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Andrea D. Lobel and Mark Shainblum - Other Covenants: Alternate Histories of the Jewish People

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Andrea D. Lobel and Mark Shainblum Other Covenants: Alternate Histories of the Jewish People

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Other Covenants Alternate Histories of the Jewish People Edited by Andrea D - photo 1
Other Covenants
Alternate Histories of the Jewish People
Edited by
Andrea D. Lobel
and Mark Shainblum
All rights reserved No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any - photo 2

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Owing to limitations of space, permission acknowledgments can be found on , which constitutes an extension of this copyright page.

Published by Ben Yehuda Press

122 Ayers Court #1B

Teaneck, NJ 07666


http://www.BenYehudaPress.com

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If youre the sort of person who reads this fine print, you might have found a mistake in this ebook, whether a typo, a formatting mistake, or perhaps an OCR error. You can report it here and be acknowledged in a corrected edition of this book.

ISBN13 978-1-953829-40-5 pb, 978-1-953829-80-1 hc, 978-1-953829-81-8 ebook

Cover art by Isaac Brynjegard-Bialik

22 23 24 / 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 120221206

For Maya, light of our lives, who loves alternate histories.
Contents

If the Righteous Wished,
They Could Create a World

Biographical Notes to
A Discourse on the Nature of Causality, with Air-planes by Benjamin Rosenbaum

Foreword

Historian Thomas Cahill, author of The Gifts of the Jews (Knopf, 1999) suggested that it was the Jewish people who invented the very concept of history as we know it. That we were the first civilization to perceive time not as an endless circle of life, death and rebirth, but as the flight of an arrow, on a linear path to somewhere from somewhere.

In more recent years, Cahills characterization has been dismissed by some academics as a gross oversimplification, and that may be so, but I think its still useful as a metaphor.

Because a single arrow implies a quiver of arrows, a volley of arrows, doesnt it? What if there are other timelines, other histories, other Jews? Would they still have a covenant with the one God?

I have explored these types of ideas before, most notably in Arrowdreams: An Anthology of Alternate Canadas (Nuage, 1998), which I co-edited with my friend John Dupuis. Arrowdreams was the first anthology of Canadian alternate history fiction, and I see it almost as a bookend of this collection, the first anthology of Jewish alternate history.* Both sides of my identity, Canadian and Jewish.

I suppose its natural that I would be attracted to alternate histories, to the roads not travelled. Without being maudlin about it, I am the child of a Holocaust survivor, my mother, Eva Shainblum. She and her family were deported from Transylvania to Auschwitz on the second day of Shavuot in 1944. There she lost her parents, Bela and Esther, and her brothers Paul and David. She and her sister, Ella, somehow survived for almost a year in the worst place on Earth, and upon liberation in 1945 were forced to walk home from Poland to Romania. Almost immediately upon arrival, Ella became ill and died, leaving my mother alone in the world.

With this as my family history, is it any wonder that I crave escape sideways to other worlds? To other timelines? To the hope that, in the seething, quantum foam of the multiverse, somewhere, somewhen, Bela and Esther, Paul and David and Ella lived. And were happy.

But it cant all be about the Holocaust, and suffering and misery. I reject the idea that Jewish history can be entirely summed up by They tried to kill us, they failed, lets eat! And how better to explore that notion than by exploring other worlds, other times and the other Jews that inhabit them?

As Andrea describes in greater detail in her Afterword, this book originated with a conversation in a car on a driveway. A conversation about the Jewish people, about historical trajectories, about things both good and bad, the horrible and the sublime.

This book is an exploration of paths we might have taken, a warning about paths we shouldnt take, and a celebration of the here and now, which may not be quite so bad after all, given the alternatives.

This book is a love letter to our people, the Jewish people. In all the universes we may find ourselves in.


Mark Shainblum
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

September, 2022

*A shoutout here to Gavriel Rosenfelds The What Ifs of Jewish History (Cambridge, 2016), a truly great collection of academic counterfactuals; similar to alternate history, but with a non-fiction approach.

To the Promised Land
Robert Silverberg

They came for me at high noon, the hour of Apollo, when only a crazy man would want to go out into the desert. I was hard at work and in no mood to be kidnapped. But to get them to listen to reason was like trying to get the River Nilus to flow south. They werent reasonable men. Their eyes had a wild metallic sheen and they held their jaws and mouths clamped in that special constipated way that fanatics like to affect. As they swaggered about in my little cluttered study, poking at the tottering stacks of books and pawing through the manuscript of my nearly finished history of the collapse of the Empire, they were like two immense irresistible forces, as remote and terrifying as gods of old Aegyptus come to life. I felt helpless before them.

The older and taller one called himself Eleazar. To me he was Horus, because of his great hawk nose. He looked like an Aegyptian and he was wearing the white linen robe of an Aegyptian. The other, squat and heavily muscled, with a baboon face worthy of Thoth, told me he was Leonardo di Filippo, which is of course a Roman name, and he had an oily Roman look about him. But I knew he was no more Roman than I am. Nor the other, Aegyptian. Both of them spoke in Hebrew, and with an ease that no outsider could ever attain. These were two Israelites, men of my own obscure tribe. Perhaps di Filippo had been born to a father not of the faith, or perhaps he simply liked to pretend that he was one of the worlds masters and not one of Gods forgotten people. I will never know.

Eleazar stared at me, at the photograph of me on the jacket of my account of the Wars of the Reunification, and at me again, as though trying to satisfy himself that I really was Nathan ben-Simeon. The picture was fifteen years old. My beard had been black then. He tapped the book and pointed questioningly to me and I nodded. Good, he said. He told me to pack a suitcase, fast, as though I were going down to Alexandria for a weekend holiday. Moshe sent us to get you, he said. Moshe wants you. Moshe needs you. He has important work for you.

Moshe?

The Leader, Eleazar said, in tones that you would ordinarily reserve for Pharaoh, or perhaps the First Consul. You dont know anything about him yet, but you will. All of Aegyptus will know him soon. The whole world.

What does your Moshe want with me?

Youre going to write an account of the Exodus for him, said di Filippo.

Ancient history isnt my field, I told him.

Were not talking about ancient history.

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