Simply magnificent Edgar!
Thank you…
jerome

> On Oct 22, 2025, at 13:17, Bruce Reisch <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
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> Edgar,
>  The book and associated correspondence in Die Stimme – both are simply 
> priceless. 
>  Thanks for finding these treasures and sharing them with all of us so 
> freely! A free download of the book itself – wow!
>  A bunch of years ago, Sylvie Gsell and I found an original tombstone from 
> the Old Jewish Cemetery of Czernowitz on display in the Museum of the 
> Holocaust in Paris. We tried to find out how it got there, but got no 
> response.
>  Thank you,
> Bruce
>   From: [email protected] 
> <[email protected]> on behalf of Edgar Hauster 
> <[email protected]>
> Date: Wednesday, October 22, 2025 at 06:24
> To: CZERNOWITZ-L <[email protected]>
> Subject: [czernowitz-l] A Snippet from "Die Stimme" [The Voice] in 1950: 
> ANDRÉ SPIRE'S VISIT TO CZERNOWITZ
> Czernowitzers...
> 
> A new edition of “Die Stimme”, the monthly Newsletter for the Bukovinians, 
> was published on 01-MAY-1950. Let's take a journey into the past together to 
> comprehend what moved our ancestors, their relatives and friends back then!
> 
> ANDRÉ SPIRE'S VISIT TO CZERNOWITZ in 1925 continues to fascinate "Die Stimme" 
> 25 years later and us 100 years later. We learned more about the visit itself 
> from the March 1950 issue of "Die Stimme"; in this May 1950 issue, we learn 
> about the outstanding value of the book “Jüdische Volkskunst” [Jewish Folk 
> Art] by Dr. Max Diamant. And because the Old Jewish Cemetery of Czernowitz 
> has been gone for a long time and Diamant’s book contains what are probably 
> the only remaining photos of it in the world, I have unearthed it for you 
> from the depths of the archives:
> 
> http://czernowitzbook.blogspot.com/2025/08/judische-volkskunst-jewish-folk-art.html
> https://www.amazon.de/photos/share/cMJlQyi5NHqal3tO3jm0IFxohoir3wDh33sg0cR1v6t
> 
> “We received the following letter: In the article by André Spire reproduced 
> in the previous issue of your newspaper, the gravestones that Dr. Diamant 
> showed in Czernowitz are compared with those in the Prague Jewish Cemetery, 
> among others. What is remarkable about them, however, is that they have 
> nothing in common with those. The Prague stones, for example, were created by 
> Christian stonemasons in the style and ornamentation of the Christian 
> environment there. The stones that Diamant discovered in northern Bukovina, 
> the southern tip of Eastern Galicia, and Moldavia were carved by Jewish 
> stonemasons, members of the Chewrah Kadischah, in fulfillment of a sacred 
> duty. They are worked from left to right, the writing itself is a means of 
> expression, the ornamentation harks back to ancient symbolic motifs from the 
> Middle East and is often completely redesigned. The craftsmen often succeeded 
> in expressing something of the nature of the person buried beneath the stone 
> (see, for example, the gravestone of a young girl or that of the rabbi in 
> Diamant's book). Diamant was therefore right to claim that he had discovered 
> a kind of Jewish folk art in these stones. In doing so, he refuted the 
> assumption that we Jews are incapable of developing folk art. These stones 
> have such richness and power of expression that they are something entirely 
> unique and become an experience for the viewer.Diamant's book “Jüdische 
> Volkskunst” [Jewish Folk Art] was published by Präger Verlag, Vienna, but due 
> to a lack of funds it had to be printed in Czernowitz and the clichés for the 
> illustrations were obtained in Bucharest, not always to our full 
> satisfaction. A subscription in Vienna, followed by one in Czernowitz, 
> covered part of the printing costs; Diamant himself paid the rest, just as he 
> had often restored the gravestones in the cemeteries at his own expense. Most 
> of the book's print run was destroyed by the Nazis in Vienna. It would be 
> welcome if a new edition could be published, which, among other things, could 
> provide a wealth of inspiration for Jewish arts and crafts. The people of 
> Bukovina will remember that Ing. Dawidowicz created chandeliers and grilles 
> for the lodge house in Czernowitz based on motifs from Diamant's book. M. 
> Seidman”
> 
> https://www.bukowina-institut.de/de/bukowiki/personen/detail?id=19
> http://hauster.de/data/192709DiamantMenorah503.pdf
> https://www.difmoe.eu/uuid/uuid:0f546d56-fc21-4779-ab5b-619522956402
> 
> Dr. Manfred Reifer founded the Chug Olej Bukovina [Association of Immigrants 
> from Bukovina] and decided to publish “Die Stimme”. He entrusted with this 
> task Dr. Elias Weinstein, the former editor of the renowned daily newspaper 
> “Czernowitzer Morgenblatt”.
> 
> I will try to let “Die Stimme” continue to resound in the future and invite 
> you to follow me on this journey. Your comments are highly welcome!
> 
> Edgar Hauster [MacBook]
> 
> 
> P.S.: By courtesy of the Digital Forum Central and Eastern  Europe (DiFMOE) 
> "Jewish-German Bukovina 1918+" Digitization Project: https://www.difmoe.eu


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