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        Jewish Texts Lost in War Are Surfacing in New York 
        
        In 1932, as the Nazis rose to power in Germany, a Jewish 
librarian in Frankfurt published a catalog of 15,000 books he had painstakingly 
collected for decades.  
 
It listed the key texts of a groundbreaking field called the Science of Judaism, 
in which scholars analyzed the religion’s philosophy and culture as they would 
study those of ancient Greece or Rome. The school of thought became the 
foundation for modern Jewish studies around the world.  
 
In the tumult of war, great chunks of the collection vanished. Now, librarians 
an ocean away have determined that most of the missing titles have been sitting 
for years on the crowded shelves of the Leo Baeck Institute, a Manhattan center 
dedicated to preserving German Jewish culture.  
 
The story of how the hundreds of tattered, cloth-bound books with esoteric 
German titles ended up in New York includes impossible escapes, careful 
scholarship and some very heavy suitcases. And while the exact trails of many of 
the volumes remain murky, they wind through book-lined apartments on the Upper 
West Side, across a 97-year-old woman’s cluttered coffee table and into a 
library’s cavernous stacks.  
 
For Jewish scholars, the collection of Science of Judaism texts (in German, 
Wissenschaft des Judentums) is a touchstone marking the emergence of Jewish 
tradition as a philosophy and culture worthy of academic study.  
 
“We’re all heirs to the legacy of Wissenschaft,” said Jonathan D. Sarna, 
a professor of American Jewish history at Brandeis University.  
 
The University Library Frankfurt still houses the bulk of the collection, but 
experts there have determined over several decades that they were missing some 
2,000 books listed in the 1932 catalog. In the last two years, a team led by 
Renate Evers, head librarian at the Leo Baeck Institute, found that her shelves 
had more than 1,000 of the lost titles.  
 
While scholars say the books in New York are probably not the same copies as 
those lost from the Frankfurt library, their rediscovery offers the chance to 
rebuild what one professor called “a legendary collection.” Frankfurt librarians 
are putting the collection online, while the Center for Jewish History, the 
institute’s parent organization, is seeking a grant to do the same.  
 
“This is very exciting,” said Rachel Heuberger, head of the library’s Judaica 
division. “You can reconstruct a collection that otherwise never would have come 
to life again.”  
 
Scholars say the books were most likely brought to New York from Europe by 
private collectors and antiquities dealers. In the past 50 years, donors, nearly 
all of them German Jews who immigrated and prospered here, gave them to the Leo 
Baeck Institute.  
 
The donors, photographed in their cinched ties and sober suits, represent a 
generation of scholarly New York immigrants that is nearly gone. They escaped 
the Nazis, built new lives and created a sophisticated community that centered 
on books, culture and learning. Their ranks included the political philosopher 
Hannah Arendt and Dr. Ruth Westheimer.  
 
Many came to this country hauling suitcases filled with books, and as they 
settled here, they created academic journals and scholarly institutes. They 
debated politics during formal dinners in Washington Heights parlors. They took 
typewriters along on vacation so they could keep working.  
 
Herbert A. Strauss, who came to New York with his wife in 1946, owned one of the 
lost books, an 1843 volume by Ludwig Philippson. Where he got it, his widow, 
Lotte, has no idea. A historian and a professor, he was always coming home to 
their Upper Manhattan apartment with his arms full of new tomes.  
 
“He was not only married to me,” Mrs. Strauss said. “He was also married to his 
desk.”  
 
When he died in 2005, she donated 4,500 of his books to the Leo Baeck Institute.
 
 
The couple had met in Germany, and escaped together to Switzerland just steps 
ahead of the Gestapo. They recounted their ordeals in separate memoirs published 
in 1999.  
 
Mrs. Strauss, 97, a great-grandmother, recalled meeting her husband. “I was 
fascinated by him,” she said. “He was good-looking and he had new ideas.”  
 
On a recent afternoon in her sun-drenched apartment, Mrs. Strauss pulled out her 
husband’s brittle papers. There were Nazi-era ration cards decorated with 
swastikas — red for bread, blue for meat. There was a lifeguard certificate from 
Berlin that showed a young man, sleeves rolled up past his elbows, smiling at 
something off-camera.  
 
Did he carry books with him when he came to New York?  
 
Mrs. Strauss laughed. “We came here poor as church mice,” she said. “You went as 
you were; you didn’t carry a thing.” She was eight months pregnant and had one 
dress to her name. Mr. Strauss built his library, and their life, in New York.
 
 
Ludwig Schwarzschild, a dermatologist, brought his library with him when he came 
to the United States in 1934. Although his practice north of Frankfurt was 
shuttered by the authorities, he, his wife and their two young children were 
able to take most of their possessions out of Germany, said their daughter, Lore 
Singerman, of Annapolis, Md.  
 
Mrs. Singerman, 78, remembered a Manhattan childhood of heavy European furniture 
and crowded bookcases. Reading was highly prized — prayer books, The Saturday 
Evening Post, National Geographic.  
 
Her father owned one of the lost Wissenschaft volumes, an 1888 edition of 
a Hermann Cohen book. His family donated it to the institute in 1970, the year 
he died. Mrs. Singerman does not know where her father got the book, but said, 
“If it was in German, he probably brought it with him — he didn’t buy German 
books here.”  
 
Fred W. Lessing, another German Jewish donor, built such a vast book collection 
at his home in Scarsdale, N.Y., that he ordered catalog cards from the Library 
of Congress to keep track of it all. He was chief executive of a Yonkers metal 
company, but his passion was his library and discussions with professors and 
writers.  
 
Mr. Lessing scoured auction catalogs for treasures, with a special focus on the 
history of the Enlightenment. His children knew enough not to touch his “good 
books,” said his daughter Joan Lessing. “His library was part of our lives,” she 
said. “Books were in every room.”  
 
Mr. Lessing gave the institute an early-20th-century edition of a volume by 
Adolf Eckstein, but his daughter did not know where he had gotten it.  
 
Even the Frankfurt librarian who cataloged the entire collection, Aron Freimann, 
came to New York. After arriving in 1939, he went on to work at the New York 
Public Library.  
 
Today, his granddaughter, Ruth Dresner, lives in the Riverdale section of the 
Bronx. She keeps her grandfather’s catalog on her shelf — she calls it his “magnum 
opus” — and plans to leave it to her children.  
 
“I’m 80 years old, and I’m very devoted and dedicated to perpetuating 
tradition,” she said. “I am very proud.”  
 
A version of this article appeared in print on March 8, 2011, 
on page A21 of the New York edition.  
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