Superman: From Cleveland to Krypton
The Man of Steel's Jewish roots.
By Simcha Weinstein
Coming
over from the old country, changing his name like that. Clark Kent, only a Jew
would pick a name like that for himself.
--
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and
Clay, by Michael Chabon, p. 585
The Birth of Superman
Jerry
Siegel and Joe Shuster, the two ordinary young men who created an extraordinary
hero, lived twelve blocks apart from each other in Cleveland. The pair
collaborated on stories for their high school newspaper and shared a passion
for science fiction and pulp comics. It was the 1930s, and comic book
publishing was in its infancy. Like many young Jews with artistic aspirations,
Siegel and Shuster yearned to break into this fledgling industry. Comic book
publishers actively hired Jews, who were largely excluded from more "legitimate"
illustration work.
The
1930s were also, arguably, the most anti-Semitic period in American history.
Nazi sympathizer Fritz Kuhn of the German-American Bund led legions of rabid
followers on marches through many cities, including Siegel and Shuster's
hometown. Radio superstar Father Charles E. Coughlin of the pro-fascist
Christian Front was one of the nation's most powerful men. And Ivy League
colleges kept the number of Jewish students to a minimum, while country clubs
and even entire neighborhoods barred Jews altogether.
So
Siegel and Shuster began submitting treatments under the pseudonym Bernard J.
Kenton, just to be on the safe side. Throughout the Great Depression, the two
boys scraped together every penny they could just to cover postage. Shuster
sketched on cheap brown wrapping paper.
From
these humble beginnings, Shuster and Siegel carved out a character that
embodied their adolescent frustrations, served as a mouthpiece of the
oppressed, and became an American icon. Many years later, Jerry Siegel recalled
the birth of Superman:
"The story would begin with you as a
child on far-off planet Krypton. Like the others of that world, you had
super-powers. The child's scientist-father was mocked and denounced by the
Science Council. They did not believe his claim that Krypton would soon explode
from internal stresses. Convinced that his prediction was valid, the boy's
father had been constructing a model rocket ship. As the planet began to
perish, the baby's parents knew its end was close. There was not space enough
for three people in the small model craft. They put the baby into it. The
mother chose to remain on the doomed planet with the man she loved, and die
with him. Tearfully, hoping that their baby boy would survive, they launched
the craft toward the planet Earth. Shortly, Krypton exploded and its millions
of inhabitants were destroyed."
The
idea of for this new superhero came to them in 1934. It would take another four
years before Superman would be transformed from a feverish dream to a full-fledged
hero. In 1938, Detective Comics, Inc., was looking for a character to launch
its new magazine, Action Comics. They
paid young Siegel and Shuster $130 for the first thirteen pages of Superman. Action Comics #1 came out in June of that year. The issue sold out,
and a star was drawn.
In
a brilliant stroke, Shuster and Siegel gave their superhuman hero a secret
identity, that of an all-too human reporter, the meekly-mannered Clark Kent.
Practically speaking, this notion of "double identity" allowed for
almost endless storyline twists and thematic depth. On another level, it added
considerably to the "mythology" that would eventually accrue around
this fictional crime fighter. Clark's shyness undermines his courtship of his
co-worker, the gutsy Lois Lane. Siegel and Shuster later admitted that the shy
Clark struggling for a date reflected their own social challenges.
Superman #1 was published
in the summer of 1939. Across the Atlantic, in Germany, Adolph Hitler was
exploiting his nation's economic and social ills by scapegoating Jews. Living
in a country that had stripped them of their citizenship yet perversely
obstructed their exit, German Jews resorted to desperate measures. Just as the
baby Superman was sent away from Krypton to avoid the mass destruction of his
people, many Jewish children were sent on the Kindertransports to seek safety with families in England.
After
the attacks on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, America entered World War II, and
so did Superman. In Siegel and Shuster's comic, Clark Kent tries to enlist in
the Armed Forces, but he fails the routine medical examination,. Clark accidentally
uses his X-ray vision to read the next
room's eye chart. Distraught, he muses, "I've got the most perfect
body the world has ever known, and through a sad trick of fate, the army turns
me down as hopeless!" This feeling of desperation and despondency was felt
across the country. As news of the Nazis' murderous Holocaust plan emerged,
American Jews felt utterly powerless to help their European brethren.
Word
of Superman and his ethnic undertones did not escape the enemy's notice in real
life. Josef Goebbels, the Nazi Minister of Propaganda, denounced Superman as a
Jew. In April 1940, Das Schwarze Korps,
the weekly newspaper of the Nazi S.S., attacked the comic and its Jewish
writers:
"Jerry
Siegel, an intellectually and physically circumcised chap who has his
headquarters in New York. . . The inventive Israelite named this pleasant guy
with an overdeveloped body and underdeveloped mind "Superman.."
Here
were Nazis wringing their hands over a cartoon character cooked up by a couple
of boys across the sea. Yet this ideologically driven rant actually touched on
something vital--the importance of Shuster and Siegel's Jewish heritage.
Superman #1 begins with a
brief synopsis of the hero's escape from Krypton, which draws heavily on Jewish
sources. Superman's journey closely reflects the story of Moses. Like the
people of Krypton who faced total annihilation, the Israelites of biblical
Egypt faced the murder of their male offspring. To ensure her son's survival,
Jochebed places Moses in a reed basket and sets him afloat on the Nile. Her
desperate decision is clearly echoed by Superman's father, Jor-El, who launches
the little rocket ship containing his son into outer space.
Moses
and Superman are eventually discovered and raised in foreign cultures. Baby
Moses is found by Batya, the daughter of Pharaoh, and raised in the royal
palace. Superman is found by Jonathan and Martha Kent in a Midwestern cornfield
and given the name Clark. From the onset, both Batya and the Kents realize that
these foundling boys are extraordinary. Superman leads a double life as the
stuttering, spectacle-wearing reporter whose true identity no one suspects. In
the same way, for his own safety, Moses kept his Israelite roots hidden for a
time.
Superman's
original name on Krypton also reveals Biblical underpinnings. Superman is named
Kal-El and his father Jor-El. The suffix "El" is one of the ancient
names for God, used throughout the Bible. It is also found in the names of
great prophets like Samuel and and Daniel and angels such as Michael and
Gavriel. We may never know whether Siegel and Shuster were aware of these
precise Hebrew translations; nevertheless, the name could not be more apt.
While
the invincible Superman may have stood the test of time, the lives of his
creators were not as triumphant. From the beginning, Siegel and Shuster were so
busy they had to hire assistants, but while DC Comics was making millions,
Superman's creators weren't sharing the wealth. The two men were paid a salary,
but their initial payment back in 1938 had included all rights. They had sold
their percentage of a goldmine for $130 and were eventually fired from their
own creation.
Lawsuits
followed. None were successful. Siegel and Shuster tried and failed to create
new characters. Their names were familiar only to comic book aficionados. Then,
rumors began to circulate in the early 1970s that a big budget Superman movie
was in the works. DC Comics received $3 million for the rights to film
Superman. Once again, Siegel and Shuster were left out of the equation.
This
time, the two men tried a new approach. They bypassed their lawyers and went
straight to the media. Newspapers across the world picked up the story of
Siegel and Shuster, the poor boys who'd created an American icon, made DC
Comics rich--and were now penniless and forgotten. That Shuster was now going
blind added to the story's poignancy.
Legally,
DC Comics owed Siegel and Shuster nothing, but bad publicity was costing the
company dearly. A financial settlement was reached, and the names "Siegel
and Shuster" appeared in Superman comics once more. In 2006, Superman returned to the big screen, and
not a moment too soon--in today's post 9/11 world, we need a hero more than
ever.
Rabbi
Simcha Weinstein holds a bachelors degree in Film History from the Manchester
Metropolitan University and is a former Film and Television location
scout. Founder of the downtown Brooklyn Jewish Student Foundation, Rabbi
Simcha is a sought-after television and radio guest, and has been profiled in
many publications, including the New York Post, the Jerusalem Post
and the Washington Post. He is also the author of the new book Up,
Up and Oy Vey! How Jewish History, Culture and Values Shaped the Comic Book
Superhero (Leviathan Press). Rabbi Simcha can be reached at www.rabbisimcha.com and rabbisimcha@pratt.edu.