The Heart of Jewish Humor
Jewish humor mocks the powerful (including God) and pokes fun at the Jew's
often-downtrodden status
By William Novak and Moshe Waldoks
Reprinted with permission from The Big Book of Jewish
Humor (HarperCollins Publishers)
What do we mean by Jewish humor? To begin, it is humor that
is overtly Jewish in its concerns, characters, definitions, language, values,
or symbols. (A Jewish joke, goes one definition, is one that no goy can
understand and every Jew says he has already heard.) But not all Jewish humor
derives from Jewish sources, just as not all humor created by Jews is
necessarily Jewish. In these matters it is best to examine not the singer but
the song.
Jewish humor is too rich and too diverse to be adequately
described by a single generalization. Jewish theologians used to say that it is
easier to describe God in terms of what He is not; the same process may
be useful in understanding Jewish humor. It is not, for example, escapist. It
is not slapstick. It is not physical. It is generally not cruel and does not
attack the weak or the infirm. At the same time, it is also not polite or
gentle.
But individual humorists come to mind immediately to negate
each of these tendencies: the Marx Brothers are slapstick performers; Jerry
Lewis and Sid Caesar are physical; Don Rickles is cruel; Sam Levenson is
polite, and Danny Kaye is playful. So much for generalizations.
What Jewish humor is may be even more difficult to
determine, and we offer the following broad statements in full awareness of
the possible futility of the exercise:
Jewish humor is
usually substantive; it is about something. It is especially fond of
certain specific topics, such as food (noshing is sacred), family, business,
anti-Semitism, wealth and its absence, health, and survival. Jewish humor is
also fascinated by the intricacies of the mind and by logic, and the short if
elliptical path separating the rational from the absurd.
As social or religious commentary, Jewish humor can be sarcastic, complaining, resigned, or descriptive.
Sometimes the "point" of the humor is more powerful than the laugh it
delivers, and for some of the jokes, the appropriate response is not laughter,
but rather a bitter nod or a commiserating sigh of recognition. This didactic
quality precludes laughing "for free," as in slapstick humor, which
derives its laughter from other people's misfortunes.
Jewish humor tends to
be anti-authoritarian. It ridicules grandiosity and self-indulgence,
exposes hypocrisy, and kicks pomposity in the pants. It is strongly democratic,
stressing the dignity and worth of common folk.
Jewish humor
frequently has a critical edge, which creates discomfort in making its
point. Often its thrust is political--aimed at leaders and other authorities
who cannot be criticized more directly. This applies to prominent figures in the
general society, as well as to those in the Jewish world, such as rabbis,
cantors, sages, intellectuals, teachers, doctors, businessmen, philanthropists,
and community functionaries. A special feature of Jewish humor is the
interaction of prominent figures with simple folk and the disadvantaged, with
the latter often emerging triumphant. In general, Jewish humor characteristically
deals with the conflict between the people and the power structure, whether that
be the individual Jew within his community, the Jew facing the Gentile world,
or the Jewish community in relation to the rest of humanity.
Jewish humor mocks everyone--including
God. It frequently satirizes religious personalities and institutions, as well
as rituals and dogma. At the same time, it affirms religious traditions and
practices, seeking a new understanding of the differences between the holy and
the mundane.
Pages xx-xxiii from the Introduction from The Big Book of
Jewish Humor by William Novak and Moshe Waldoks. Copyright (c) 1981 by
William Novak and Moshe Waldoks. Used by permission of HarperCollins Publishers
Inc.