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Arnold Wesker Reflects on Jewish Roots

The acclaimed playwright, who turns 80 this month, reflects on what makes him Jewish, and comes up with an answer that causes him to wonder whether he missed his calling

May 10, 2012 13:38
Jewish characters in Chicken Soup with Barley

By

Sir Arnold Wesker

4 min read

My mother was Jewish. Her mother was Jewish. And her mother was Jewish. My father was Jewish. His mother was… and so on. Shouldn't this be enough to encourage me to think I'm Jewish? Orthodox Jewry wouldn't think so. Only those, say the Orthodox, who adhere to the prescribed rituals and laws of the Torah can claim the mantle of Jewishness.

When Max Stafford-Clark was artistic director of the Royal Court Theatre, from 1979-1992, he was asked why he wasn't producing more of Arnold Wesker's plays. He replied that the problem with Arnold is that he can't be objective about his Jewishness.

Stafford-Clark would never have dared say such a thing of an Irish, Asian or West Indian playwright. What could he have meant? That I shouldn't have written Shylock, offering an alternative portrait of a Jew more sympathetic than that of Shakespeare? He would seem, on the surface, to be offering the kind of advice given to students on a creative writing course: don't become emotionally swamped by your material.

But did he mean something else? Not Arnold can't be objective about his Jewishness, but Arnold can't be objective about the Arab/Israeli conflict. But it is not the purpose of this article to argue the sad complexities of that conflict but rather to enter the old debate that frequently erupts when Jews assemble round a card game or a Shabbat table or a Seder night: what is it to be Jewish?