The tradition of the Just Men is an ancient one, dating from the time of the prophet Isiah. These thirty-six mortals "are the hearts of the world multiplied, and into them, as into one receptacle, pour all our griefs." Without the Just Men to witness and accept the suffering of humanity, mankind could not survive. It would be overwhelmed by the knowledge of the cruelty men inflict on their fellow men. The Last of the Just is an account of how the descendants of Rabbi Yom Tov shouldered the burden of this knowledge.
As Andre Schwarz-Bart acquaints us with succeeding generation of Levys, he also schools us in the tragic legacy of Jewish persecution. But neither the pogroms of the Cossacks nor the Spanish Inquisition could dampen the religious ardor of Europe's Jews. Expulsion after expulsion--from England, France, Portugal, Geramany, Russia--finally lead the Levys to Poland. Zemyock, a peaceful village sheltered in a valley, will be their home for two centuries. It is here we meet Mordecai and later Benjamin, grandfather and father of Ernie. But Ernie will not be born in Zemyock; the pogroms of the Russian Revolution determine that the Levys emigrate once more--to Germany.
Schwarz-Bart's 1959 novel is a chronicle of Jewish persecution beginning in England in 1105 and ending with the Holocaust. This book was a huge hit when first released, eventually being translated into several languages. It is both a historical document and a compelling piece of fiction. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\
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April 05, 2003: This story of the thirty-six Just men ,those upon whose very existence the world depends is tremendously moving and painful. It is the story of Jewish suffering in Europe which comes to its terrible end in the Shoah(the Holocaust) And the center of the work is the story of Ernie Levy, the last of the just. This is one of the most moving books I have ever read.