In Norway a large part of the Jewish Community consists of inter-married couples. Most of the time these converts, on their own, for no specific reason, decided to embrace judaism. They keep that community alive. They are devoted synagogue members. Your story saddened me greatly- It is indeed unfortunate that this wonderful man and his family have to counter distrust and negative attitides. Hopefully they will continue to be strong in their love for Yiddishkeit and raise a family of dedicated Totah Jews. In Scandinavia I found that the young people often have little involvement with the jewish religion. They know they are Jews but are happy to be uninvolved. Without religous schooling and participation I worry about the future of scandinavian Jews. Perhaps this is still a reaction to the Nazi years of destruction. The ripple effect can still be felt.
(54) Anonymous, September 10, 2006 3:09 AM
Thank you for this wonder-full article!
I myself am a Holocaust survivor and since 1976 have led seminars in Germany with second generation Nazis. – I am a psychotherapist.
In the year 1978 I lived in Haifa for a year, worked there at an institute and also gave workshops at the Hebrew University!
This too is another example that we can – if we so choose – to be living in the "Here and Now".
Needless to say, it took loads of work on my part and I can honestly say that I often yearn to be back where I was born – quite different from most Survivors who still suffer from their past experience - and remain resentful.
"We must never forget" is SO true, but we need not to continue to suffer – and make others suffer for their parent's awful mistakes – in order to remember!
How else will there ever be Peace?
Thank you again for your writing!
(53) Anonymous, September 9, 2006 11:55 AM
Unbelievable.
(52) Puregoldj, September 8, 2006 10:08 PM
I am shocked and disgusted that some are calling these peopple Nazis. Whether out of guilt, disgust at what their forebears did, or just through spiritual journey, these people have decided freely to convert to Judaism and to live in Israel as Jews. They are very clearly nothing close to nazis, and should not be blamed for the sins of their ancestors. They should be completely welcomed and embraced!!
What more of a complete victory over naziism could we hope for than to have the descendents of nazis becoming Jews!
(51) Anonymous, September 7, 2006 3:51 AM
I can't think of a better revenge on the Nazis than having his descendants become Orthodox Jews.
(50) BeverlyKurtin, September 6, 2006 11:28 PM
Welcome!
I hold that anyone who is a Jew IS a Jew. Some hold that a convert is called a ger. According to tradition, all Jewish souls were at Mt. Sinai when Moses was speaking with HaShem. "Dr. Brown" was there, to. So, like many others, welcome, brother, it's nice to know you're a member of the "tribe."
Many of you have made me proud to be a Jew. Wheeee!
(49) HDUrielSmith, September 6, 2006 7:57 AM
In support of "Adam"
I met Rabbi Aharon Shear-Yashuv before and after his conversion and was impressed by his sincerity and care. Members of both my own family and my wife's family were in the camps. I grew up first with children sent to England on the kindertransport, and after the World War with survivers who were cared in England. (Anna Freud dedicated part of her work in child psychology to help them, and she and other psychologists tried to use me as a "neutral" comparison. Of course, I was not "neutral".) My wife was in hiding with her mother, helped by Germans who risked their lives in helping them. We do not automatically trust new Germans whom we meet (as the Talmud states, "kabdehu v'-hashdehu", "Honour him, but mistrust him"). But we know of quite a number of good people, and are good friends with some of them. As the Torah states, and Ezekiel confirms, we should not paint children with the sins of their parents. The Talmud states that those who have converted to Judaism are as if they were born anew, and they especially should not be reminded of their ancestors sins. I pray that those who have hurt "Mr Brown" will learn the true Jewish tradition, and during the High Holidays ask him for forgiveness.
(48) DouglasE.Hall, September 5, 2006 7:39 PM
Intense.
Your reporting brings light into the present world.
(47) Adam, September 5, 2006 7:33 PM
This is written in the Talmud
Anybody who criticizes descendants of Nazis, and especially "Dr. Brown", are ignorant of the Mesorah and are behaving incorrectly. The Talmud, in Massechet/Tractate Sanhedrin, states "the descendants of Haman learned Torah in Bnei Brak," and it is clear that this is said in praise of them. Haman was just as bad as Hitler - the only difference is that he was stopped before he got started, but his intentions were exactly the same and he was moments away from implementing his diabolical plot before G-d intervened (read Megillat Esther/The Book of Esther). The Talmud never states something parenthetically or offhandedly, its statements have eternal significance, and this article is proof of that. The same underlying priniciple which guided Haman's descendants to Torah lead Dr. Brown to it as well. This is inspiring news. Dr. Brown, you are a living testament to the uniqueness of the Talmud of Torah in general.
(46) RoberMendler, September 5, 2006 6:23 PM
After reading this article I was very impressed with it. As a Holocaust
Survivor, myself I forgive but I won't forget, he deserves a chance to be a Jew and make up for his families crimes. It is a big price to pay for he is doing.
(45) JohnPayne, September 5, 2006 2:21 PM
The truth marches on, thankfully.
It is remarkable the experience that this man has gone through, revealing yet more truth in the scheme of life. Though this main story, regarding the Holocaust, the Jews and Israelis, will never have an ending, the chapters keep appearing. I hope and pray all will read and understand these stories from life and incorporate them into their real life experience.
(44) SandyBetty, September 5, 2006 11:56 AM
True conversion
I was often told that a true convert to Judaism is one who doesn't do it for convenience, just for marriage or any other superficial reason; but rather for the person's soul. As one whose maternal grandmother lost her entire family in Poland, I would say that Mr. Brown did indeed try to repent for his family and himself, and by doing so, and becoming so Jewish, he may have reached a higher level with God than those of us who claim to be Jewish but are embarrassed and change names and noses. I welcome Mr. Brown and the others who have chosen to live a moral, spiritual life within the Jewish community.
(43) Tzvi, September 5, 2006 7:48 AM
The Ultimate Revenge
I love reading stories about the descendants of Nazis becoming SINCERE Jews. This shows true Hashgachah Pratis. These sincere Jews should be embraced and respected for the strength of character it took to make such a tremendous change. May their descendants be a true Berachah to Klal Yisrael and fill the Yeshivos and Batei Midrashim with noble and dedicated Talmidei Chachamim. May they contribute to our speedy Geulah.
(42) Anonymous, September 4, 2006 11:32 PM
Be Careful What You Say to Someone
Unbelievable Often we say things in front of people never realizing their true ancestry. This article brings home the admonision of watching what we say to a convert for ten generations lest we hurt their feelings by bringing up their former religion and cause them to get defensive.
I do know of several Jewish men who, after the war, married their German maids(who converted). They then started life in America as Jewish couples. But this story is quite different!
(41) DeborahArky, September 4, 2006 11:08 PM
These Stories Must Be Told
Thank you for this fascinating article. It saddens me to hear about the cruelty endured in Israel. In a perfect world, those who have suffered would not make others suffer as they have. We are not responsible for what our relatives do.
I hope you and your family can spend the rest of your lives in peace.
It's important that Jews know these stories and accept our fellow Jews with love, peace and harmony.
(40) Andy, September 4, 2006 9:57 PM
Torah commands to love the stranger
It is disgusting that the nephew[or his children] of Hitler's grandson should be ill treated for no other reason than his ancestor was a rasha. If a Nazi who has blood on his hands did tshuvah and became a Jew I could understand him not being accepted but a nephew's grandson please. It seems to me that all those who ill treat or silently remain on the sidelines while this sincere Jew is shunned commit a serious sin.The hagadda re our ancestor Laban shows we all have less than stellar yichus.
(39) shronava, September 4, 2006 11:57 AM
pretty amazing story! -
I would like to know more about these people, their lives and conversions- I find it both sad and understandable that so many Jewish Israelis would be hostile - there must be some way to help them heal and accept the past as past, judging the present and the people in it in their current context and deeds - if we all responded to each other according to the misdeeds of our foreparents, the world would be even more horrific than now.
(38) Anonymous, September 4, 2006 11:31 AM
do these people have Jewish anscestors?
I have thought about this phenomenon of converted Germans - have heard of it. I have always thought that many of these converts must have "Jewish blood" in them from before. Germany was a highly assimilated country at the end of the nineteenth-early twentiesth centuries, and many Jews intermarried. Many of these people may be their grandchildren.
Also, many of the children who were sent to live during the war with German families never found out they were really born Jews, but remained with their German families after the war.
I have always thought that, among many of these converts, it may be their Jewish anscestry claiming its own. Or the prayers of a long-ago grandparent who did not know the fate of future generations, but prayeed for their spiritual welfare.
(37) JulesTabak, September 4, 2006 11:18 AM
It was refresshing to read
In regards to the people of the Hitler era or right after who try to make amends or become a better person, it is nice to hear. But for the many others who will not change, what will be the outcome of our lives, our childrens lives?
(36) Sidney, September 4, 2006 10:38 AM
I did not know of this. Very interesting.
(35) RodrigoSacca, September 4, 2006 10:11 AM
Nobody is to be held accountable for other's misdeeds
First of all, this message goes to our fellows jews who have mistreated one of our brethren for misdeeds he didn't do. How dare you! Do you know for sure who your ancestors were? And even if you do, can you be held accountable for any misdeeds they could have made? That's what I told a friend of mine of German descent who blushed the first time we met as I told her that I am jewish. The people who have done wrong to "Dr Brown" should do t'shuva and offer their sincere apologies to him! Should you read this message, "Dr. Brown", I would like to tell you that I would very much like to meet you in person, attend your lectures and be your friend.
(34) glynis, September 4, 2006 9:40 AM
Some contradictions seem just too much to bear. In this sense, the mere bizarre nature of this incites fear in me, this is my response, I almost wish I didn't know this
(33) Anonymous, September 4, 2006 8:52 AM
Coming out of the "Conversion" closet.
Amazing story. While I am sorry for any negative comments he and his family have received, coming out of the "conversion" closet was the right step.
We are in an era of major enlightening, and focus on religions, ideologies, and plain old brutal truths, as it should be. Note the many conversions from Islam being publicized, too. They fear, but they speak.
Until a country, or it's people can accept a person's religion, or conversion we have not yet evolved into civilized people. Ignore the negatives, just reading the comments proves there are many others who have chosen Judaism, descendants of Hitler, included.
Wonderful story.
(32) Leilamanasseh, September 4, 2006 8:09 AM
Hashem works in mysterious ways.
Kol Hakovod to Yitta Halberstam for this inspiring and surprising account of former nazis` and descendants of nazis` conversion to Judaism. It is shameful that these heroic people should have treated so badly by an ignorant, albeit, minority. Their unwavering faith is an example to our fellow Jews whose connection to Judaism is tenuous and wavering. This true story should reach a wider public.
(31) Sharon, September 4, 2006 7:22 AM
It is a new generation of Germans
Even before reading this article, I have suspected that the current generation of German people, with the exception of the neo-Nazi group, is qualitatively different from the German people of the Nazi era. Everything we read in the news, suggests this.
The story here suggests that a person is more than just the product of his education and circumstance. He does have the ability to think and feel and act upon the conclusions to which he comes. In a word, a person has free choice and is totally responsible for his choices.
I hadn't known that even the infamous Haman had Jewish descendents until I read about it in the comments. This historical fact should make it easier for anyone to accept the authenticity of the conversion of descendents of Nazis.
I wonder at Brown's decision to send his teenager to Poland on the "Holocaust tour." The very unique thoughts and feelings that he had to grapple with would have made a family trip more appropriate.
My own paternal grandparents were murdered in Auschwitz and a large part of my mothers family were also killed in the Holocaust, but I can accept Brown's family and others like them as true Jews, without any reservations, because this is what the Torah dictates.
(30) karendahl, September 4, 2006 5:58 AM
German Connections.
The Hitler family have stong Hebrew connections and very strong claims on their heritage as Jews. Clearly such a claim may offend, but that is the way it is. Unfortunately we now know there were numerous Jews who worked as Nazis in Germany, wearing the uniform, making the salutes, doing the evil work of darkness. Sad but true. I'm not a believer in the new age dictum 'we're all connected' as I believe our connections are often only very superficial and material, however, our soul connections, the connections of the neshema are the most powerful connections we have, a Jew will always be a Jew just as goodness, love and beauty are the powers of all eternity, darkness reigns only for a moment. Lest we ever forget the persecutions that as a nation we have borne, we must focus upon our light power, the light of the Menorah, we are in a time of attack, ever more fierce, our focus for the New Year must be our call upon the light of truth and goodness, love and beauty, to make ever strong our homeland. We must not back down again, we faltered losing Sinai, it must not happen again, we must make the battle call and hold true with the power of our essence as a nation, our power is of the soul, it is deeper and stronger than the power of material connection with lowly dark powers of death and destruction. We must draw forth with faith from the many corners of the Diaspora to reclaim our heritage, our Land of Israel, with love, light and peace. Our power is mighty, the power of good.
(29) Dr.W.E.Geller, September 3, 2006 11:17 PM
A most facinating article.
It warmed my heart to know that these decendents of monsters converted to Judaism, not in atonement but because this is what they wanted. May they live their lives in peace.
(28) CarinaRamirez, September 3, 2006 10:32 PM
Very interesting. I have German relatives, both Jewish and Catholic, who refuse to speak of this time. It is just too painful.
(27) Rivka, September 3, 2006 9:23 PM
I always thoughtn Iwas the only german person converting to Judaism
wow,( read at your own risk.....)
this story made my hair stand on end!!. A lot of what was said mirrored my own experience. I always felt, I was the only "convert" in the world, or in the United States, with my German/ Roumanian background.
I was also born in 1952, in Hamburg, Germany. my mom a refuge from roumania, my father, a pacifist from Germany, who refused to join the nazi party, and never spoke much about his experience, as he was pleased to put that time behind himself.As children, we were not allowed to play with toy guns,he was allergic about that , and he hated uniforms.My brother in the 60's was not allowed to join a fraternity, when he was in college.I was fully integrated in German society, was a Medical Student, and had many friends, and a busy life. In 1972, I met a Jewish / holocaust survivor family, who happened to live in Hamburg, son became my boyfriend, and the entire family befriended me. End of story( or beginning of story)
I still cannot explain, what drew me towards Judaism, from the age of 20 years on, I do not think it had much to do with guilt. Also, I do not know why I was different from everybody else in the family. I can identify with the person, who felt drawn to Judaism, from the spiritual aspect of it, as my mother instilled a deep belief and trust in G-d in me. My mother was a Catholic, my father was a Protestant.
I believe that I had a Jewish soul, in the past, and the Kabbalists also explain conversions to Judaism on that level. I actually had many Holocaust dreams, as a younger person, and somehow believe that I was part of it, as a Jew, in a previous life.
I married a Jewish man,a Russian refugee, and now have three beautiful children. Sadly, the marriage did not last, and since the divorce, I have grown even closer to Judaism, and derived much consolation and enlightenment from my religion and beliefs.
With my complex background, it will be very difficult for me to find another partner, it is very difficult, to explain my bizarre conversion story to any Jew or nonJew.And I usually try to avoid it, or skip over it , am very good at changing topics....
Believe me, the conversion, with me diving in the Mikvah,( now some 24 years ago, in Manhattan) and three male rabbis talking to me from the other side,of the change room , somewhere in a Queens Mikvah place,an unforgettable experience. Also, the rabbis interviewed me for two hours,( after going through an extensive course of study for many months),refuse you three times before they accept you, and you have to come up with some pretty good reasons why you would want to be part of the "chosen people", and they make you feel like you make the wrong choice, and that you really do not want to be part of the "persecuted crowd", especially if you have it cushy and comfy where where youre coming from.
I never regretted it, however, after reading your story, I realized, what a complex package I gifted to my children, especially when I read the story about the kids traveling to Poland, and how they felt visiting the camps..
We once took the train to Dachau to the Holocaust memorial/exhibit, in 1991/2, my daughter was 3or 4, and my son was 8 or 9 years old, they were too young to fully understand.
I never forget my daughter singing " "Avenu malkenu", a song her grandfather taught her , in 1991, in the German train, when we took the ride to Dachau to visit the camp, all the German people in the train had no idea what she was singing about, it was beautiful, but very haunting,evoking so many images.We just pretended we were a family/ American tourists with a lively child, not a quiet, well behaved child like the german kids.I will never forget that young innocent voice singing very loudly, full of gusto,out of the blue, what made her sing "Ovenu malkenu", at that time, over and over, and over?
We did not hush her, I never forget this picture.
Enough of this , I never thought I would find an email to respond to from the heart,
my daughter started college, I dropped her off yesterday, at school, a new life, she will join the Chabad House, and Hillel on Campus, I am so proud of her. I want to email her the Khalil Gibran poem about children, if i can find it.
I hope she will keep her inquisitive mind, and ask questions, and will always live in a free country, where we can sing" Avenu Malkenu, " with a very loud voice.
Rivka( my Hebrew nam)
Ana, April 15, 2011 12:31 PM
B"H
Beautiful!
(26) Anonymous, September 3, 2006 7:05 PM
Had no idea !
Wow. How awesome. That is beautiful and commendable and too bad some people gave him and his children a hard time.
(25) Anonymous, September 3, 2006 6:25 PM
The bottom line is...
While it is extraordinary and compelling that people such as "Mr. Brown" have delved into their pasts and have seen the horror and are strong enough to convert, I still feel that they have to understand that it does not make the past go away. The bottom line is, yes "your grandfather could have turned [his] grandmother into soap", your repentance doesn't change that. While people should treat you for who you are and not for what your forefathers did, you still have to be aware of that bottom line.
(24) Anonymous, September 3, 2006 5:06 PM
Wonderful when non-Jews learn who we are...
it is amazing how many non-Jews become enchanted with Judiasm. It has nothing to do with their conversion, rather, simply, of who we are, what we do, and how we live our lives. I am proud to be part of a people who want to heal the world, what finer goal in life can there be?
I wish more people understood us/this.
(23) MurrayBrandys, September 3, 2006 5:02 PM
Well writen story
As a holocaust survivor converts should have been in the thousands not in the hundrets .Read my book it is on the web side [My Name was 133909]
(22) Anonymous, September 3, 2006 4:57 PM
oy gevald
might be my grandparents were the ones his relative saw hanging in lodz.
(21) DeborahWenocur, September 3, 2006 3:23 PM
met Asher Eder in Israel
I met Dr. Asher Eder in Israel in 1973, when he was our tour guide. He is a most amazing, interesting, and wonderful man. We still remember him well, 33 years later. I would love to be able to be in touch with him if anybody has contact information.
(20) Anne, September 3, 2006 2:57 PM
Children are Innocent
My mother of blessed memory was a survivor of Auschwitz. She spoke about her experiences and told me that the worst thing she she had to go through was to watch children suffer, not just those in her family but all Jewish children. "The worst thing in the world is to see a child suffer." I don't know what promted me to ask, "Even a German child?" She answered, "Yes. Even a German child. Children are innocent until you fill them with hate."
There is also precedent for this. Isn't there a story that the grtandchildren of Haman converted and became Jews?
Anne
(19) astridkunzer, September 3, 2006 2:13 PM
wow! what an article
I feel very grateful to know that there are people who live truthfully. Thanks to your challenging article, they may get the respect they deserve.
(18) Anonymous, September 3, 2006 1:55 PM
unbelievable
Difficult to process.
Perhaps the converts also wanted to find out for themselves why Jews were so unloved and unwanted by the Nazis. Maybe they wanted to find out what was so special about Jews and Judaism that caused Hitler to be afraid of them lest they stay and contribute to music, medicine,psychology,architecture,law,art,literature that will outweigh the German contributions, And the German converts found out and it has given them peace not only for their ancestors' past but peace for themselves in a group of people who cherish life,education,joy and tradition, that speaks to the converts and makes them whole.But it is difficult for them to live in Israel and somehow that is to be expected and hopefully somehow also accepted as a true and positive intention.
(17) DvorahStone, September 3, 2006 1:35 PM
Reactions to German Converts
Even though it appears astomishing to us that someone with such a background would convert to Judaism, we are bound by an explicit law in the Torah to love a Ger Tzedek, not to remind them of their origins which most certainly is intended to preclude someone from causing them deliberate grief. On the contrary how often does one have the chance to preform the Mitzvah of "loving a Ger." Anyone with a problem accepting true Ger Tzedek should be taught about Haman's decendent who was a Ger, Onkolos and about Rabbi Akivah's ancestry.
(16) Mary, September 3, 2006 1:24 PM
Ahmadinejad
It's too bad that the converts from Naziism don't write a combined letter to the Hitler of our time, Ahmadinejad, holocaust denier, and attempt to straighten out his thinking, and all sign the same letter.
(15) BeverlyBatok, September 3, 2006 1:09 PM
enteristing
Very interisting, would love to here more
(14) Jana, September 3, 2006 12:55 PM
our grandparents lives
Who of us but this group of people are held responsible for their grand-parents actions, if the younger generation has taken a different path?
My great-grandmother would tell me stories of her mother's cousin, and the family's life. The cousin was Jefferson Davis. I haven't heard of any relatives being held responsible for his actions.
Hats off to "Daniel Brown", and the others, who have had personal demons to deal with us that most of us will thankfuly never know.
(13) malka, September 3, 2006 12:18 PM
why
What an outstanding and insightful article. But I don't understand why, if Mr. "Brown" had a proper conversion, an Israeli newspaper badgered him so much about his past. He is a Jew in the eyes of Hashem, and should be to all of us as well. People should worry more about the modern day Nazis--Muslims--that are bent on wiping Israel off the face of the earth and the messianics who are striving to steal Jewish souls.
Mr. Brown--for any pain any Jewish person has caused you or your family-- I am sorry.
(12) efroimg., September 3, 2006 11:31 AM
Ignorance and hate.
This is a very good article. I am of german decent as well and have been cheaply attacked in israel as well as in usa by fellow jews in such a fashion. One even gets attacked if you tell them where you were born. I have learned to deal with it. There will allways be good and bad. I choose to be the prior. In the end, evryone will be judged according to their deeds.
(11) RuthLove, September 3, 2006 10:54 AM
Spell binding. I couldn't quit reading til the bitter end.
This article was so fabulous. It really touched me to learn of these facts. I also found out about the many Germans who live in Israel. I was not aware...and of the reaction of the young people when they learned the truth about Brown.
(10) Tziporah, September 3, 2006 9:53 AM
Torah
According to the Torah, people are not allowed to persecute others for what their parents have done. If they do, then they need to delve into their roots.
(9) JerryReich, September 3, 2006 9:44 AM
Famial & Familiar
This story really hits home by stirring up memories of my childhood. I am an orthodox jew with similar name brand issues but without the special yichus. I've been hazed uncountable times by classmates in America and when I made Aliya in Israel. I've been called the third reich, {theres two older siblings}and denigrated in so many ways. In Israel at beit Sefer Himmelfarb the sefardi classmates would spit sunflower seeds on me almost daily and curse at me {u SOB....}sometimes within earshot of their sefardi teachers who never lifted a finger in objection. Believe me, Matchmakers don't want to know of a Jew with such a questionable name like Reich. How galling is it when I'm with gentiles I recieve such warm support "You have a good German name" I'm told on numerous occations. Such acceptance is virtually non existant among my own people! Truth be told, only G-d accepts you the way you are, everyone else is on the change campaign, most with good never with the best of intentions. This is alluded in the very word "acceptance" an anagram that may be spelled "cant c peace". Once labeled or should I say libeled in Israel you'll never retrieve your dignity. The author was just too kind when he said "the decency of the majority did not nullify the crude conduct of the minority". My aliya experience contained none of this decency. From day one when I did'nt even recover from jet lag a sabra neighbor{and uniform wearing soldier of tzahal} upon being requested not to let his dog crap on our welcome mat told us to "go back to America where you came from, we don't need you or your money". He should have worn a PA uniform. The second temple was destroyed due to causeless hatred. How little has changed in 2000 years!
(8) sarahshapiro, September 3, 2006 9:43 AM
May "Daniel Brown" and his family receive love and appreciation from their fellow Jews
(7) Chava, September 3, 2006 9:36 AM
To forgive, but not forget
I believe it is very poignant that this article was printed close to the High Holidays. I, a grandchild of two whose many family members perished in the Holocaust, accept "Dr. Brown" and his attitude of humility before HaShem. Though the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children, we are also accountable to HaShem for what we do. Didn't our great rabbis say that we are not to remind a convert that he/she is one? We are to accept and embrace them, as many great rabbis through the ages have also been converts. During this High Holiday season, let us look to forgive others, though we will not forget the tragedy that has touched our lives. Remember that HaShem allowed Dr. Brown to be born into this world to come to this point in his life. Do we question HaShem or accept that Dr. Brown now worships our G-d in his heart? Remember tashlich? "Who is like You, G-d, who removes iniquity and overlooks transgression of the remainder of His inheritance. He does not remain angry forever because He desires kindness. He will return and He will be merciful to us, and He will conquer our iniquities, and He will cast off our sins into the depths of the seas. Give truth to Jacob, kindness to Abraham, like that you swore to our ancestors from long ago." Let us remember this when we deal with others during this season.
(6) r, September 3, 2006 8:46 AM
small-minded people make big trouble; great people aspire to loftiness
Mr. "Brown" (& others) might be interested in hearing about a kid in my class who persecuted me, after hearing that I had been born in China. Growing up in the shadow of the McCarthy era, I had a kid in my class who persecuted me as a "commie," pulled my braids whenever possible and tried to convince my classmates that I couldn't be Jewish if I admitted to having been born in Shanghai. It didn't help to declare that we had left when I was all of 4 MONTHS old. This kid tried to ostracize me as a "commie spy." It was a very unpleasant time for me, even tho there was absolutely no basis for this "blame." {PS this jerk was so "enlightened" that he afterwards left mitzvah-observance....}
So I very much feel for these people who have been "mosser nefesh" (sacrificing their comfortable lives) for their pursuit of truth. I know an American convert who told me her story, saying that her mother's own search had brought the daughter to take it one step further. When I inquired why the mother had not herself converted, the daughter exclaimed, "You have no idea what a hard step it is!" Usually very reticent, she said this with such vehemence that it has left an indelible impression.
My best wishes to all those who have taken this giant step; and with the New year, may we ALL merit Heavenly help in striving ever higher, aspiring to Truth, and making Peace among our fellow men. Ksiva v'chasima tova to all Klal Yisroel.
(5) JaneFrost, September 3, 2006 8:38 AM
Light in all Dark Places article
What a piece of news. I do hope somehow all people learn tolerance, and somehow to forgive (not forget, but forgive). Though I am not of Jewish faith, I enjoy receiving Aish.
(4) Adriane, September 3, 2006 8:24 AM
Surprise
This scenario never even crossed my mind. This is amazing and perhaps prophetic. Somehow I am glad for the people in the story; and at the same time I get the shivers. In any case I am happy I read it.
(3) NeilKuchinsky, September 3, 2006 8:20 AM
If They Can Move to Israel...
To me, the real irony is that so many people in "Dr. Brown's" situation can find ways to move to Israel and adapt, while so many American Jews can find excuses not to.
(2) eliava, September 3, 2006 8:15 AM
converts are 100 jewish!
i'm a convert myself, though none of my ancestors have been nazis. it's sad that many jews, especially in the orthodox community, don't accept converts as the torah asks from us. this is weird, because if they study torah all day, they should know, how much g-d loves all the jews, and that converts are to be considered 100 jewish, not more or less then a jew by birth. converts can't be honest and let their neighbors etc. know that they're jews by choice. if they do, they might endanger their kids to get a good shidduch one day, this isn't something i made up, people that know that i converted tell me not to tell anyone else, for this and other reasons..
there's a lot of discrimination going on out there, and it's very sad, because we should be am echad, and it shouldn't matter where we come from, if it's from a goyishe, sephardi or ashkenazi family, what counts is, that we're all jews today and we try to bring forth the ge'ula, speedily in our days, amen.
(1) Scott, September 3, 2006 4:19 AM
Why the surprise?
Our traditions are replete with stories of our enemies, or their decendents, converting and joining the Jewish people. It even makes sense. Unlike other nations, our enemies recognize our relationship with Hashem. They want to usurp or nullify that relationship. Their relatives who join us want to EMBRACE it. Two sides of the same coin.
I am saddened by the hostility and rejection these people face. I only hope they continue to remain firm in their belief and resolve.