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Jakob der Knecht

von Isaac Bashevis Singer

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974821,461 (4.1)48
Four years after the Chmielnicki massacres of the seventeenth century, Jacob, a slave and cowherd in a Polish village high in the mountains, falls in love with Wanda, his master's daughter. Even after he is ransomed, he finds he can't live without her, and the two escape together to a distant Jewish community. Racked by his consciousness of sin in taking a Gentile wife and by the difficulties of concealing her identity, Jacob nonetheless stands firm as the violence of the era threatens to destroy the ill-fated couple.… (mehr)
Kürzlich hinzugefügt vonprivate Bibliothek, ELibrary_ISDM, Ak.786, tuttermouse, prengel90, Fesp, Black.Opium, ClarendonLibrary
NachlassbibliothekenNelson Algren, Eeva-Liisa Manner
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The opening setting of The Slave is the remote rural mountains of southern Poland in the late 17th Century in the years immediately following the Chmielnicki (often spelled Khmelnytsky) Uprising, an invasion by Cossack forces in rebellion against Polish domination. In Jewish history, these events are known as the Chmielnicki Massacres, as the Cossack forces, aided often by the Poles themselves, perpetrated widespread and massive pogroms. Whole villages were essentially obliterated. Our protagonist, Jacob, is a survivor of one such attack on his native village, Josefov. His wife and three children, he believes, have been murdered, but instead of being killed himself, Jacob is captured and sold into slavery to Jan Bzik, a farmer in remote mountain town. Escape into the mountains, whose ways are unknown to him, means certain death, and the villages have sworn to kill Jacob on sight if he is spotted on the wrong side of the river that borders Bzik's land. Bzik himself, it should be noted, is not portrayed as a cruel man.

For five years Jacob spends his winters in a high mountain cabin tending to Bzik's cattle. His only source of food and water is what is brought up the mountain to him daily by Bzik's daughter, Wanda. Far from Jewish community and the holy books he loves, Jacob strives to maintain a pious Jewish life as best he can, and that include resisting the strong physical attraction that Jacob and Wanda feel for each other. Jacob would surely be excommunicated by the rabbis for cohabitating with a Gentile, and either or both of the two could be burned alive by the Church. Marriage is out of the question. Well, but as we know, such temptation cannot be resisted forever, and certainly not in fiction.

Well, I don't want to give away any plot developments.The storyline drew me in and made The Slave an active, enjoyable reading experience for me. As is often the case with Singer, although not as strongly as in others of his novels, there is a touch of magical realism, at least as seen though the characters' eyes, and there is also a bit of a fable like quality. Wanda and Jacob's love, and the peril it brings them, provides the momentum. The Jewish community rebounds from the massacres, but goes quickly back to its former, all too human ways, scrupulously following the slightest rabbinical dicta regarding dress, prayer and diet while ignoring biblical commandments about how to treat one's neighbors. Singer, examines this phenomenon in depth through Jacob and Wanda, who experience it all first hand. And though Singer's (and Jacob's) observations are often scathing (Singer himself turned from religious Judaism to a much more secular philosophy and lifestyle in early adulthood), nevertheless he retains an underlying compassionate perspective on both the frailties of humanity and the value of faith.

As The Slave was published in 1962, the resonance of the Holocaust and its aftermath within the narrative is unmistakable. Singer weaves together themes of identity, isolation, faith, religion, superstition, love, cruelty and compassion, separation and renewal into a rich and memorable novel.

Here is a quote I like:

"Ceaselessly he had prayed for death; he had even contemplated self-destruction. But now that mood had passed, and he had become inured to living among strangers, distant from his home, doing hard labor. As he drowsed, he heard pine cones falling and the coo of a cuckoo in the distance. He opened his eyes. The web of branches and pine needles strained the sunlight like a sieve, and the reflected light became a rainbow-colored mesh. A last drop of dew flamed, glistened, exploded into thin moten fibers. There was not a cloud to sully the perfect blue of the sky. It was difficult to believe in God’s mercy when murderers buried children alive. But God’s wisdom was evident everywhere." ( )
1 abstimmen rocketjk | Jul 14, 2023 |
4/13/22
  laplantelibrary | Apr 13, 2022 |
This is the first Isaac Bashevis SInger novel I have ever read and I was surprised that it was racier than I was expecting. It gave an interesting view of both Jewish and non-Jewish life in prewar Poland. I didn't love the translation, however. It used words like Pentecost instead of Shavuot and phylactery instead of tefillin. ( )
  KamGeb | Oct 23, 2014 |
"His name was Jacob also; he too had lost a beloved wife, the daughter of an idolater, among strangers; Sarah too was buried by the way and had left him a son. Like the biblical Jacob, he was crossing the river, bearing only a staff, pursued by another Esau. Everything remained the same: the ancient love, the ancient grief. Perhaps four thousand years would again pass; somewhere, at another river, another Jacob would walk mourning another Rachel. Or who knew, perhaps it was always the same Jacob and the same Rachel. Well, but the Redemption has to come. All of this can't last forever.
Jacob lifted his gaze: Lead, God, lead. It is thy world."


The Cossacks killed Jacob's wife and children and placed him into captivity. He finds himself in love with a woman who brings him bread and the war between his flesh and his faith, which does not allow such pairing, are a daily endurance. His faith is all the slave has to call his own and, lost in a land of pagans, Jacob clings to it hard. Does he trust his God to bring him through this captivity? Does he believe his faith will sustain him if being an abused cow-herd is all there is for the rest of his years?

I was surprised at how fast of a read [The Slave] turned out to be. Jewish/Gentile relationships are a subject I find myself coming back to and even though that's a big part of the book, it's not the entirety. I really felt myself going on this journey of faith with Jacob. I'll have to look for more of Singer. ( )
1 abstimmen VictoriaPL | May 6, 2012 |
A novel about a Jewish slave in Poland in the 1600's who takes a gentile for his wife and flees to a Jewish community to face the difficulties there.
  Folkshul | Jan 15, 2011 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (21 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Isaac Bashevis SingerHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Šenkyřík, LadislavÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Hemley, CecilÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Kriek, BarthoÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Landmann, SalciaNachwortCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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Four years after the Chmielnicki massacres of the seventeenth century, Jacob, a slave and cowherd in a Polish village high in the mountains, falls in love with Wanda, his master's daughter. Even after he is ransomed, he finds he can't live without her, and the two escape together to a distant Jewish community. Racked by his consciousness of sin in taking a Gentile wife and by the difficulties of concealing her identity, Jacob nonetheless stands firm as the violence of the era threatens to destroy the ill-fated couple.

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