The Youth of Jewish Prague
Robert Weltsch
1917
What is this Jewish Prague that is so much talked about here? We don’t know it in a way that would allow us to define it or draw its image. But we know that it is a reality that lives in us and has an effect, in us, Prague’s Jewish youth. We, today’s Jewish youth of Prague, are no longer the children of Prague’s ghetto whose material manifestation…
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Creator Bio
Robert Weltsch
As did his cousin Felix Weltsch, Robert Weltsch grew up in a German-speaking Jewish milieu in Prague in the last days of the Habsburg Empire. He chaired the Zionist student Bar Kochba Association (1911–1912) while studying in the Karl-Ferdinand German University law school in Prague. He contributed Zionist articles to Die Welt and Selbstwehr throughout his student years and while serving on the Russian front as an Austro-Hungarian officer in World War I. From 1919 to 1938, he served as editor of the twice-a-week, Berlin-based Zionist newspaper Jüdische Rundschau. Because of his association in the 1920s and 1930s with Brit Shalom, which championed binationalism, he was a frequent target of criticism by mainstream Zionists. After fleeing Nazi Germany, he settled in Palestine, where he worked for the prestigious Hebrew daily Ha’aretz, serving as its London correspondent from 1945 to 1978. He was instrumental in establishing the Leo Baeck Institute, which promotes scholarship on the history, culture, and legacy of German-speaking Jews.