Elsa
Lasker-Schüler,
Thebes
with Jussuf (detail)
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Her last rites,
like her life, were memorable. The Hebrew writer S.Y. Agnon said the
Kaddish, the Hebrew memorial prayer for the dead; he was followed
by Rabbi Kurt Wilhelm, who recited Lasker-Schüler's poem I Know
in German, something unheard of in Jewish Palestine at that time.[*]
Leopold Krakauer,
the artist-architect and a friend of the poet, created Lasker-Schüler's
tombstone. When the Mount of Olives became Jordanian territory, the
Jordanians desecrated the cemetary and utilized the smooth gravestones
for building purposes. The rough and natural heavy stone from the Galilee
with Krakauer had chosen for the Poet's grave was shoved to the side
as unsuitable. After the Six-Day War in 1967, when the Mount of Olives
again became a part of Israel, one of the few tombstones to be found
was that of the poet Else Lasker-Schüler.
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[*]
Heinz Politzer, "The Blue Piano of Else Lasker-Schueler,"
Commentary 9 (1950), p. 335. |
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From:
Durchslag, Audri and Jeanette Litman-Demeestère. Else Lasker-Schüler:
Hebrew Ballads and Other Poems. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication
Society, 1980, p. xxii. Permission of Jewish Publication Society. |
LASKER-SCHÜLER Introduction
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