|
Celebrating
Hank Greenberg
Four times he led the American League in home run hitting. In 1938, he
blasted 58 - no player had hit more in a season up to that point in time
except for Babe Ruth. He starred in the majors for more than a decade and
batted .313 for his career.
He missed
four and a half years to serve in WWII. He closed out his career in 1947
as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates. He blasted 25 home runs that
season, most of them into a section of the outfield known as
"Greenberg Gardens." In 1956, he was elected to the Baseball
Hall of Fame. He passed away 30 years later.
His
name was Henry Benjamin Greenberg, but he was better known as Hank
Greenberg.
"The
Life and Times of Hank Greenberg," a documentary film by Aviva
Kempner is a loving and beautifully done tribute to a great player and
goes into an in depth treatment about all he had to overcome to prevail.
The
film opens with Mandy Patinkin singing a Yiddish rendition of "Take
Me Out to the Ballgame" while street scenes of young boys playing
baseball in the Bronx in the 1930s enter the screen. The son of Romanian
immigrants, Greenberg grew up Jewish in the Bronx and went on to star at
James Monroe High School.
He
began his major league career in Detroit in the mid 1930s - it was a city
that had well known anti Semites such as automaker Henry Ford and Father
Coughlin, the latter dished out hatred from his pulpit.
But
Greenberg at six-foot-four with broad shoulders and big muscles feared no
bigot, never backed away - whether it was from a spring training fight on
a bus with Detroit pitcher Rip Sewell or an entire Chicago White Sox team.
There
was a game in Chicago when Sox players went after Greenberg with religious
epithets way beyond the normal. When the game ended, a seething Greenberg
went into their clubhouse ready to do battle. He told the White Sox
players, "If you got a gut in your body you'll stand up." Of
course, nobody did.
Greenberg
often acknowledged the insults. "It was a constant thing," he
said in an interview shown in the film. "I think it was a spur for me
to do better. Not only were you a bum; you were a Jewish bum."
He
was the man Jews looked up to because he was "what most of them could
never be," in attorney Alan Dershowitz's phrase. Jews were in
sporting goods, not sports.
In
1937, Greenberg drove in 183 runs, one short of Lou Gehrig's American
League record. The next year, he hit 58 home runs - he had that number
with five games remaining. As the story goes, the word was out not to let
a Jew break Babe Ruth's record of 60. Walks and pitches delivered with a
high level of difficulty to become homers were the order of the day.
"I
wasn't bitter at all," Greenberg says in the documentary.
In
1934 with the Tigers caught up in a battle for first place with the
Yankees, Greenberg did not play one game. He observed the Jewish Holy Day
of Yom Kippur. The film relates how when the big slugger entered the
synagogue, a fan said, "My God, nobody ever saw a Jew that big."
The congregation gave Greenberg a standing ovation.
A
standing ovation is also due Aviva Kempner who devoted the past 12 years
to complete this compelling and winning documentary - a film she wrote and
directed.
Bravo,
Ms. Kempner!
Bravo,
Hank Greenberg!
# # #
|
You can reach
Harvey Frommer at:
Email: harvey.frommer@Dartmouth.EDU
I am at work on my
newest effort - - REMEMBERING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND
NARRATIVE HISTORY, a companion book to REMEMBERING YANKEE
STADIUM (The Definitive Book) Fall 2008 (Abrams, STC). If you
or those you know have specific stories and memories of times
(first game, marker moments, oddity) at the Fens - please get in
touch with me and hopefully we can set up a date and time for me
to interview you. I would appreciate that.
All best,
Harvey
About the Author:
Harvey Frommer is his 33rd consecutive
year of writing sports books. The author of 40 of them including the
classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and
Ragtime Baseball," his REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative
history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published September 1,
2008 as well as a reprint version of his "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime
Baseball.".
Frommer sports books are available direct from the author - discounted and
autographed.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in excess of one million
and appears on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~frommer.
Other Frommer sports related articles can be
found at:
Harvey
Frommer along with his wife, Myrna Katz Frommer are the authors of
five critically acclaimed oral/cultural histories, professors at Dartmouth
College, and travel writers who specialize in cultural history, food, wine, and Jewish history and heritage
in the United States, Europe, and the Caribbean.
This Article is Copyright ©
1995 - 2008 by Harvey Frommer.
All rights reserved worldwide.
|
|