THE HOME OF THE PASSION PLAY - OBERAMMERGAU
Nestled at the foot of the mountains
in the highlands of Bavaria, is the little village
of Oberammergau, the home of the world-famous Passion
Play. Although of German extraction, these humble
people were opposed to war with all their power, but
when it came they were compelled to submit. One
of the saddest pictures during the war was that of
these people as it was given by Madaline Doty, which
was published in the Atlantic Monthly in 1917.
This writer said: “The
village was silent and the people were in great distress.
There were no carriages or even push carts; no smiling
people, no laughter, and no gay voices were heard.
Old people sat about as if dazed. Five hundred
and fifty out of eighteen hundred population had gone
to war.” The village was bankrupt.
There was no money. It was like a plague-stricken
place. The theater building was locked up.
The little stores had nothing to sell. No person
was allowed more than one egg per week and but few
could get that. People were on the point of starvation.
During the season of 1910 the writer
made the journey to Oberammergau on purpose to see
the Passion Play and this chapter is but a brief description
of it. Journeying from Zurich, Switzerland, to
Oberammergau a stop was made at Munich. From
that place there is but one little dinky railroad
and one of the greatest mobs I ever got into was at
the depot in Munich. A thousand people were trying
to get on a train that could carry only a few hundred.
Finding a porter who was persuaded to open a compartment
with a silver key a half dozen of us had a comfortable
place. The distance to the mountain village is
less than one hundred miles, but it took from five
in the evening until midnight to reach it.
Having purchased a ticket for the
play on the following day weeks before, and with it
lodging for two nights, a gentleman took me from the
depot to the home of one of the players and I went
to bed. Early the next morning while eating breakfast
at the home, on looking through the door I discovered
that one end of the house was a cow stable. Going
from the house all that was necessary was to follow
the crowd, for people seemed to be coming from everywhere.
Passing through the winding, narrow streets, soon
the large theater building was reached.
This building is one hundred and forty
feet square. The roof is supported by six gigantic
arches that are sixty-five feet high in the center.
The floor is built on an incline so that every one
of the four thousand seats is a good one. The
stage reaches entirely across the building and is
in the open air, the whole end of the building open.
At each end of the stage are small buildings representing
the Palace of Pilate and the Palace of the High Priest.
Back about twenty feet from the edge of the stage
is a covered stage with a curtain and in which the
tableaus are arranged. There are fourteen entrances
to the building.
The large orchestra is just in front
of the stage but lower than the people, so unless
one happens to be near the platform the musicians
cannot be seen at all. The end of the entire building
being open, the rain beats in and the cheapest seats
are those where one is likely to get wet should it
rain. The orchestra is kept dry by a large canvas
that is pulled out when the rain begins. Back
in the inner covered stage is a network of ropes,
pulleys, lances, arms for Roman soldiers, dishes for
banquets, costumes and wardrobes for the players, all
in perfect order and ready for use at a moment’s
notice.
The play itself occupies about eight
hours. There are six hundred and eighty-five
people in it, but only one hundred and twenty speaking
parts. The principal actors are not many, but
during the play there are many children as well as
old men and women take part. There are twenty-two
tableaus; seventy-six scenes and in all eighteen acts.
The tableaus represent Old Testament prophecies of
the events portrayed. It must be remembered,
however, that the play represents only the events
that occurred during the last week of Christ’s
life.
The music is simply wonderful.
For generations these mountain people have been developing
a tenderness and pathos that really grips one’s
heart. The music was composed by a man by the
name of Dedler, about one hundred years ago, and while
it gives expression to the composer’s tender
heart, yet experts say that it reminds them of Hayden
and Mozart. The paintings in the building are
those of great masters. It took an entire year
to paint the scenery for the play in 1910, but they
could not afford to spend so much upon it in 1922.
The curtains and costumes are of fine material, nothing
shoddy or cheap about it.
The story of the beginning of the
Passion Play is as interesting as a novel. It
was in the year 1633. A pestilence was raging
in the villages in the mountains of Bavaria and death
rode down the valleys like a mighty conqueror.
Hundreds were smitten and the hand of death could not
be stayed. Whole villages were depopulated and
even the dead were left unburied. For a while
the village of Oberammergau was favored, while neighboring
villages were stricken. A line of sentinels were
stationed around the village and a strict quarantine
was maintained. Finally, love of home and the
desire to see his family caused a laboring man, Casper
Schushler, who was working in another village, to steal
through the line and spend an evening at his own family
fireside.
In a couple of days all was changed.
The songs of the children were hushed in silence,
for this man had brought the plague into the village.
In thirty-three days eighty-four had perished and scores
of others were smitten by the hand of death.
It was a great crisis and looked as though that soon
there would not be left among the living enough to
bury the dead. A public meeting was called.
It was a sad gathering of hollow-eyed men and women.
They spent the whole day in earnest prayer. They
vowed to the Lord that day that if he would hear their
petition and save them, they would repent of their
sins as a token of their sincerity, and that they
would try to re-enact the scenes of Calvary and thus
give an object lesson of God’s love for humanity.
The chronicler says that from that
moment the hand of death was stayed. Not another
person in the village died from the plague. Every
one smitten recovered and by this they knew that the
Lord had heard their prayers. At once they set
about to carry out their vow. From that day forward
they aimed to give the object lesson every ten years
and have done so except on occasions when they have
been hindered by war, as two years ago. In 1910
a quarter of a million people endured the hardships
and inconveniences of a long, tiresome journey, sometimes
spending many hundred dollars, to see the play.
The day I spent there was one of the
shortest days in my memory. Sermons not an hour
long have sometimes seemed longer than this entire
day. A strange silence was everywhere. There
was no gaiety such as one sees at a theater.
There was no applause, no laughter. Criticise
it if you will, condemn it if you like, yet the fact
remains that it is the greatest object lesson of the
ages. It would be hard for any man to see it and
not come away with a more tender heart and a better
appreciation of the world’s Redeemer. The
late William T. Stead truly called this play “The
Story That Has Transformed the World.”
No other story so fills and thrills
the soul. I saw non-Christian men sit trembling
with emotion and great tears rolling down their faces.
Sometimes one’s indignation was so aroused that
it was hard to sit still. At other times the
fountains of the great deep were broken up and one’s
heart would nearly burst. On this particular day
every one of the four thousand seats were taken and
five hundred people stood up from morning until evening.
It is as impossible to describe the Passion Play as
it is to describe a song. It is real life before
your eyes. I have never yet seen pictures of
it that did not make me heart-sick, for it is impossible
to give a true picture of it on the screen.
On years when the play is given it
generally begins about the middle of May and closes
the last of September. They give it regularly
on Sunday and Wednesday of each week during this time.
During the busy season it is often repeated for the
overflow on Monday and Thursday and occasionally on
Friday. Tickets for the regular play are generally
sold out beforehand but as usual a great many reach
the place without tickets and have to be accommodated
in this way.
All the years the highest ambition
of the boys and girls in the village is to so live
that they will be chosen for some prominent part in
the play. No one can be chosen unless born in
the village and this confines it to the village.
No one is chosen for a prominent part if there is
anything against his character and that places a premium
on right living. Hence one can easily see their
reason for hating war with all their power. While
narrow in their peculiar religious ideas, no doubt,
yet a more consecrated and devoted class of people
are perhaps not found in another village on earth.
All told there are nearly a thousand
people who are connected in some way with the play
and as the population of the village is less than two
thousand, it practically takes in every family and
sometimes every member of the family. The choosing
of the important players is always an important event
in the village. After a season closes no characters
are chosen for seven years. At length the day
arrives when the committee of fourteen who are to
choose the leading characters for the play three years
hence is elected. It is a great day. The
assembly meets in the town hall. Every parishioner
has a vote. The mayor of the village is chairman.
After this committee of fourteen is
duly elected a meeting is soon called. It takes
several months to consider the problem. Every
player must sign a contract to carry out his part
to the best of his ability. Offenders are punished
with great severity. Married women are barred
from the prominent parts. It is said that more
than one hundred rehearsals are held before the opening
day.
The receipts for a season are enormous.
The sale of post cards and souvenirs greatly add to
the sum. It is not surprising that these people
are often accused for running the play for the money
there is in it. But the leading characters only
receive a few hundred dollars for the season’s
work. The church receives a large amount.
The theater building and upkeep represents a fortune.
To care for the thousands who attend, the town must
have a good water supply, an up-to-date sanitary system,
and many things that would be uncalled for in an ordinary
town. Located as it is away in the mountains,
it is very difficult to have the things that are necessary
in the way of improvements.
The people of Oberammergau are a humble,
hard-working people. Their main business is wood
carving and they are experts in this work. Without
the Passion Play season the demand for their product
would not be so great. As is said above these
people are very religious. They have a very expensive
church or two. On a peak of one of the highest
mountains in the vicinity is a gigantic cross.
This is kept polished and when the sun shines upon
it the sight is very beautiful. Many journey to
the top of this mountain and the view richly repays
one for the difficult climb.