Tuvia Tenenbom

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Tuvia Tennebom

Tuvia Tenenbom (born 1957 in Bnei Brak, Israel) is a theater director, playwright, author, journalist, essayist and the founding artistic director of the Jewish Theater of New York, the only English-speaking Jewish theater in New York City. Tenenbom was called the "founder of a new form of Jewish theatre" by the French Le Monde and a "New Jew" by the Israeli Maariv. Tenenbom is also an academic, having university degrees in mathematics, computer science, dramatic writing and literature.[1]

Dramatic works

Tenenbom has written over sixteen plays for The Jewish Theater of New York, widely recognized by American and European critics. German newspaper Die Zeit described Tenenbom's play The Last Virgin as "more desperately needed in Germany than suspected";[2] The New York Times, reviewing Father of the Angels, called it "irresistibly fascinating"; and Corriere della Sera, reviewing Last Jew In Europe, named Tenenbom "One of the most iconoclastic and innovative of contemporary dramatists."

Political essays and other writing

Tenenbom writes for various newspapers and websites,[3][4] and his political articles, cultural criticism and essays have appeared in media outlets including Die Zeit of Germany, Corriere della Sera of Italy, Yedioth Ahronot of Israel and Fox News. Tuvia Tenenbom is also a columnist for Zeit Online, writing on sports and spirituality; his column appears every second week.

I Sleep in Hitler's Room

Tenenbom's book I Sleep in Hitler's Room, published by an imprint of The Jewish Theater of New York, is a psychological travelogue through present-day Germany. Described by the Israeli paper Haaretz as an "alarming account of anti-Semitism," the book details the wide spread of modern anti-Semitism in Europe. "Tuvia Tenenbom comes off as a Jewish Hunter S. Thompson," said Spengler of the Asia Times in his review of the book, adding, "To understand Germans, one has to learn their language and live with them – or read Tenenbom’s book." Bruce Bawer, reviewing it for PJ Media, writes: "It's a book in a category all its own — deeply sobering, depressing even, in its observations of the darker side of Germany, yet at the same time so chatty and engaging and laugh-out-loud funny that it's hard to put down." The book also received strong endorsement from the National Review,[5] which called it "a tremendous book."

In December 2012, a German translation of Tenenbom's book titled Allein unter Deutschen (Alone Among Germans), published by Suhrkamp Verlag of Berlin, became an instant bestseller on the Spiegel bestseller list. Upon publication in Germany, book critics differed widely in their opinions of the work. Der Spiegel[6] was highly critical of the book, as was Spiegel publisher Jakob Augstein.[7] In the left-leaning media, the TAZ[8] was extremely critical, writing that Tenenbom's book offered "zero insight", while Jungle World[9] called the book "a gem." The German-Jewish journalist Henryk M. Broder, however, praised Tenenbom's "one-sidedness" and compared him to both Michael Moore and Sacha Baron Cohen's Borat in Die Welt.[10] German TV station WDR, which Tenenbom accused in his book of assisting an anti-Semitic group in Cologne, dismissed the book as "embarrassing and dumb".[11] Deutschlandfunk [12] encouraged its listeners not to buy the book and advised those who had already bought it to bring it back to the bookstore. Evelyn Finger of Die Zeit[13] praised the book, calling it "courageous" and describing its content as a "Kamikaze ride of discovery into Germany's national character." In Germany's Jewish weekly Jüdische Allgemeine,[14] which is published by the Jewish community of Germany, Hannes Stein endorsed Tenenbom's book and findings: "This book contains the bitter nectar of the pure, unfiltered truth.".

Catch the Jew!

Tenenbom's book Catch the Jew!, published by Gefen Publishing recounts the adventures of Tuvia Tenenbom, who wanders around Israel of our time calling himself “Tobi the German.” In the course of numerous interviews Tuvia extracts information, sentiments, hidden theories and delusional visions motivating the miscellany of peoples forming the present-day Holy Land. The Wall Street Journal hailed the book, writing: “Catch the Jew! offers one of the more interesting portraits of Palestinian politics to have appeared in English," and concluding that "no reader of Catch the Jew! can come away having failed to learn many new things about Israelis and Palestinians, two peoples we talk about so much but understand so little." In a starred review, Publishers Weekly writes that Tenenbom's "riveting tale, chock full of unbelievable and hilarious encounters, is highly engaging and emotional, eminently readable, brutally honest, and likely the most uncensored and eye-opening report readers will see." "Catch the Jew" was published in Israel in September 2014 by Sela Meir publishers and became an instant best seller in Israel, reaching the #1 spot on Haaretz, Steimatzky and Yedioth Ahronot Best Seller lists, winning major praise by Israeli critics. Mida called Tenenbom "the ultimate leftist and humanist who loves all people, is everything the left pretends to be but is not," while Channel 2 TV named it "the most important book in the last five years," and Haaretz advised its readers to "read Tenenbom's book; we don't have the luxury not to know what he's telling us." In Germany the book came out in November 2014 by the publishing house of Suhrkamp under the title "Allein unter Juden" (Alone Among Jews) and immediately became a Spiegel Best Seller. Like in Israel and the USA, the book earned major endorsements by German critics. Spiegel Online said: "You need to have curiosity in you and a fearlessness of thought to view the Middle East story differently, a curiosity and a fearlessness that Tuvia Tenenbom has," and Die Welt called it, "The finest book on the Middle East saga."[15]

References

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  13. Die Zeit, issue #50, 2012
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