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Hebrew between Jews and Christians. Edited by Daniel Stein Kokin. Studia Judaica. Forschungen zur Wissenschaft des Judentums 77. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023. vi + 357 pp. $118.99 hardcover, E-book.

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Hebrew between Jews and Christians. Edited by Daniel Stein Kokin. Studia Judaica. Forschungen zur Wissenschaft des Judentums 77. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023. vi + 357 pp. $118.99 hardcover, E-book.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2024

Yuliya Minets*
Affiliation:
University of Alabama
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews and Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Society of Church History

The history of any language is often understood either as a history of its speech community, or as a history of its phonetical, lexical, morphological, syntactical, and stylistic changes over time. Yet these approaches do not always do justice to the complex developments of what a language was in different cultural contexts through centuries, especially if this is a language so loaded with multiple legacies and spanned across several traditions as Hebrew is.

The collected volume Hebrew between Jews and Christians, edited by Daniel Stein Kokin, reflects the recent increase in scholarly interest in what a language means as a cultural phenomenon beyond what it expresses as a linguistic code. The book opens with an insightful Introduction by the editor who mentions that it is crucial to recognize that “Hebrew itself has played a significant role” in the relations between Judaism and Christianity, and that the volume is “an academic treatment of this role committed to examining the two religious traditions as equal partners in this story across the longue durée” (1). Moreover, while there is “the great quantitative difference” in the use of Hebrew by the two traditions, “both Jews and Christians have used engagement with Hebrew as a means of thinking about, reaching, and also critiquing one another” (17). This engagement—across centuries, confessions, intellectual trends, cultural and political contexts—is ultimately the link that connects this volume's contributions.

The contributions are set in chronological order. The book starts with the studies of late antique topics—rabbinic discussions of the possible multilingual revelation of the Torah as a way to either fully comprehend the true meaning of Scripture, or to inform other nations of its laws and potentially hold them accountable (Steven D. Fraade) and the views on the primordial language attested in the Syriac tradition—in particular, in Jacob of Edessa (633–708 CE, Alison G. Salvesen). Irven M. Resnick continues with a survey of medieval Christian ideas about the Hebrew language—as one that is simultaneously sacred as the language of God and angels, and suspicious and dangerous as a language of Jews. The chapter is nicely counterbalanced by Gabriel Wasserman's contribution, which explores the medieval Jewish views on Aramaic—a liturgical language along with Hebrew but not quite as prestigious, and paradoxically, the one that may reach God directly, bypassing angelic intermediaries. The upper chronological end is represented by the chapters by Yael Almog devoted to the notions of Hebrew in the thought of the late-eighteenth-century German intellectuals Hamann and Herder; by Thomas Willi on the Aramaic studies of Gustaf Dalman (1855–1941); by Shalom Goldman on the spiritual and scholarly life of Paul Levertoff (1878–1954); and by Liora R. Halperin on changes in the sacred and secular roles of Hebrew in the Yishuv era.

Although all chapters are cross-linked in multiple ways, the volume's true tour de force, in terms of the density of interrelated discourses, is the central block of seven articles devoted to the Christian and Jewish Hebraism in the early modern period. Their authors take different approaches but ultimately are engaged in a dynamic conversation of the same closely related group of intellectuals and texts. Irene Zwiep focuses on Elijah “Baḥur” Levita (1469–1549) and his studies of Hebrew grammar that came up as a result of an inner-Jewish Ashkenazi-Sephardi dialogue. Melanie Lange takes this discussion a step further and explores the Christianizing strategies employed by Sebastian Münster (1488–1552), a prominent Christian Hebraist of the time, in his edition of Levita's linguistic treatise Sefer ha-Baḥur. Similarly, Ilona Steimann discusses the “conversion” of Jewish books to Christianity by Hartman Schedel (1440–1514)—a physician and chronicler from Nuremberg and a Hebrew book collector who did not know the language, but his very ignorance suggested paratextual ways to transform and “improve” the codices—by adding prophetic inscriptions and typological woodcuts, “in accordance with his ideas about Jews and Judaism” (160).

Saverio Campanini develops another important theme that has already emerged from a different angle in Zwiep's contribution and that will reappear in the chapters by Stephen G. Burnett on Luther's Hebrew scholarship and his attitudes to Judaism and by Guido Bartolucci on post-Tridentine Catholic scholars of Hebrew. Campanini speaks about a “typology” of the Hebrew language acquisition among Christian intellectuals in this period. This has never been a neutral act, but one infused with a theological significance. Besides the noticeable change that “it became possible for Christians to be instructed in Hebrew by other Christians without recruiting Jewish teachers or even Jewish converts” (141), Campanini mentions the newly developing confessional distinctions in Hebrew learning—while the Catholics “choose tradition over philology, the protestants, on the other hand, chose philology over tradition” (153). The contributions by Burnett and Bartolucci on, respectively, the situation among the Protestant and Catholic intellectuals complicate this observation further. This ultimately resonates with the very title of the book—“Hebrew between Jews and Christians.” Both entities are in plural, suggesting that there have always been multiple different groups of “Christians” and “Jews” and that their ideas of Hebrew were as much a product of the inter-religious polemics as of intra-confessional discussions and distinctions.

The development of national discourses added another layer of complexity, as evident in Halperin's contribution. Similarly, Stefan Schorch explores the peculiarities of Hungarian Christian Hebraism in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The linguistic theory of the time that Hebrew and Hungarian are closely related on the basis of some grammar similarities between the two languages, though totally untenable today, became an important mechanism to channel sentiments of national identity and even to claim some of Hebrew's holiness for Hungarian. This emphasizes that the cultural significance of Hebrew goes beyond the knowledge of this language (cf. Steimann's chapter) and that language fantasies are no less important for cultural history than linguistic realities.

The broad chronological frame of the book should not intimidate scholars who, like myself, are interested in ideas about languages, but focus more narrowly on a specific period. The articles are appealing and accessible, and the shared themes reverberate through the entire volume, which is a valuable addition to this currently growing field.