(Maharal of Prague) Hanukah and Night (Ner Mitzvah)

Night consumes the entire visual ambience of the Ner Mitzvah, a short text on the holiday of Hanukah, the festival of lights, by the Maharal of Prague. Volume I constitutes a long and vivid excursus on Daniel, visions of the night, the 4 Kingdoms, beasts rising from the sea, and Israel. Volume II revolves around the Hanukah lamps lit after sunset in the dark of night.

The total world picture of the Maharal is of an interconnected-interactive and active cosmos, the order of “nature” (teva), marked by imperfection (hisaron) and death. Across earth and heavens, the world picture is segmented and hierarchical, cut between three powers physical, animated spirit (nefesh), intellect (sechel) under the power of a fourth power, the divine. The Maharal’s point of view is centric, with Israel and Torah and Land and Temple in the middle (emzah), manifesting light, separate (nivdal) from and above nature, which is physical and murky.

The Ner Mitzvah is a political theodicy. If everything in the world is created for God’s honor and under God’s sovereign authority, then why did God arrange the world this way with these 4 terrifying kingdoms –Babylonia, Persia, Greece, and Rome– which represent imperfection and the violence of empire in the order of creation and in the world of created beings. What comes after the 4 Kingdoms in volume 1 is Volume 2:  Hanukah, miracle, light, and beauty. (The Ner Mitzvah ends with critique of the Maharal’s generation, sectarian split from the community and rabbis don’t rebuke. Sages as essential fence in the world.) (About the political theology of the Maharal I’ll have more to say when I get to Netzah Yisrael and Gevurat Ha’Shem.)

The fourth beast, Rome, which is Christendom, which is Europe and the West was different from all the other beasts (Daniel 7:7), uniquely integrating the three powers that compose the human –physical strength, a soul [nefesh], and intellectual power—into one single power that knows nothing but itself (par.27). In this theory of empire, the 4th beast in Daniel’s night vision, a which can be read as a prefiguration of late modern captialisn, is uniquely attached to emptiness (ההעדר) which it brings to others. “And because of this, it destroys everything as well. Therefore, it says (Daniel 7:7) ‘its teeth were of iron.’ And it says (Daniel 2:40) ‘the fourth kingdom shall be strong as iron, just as iron breaks and shatters all things, and as iron that crushes all these, it shall break and crush.’ And behold, each and every one that is close to emptiness and nullification is more diminished. Therefore, the first is compared to gold (Daniel 2:32), and after it silver (ibid.), and after it bronze (ibid.), and after it iron (ibid., verse 40), which is less than all. And in this kingdom, deficiency and emptiness are attached, and because of this, it also cuts and destroys everything” (par.33).

Why light the Hanukah lights after sunset and in the physical dark, still under the rule of the 4th empire? Because daytime reflects the natural order, whereas night, not day, reflects the world of miracle above nature.

The Maharal explains,

“[T]he time for lighting is after sunset, because the lighting of the candle is in remembrance of the miracles that God performed for them with the lights. And the day is designated for the governance of the world in its natural course, and the beginning of the night, which comes after the day, signifies miracles, which are above nature, and the night is particularly designated for miracles. This is explained in many places that the night is especially for miracles. Therefore, after the day, when the sun has set, it is fitting to light the candles to remember the miracle that God did for them, as it is after the governance of nature. But if one did not light after sunset, it is not in accordance with the natural order. And just as we established the eight days of Hanukkah, and we explained that the eighth is for the governance of nature, and the seven correspond to the seven days of creation, when nature, the governance of the world, was created. The eighth is for what is above nature, as are all miracles. And thus, the day is for the governance of the natural world, and the night is for something above nature. And thus, it is said in the Midrash that the night is especially for what is above nature. And so, they also said (Eruvin 65b) that the moon was created only for learning. All this is because the Torah is not natural, but rather divine. Therefore, after sunset, one should light the candles. And according to this reasoning, if one did not light from sunset until the foot has gone out from the marketplace, he should not light. Therefore, one should be stringent and careful about this” (par. 28 at Sefaria, translated by Chat GPT)

One day, the Messiah will come, today, if you listen to his voice. Today, do not violate communal norms, do not separate from the community and the words of the rabbis which are meant for protection and preservation.  About this, the Maharal could not be more strict. “[O]ne who separates from the ways of the congregation, where the Holy One, blessed be He, is with the congregation, when one separates from the ways of the congregation, that is, from what the Sages established and what is customary, is as if they are separating from the Holy One, blessed be He (par. 39-40).

Both the human person in the world of nature and the world itself remain imperfect, transient. The world is a candle.

According to the Maharal,

“[A] person is prepared for this world, and this world is called ‘a candle,’ because the candle burns for a while and then stops. Similarly, a person in this world has an end (הפסק), just as the candle burns for a time and then extinguishes. And thus they said in the tractate Sotah (21b), “For the mitzvah is a candle and the Torah is light” (Proverbs 6:23), the mitzvah is compared to a candle, and the Torah to light. Just as a candle has an end, so too the reward for the mitzvah has an interruption. “And the Torah to light” — just as light has no end, so too the reward for the Torah has no end. Also, because this world is material, and it receives form. Therefore, this world is called ‘a candle,’ because the candle is material and receives light, which is considered like form. Thus, this world is completely similar to a candle. And it is said that one who is accustomed to a candle is prepared for this world, which is a candle. And because the person in this world is subject to death, he does not have this world in its completeness, but only when he has children who remain after him” (par. 33).

[Attached is a translation of Ner Mitzvah]

[I took the electronic copy of the text available at Sefaria and plugged it into ChatGPT. Numbers in brackets represent the paragraph-numbers at Sefaria. I have lightly annotated the text in bold font. Reader beware: the translation is checked for accuracy, but not completely]

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(Sub-World) Old Jewish Socialism (Bund)

What was the old Jewish left and what does the memory of it mean at our own critical inflection point in contemporary Jewish history both in Israel and across the Diaspora? On the anti-Zionist left today, all kinds of claims and counterclaims revolve specifically around the Bund, but with almost no historical context. For theoretical clarity, I am organizing in this post my reading notes on social historians. I want to map conceptually the Bund as a distinctly intra-collective social phenomenon. My own area of interest is modern and contemporary Jewish thought and culture, a subset of which includes politics and the political imagination. Posted below are very long passages that I have selected from social historians who specialize(d) in this area of study; their work is iconic in its own right for the light they shed on this phenomenon.

Regarding the old Jewish left, I am constellating tentative takeaways from Jonathan Frankel, Ezra Mendelsohn, and others around a few elemental nodes: [1] the critical tension between universalism and particularism, socialism and Jewishness, internationalism and nationalism, [2] collective-group formation and  autonomous self-organization, [3] the place and time of modern Jews on the left in the world in the Diaspora caught between “here” and “there” and the past and the future.

In retrospect, the least interesting thing about the Bund is the opposition between anti-Zionism and Zionism. As per Frankel, “The truth is that the socialists were actively hostile to the Palestine movement, argued against it, regarded it as a threat, and in attacking it were influenced by its mode of thought” (Prophecy and Politics, p.195). The reason is simple enough. First, Bundists and Socialist Zionists were part of the same social fabric and social class; their politics represent the same acute suffering of a Jewish proletariat, the personal and collective experience of which the New Jewish Left emerging in the 1960s had little in common. Secondly, from early on the Bund embraced a national program of social transformation and cultural autonomy. This rich fabric recognized in the eclectic mix of socialist expression collected by Tony Michels in Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader. Bundist, Zionist, Territorialist, Socialist Party, and Communist were separate but interwoven threads in a far-flung universe representing a nexus of working-class Jewish labor and Jewish mass politics.

Jewish Socialism

Jonathan Frankel understood the term “Jewish socialism” as referring  to “those socialist individuals, groups, and emergent movements that sought to establish a political role for themselves or their ideas specifically within the Russian-Jewish world (which in the late nineteenth century, of course, was still overwhelmingly Yiddish-speaking)” (“The Roots of ‘Jewish Socialism’ (1 8 8 1 – 1 8 9 2 ): From ‘Populism’ to ‘Cosmopolitanism,’ p.58, emphasis added). It’s an intra-communal model that by definition excludes Jewish communists or other “Jews on the left” who organize outside the Jewish social body.

Late Emergence

Der Algemeyner Yidisher Arbeter Bund (The General Union of Jewish Workers) as a prominent movement on the Jewish left in eastern Europe emerged at a moment of unfolding crises in the first quarter of the twentieth century. Frankel suggests that Jewish socialism came second. A latecomer in “the modernization of Jewish life,” it only developed after “socialist internationalism and Jewish nationalism were already firmly established as possible options for the post-traditional Jew” (Prophecy and Politics, p.552). Daniel Blatman gives an excellent historical overview of the emergence of the Bund starting at its founding in 1897, the transition to a Jewish national program, its elimination in Russia after the Revolution in 1917, and its reemergence in Poland during the interwar years. The Bund did not take off in the United States where Jews active on the left did so primarily outside a Jewish communal or collective umbrella. Instead of seeing Jewish socialism as an import from eastern Europe the United States, Tony Michels demonstrates how Jewish socialism emerged as a force in New York City in the 1890s and was then transplanted back to eastern Europe).

Influence

What were the scope and limits of the Bund’s actual influence as a movement of Jewish socialism? Joshua Myers traces how the Bund buckled under weight of anti-Semitic violence after its first heyday in 1905. “A majority of Bundists, including many of the party leaders, aligned with the Communist regime, while many of their opponents split off to form a Social-Democratic Bund. The Communist Bund would be absorbed into the Russian Communist Party in 1920, their opponents liquidated in 1921…Still, it was not until 1936 that the Bund began to play a major role in Polish politics, and even then, it was restricted to local politics, primarily in Warsaw and Łodz. Two years later, the party would finally break through on the national level, claiming an estimated 38% of the votes cast for Jewish parties in the municipal elections of December 1938-January 1939. The Zionists, their rivals, claimed 39%, but this was split between two parties—a general list that won 36% and the Left-Poalei Zion, a small faction that hoped to build a Yiddish-speaking society in Palestine ruled by workers’ councils, which won 3%.”

A Subworld

The old Jewish socialism was a microcosmos in the big-little world of Jewish society in the grim world of the Pale of Settlement at a moment of decay. Frankel calls it as a “subworld” (Prophecy and Politics, p.552, 556). As Ezra Mendelsohn contends, “Any consideration of the achievements or the lack of achievements of interwar Jewish politics must…take into account the success of Jewish politics in creating satisfying subcultures, little worlds that supplied a wide range of services to their adherents” (On Jews and Modern Politics, p.122). As a subworld, it combines elements of fantasy and quotidian culture. (That Mendelsohn’s book is so richly illustrated with art is by design.) Old Jewish socialism mingles politics and the critical imagination into an alternate reality. It mapped out a different world, a realized utopia set apart and set inside the larger social world of Jews set apart and set inside the larger surrounding national cultures of eastern Europe in which it sought a place for the reorganization of Jewish labor, politics, society, and culture free from the scourge of anti-Jewish violence at a moment of historical upheaval.

Once upon a time, socialism was a way of life. There is nothing like this today. About old Jewish socialism in the United States, Tony Michels writes, “Countless young American Jews absorbed socialism at their kitchen tables, in the streets, in summer camps, on school playgrounds, and in working-class housing cooperatives where the atmosphere was thick with socialist ideologies. ‘Socialism was a way of life, since everyone else I knew in New York was a Socialist, more or less,’ the writer Alfred Kazin recalls. ‘I was a Socialist as so many Americans were ‘Christians.’ I had always lived in a Socialist atmosphere.’ Family and neighborhood, in other words, predisposed many Jewish children to the Left, even as socialism’s universalistic vision offered a path—an “exit visa,” in the words of one sociologist—away from the Jewish people” (“Introduction: The Jewish-Socialist Nexus,” p.13).

The “exit visa” from Jewish parochialism did not come with a simple one-way ticket. “With the important exception of socialist-Zionists,” Michels contends, “American-born radicals usually viewed Jewish affairs as a parochial distraction from the class struggle and other matters of seemingly larger significance. This desire to escape Jewish particularity had antecedents in the immigrant experience…. In any case, such negations of Jewish identity diminished over time, often in direct correlation to persecutions of Jews in Europe. After all, railing against Jewish ethnocentrism hardly seemed the most appropriate way to respond to a pogrom” (“Introduction: The Jewish-Socialist Nexus,” p.12). About dining room table Jewish culture once upon a time in the United States, I would point to Kazin’s evocation in his memoir Walker In the City. Written at midcentury looking back to his youth in the 1920s in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, Kazin paints a deeply moving picture of the Sabbath table as a site of adolescent sexual awakening and a paean to socialism. Something of this memory carried forward well into the 1960s and 1970s of the American melting pot. The picture continues to linger as an active, nostalgic after-impression in the imagination of young middleclass Jews on the U.S. left in the post-suburban social milieu evoked most recently in Joshua Leifer’s recent Tablets Shattered: The End of an American Jewish Century and the Future of Jewish Life.

The mass mobilization of Jewish youth in political movements during the interwar years stands out as cornerstone of the structural microcosmos that was Jewish society in eastern Europe. Ezra Mendelsohn notes the vast majority of Jewish youth participated in political movements. Placing the youth movements in their time and place as counterculture, he explains,“[F]or hundreds and thousands of Jews in Eastern Europe the youth movement, and then the political party, was particularly attractive because it seemed to offer a happy alternative to grim Jewish reality. The rapid growth of the youth movements was a result of the Jewish crisis in interwar Eastern Europe—increasing economic misery, increasing antisemitism, the feeling that there was no future, and the belief that one’s parents were at a loss to map out the path to a satisfying life. This crisis, much greater than the one that affected American Jews during the Great Depression, produced a vacuum into which stepped Betar, Hashomer ha-tsair, Skif, and all the other groups, promising not only friendship, not only relationships on an equal basis with people of the opposite sex, not only gaiety, but also something more profound. In the memoir literature one encounters descriptions of Jewish life in Poland that emphasize its “emptiness” (pustkeyt), its ‘grayness,’ its ‘disorder’ (umordnung). To escape from this one joined an organizatsye—the word itself is of great significance—a world that stood for a life that was “rational” and “planned,” a world that emphasized the virtues of carrying out orders and bearing responsibility, a world of ‘strictness and punctuality.’ Great emphasis was placed on outings to the countryside, where the young Jews were introduced to the harmony of nature, so different from the ugliness of the town” (On Modern Jewish Politics, pp.120-2).

Jewish Socialism and Socialist Internationalism

The contemporary turn to the Bund by Jews on the anti-Zionist left in no way resolves the deep contradictions at work in the lifeworld of modern Jewish politics. Despite current questions today about the contradiction or non-contradiction between Zionism and democracy, the tension was not, in fact, unique to Zionism. Yiddish culture and the Bund, “here” at home in the Diaspora did not escape the coil between particularism and universalism. On a most basic level, there is no Jewish modernity outside the many varieties of this constituent problematic.

Writing about the Jewish left in the United States, Tony Michels points out what I would call the irony of Jews on the left. “The early Jewish socialists,” he writes, “viewed themselves not as building a new Jewish culture in Yiddish (they denied such a thing was possible) but as preparing the masses to transcend their own allegedly parochial culture. Their goal, in Abraham Cahan’s words, was ‘to erase all boundaries between Jew and non-Jew in the labor world.’ ‘We are no patriots of a special `Jewish labor movement,’ Cahan’s colleague Louis Miller explained in 1892. ‘We would like the Jews to be members of the American unions.’ And yet, in their efforts to organize and educate (‘enlighten’) immigrant Jews, socialists built –in spite of themselves– a distinct Jewish labor movement”(Fire in Their Hearts, p.31).

In eastern Europe, Jonathan Frankel refers to the “double alienation” with which members of the Bund grappled. Jews on the left were “at once estranged from, and drawn to, the ways and problems of their own nationality, on the one hand, and a Russian or universalist political philosophy, on the other (Prophecy and Politics, p.3). Frankel’s analysis continues, “Bound together in conspiratorial brotherhood, the leadership could never cut the Gordian knot, could never finally decide whether its first duty lay with the international proletariat or with national liberation. In this respect, perhaps, it reflected more faithfully than any other movement the divided soul of the modern Jewish intelligentsia (Ibid., p.185).

Autonomy

Not merely communal, the formation of Jewish socialism as part of a distinctly “national” project was a relatively late phenomenon, a byproduct of anti-Jewish violence in eastern Europe, and in competition with Zionism. Tony Michels recalls how, “In 1899 the Bund’s program advocated only for civil and political rights for Russian Jews. Two years later the Bund made the important step of identifying Jews as a nation and, in 1903, adopted the demand of ‘national cultural autonomy’ for Russian Jews” (A Fire in Their Hearts, p.142?). As explained further by David Slucki, “Bundists were central to the establishment, a year later, of the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party; in 1903, however, the Bund withdrew from the Russian party after being denied federative status as an autonomous Jewish party. Although it began with an interest primarily in combating the special barriers that Jewish workers faced, in 1901 the Bund adopted, at its fourth conference, a national program calling for a federated Russia that would provide constituent nations with national-cultural autonomy, a concept borrowed from the Austro-Marxists” (The International Jewish Labor Bund after 1945, p.3).

The transition from internationalism to a national Jewish program lies at the core of Frankel’s scholarship as it relates particularly to the Bund. About this he writes, “In May 1895, [Martov’s lecture], delivered to some forty worker-agitators, was published in 1900 and was entitled A Turning Point in the History of the Jewish Labor Movement (in Russian) and A New Epoch in the History of the Jewish Labor Movement (in Yiddish). ‘Our movement,’ he said there, ‘has become first more democratic and, second, more materialist… The object of our activity…is not the worker-intelligent who is divorced from his environment by his mental abilities, his need for education, but the average worker of the masses with his average needs, average morality, and average level of development. The materialist character of our movement today…consists of the fact that all our hopes and expectations depend not on a faith in the omnipotence of our ideas… but…on the needs of the masses.’ But in becoming more democratic and more mass-oriented, Martov continued, the movement had inevitably become more national in character. ‘[Previously], relegating the Jewish working-class movement to second place, we tended to scorn the realities of its existence, and this attitude found expression in the fact that we conducted our work in the Russian language’…[But] life has forced us to change our tactics…While we tied all our hopes to the general Russian movement we —without even noticing it ourselves-raised the Jewish movement to a height not yet attained by the Russian one . . . Having placed the mass movement in the center of our program we had to adapt our propaganda and education to the mass, that is make it more Jewish. What was now required was to recognize the logic dictated by experience, to translate the unconscious gains made hitherto into a conscious organizational program for the future: The goal of the Social Democrats working in the Jewish sphere [should be] to create a separate Jewish labor organization which would lead and teach the Jewish proletariat in the struggle for economic, civil and political liberation” (Prophecy and Politics, p.174).

Do’ikayt

Appearing late at the historical twilight of the Bund, the slogan Do’ikayt, Yiddish for “Hereness,” conveyed the notion that the fight for socialism was here at home, here where Jews are. It was a principle that flew in the face of social history at a dis-locative moment of anti-Jewish violence and genocide, and mass emigration when European Jews left had little choice but to leave here for there.

About the appearance of the actual term (as opposed to the idea and ideology it instantiated), there is some confusion. Ezra Mendelsohn writing about Poland in the 1930s introduces the theme in its relatively late Polish context. “The Bund was the great apostle of doikeyt on the ‘Jewish street’—its slogan, ‘We remain here.’ In a novel of Polish Jewish life in the 1930s, the Polish mayor of a little town asks Hersh when he will be leaving for Palestine with all the other Jews. Hersh may not have been a Bundist, but his reply was in keeping with that party’s most fervently held position: ‘It’s no use, Wojtusz. We Jews must live here together with you in Smolin. This is the way it has always been.’ Such stubborn optimism may have been admirable, but why should it have appealed to the Jewish masses at a time of growing economic misery and rising antisemitism. The Bund was also the great advocate of cooperation with the Polish left despite its disapproval of what it regarded as the too-nationalistic line of the main Polish socialist party” (On Modern Jewish Politics, p.76).

“Do’ikayt” has its own strange place and time in the history of Jewish socialism. Long since forgotten and only recently remembered, it seems that the term was articulated only after World War II and the destruction of European Jewry. Flying in the face of reality, the principle speaks to the ghostly hereness of a Jewish collective that was no longer there, in Poland. Do’ikayt is a retroactive concept from when the Jewish left in eastern Europe had just lost its actual place in time. About this, David Slucki observes, “To the best of my abilities I have established that the term “do’ikayt” seems most likely to have gained in usefulness only after World War Two to describe a set of beliefs originating in the interwar period” (The International Jewish Labor Bund after 1945, p.207).

Madeleine Adkins Cohen confirms this late dating of what turns out to be a postwar theoretical object. She explains, “The term ‘do’ikayt’ appears only to have gained popularity and usage in the immediate post-World War II period when the ideological debate between Bundists (members of der algemeyner yidisher arbeter bund, the General Jewish Workers Bund), scattered around the world and Zionists on the cusp of Israeli statehood became especially—and perhaps surprisingly—heated. While recent scholarship on Jewish national politics in the first half of the twentieth century often uses the term to describe Bundist ideology, especially in the interwar period, nothing that I have come across traces the term back to actual use in the interwar period. It remains something of a mystery how the term has become so accepted in historical and cultural scholarship of the last few decades with such sparse ties to the period and ideologies it is used to describe. The best answer I have at this point is a sudden rise in usage by Bundists and perhaps especially by Zionists critiquing Bundist ideology in the immediate postwar period. The debate about Jewish territory and belonging took on new intensity and immediacy as displaced Jews decided where to live after the end of the war and as Israeli statehood became a reality. These debates become the basis for political and historical reassessments of territorialism, antiterritorialism, the Bund’s legacy, and Zionism’s ‘victory’” (Here and Now: The Modernist Poetics of Do’ikayt, pp.3-4).

Allies+ Class war

Questions regarding non-Jewish allies and alliances and intra-Jewish antagonism have always been a key component of all modern Jewish political movements –liberal, rightwing and leftwing, Zionist, ultra-orthodox, nationalists, socialists.

Regarding Jews on the left, Ezra Mendelsohn explains with characteristic wit, “The alliance with the gentiles signified not only comradeship but also power. It is said that the leaders of the tiny Montenegran people were fond of boasting that they, together with their allies the Russians, numbered over one hundred million people. For Jews on the left the longed-for alliance with the international working class signified their transformation from a despised and powerless minority into an integral part of a mighty force, potentially the majority of mankind. This must have been, from a psychological point of view, an extremely satisfying compensation for the loss of old certainties, of God and Torah” (On Modern Jewish Politics, p.100, see pp.99-103).

But who were the actual allies of the Jews or of the Bund on the left in Russia before the Russian Revolution or in Poland between the wars? On the one hand, according to Frankel, “For the Bund, the challenge from the Russian Social Democrats [the RSDRP led by the Mensheviks and Bolsheviks –zjb] presented incomparably more difficult problems than did the conflict with the PPS or the Zionists. After all, the entire ideology of the Bund was based on the idea that the Jewish movement (albeit self-governing) formed an integral unit in the international but Russian-centered party. To have to decide between loyalty to the Russian party and to Bundism, as it had developed by 1901, was a cruel choice indeed” (Frankel, Prophecy and Politics, 227).  Frankel’s detailed analysis of the full-bore attack against the Bund orchestrated by Lenin and others at the Second Congress of the RSDRP in 1903 assigning primary importance to the confrontation with the Bund makes for painful reading (ibid., 227-46)

On the other hand, did the slogan of the Bund even make sense? “Workers, organize yourselves within one party but with national subdivisions” (Frankel, Prophecy and Politics, p.248)? In the end, the Bund was menaced politically, not by Zionists, but by the allies in RSDRP. “As long as its principal rivals were on the right,” writes Frankel, “the leadership [of the Bund] slowly moved toward the idea of a fully autonomous Jewish socialist party, combining class war with the defense of national interests…It saw the opportunity to preempt the cause of Diaspora nationalism, revolutionary and socialist, and by 1901 it had moved far and effectively to do so. But whenthe challenge came from the internationalist Left, the Bund was thrown into a deep inner crisis from which there could be no satisfactory escape” (Frankel, Prophecy and Politics, p.257).

Of a piece with alliance politics, intra-Jewish class war was a mainstay of the Jewish left. I don’t have a lot on this in my reading notes, except for Dubnov’s criticism of the Bund taken from Jonathan Frankel.“The basic assumption of Bundist ideology, that the accentuation of class divisions and class warfare within the Jewish people was in the best interests of the nation, became the cause of bitter attacks from the ‘bourgeois’ leaders of the Union for Equal Rights. The Bund, Dubnov wrote in December 1905, ‘declares its pretensions to be the representative of our national interests . . . but the alienation of these Marxist fanatics was revealed in tragic form during the recent events. Together with their comrades from the Russian socialist organizations, they are profoundly convinced that the Russian people are called upon to carry through a revolution of the highest order which will enable it in one fell swoop to leap all historical barriers, even a democratic constitution, directly to a ‘people’s government’ or to a democratic republic or even a little further-to social revolution . . . How has this mystical Russian [russkii] nationalism seized hold of you, gentlemen, the Jewish Social Democrats, you, brothers and sisters, who have just experienced on your broken skulls one of the historic “missions” of the Russian people, making 1905 analogous to 1648 (read 1648 not 1848)?’” (Prophets and Politics, p.253).

With his eye on the old Soviet Union in particular, Mendelsohn’s own conclusions were judicious in their mordant wit regarding the general promise and failure of Jewish-gentile alliance politics on the left. “The most charitable interpretation that can be put on this sad alliance between Jewish radicals who would not harm a fly and a wicked regime that murdered millions of innocent people is that it derived at least in part from the existential situation of a persecuted minority that, especially in the 1930s, found itself under an attack of unprecedented dimensions led by nazism, the “native” fascist movements of East Central Europe, and by less powerful but nonetheless frightening forces in America” (On Modern Jewish Politics, p.102). “Nonetheless, a chapter dealing with the sources of appeal to Jews of various political movements must emphasize the tremendous power of the vision of an alliance between Jews and all progressive mankind—Polish and Russian workers, American blacks, all the dispossessed and powerless, struggling together for a better world, for a just society, against the forces of evil embodied by nazism. It was, I believe, one of the great heroic visions of modern Jewish politics, and if it had, to put it mildly, its unpleasant side, so did the others” (On Modern Jewish Politics, p.103).

Israel

Critical doubts regarding the coherence of doi’kait as a slogan today on the anti-Zionist left have nothing to do with the epic failure of alliance politics or the destruction of the Jews in Europe. It has everything to do with brute social-demographic facts made manifest by the establishment of the State of Israel as a dominant center of Jewish life in the world today.

At our own historical distance, it is easy to overlook that the most interesting critiques of Zionism from Jews on the left had little to do with imperialism and colonialism and the so-called Arab question in Palestine. Anti-Zionism was an inner-Jewish critique reflecting Jewish political exigencies. Almost to a person, the early critics assembled by Tony Michels in Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader argued that Zionism was an impractical solution to actual Jewish political problems. The Zionist idea was nothing more than a “dream,” not “real.” Socialism represented the real solution to the challenge of Jewish liberation. At most, it was argued, the isolated settlement in Palestine might accommodate a mere two or three million Jews. But the Jewish society and culture built there would be a small thing indeed relative to the great powers and more culturally advanced countries in Europe and the United Stats. Against utopian schemes, Zionism harmed socialist internationalism which was imagined as being really real and not an empty scheme. Ironically, the only one in Michel’s reader expressing concern about Arab dignity in Palestine was Hayim Greenberg, an American Labor Zionist who visited Palestine in the 1930s and met with Jews, Arabs, and British administrators. Because their orientation at the time was purely class-based, Jewish socialists on the anti-Zionist left failed to see the national character of the Jewish and Arab-Palestinian politics in British Mandate Palestine.

In retrospect, the establishment of the State of Israel becomes part of the history of the Bund, as made clear by David Slucki. Concerning the major policy reversal at the 1955, third world conference in Montreal, “the world Bund officially endorsed Israel as a positive factor in Jewish life” (The International Jewish Labor Bund after 1945, p.173). Slucki shows how, after the war, the Bund sought to reconcile “its antipathy toward Zionism and its support for one of the largest Jewish communities in the world, which was growing in Israel at an exponential rate… Bundism very quickly transformed to accommodate Jewish statehood…The Bund’s relationship with Israel was complex. Torn between support for the state’s existence and its critical stance vis-à-vis Zionism, the Bund sought a path that could resolve the tension between its doykayt, which did not privilege any Jewish community above another, and the very real role that Israel could and did play on the world Jewish stage..” Slucki quotes a leader of the postwar Bund in Israel, “We are not Zionists. We don’t have the illusions that the Zionists have with regard to the state. It is also true that we never strived for Jewish statehood, because our ideals were higher and broader than a tiny little state surrounded by enemies.” It was argued that, despite this, “the destiny of the Jewish people is precious” to Bundists, so “if a Jewish state exists, why would we be ‘outsiders’ and ‘enemies’ when we live in the state? When our own success depends on its success? (ibid., p.197). Slucki cites another postwar leader of the Bund that “the continuity of the Jewish people lay not in the rise or fall of the state, but in the ascent of democracy. In the present time, he argued, the Jews’ national destiny was in their own hands, and their self-determination was a consequence of their living in democratic countries” (ibid.,p.206).

These principles of self-determination, democracy, and skepticism of state power represented by the Bund after the Holocaust and the establishment of the State of Israel still cohere today as guiding normative politics across the entire Jewish left.

Utopian-Futurism

There never was and there never will be socialism apart from a stake in utopian fantasy and the futuristic imagination. The very aesthetic of old Jewish socialism reflected broader trends in the radical culture of the short-lived Russian avant-garde (Cubo-Futurism of early Chagall, the Constructivism of Lissitzky and Rodchenko, and so on). In Bundist and other Jewish socialist and communist poster art/agit prop from the period, we see imagined the energetic dissolving of old forms conveyed in experimental typography and sharp geometric shapes, a bold but ultimately monotonous palette of red and black, the social drama of militant motion in abstract time and place.  

As a modernist movement in Jewish politics, the old Jewish left expressed belief in the future. Per Jonathan Frankel, socialism stood out as “a movement of new men [sic] who were fighting the past and already living in the future, in a new world undivided by outmoded ethnic barriers” (Prophecy and Politics, p.6). Mendelsohn saw as well how, “Finally, the people and organizations belonging to this school of Jewish politics evinced great optimism regarding the future of the Jewish Diaspora. History, they believed, was on their side. Reason would triumph over medieval superstition. The artificial walls separating the Jews from the rest of mankind would, like the walls of ancient Jericho, come tumbling down. When they did, the aims of the Central-Verein, the Alliance, the American Jewish Committee, and their sister organizations would be fulfilled at last. The barriers to advancement would collapse, allowing fully acculturated, patriotic Jews to bring their great talents to bear in the advancement of society for the general good (On Modern Jewish Politics, p.16).

EPILOGUE

What are the real effects of a simulacral presence? With each passing generation, the Jewish left in the United States more and more will have lost that material base in a thick social Jewishness that was the condition of possibility and the vital source of energy for the old Jewish left. But,“[f]or better or worse,” Ezra Mendelson insists, “the old association with the left still has an impact— hard to measure but palpable— on the modern Jewish ‘mentality.’ The struggle for social justice and the campaign against racial and other forms of prejudice can still count on considerable Jewish support. Historians are not prophets, but it is likely that the next round of radical left-wing activity in the Western world, whenever it comes, will once again find willing Jewish recruits (introduction to Essential Papers on Jews and the Left, p.12-13).

In the Diaspora today, Jews no longer represent a large social mass. Jewish politics in the Diaspora is integrationist insofar as looks outwards, assuming institutional place in civil society. Insofar as it looks inward, Jewish politics is communal, not collective. Jewish politics aren’t mass movement politics. Politics on the radical Jewish left is internecine and sectarian vis-à-vis the larger Jewish social body represented by institutions and the “Jewish establishment.” In Israel, Jewish politics is, indeed, national, but the left and especially the radical left in Israel today represent niche politics.

I want to conclude this long post with a nod to the richly illustrated manifesto by “Di Luftmenschen.” It is, in its own right, a product of the political imagination, akin to science fiction by Octavia Butler. Reconstructing the Jewish collective is at its heart. The authors are cognizant of Israel (“the seed of a re-mingled people with no homes to return to”). (As a Zionist, much harsher things could be written about Israel.) But the manifesto is written over here and in spaces between here and there. It is an unapologetic Diasporist manifest for tomorrow. There is the anti-assimilationist call for new communal-social and interpersonal structures and values, commitment to Jewish solidarity, and a critique of techno-capitalism. At our apocalyptic moment, the Jewish temporalties are steeped in futurism and “cultural time travel.” 

Bibliography:

Daniel Blatman, Bund, https://encyclopedia.yivo.org/article/146

Joshua Meyers, “The Bund by the Numbers: The Ebbs and Flows of a Jewish Radical Party” https://ingeveb.org/blog/the-bund-by-the-numbers

Jonathan Frankel, Prophecy and Politics: Socialism, Nationalism, and the Russian Jews, 1862—1917

Jonathan Frankel, “The Roots of ‘Jewish Socialism’ (1 8 8 1 – 1 8 9 2 ): From ‘Populism’ to ‘Cosmopolitanism,’” in Essential Papers on Jews and the Left https://laliberationschool.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/frankel.pdf

Ezra Mendelsohn, On Modern Jewish Politics

Ezra Mendelsohn, Essential Papers on Jews and the Left

Tony Michels, A Fire in Their Hearts: Jewish Socialists in New York

Tony Michels, “Introduction: The Jewish-Socialist Nexus,” in Michels (ed.), Jewish Radicals: A Documentary Reader

David Slucki, The International Jewish Labor Bund after 1945: Toward a Global History

Madeleine Atkins Cohen, Here and Now: The Modernist Poetics of Do’ikayt (dissertation)

Di Luftmenschen https://ia800103.us.archive.org/23/items/5784-1/5784-1.pdf

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Neo-Bundist Diasporist Manifesto for Tomorrow (Di Luftmenschen)

This incredible neo-post-Bundist statement here by Di Luftmenschen, richly illustrated, in its own right a Jewish art object, reads in part like science fiction of Octavia Butler. The authors are cognizant of Israel (not…a European novelty, but the seed of a re-mingled people, with no homes to return to”), (as a Zionist, much harsher things could be written about Israel). But it’s written over here, or in spaces between here and there, a proud Diasporist manifest for tomorrow. This is an anti-assimilationist call for new communal-social and interpersonal structures and values, commitment to Jewish solidarity and a critique of techno-capitalism at an apocalyptic moment. The Jewish temporalties are steeped in futurism and “cultural time travel.” It runs for some 38 pages.  h/t Edie Portnoy;

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(Workshop) Israel and Jewish Studies After October 7 (Syracuse University)

3nd Annual Arlene and R. Raymond Rothman Workshop in Jewish Studies

Jewish Studies Program

Syracuse University

Israel and Jewish Studies After October 7

December 1-2, 2024

Sunday, December 1, Tolley 304

5:00-6:00 Introductions: how was your year?

6:00-7:00 The Politics of Jewish Studies

7:30 dinner

Monday, December 2, Tolley 304

9:30-10:45 Free Speech and Title VI

11:00- 12:00 Israel and Zionism

Lunch 12:00-1:00

1:30-3:00 Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism

3:00-3:30 Concluding Thoughts

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(Auto-Emancipation) A Social Jewish Left (After October 7)

Three questions for Jews on the Left in the fierce face of rising anti-democracy movements and religious ethno-nationalism in Israel and the United States and resurgent anti-Semitism before and after October 7 and the re-election of Donald Trump: What defines the communal and social alignments of a distinctly Jewish left? At this moment when democratic norms, institutions, and societies are under assault in the world at large, how might a significant segment of the Jewish left position itself outside the anti-Zionist and anti-Israel camp prevalent throughout the mainstream left and radical edges of the progressive left? Between particularism and universalism, what critical and impactful role does the Jewish left play within broader Jewish communities and society in both the United States and Israel? Now that the Jewish left itself is dominated by anti-Zionism, what name is there for a non-anti-Zionist Jewish left, one that centers a global Jewish communal-collective and cultural matrix at the heart of its social and political worldview?

To put it polemically, a Jewish left worthy of the name is a social Jewish left. The Jewish left, organized as such, has historically aligned itself around the principle of Jewish social solidarity and humanist principles of equality and justice. Jews on the Jewish left have historically represented a critical commitment inside the larger klal or Jewish social body, in whose name it works to push to the left. Morally and politically, Jews today on the social Jewish left understand that to detach from the suffering and sorrow of the people violates a basic Jewish social norm. A social Jewish left worthy of the name commits to the doykot or hereness of wherever Jews are in the world, in the Diaspora and in Israel. It is a commitment that represents a terrible challenge at a moment in history when the klal has been politically consumed by the ethnonationalist right and religious ultra-right in Israel, and in the lead up to and now after October 7, the worst assault on Jewish life since the Holocaust. What are its founding principles? Against anti-Semitism, the social Jewish left is “liberal” insofar as it continues to draw from the liberal tradition of equality and human rights and individual autonomy. It is both “Jewish” and “leftist” and not merely liberal insofar as it centers itself in the political body of a social collective.

Aligned with the social-democratic left, the social Jewish left is a liberal-social hybrid. It sustains inclusive political culture grounded at the intractable tensions between personal autonomy and collective responsibility, political critique and social belonging. Jews on the social Jewish left reject “campism” on the global left supporting acts of violence and manifestations of terrorism against Jews in Israel under the rubric of decolonialism, and gaslighting anti-Semitism and justifying the exclusion of Jews from public life in the Diaspora on the basis of an anti-Zionist litmus test. Against the Jewish anti-Zionist left, a Jewish left worthy of the name is global. Jews on the social Jewish left stand in solidarity with all democratic forces in Israel and Palestine and commit to creating robust Jewish culture in the Diaspora. Against extremism and racism, especially the politics of occupation and annexation and anti-Palestinian racism on the Jewish right and religious right, the Jewish left fights for universal human dignity which it roots as an elemental form of contemporary Jewishness.

[I]

For voices from the Jewish left that represent this core hybrid of universalism and particularism, I’m posting links to a set of think-pieces and statements from Jews and allies on the left which have appeared over the last year. Negotiating oppositional tensions, the form of political thought is dyadic, but non-binary. Opposed to the right and religious-right in Israel, voices on the social Jewish left respond to the horror of October 7, the war and the hostage crisis, death and destruction in Gaza, and anti-Semitism and anathematization of Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora. On or aligned with the Jewish left in Israel, these are perspectives inextricably tied to this place and people at a moment of crisis and danger and extreme violence in Jewish life today. What I am posting appeared early after October 7 and after the first burst of anti-Israel animus immediately in its wake. I do not know where any of the individuals cited below stand politically after the long and terrible war with Hamas in Gaza, the catastrophic toll in Palestinian civilian lives, and the war in Lebanon with Hezbollah, and now possibly with Iran. What stands out is the coherence of a humanistic political vision situated on the Jewish left in the face of war and violence.

Universalism and Particularism: What it Means to Be Jewish Now

I’m starting with articles that appeared at The New Statesman in a series, “What It Means to Be Jewish Now.” They were among the first responses from the Jewish left to October 7 and to the abandonment of Jews on the progressive left. The authors are a disparate group of Israelis, Americans and Europeans. They include Fania Oz-Salzberger, Shlomo Sand, Yair Wallach, Celese Marcus, Howard Jacobson, Susan Neiman, Omer Bartov, and others. Almost all express shock at the intensity of violence of October 7 and the response to October 7 on the global left. With varied and conflicting perspectives relating to Israel, they mostly express themselves in the universal language of enlightenment humanism.

Instead of providing a complete digest, I invite the reader to read the pieces each on their own. For now, I want to identify the underlying tension between universalism and particularism. The primary challenge faced by a great many Jews on the left relates to peculiar alignments on the larger global left. “It was easy enough,” says Naiman, “for left-wing Jews to uphold the universalist tradition so long as the international left itself was firmly universalist. But what are we to do when what now calls itself the left has gone tribalist [sic], rejecting universalism – like other Enlightenment ideas – as Eurocentric hype designed to dominate the rest of the world?”  Writing against the contemporary grain in leftist, decolonial political theory, Neiman asserts that the very critique of Eurocentrism was itself, originally, a hallmark of the Enlightenment, for all its warts and all.

The degree to which claims about the old Jewish left and about the European Enlightenment are true and/or not true is beside the point for now. Naiman, in her essay, catches the contradiction, which I would put this way. Once it was the commitment to Jewish particularism that isolated the Jewish left in relation to the humanist-universalism of the left. Today what isolates people on the social Jewish left is their own commitment to universal principles they had once thought were rock-solid, but which are no longer shared consistently on the progressive and radical left. Tout court, the hard core of the progressive decolonial left rejects western values such as reason and secularism. In the case of Israel, the values of peace and coexistence, human rights and women’s rights, etc. give way to open calls for violent armed struggle and “resistance by any means necessary.” Never mind the price paid by the people of Israel, Lebanon, and Palestine.

Letter from The Israeli Left to The International Left

Universalism and humanism have always been attacked in Israel from the stalwarts of occupation and annexation on the hard nationalistic right and nationalistic-religious right. Signatories from the Israeli left respond here with horror to find these attacks mirrored on the global left against Israel after October 7. Noteworthy is the larger complex of universalistic values driving this open appeal to the global left in relation to the confusion and pain of this particular moment. The signatories are mostly Jewish and include Arab-Palestinian Israelis, some of whom have since expressed reservations about the letter.

“At this moment,” the signatories write, “more than ever, we need support and solidarity from the global left, in the form of an unequivocal call against indiscriminate violence towards civilians on both sides…We never imagined that individuals on the left, advocates of equality, freedom, justice, and welfare, would reveal such extreme moral insensitivity and political recklessness…We call on our peers on the left to return to a politics based on humanistic and universal principles, to take a clear stance against human rights abuse of any form, and to assist us in the struggle to break the cycle of violence and destruction.”

The Israeli signatories are naïve perhaps, or out of touch with what the global left has become over the last twenty plus years. Their appeal only highlights how the mainstream of the international left, in total opposition to Israel and Zionism, is now captured by a hard core of pro-Palestine-anti-Israel activists who reject peace and coexistence in favor of resistance and war.

No Israel Litmus Test

Louis Fishman is a historian of Jewish communities and Muslim-Jewish relations in Ottoman Palestine. A professor at Brooklyn College, he splits his time between Istanbul, New York, and Tel Aviv. In this op-ed, Fishman explains his own aversion to “pro-Palestine” protests in the United States. He rejects an anti-Semitic litmus test for Jews in relation to Israel and Zionism; and he positions himself vis-à-vis universalistic values.

“The pro-Palestine bar of acceptance for Jews,” writes Fishman, “is not based on shared values of peace, equality, and human rights. It is based on one simple question: Are you willing to separate yourself not just from Israelis but from the Jewish people at large, who overwhelmingly sympathize with Zionism? If you are willing to do so, it does not matter who you are. You can range from the ultra-orthodox Neturei Karta to radical LGBTQ+ activists; you can support fascist politics or far-left politics, support violent decolonization, or be a fervent pacifist. All these types of self-identification are secondary to whether you reject Jewish self-determination in one form or another. Jews are welcome? Only if you declare vociferously that you’re anti-Zionist and renounce your support for any Jewish political presence in the territory of Israel-Palestine. This is where anti-Zionism morphs into to antisemitism.”

Against the posing of anti-Israel litmus tests by the anti-Zionist left, Fishman’s op-ed indicates the problematic position of Jewish belonging on the left today in relation to Israel.

Jewish History

Philosopher Seyla Benhabib writes in support of the Jewish and Israeli left, responding here at Medium to a letter written by colleagues in philosophy against Israel. “My objection to your letter is that it sees the conflict in Israel-Palestine through the lens of ‘settler-colonialism’ alone, and elevates Hamas’s atrocities of October 7, 2023 to an act of legitimate resistance against an occupying force. By construing the Israel-Palestine conflict through the lens of settler-colonialism, you elide the historical evolution of both peoples. Zionism is not a form of racism, though the actions and institutions of the State of Israel towards the Palestinian people of the occupied West Bank, the refugee camps and, of course, Gaza, are discriminatory on the basis of nationality, not color, and reflect the continuing state of emergency that exists between Israel and its neighbors.”

Pushing back on the settler-colonial paradigm, one the one hand, and fascism and ethno-supremacy in Israel, Benhabib’s letter signals the importance of history and historical memory as a core feature of Jewishness on the left, and the importance of Jewish historical memory in relation to Israel and Palestine. From philosophy, she demands clarity regarding principles of mutual recognition and coexistence.

Reconstructing the Social Contract

Israeli voices on the left are arguably the most interesting ones today by virtue of the fact that Israel is a Jewish majority country in which Jewish culture defines the dominant social fabric. Not beholden to the gentile gaze, that is the privilege of the Jewish center-left and radical left in Israel, as they are not preoccupied by anti-Semitism and know little about it. Jews and Arab-Palestinians in Israel do so as citizens of a state from positions of profound inequality. Jewish voices on the center-left in Israel commit to the well-being of a multi-cultural society in a prolonged state of democratic backsliding and political collapse. Analysis here  by Israeli sociologist Eva Illouz connects the security collapse on October 7, 2023 and the Hamas-Israel war back to the government cobbled together by Prime Minster Netanyahu in November 2022 and its assault on the social contract and civil society in Israel.

On rebuilding the social contract in Israel, Illouz writes against Israeli state dysfunction under Netanyahu and his allies in the haredi camp and on the religious-national right.  In the wake of October 7, she writes, “the gradual realization that the unfathomable collapse of the entire security apparatus isn’t a one-time accident but the outcome of a deep and widespread systemic failure. We now realize that our house has been built on quicksand that is slowly sucking us down…Most urgent will be the need to rethink the very foundations of the Israeli social contract. We now have the proof that Israel cannot ensure its security while assigning disproportionate resources to messianics and the ultra-Orthodox. Israel must now choose its path.”

Re-Thinking Zionism

Scholar and activist Hayim Katzman was murdered by Hamas terrorists at Kibbutz Holit in southern Israel on October 7. In this posthumously published essay here at Jacobin, Katzman reimagines Zionism and Jewish identity in Israel in terms of liberal democratic norms and Jewish-Arab citizenship. Against the model of an exclusivist Jewish ethno-nation state, Katzman points to classical Zionist thinkers. The fundamental demand is the creation and preservation of a Jewish national identity defined by language, culture, and, most importantly, a sense of a shared past, present, and future. Against the current grain, the vision aligns Zionism with human values and principles of democratic equality across lines of national, racial, religious, and ethnic difference.

Standing Together

Especially fraught is the position of Israeli Arab/Palestinians in their own complex and unequal alignments vis-à-vis a Jewish majority country. Comprising Jewish and Arab-Palestinian Israelis, Standing Together is a critical alternative to the ethno-national orientation and the ethos of separation that marked the Labor Zionist tradition and the Zionist left in Israel. Against extraordinary odds, Standing Together is bi-national in its social orientation without being anti-Zionist as such. The vision of equality and shared citizenship in a civil-society compact is predicated upon the principle of mutual recognition. “Change Together: Standing Together’s Theory of Change” speaks in broad, simple strokes about the movement’s vision of “socialism, democracy, solidarity, equality, justice, an end to the occupation, peace, and the establishment of a government that works for the good of all those who live here.”  

The ethos of Standing Together is profoundly social, reflecting the views of Israeli Jews and Arab-Palestinians who actually live there. “We don’t speak in the name of just one nation, rather we sound the voice of all people who live here – Jewish and Arab alike. This is our society in its full diversity. We speak for it. We speak for the majority. Since the current regime doesn’t reflect the majority’s interests, we will. The rightwing regime seeks to split the majority and portrays our political reality as an eternal struggle between irreconcilable groups (Jews versus Arabs, Ashkenazi vs. Mizrachi, etc.). Our task is to dismantle this discourse of hatred and replace it with joint struggle and cooperation.”

Standing Together is a social left model that is fundamentally creative and generous in relation to people. The non-sectarian theory of change rests on belief in the goodness of people. “We strive to create profound change within Israeli society, the Israeli economy, and Israeli politics. This is not a simple task, but we are inspired by our faith in people: their open minds, their genuine intentions, and their hearts filled with compassion and empathy. We love the people who live here. We are a part of them and we insist on fighting with and for them. Through joint solidarity and struggle, we will succeed.”

Standing Together has since drawn the ire of activists working under the umbrella of BDS. Against “normalization,” the dead-end of the radical anti-Zionist left represented by PACBI, the main organizing body of BDS, is now targeting Standing Together. You can read that here. Activists on the self-styled radical left do not consider Standing Together radical in the first place because the group does not commit to anti-Zionism. At once locative and utopian, Standing Together has actual stakes in the struggle for a shared civil society agenda against the politics of social division separating Jews and Arab-Palestinians in Israel. Against the politics of rejection as mirrored on the Jewish right and the anti-Zionist decolonial left, the lived social reality and political vision of Jews and Arab-Palestinians standing together are what it means to be in solidarity on the social Jewish left.

Religion

Religion is a dominant conservative, rightwing, and ultra-rightwing force in society. It has been at the core of the assault on democracy and individual rights, both in Israel and the United States. A deep aspect of culture, religion remains something still poorly understood broadly across much and most of the entire left. A group of progressive American rabbis, T’ruah combines universalism and particularism, rooting both in Jewish texts and traditions. As cribbed from their website , Jewish values are universal values of human dignity, equality, and justice that advance democracy and human rights for all people in the United States, Israel, and the occupied Palestinian territories. Of great interest is this piece from +972 about a conference in Jerusalem of the “Faithful Left” spanning the gamut from traditionalist to Haredim. Yuval Abraham reports how, “speakers and participants dove deep into questions surrounding the occupation, feminism, religion and state, fighting poverty, and distributive justice. Of a piece with recent work by Michael Manekin, a major goal, according to the independent activists who organized it, was to help establish a wide-ranging, left-wing religious community that could lay the groundwork for political and social action on the ground.”

My own more sober belief rejects political theology as such and supports the separation of religion from politics. Religion and “the political” are incommensurable in their value structures. This was the position of Yeshayahu Leibowitz from many years back, and Moses Mendelssohn and Benedict Spinoza centuries before him. It is a basic presupposition of the humanist Enlightenment. Religion is social, not private but also not “political.” Freedom of and from religion depends upon the recognition that religion, society, and state are distinct but interlocking forces. As a zone of contest, the sacred has its own heterogenous place in society, but the larger surrounding space of society itself is secular, not sacred. I think it was Leibowitz’s argument somewhere that society must be protected from religion and religion from society.

Internationalism

In support of the left in Israel and the hundreds of thousands of Israeli liberals and leftists who demonstrated against the anti-democratic judicial coup, this piece here by Arash Azizi reminds us that Marxism upheld a historical dialectic that recognized the significance of self-determination of all nations. Azizi writes against the anti-Zionist online magazine Jewish Currents, which he accuses of betraying this tradition. With his eye on history, Azizi upholds the classical internationalism of the Communist Party as it once was manifest in the Arab world.

I want to quote him in full.

“Don’t misunderstand me,” he writes, “the communist movement did not model perfect fealty to this ideal. The litany of crimes committed by Stalin’s Soviet Union include targeted killings of Ukrainians, Poles and, in the last years of his rule, Jews. Even after Stalin was gone, antisemitism would surface again in the movement and certainly in the USSR itself. Like everything else in communist history, the heroic and the criminal tango messily. Nevertheless, and especially in the context of Middle Eastern politics, communism strained to honor the ‘fraternity of peoples.’ It was for this reason that the communist parties of the Arab world resisted the antisemitism rife in their societies, nor did they hector for the destruction of Israel. In fact, they often were at the forefront of the frail movement for Arab-Israeli reconciliation and friendship. In the early 1950s, the Tudeh Party of Iran called on Tehran to establish diplomatic ties with Israel and the Iraqi Communist Party advocated for “Arab-Israeli Friendship” in its agitations. Even after 1967, when the Soviet Union cut diplomatic ties with Israel following Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories, the communist parties agitated for a negotiated peace between Israel and the Palestinians. The communist logic was basic: Israeli Jews had the right to self-determination like all other national communities. And if workers of all countries are to unite, Israel was no exception.”

Representing another voice form the international left, the signatories to this statement here from December 2023, “For a consistently democratic and internationalist left” start with a critique of the decolonial left in the wake of October 7. Inclusive of Israel and critical of anti-Semitism, the statement is a commitment to universalist principles and human values on the left.

The signatories reject syncretic politics (dangerous alliances on the left with forces from the far right), campism (alignments with reactionary regimes in Syria, Iran, Russia against western imperialism), and anti-Semitic conspiracy theorists. According to view expressed here, “Much left politics of recent decades has been predicated not so much on a struggle against capitalism-as-social-relation, but on a rejection of “American hegemony,” “globalization,” “finance” — or sometimes, “Zionism”, seen as the vanguard of all these forces. This has led many people who think of themselves as leftists to sympathise with reactionary alternatives to current political and economic arrangements.”

The signatories maintain that “the renewal of the left as a movement for international solidarity…requires consistent anti-racism, consistent feminism, a renewal of class politics, a renewal of an analysis of global capitalism, and the rejection of the campist vision that divides the world into neat binaries of good and evil….[They] offer this analysis as a step towards left renewal on the basis of genuinely internationalist and consistently democratic politics…. Centering the voices and experiences of working-class, progressive, peace-building forces on both sides.” 

Cognizant of links between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism, the signatories understand that the attribution of “absolute power” to Jewish social bodies is itself a feature of anti-Semitism. Rejected is the view that Israel and Zionism constitute a unique center of political violence. “Understanding Israel in the world” is to see it in a “complex, liquid, “multipolar world.” Seen this way, “[r]efusing to demonise Israel or see it as entirely exceptional does not mean reconciling with its policies, but rather situating those policies within trends of which they are one expression, rather than the quintessence.”

[II]

What should have surprised no one on the Jewish left, or anyone else for that matter, was the response from the progressive and radical left to October 7 and to the Hamas-Israel war. On those parts of the left now fully captured by anti-Zionism, this has included implicit support already present in October 2023 and then the out and out support for Hamas as revealed by October 2024. This was a long time in the make on the anti-American left. Tracing back to the end of the Cold War, the global left opposed NATO support for Bosnia during the civil war and genocide. They were silent about Russian, Iranian, and Hezbollah intervention in the civil wars in Syria and Yemen. They fault NATO for the Russian invasion of Ukraine and do not support Ukrainian independence. They find a place in the anti-imperialist camp for Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis.

These alignments are of a piece with anti-Jewish animus: the contextualization and celebration of violence against civilians in southern Israel, silence and denial regarding gender violence on October 7, calls to destroy a country, expressions of ghoulish anti-Semitism, toxic forms of social exclusion, indifference to Jewish lives and Jewish history. Strange is the radical-progressive left embracing national-sectarian-ethnic conceptions of indigeneity and race, namely the very same rubrics that have always worked to exclude Jews from the public sphere. Many Jews see in this a final betrayal of Jews undermining the political foundations upon which the democratic and social Jewish left once built its home.

In this respect, the commitments to universalism and particularism, the synthesis of Jewishness and humanism on the social Jewish left are out of step and out of time. Naïve and nostalgic, the social Jewish left uphold values dredged up from the distant past. They echo something of the spirit manifest in the old Port Huron statement of the New Left 1962. In the aftermath of World War II, this was a vision of the human person as “infinitely precious and possessed of unfulfilled capacities for reason, freedom, and love.” The Port Huron statement countered “the dominant conceptions of man in the twentieth century.” It rejected the notion that a human being is a “thing to be manipulated,” opposing the “depersonalization that reduces human being to the status of things.” Unlike those today who justify violence and armed struggle, the Port Huron statement recognized that “the brutalities of the twentieth century teach that means and ends are intimately related, that vague appeals to ‘posterity’ cannot justify the mutilations of the present.” 

In the 1970s, Democratic Socialism supported human rights and democracy, co-existence between Israel and Palestine, a 2ss. The Social Democrats of America (DSA) recognized in Zionism “the national liberation movement of a Jewish people asserting their right to self-determination.” This was a long time ago, and Israel then was a much different place than it is today. Yet for all that, prominent Jews on the old guard of the DSA left the organization because of anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism after October 7. You can read about it here and here. (Without mentioning October 7 or Hamas, the DSA responds here.) (The 2017 DSA statement supporting BDS is here) (The first response from DSA to October 7 is here) (The July 2024 anti-Zionist resolution is here). They were gladly shown the door by the younger cadre of activists all out for Palestine against Zionism and Israel.

The DSA is further proof how the polarizing all-or-nothing politics of Israel and Palestine poisons everyone and everything with which it comes into contact, including cultural institutions like universities, museums, book and movie festivals, concert venues, arts journals, scholarly associations, medical programs (?!!), political organizations, and so on; and also Jewish cultural institutions including synagogues, programs in Jewish Studies, activist organizations, social media platforms. Refusing the logic of either/or, a social Jewish left would offer spaces from which to model less toxic expression of political analysis and engagement. I do not believe Jews on the left can do this apart from their own autonomous spaces.

It is fair to say that the liberal or social Jewish left is institutionally amorphous today and lacks a culture of protest. In the United States, groups like T’ruah or Americans for Peace Now do not manifest the same degree of organized intensity shown by anti-Zionist groups like Jewish Voice for Peace or Jewish Currents. Established on a foundation of antipathy, the psychic energy and vision of the Jewish anti-Zionist left draws from the expression of fundamental opposition to larger Jewish communal norms. If there is such a thing, a social Jewish left would have to be constructed from the inside out.

We are at a time described by critical-legal theorist Roberto Mangabeira Unger as a moment of darkening, a time in which the old sedimented and normalized institutional and ideological structures lose their pertinence and clarity. Overloaded with theory, such times are marked by the experience of disorientation and a willingness to take alternative paths, including roads once rejected in the past. Unger’s sense of all this is basically grim, noting that the result is more likely a waning of faith than the development of new faith. Unger leaves the task of transformation mostly to the imagination, offering no dogmatic blueprints (The Critical Legal Studies Movement, pp.19-21, 23)

Philosopher Judith Shklar called it a “liberalism of fear,” but nothing could be more vital in the Jewish world at this terrifying historical inflection point. After October 7 and with the re-election of Donald Trump, the reconstruction of democratic and social norms in both Israel and across the Diaspora requires basic orientations around principles of self-determination and mutual recognition. Abandoned by the radical-progressive and mainstream left and left for dead by the Jewish anti-Zionist left, what it means to be on the social Jewish left today is auto-emancipation. To maintain a moral and political compass at a moment of total crisis is to understand, fundamentally, that auto-emancipation and human dignity are interdependent.

If I am not entirely pessimistic about that mythic entity in the United States called “the Jewish community,” it is because I think the basic DNA of the community is liberal and skews left on social issues. On a personal note, I witnessed how the Oslo peace process broke up conceptual logjams about Israel and Palestine that once defined Jewish society and showed a path forward. After the collapse of Oslo, more people recognize now that the catastrophic violence of the Second Intifada cemented in Israel a repellent religious-ethno-nationalism that is now drowning the State of Israel. There is place to build a social Jewish left in the space made possible by the broad opposition in Israel to Netanyahu and his government of religious fanatics elected in November 2022, the ensuing democracy protests in Israel in 2023, the catastrophe of October 7, and the willingness of the Netanyahu and his allies in government to sacrifice the hostages for the sake of occupation and annexation in Gaza. More and more mainstream Jews in Israel and the United States are beginning to connect this meta-crisis in the Israeli social contract to the occupation-annexation of the West Bank.

The tissue between particularism and universalism has always been the beating heart of the modern Jewish predicament, impacting its culture, politics, and religion. On both the left and the right, self-consciously modern movements in Jewish society have always sought to grasp both horns at once as the very condition of their enlightenment, or commitment to reason, and emancipation, their participation in society at large in the world. Building a home after October 7 for the social Jewish left constitutes an act of self-assertion, an active commitment to new social contracts redefining and reimagining Jewish community from the inside out. At a moment of crisis and contest, an unapologetic social Jewish left critically situated in Jewish traditions and communal norms builds a home in the public space of democratic values and human dignity.

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(Columbia University) Trump After Gaza (Mea Culpa)

A critic should be generous about this. They didn’t see it coming. At Columbia University, the editorial board of the student Columbia Spectator, which spent a better part of last year platforming the pro-Palestine-anti-Israel protests, offers this blunt self-assessment about their inability to anticipate the election of Trump. About perception, it was posted November 13, 2024. While the editorial is not claiming that Gaza brought down the Harris campaign, the student writers recognize their own failure to read the political map. They attribute the failure to privileged echo chambers; normalized refusal to engage with opposing voices; misguided factionalist discourse, and unrealistic expectations

After a tense and trying year in the wake of an ongoing political and human catastrophe, anyone who cares about students, the university, and the politics of Israel and Palestine on campus should give it a read.

The part that caught my interest is here:

Trump won. How did we fail to see it coming?

Notably, Trump’s victory marks the first time a Republican presidential candidate has won the popular vote since 2004, before some of us were even born, and this was only the second time since 1988. As shock from Harris’ historic defeat continues to reverberate across half the nation, the editorial board, and those within liberal circles more broadly, we must ask ourselves: How did we get it so wrong?

Our failure to adequately reckon with the impact of increasingly prevalent echo chambers—both online and within student life on campus—played a major role in our miscalculation. Perhaps more than any polling error, our myopic focus, exacerbated by the media’s framing of the election, obscured the true feelings of the American electorate’s majority. While we easily recognized how bitterly divided the Columbia community remains on the war in Gaza, our focus on insular infighting neglected how our privileged position and political debates do not necessarily reflect the reality of the average American. Columbia’s socially liberal status quo, which many of us take for granted, evidently diverges greatly from the lived experience of the majority of the American public, for whom Harris’ economic policies failed to resonate despite post-pandemic inflation being the paramount priority for voters. Within this sheltered environment—upheld by a normalized refusal to engage with opposing voices—misguided factionalist discourse and unrealistic expectations for the election took hold.

The path they see forward is a recommitment to shared public discourse and engagement in local politics. On Israel and Palestine, it could represent an alternative to destructive polarization, an opening and opportunity to address in a substantive way the history and culture and politics of the conflict.

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(Trump) Covenant of Pieces (2024)

Kudos to Jeremy Kolmanofsky for connecting the dots between the re-election of Donald Trump election this week and this week’s parsha read in the synagogue as part of the yearly cycle of ritual reading. In Genesis 15, God takes Abram out into the open and tells him to cuts into parts a three-year-old heifer, a three-year-old she-goat, a three-year-old ram; a turtledove, and a young bird are left whole. In this terrifying visioon, birds of prey descend upon the the carcasses and Abram drives them away. The sun sets and a great dark dread descended upon the patriarch. Abram now knows full well that his offspring will be strangers in a land not theirs. God will execute judgment on the nation they serve, and in the end they’ll go free. In the meantime, it was very dark; there appeared a smoking oven, and a flaming torch passing between the pieces

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Truth Lies Hate Trump (Binary Politics)

Trump did what Bernie and the U.S. left could never do. All at the same time, he turbo-charged his base and captured the center of American politics. The effect was synthetic in character. He combined the anger of the base with the anger of “the people.” All of it artificial, MAGA fuses the reality of economic inequality in the United States into a toxic and binary miasma of hate.

Catching the political center, Trump took the reality of profound economic and social distress during a moment of inflation and crushing costs of living suffered by ordinary Americans. Appealing to the base, Trump remastered the old political art of blaming real problems on imagainary enemies, on Biden and that b. Harris and people who hate our country.

But all he can pitch is snake oil. He wrapped social truth in a web of lurid lies about immigrants and transexuals, and Democrats, saturated with misogyny and racism, and with violence and threats of violence. The base loved it. From the fascist playbook, the friend/enemy, us/them binary was projected across the digital, mainstream, and alternative media platforms.

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Botanical Judaism (Sukkot)

This Sukkot may we all merit to botanical devotion. [Woodcuts from Sefer Minhagim, Amsterdam, 1708]Yosef Rosen @Yossele

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(Yom Kippur) Jews & Arabs & Empathy & Enmity (Nadia)

[Käthe Kollwitz, The Mothers (Die Mütter), 1922–1923]

I’ve been following @nadiaaakd since October 7. Her bio at Twitter says nothing, but those of us who follow her will recognize her as a Palestinian citizen of Jordan who posts in English. She’s maybe Christian? I read her regularly and scan her feed for the consistent political insight and moral clarity she brings to the war and conflict. Empathy and solidarity across genuine lines of profound and bitter difference are possible. What follows is a post she posted about the reality of enmity.

A reality most of you refuse to accept is Israelis and Palestinians do not owe each other sympathies, I won’t tiptoe around anyone’s feelings and if I show sympathy to the innocent victims, hostages and their families on the Israeli side, I do not consider it transactional.

It would be nice, but it’s just not doable, not now, not ever.

At the end of the day we both *hopefully* are going to have to sit on the other side of a border and not kill each other.

But running purity tests on Palestinians “do you condemn *insert*” and on Israelis “do you denounce *insert*” is not going to do it.

We are enemies, we hate each other and many on both sides have shown that they celebrate each other’s pain openly without shame and justify it for their own belief of what will bring them freedom/security.

Never are we going to hug it out and get over it, so if you want to demonize Palestinians for expressing their open hate and contempt for Israelis, go ahead, but at least stop denying that the same deep hatred runs through Israeli society, is celebrated by their supporters, labeled as “strength” and is actually followed by actions far more disastrous and deadly than anything Palestinians have ever done.

I have pointed out shameful actions, even crimes committed by our diaspora and their supporters, will continue to do so, but if Israel can’t have a ceasefire for one month to even allow us to bury our dead, who are rotting in the streets, don’t expect us to stand still for you to have a memorial.

I pray the day comes when we can all mourn our victims without offending each other or use that pain to justify more atrocities against each other, but the day won’t be Oct. 7th, 2024.

I’m posting this before Yom Kippur, a year after October 7. I don’t think it’s right to imagine yourself in place of the other, because to do so is to impose yourself on them. Enmity does not get the last word in Nadia’s reflection in the face of catastrophic human suffering. But I think it’s right for all of us first to be able to confess and to be honest about our own sin and rage and hardening of heart and to work our way through it.

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