ABSTRACT

The dominant theme of post-Holocaust Jewish theology has been that of the temporary hiddenness of God, interpreted either as a divine mystery or, more commonly, as God's deferral to human freedom. But traditional Judaic obligations of female presence, together with the traditional image of the Shekhinah as a figure of God's 'femaleness' accompanying Israel into exile, seem to contradict such theologies of absence. The Female Face of God in Auschwitz, the first full-length feminist theology of the Holocaust, argues that the patriarchal bias of post-Holocaust theology becomes fully apparent only when women's experiences and priorities are brought into historical light. Building upon the published testimonies of four women imprisoned at Auschwitz-Birkenau - Olga Lengyel, Lucie Adelsberger, Bertha Ferderber-Salz and Sara Nomberg-Przytyk - it considers women's distinct experiences of the holy in relation to God's perceived presence and absence in the camps.
God's face, says Melissa Raphael, was not hidden in Auschwitz, but intimately revealed in the female face turned towards the other as a refractive image of God, especially in the moral protest made visible through material and spiritual care for the assaulted other.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Despite a substantial and growing literature of women survivors’ testimony, only since the early 1990s has Holocaust Studies’ customary inattention to gender begun to be rectified. Feminist scholars have challenged the assumption that the normative ‘Jew’ of religious and social discourse (who is actually a male Jew unless specified otherwise) also represents all victims of the

chapter 2|16 pages

The hiding of God’s face in Auschwitz

chapter 3|27 pages

Feminist intimations of the holy in Auschwitz

The covenantal sanctification of Auschwitz

chapter 4|21 pages

Face to face (with God) in Auschwitz

chapter 5|21 pages

A mother/God in Auschwitz

Maternalist perspectives on post-Holocaust theology

chapter 6|33 pages

The redemption of God in Auschwitz