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Albert
Einstein
January 14, 2000
I don't know if you receive Time
Magazine at home, but if you do, or if you have seen it elsewhere,
you surely noticed the picture of Albert Einstein on the New Years
issue's cover. The editors of Time selected Einstein as the most
important person of this century. As Jews, we can't help but be
proud that a co-religionist achieved this singular honor.
Albert Einstein was not only
one of the greatest scientists of all times but also a great humanitarian
and a proud Jew who was involved in many Jewish causes. In the next
few minutes, I would like to examine several aspects of Albert Einstein's
life that are of especial interest to me as a rabbi and that I hope
will interest you as well. To begin with, as a German Jew, his life
story gives us insight into the history of one of the most significant
Jewish communities of modern times that came to an abrupt and cruel
end with the rise of Hitler. Jews had lived in Germany for many
centuries. In fact, the oldest Jewish settlements there date back
at least 1,000 years. For most of that period, Jews tended to live
together in a Jewish quarter in each of the many towns they inhabited.
The centuries of isolation, however, came to an end in the wake
of the French Revolution in 1792. Its ideology of "freedom,
brotherhood and equality" for all not only bestowed citizenship
upon French Jews but crossed France's borders and influenced every
European nation. By the middle of the 19th century, the blessings
of freedom and equality also had come to the Jews of Germany. German
Jews eagerly welcomed the opportunity for integration into German
society. For example, Jewish boys and girls, who previously had
received only a traditional Jewish education in the heder, excitedly
rushed to attend the gymnasium that served as the stepping stone
to the universities.
By the time Albert Einstein was
born in 1879, German Jews were beginning to make headway into law,
medicine and science. Had Einstein been born but fifty years earlier,
it is highly unlikely that he would ever have achieved his level
of greatness because of the discrimination and limitations encountered
by Germany's Jews at that time. And had he been born 50 years later
his education would have been seriously hampered by the newly instituted
Nuremberg Laws.
Einstein was born just at the
right time. He was able to receive the higher education he needed
to create his innovative theories, and by the time Hitler came to
power, Einstein had achieved sufficient fame to be offered asylum
in America - something that regrettably was denied to hundreds of
thousands of lesser known European Jews.
I am not going to discuss Einstein's
theories since science is not my strong suit. But I found interesting
what the author of Jewish Influence in Modern Thought wrote about
the importance and effect of Einstein's Jewish heritage on his scientific
genius. The author proposed that the Jewish mind is less inclined
toward dogma and therefore more willing to break with conventional
thinking. In Einstein's time, most scientists were seeking to explain
newly discovered scientific information within the existing concepts
of physics. Einstein, however, dared to challenge the whole point
of view, and on the basis of his speculation, build a new system.
What I found particularly striking about this author's observations
was the year it appeared. His book was published in 1929, just as
racist ideas about the inferiority of Jews were gaining an unrelenting
hold in Germany. I especially appreciated the pointed irony in his
last paragraph. He wrote:
"In the development of
the relativity theory, it is perhaps significant that the Jewish
stamp is found at almost every turn. Were Einstein solely responsible
for the theory of relativity, the connection between it and the
Jews could be regarded as wholly fortuitous. But in as much as
the names of Michelson, Levi Civita, Minkowski, Borne and Silberstein
are all associated with it. . . one begins to feel that the 'Elders
of Zion' have unwittingly conspired to explain the world's most
baffling phenomena and apparently have met with success."
Einstein's insights into science
were not only theoretical. In 1939, he wrote a letter to President
Franklin Roosevelt, alerting him to experiments in nuclear fission
at Columbia University. He told the president that the element uranium
could be turned into an important source of energy and could also
be used to construct extremely powerful bombs. Six years later the
atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima ending the war with Japan.
How ironic that Nazi anti-Semitism which forced many outstanding
Jewish scientists out of Germany guaranteed that the Axis powers
would lose the Second World War. Exiled Jewish scientists were the
backbone of the American team working on nuclear fission. Had those
scientist stayed in Germany, it is probable that Germany would have
developed the atom bomb first and the history of the world would
be radically different.
The association of Einstein with
the creation of the atomic bomb signaled a marked change in his
political thinking. For much of his life he had been a pacifist
in the mold of Ghandi. But the rise of Nazism caused him to reconsider
his absolute opposition to warfare. After the war, however, as president
of the Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, he urged the outlawing
of the atomic and hydrogen bombs.
From the Jewish point of view,
what is laudable about Einstein is that unlike many twentieth century
Jews who achieved fame and prominence in science and the arts, he
was fiercely loyal to the Jewish people. His good fortune in arriving
at a safe haven in the United States, did not turn his head away
from the suffering of the Jewish people. After the war against the
Nazis was won, he put his prestige and his time behind efforts to
raise money for refugee relief. In another realm, in order to help
Yeshiva University build a medical school, he allowed his name to
be attached to the project. As you know, this outstanding school
is known as the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University.
Throughout his life, Einstein
identified with Zionism. He wrote extensively about Zionism and
attended many functions devoted to Zionist affairs. He was a friend
of Israel's first President Dr. Chaim Weitzman and joined him on
a highly successful fund-raising tour of the United States aimed
at buying land in Israel and in funding the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem. When Weitzman died, Prime Minister David Ben Gurion asked
Einstein to accept the Presidency of Israel. Einstein declined the
honor, saying he was deeply touched by the offer but did not feel
suited for the position. It is illustrative of his commitment to
Zionism, that when he went to the hospital for what proved to he
his final days, he took with him his notes for a television address
he was to give on the occasion of Israel's seventh anniversary.
Einstein did not consider himself
religious in the conventional meaning of that term, but he was a
believer in God. Although we often think of science as being an
impediment to belief, for Einstein science was a path leading to
God. He wrote that God reveals himself in the harmony of all that
exists. His faith in this divine harmony caused him to reject the
view held by many scientists of his day that the universe is subject
to randomness and uncertainty. He said, "The Lord God is subtle
but malicious he is not. God does not play dice with the universe."
Einstein's profound understanding
of the workings of the universe did not lead to arrogance. Quite
the opposite! Einstein reported that he felt like a speck of dust
in the presence of nature's grandeur. He wrote, "The more we
gain insight into universe's mysterious forces, cosmic and atomic,
the more reason we, with our modest powers, must feel humble."
In announcing its choice of Albert
Einstein as the outstanding individual of the century, Time magazine's
editors called him: a genius, humanitarian and locksmith of the
mysteries of the atom and the universe.
But what stands out most in my
mind about this extraordinary person is that he did not use his
fame and demanding career as an excuse to distance himself either
from his own people or from humanitarian causes. Nor did he capitalized
on his renown for personal gain. Rather he utilized his fame and
prestige to garner support for worthy causes so that they could
achieve success. What made Einstein the man of this century was
not just his mind, it was also his soul. And for us, whatever our
calling, we could do no better than remember that as with Albert
Einstein, it is humility, caring and charity that raises our life's
work to true significance.
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