Part history, part memoir, The Goose Girl, the Rabbi, and the
New York Teachers: A Family Memoir recounts a narrative of lives
lived in dramatically changing times. In the background loom author
Deborah Heller's distant forebears: a maternal
great-great-grandmother, the first Jewish woman in her
nineteenth-century German village to refuse to shave her head and
wear a wig (sheitel) after marriage, who earned her passage to
America by driving geese to market; and a seventeenth-century
Talmudic scholar, successively chief rabbi of Vienna, Prague, and
Cracow, who wrote an important commentary on the Mishnah and was
arrested and imprisoned by the imperial authorities.
Echoes of the rebellious Goose Girl and the scholarly rabbi
reverberate in the lives of Heller's parents, born at the beginning
of the twentieth century--her mother in Brooklyn, her father in a
Russian shtetl. Emerging from very different worlds, they came
together as New York schoolteachers, sharing the radical hopes and
fears of a generation marked by strong political passions.
Drawing on written and oral history, legal records, and her own
memories, Heller follows her parents from their early years through
the McCarthy years and beyond. Focusing both on individuals and on
the worlds in which they lived, The Goose Girl, the Rabbi, and the
New York Teachers illuminates significant moments in Jewish and
American history.
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