San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Scholar oversaw vast library of Judaica

- By Joseph Berger

Menahem Schmelzer, a Hungarian refugee who for more than two decades was the doting custodian of one of the world’s greatest collection­s of ancient Hebrew and other Jewish manuscript­s and books as the librarian of the Jewish Theologica­l Seminary, died Dec. 10 at his home in New York City. He was 88.

His family confirmed the death.

During Schmelzer’s tenure as chief librarian, from 1964 to 1987, the seminary’s collection of almost 245,000 volumes was a primary destinatio­n for scholarly inquiry into the history and literature of the Jewish people.

It houses a rare-book room with irreplacea­ble contents: volumes of Talmud and Passover Haggadahs from the Middle Ages; richly decorated marriage documents from the 17th century; a 15th century prayer book, handwritte­n in Florence and illuminate­d with gold leaf, that had belonged to the Rothschild banking family; handwritte­n works by the great scholar Maimonides; a Torah scroll rescued from the Spanish Inquisitio­n.

Schmelzer looked after all these documents with striking tenderness. In 1984, he showed a Newsday reporter what he called, with tart humor, an “ugly manuscript” — a battered volume of parchment pages that contained biographie­s of Talmudic rabbis but that had no particular aesthetic appeal. It was written in about the year 1200, but what endeared Schmelzer to it was its 20th century history: It had been rescued from the destructio­n of Kristallna­cht, the Nazi pogrom in Germany and Austria in November 1938 that burned down or vandalized 267 synagogues and 7,000 Jewishowne­d stores and killed more than 90 Jews.

“This manuscript is a survivor, a real survivor,” he said. “It survived from 1200 to 1938, and in 1938 it survived the Kristallna­cht. It’s a symbol of continuity, of how it survived the centuries and the tragedies.”

With ambitions to rival the Hebraica and Judaica libraries at Oxford University and at the British Museum, the Jewish Theologica­l Seminary library, in the Morningsid­e Heights section of Manhattan, was largely assembled in the early 20th century with gifts from wealthy collectors like Jacob Schiff of New York and Mayer Sulzberger of Philadelph­ia. Schmelzer enhanced the library with acquisitio­ns from Sotheby’s and other auction houses, and through private sales. He reorganize­d the book stacks and modernized the cataloging.

In 1966, two years after he took over the library, a fire broke out on the ninth and 10th floors that consumed 70,000 books; many of the

remaining volumes were damaged by water used in fighting the fire. The rare-book room was spared, but Schmelzer stood watching from across the street in anguish, pained in particular by the loss of books that had been acquired from Europe after the Holocaust.

“It was terrible to see things that survived such a tragedy should now be destroyed here,” he said in the 1984 interview.

He led a herculean effort to dry the water-damaged books by airing them out in the seminary courtyard, or by placing paper towels between the pages. By 1984, Schmelzer was able to say, “We’re pretty much where we were if not better.”

In his time as chief librarian, Schmelzer, who spoke four languages fluently, taught seminary students, first as an assistant professor of medieval Hebrew literature and Jewish bibliograp­hy and then, after 1980, as a full professor. His particular expertise was in the liturgical Hebrew poetry known as piyyutim; when he received his doctorate at the seminary, his dissertati­on was about the work of an 11th century Spanish rabbi famous for such poems.

Menahem Hayyim Schmelzer was born on April 18, 1934, in Kecel, a peasant village in southern Hungary. His home had no electricit­y or indoor plumbing. His father, Ferenc, sold wine made from local grapes, and his mother, Margit (Gottesman) Schmelzer, was a homemaker. Kecel had no yeshiva, so Menahem gained an elementary knowledge of Hebrew and Jewish law and ritual at a cheder, a Jewish primary school.

When Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, Hungary, a German ally, sent men like his father to army work camps. By 1944, mass deportatio­ns of Jews had begun, and 10year-old Menahem, his mother and his younger brother, Otto, were put on a crowded train headed for Auschwitz. At some point in the journey the train halted, and the last few cars, including those carrying Menahem and his family, were unhitched. The three wound up in the Strasshof labor camp near Vienna.

He later found out that his family was saved because of a deal Nazi official Adolf Eichmann had made — to trade 21,000 Jews for 5 million Swiss francs to buy munitions and trucks to help stave off Germany’s defeat.

Menahem was liberated by the Russians and made his way home to find his father asleep in a corner of their house. The entire family had survived.

The family soon moved to Budapest, Hungary, where Menahem studied at several yeshivas before graduating from the Jewish High School of Budapest in 1952. He began studies in ancient history and languages at Eotvos Lorand University, also in Budapest, but was arrested by Stalinist-era Hungarian police for his activities with Bnei Akiva, a religious Zionist youth movement. In 1954, a year after Stalin’s death, he was released from prison.

During the Hungarian revolution of 1956, Schmelzer fled to Switzerlan­d and studied at the University of Basel. Then he moved to Copenhagen, where he earned his master’s degree in library science in 1960.

During a stint in Israel, he married Ruth Blum, in 1961. They emigrated to New York, and he began working as an assistant librarian at the seminary.

 ?? Provided by Schmelzer family 2015 ?? Menahem Schmelzer was the doting custodian of New York’s Jewish Theologica­l Seminary’s historic collection.
Provided by Schmelzer family 2015 Menahem Schmelzer was the doting custodian of New York’s Jewish Theologica­l Seminary’s historic collection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States