The Jerusalem Post

MAGAZINE QUICK SOLUTION

- • By TZVI SINENSKY

Across:

1 Miss, 4 Sunder, 8 Standing, (Misunderst­anding) 9 Duty, 10 Verb, 11 Rhesus,

13 Leg bye,

16 Telex, 17 Adobe, 19 Abrade, 22 Asthma,

24 Suez,

25 Quid, 26 Specific, 27 Aghast,

28 Twee.

Down: 2 Ignoble, 3 Skiing, 4 Sugary, 5 Nudge, 6 Eat humble pie, 7 St Petersburg, 12 Head, 14 Exam, 15 Bar, 18 Despise, 20 Basset, 21 Abject, 23 Hydra.

With Superman and Lois premiering last week on the cW network, it’s a good time to recall that Superman was the 1938 brainchild of jewish creators jerry Siegel and joe Shuster. many have suggested that the pair were inspired by their own jewish background­s to create Superman as the paradigm of a hero who defended vulnerable population­s from their enemies.

But there is reason to suspect that a more specific encounter might have inspired them to craft the Superman persona.

the years 1923 and 1924 saw a phenomenon across north america: tours by Siegmund Breitbart, known as “the jewish Superman.” Breitbart performed in cleveland and toronto, Siegel and Schuster’s respective hometowns.

While it is nearly impossible to prove – there are no records of Siegel or Shuster mentioning Breitbart – there is reason to surmise that the strongman might have served as something of an inspiratio­n. he wore a cape and was advertised as capable of stopping speeding locomotive­s.

Who was this man Breitbart, lauded during his lifetime as the strongest man in the world, the Iron King, jewish hercules and a modern-day Samson?

Siegmund “Zishe” Breitbart was born to a family of locksmiths in lodz (now poland, then russia) in 1893. In his autobiogra­phy, he reports that his family discovered his unusual strength when, at age three, he extricated himself from beneath an iron bar that had fallen on him in his father’s store. By age four, he was casting iron in his family shop.

his early years were difficult. expelled from a number of religious schools for using force against fellow students, Breitbart was captured by the Germans while serving in the russian army during World War I. after the war he remained in Germany, subsisting on the money he earned by performing feats of strength at local markets.

It was at one such 1919 performanc­e that the German circus Busch, famed for featuring harry houdini and other top performers, spotted Breitbart and brought him on board to perform its opening act.

Breitbart’s strongman routine, which had him dressed in hyper-masculine costumes such as a roman centurion, skyrockete­d in popularity, and he quickly was moved from sideshow to main event. notwithsta­nding the fast-rising tide of antisemiti­sm in Germany and austria, Breitbart, who often wore the Star of david while entering the circus ring, achieved a mass jewish and non-jewish following in Berlin, Vienna, prague and Warsaw.

Breitbart’s act was based on his early experience working with iron. he bent rods into horseshoes, bit through chains and pounded nails into boards with his fist. he could draw chariots with his teeth. and his image undercut racial stereotype­s about jews. as musclemen were seen as representi­ng the proud, strong German male throughout the opening decades of the 20th century, Breitbart was in effect also embodying quintessen­tial images of German masculinit­y.

as Breitbart’s legend grew, he increasing­ly became the talk of each town in which he performed. one reporter noted, “not only do gymnasia students and high school girls talk about him; even first graders know how strong Breitbart is.”

a tavern proprietor complained, “my tables are studded with holes because my customers test their strength by hammering nails into them with their open hands. all Viennese women are in love with this new Samson. racial hatred, pride or prudishnes­s – all of it is useless here.”

capItalIZI­nG on his popularity in europe, Breitbart spent much of 1923 touring the united States. ultimately the Breitbart craze resulted in product endorsemen­ts, a starring role in the 1923 film The Iron King and a Breitbart physical-health correspond­ence course in which subscriber­s received guides detailing Breitbart’s muscle-building and eating routines.

Breitbart’s career came to an abrupt end in 1925 when a stage accident involving a rusty nail led to a fatal case of blood poisoning. he was buried in Berlin.

unfortunat­ely, the nazi destructio­n of polish jewry largely extinguish­ed the rich oral legends that perpetuate­d Breitbart’s memory. But his legend has not fully disappeare­d. a 2001 movie, Invincible, featured a fictional account of his life. a children’s book titled Zishe the Strongman appeared in 2010.

What do we make of this seeming paradox: a jewish superhero who at a time of rising antisemiti­sm, and during an era when jewish men were derided as sissies, became a folk hero of able-bodied masculinit­y?

Some saw Breitbart as a sort of vindicatio­n of the then-German and austrian embrace of male bravado. In this view, that he was also jewish rendered him something of a freak to the average German, making him all the more compelling as entertainm­ent on the vaudeville circuit.

others saw Breitbart as a model for the new Zionist muscular judaism. a popular yiddish saying went, “If a thousand Breitbarts were to arise among the jews, the jewish people would cease being persecuted.” Breitbart himself was a proud jew and often performed while flanked by the Zionist flag. he refused to return to a Warsaw restaurant that declined to play “Hatikvah” to greet him. he supported Ze’ev jabotinsky’s idea of a jewish army. legend has it that jabotinsky and Breitbart hatched a plan in which Breitbart would become the general of a one-day jewish army in palestine.

But neither of these fully captures the story of Breitbart, who was more than just a proud jewish strongman. he highly esteemed rabbis and jewish intellectu­als, and according to one report, he amassed a substantia­l personal library that contained 2,000 books on roman history. he performed for a group of yiddish thinkers and wrote a personal letter of support on their behalf. he met and performed personally on behalf of the radzhiner rebbe and donated 30 pounds of passover flour to the rebbe’s followers following the meeting.

even more remarkable, “Zishe” (literally sweet) was eulogized by numerous individual­s as exceptiona­lly sweet, highly emotional and filled with edelkeit (yiddish for a sweet, caring person). one reporter who met with Breitbart expected a tough guy. Instead, he subsequent­ly characteri­zed the Iron King as “the embodiment of edelkeit.”

Similarly, the chief rabbi of the orthodox jewish community (adass yisrael) in Berlin, dr. esra monk, saw Breitbart as a “modern Samson the hero” who also possessed a tender demeanor.

“It is greatly symbolic,” monk declared in his 1925 eulogy, “that for a man who broke chains, it was enough for one person’s good word to render his heart soft as butter.”

like clark Kent, Breitbart’s persona was far richer and more well-rounded than his stage persona allowed. he was a mixture of elements: brains, brawn, a gentle nature and fierce jewish pride. and he’s still inspiring nearly 100 years after his untimely death.

(jta)

 ?? (US Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons/JTA) ?? SIEGMUND BREITBART uses his teeth to pull a wagon with 50 people on board through the streets of Washington in 1923.
(US Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons/JTA) SIEGMUND BREITBART uses his teeth to pull a wagon with 50 people on board through the streets of Washington in 1923.

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