Politics, Culture, and Religion at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Jewish politics became more ideological, driving cultural change and defining nationalism. Tensions arose between secular movements and religious traditionalism.
Political Discord, Social Movements
The growing politicization—both ideological and social—of Jewish societies in the concluding decades of the nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth century played a seminal role in the powerful cultural changes born of the Jewish confrontation with modernity. Between 1880 and 1918, a sprawling network of Jewish political parties and social and cultural movements spread across the globe. Largely taking over the old communal frameworks, this network rearranged conceptual priorities, transformed linguistic codes, and challenged the standard religious and cultural discourses that had been accepted for generations across the diaspora. This new network crossed political borders, skipped over oceans, linked South and North America, and connected Sephardic Jews in the Balkans to Ashkenazic Jews in Eastern Europe. This politicization process both signaled and independently furthered the penetration of major aspects of modernity—in its European, continental, imperial, and colonial manifestations—into the hearts and minds of individual Jews and Jewish collective experience.
New Jewish political movements of the period between 1880 and 1918 influenced and accelerated processes of modernization. A useful key to understanding the tense dialogues between politics and culture that emerge from the selections included in the Posen Library is the distinction drawn between political culture and the politics of culture. Political culture refers to the ways in which people express, expound, and enact their political demands.1 The Posen Library’s texts bespeak three profound shifts in Jewish political culture born or globalized in this era. As growing numbers of Jews from Central and Eastern Europe to New York to Salonika embraced social radicalism, others—particularly in Eastern Europe—internalized the idea of Jewish nationhood; still others, in the New World particularly, sought integration into societies more democratic than they had previously known. The politics of culture, in contrast, bears on the attitude toward culture of those who work to shape cultural processes, influence them, and instill them in some community. The Jewish politics of culture played out at a variety of scales and in a variety of sites, some of which might not be initially regarded as sites of politics: not only in fierce political debates and street demonstrations in New York City or in Warsaw in 1905, but also in quieter debates about Jewish education in newspaper columns or communal meetings in small towns, in a classroom at an Alliance Israélite Universelle school in North Africa, at a planning meeting of Jewish agriculturalists in a Jewish agricultural colony in Argentina or the United States, and in family debates around the table.
To some degree, the increasingly heterogeneous space of modern Jewish politics was characterized by sustained dialogue across ideological positions, but there were also matters that could not be compromised and that rendered dialogue impossible and enmity inevitable. Perhaps the deepest conflict in this period was inherited from the mid-nineteenth century: the irreconcilable tensions between traditionalist and modernizing and secular visions. Many authors writing between 1880 and 1918 committed to some modernist venture, be it the creation of new Jewish identity or the transformation of the human condition. Others objected to any such conception out of deep adherence to the idea that tradition was not culture but commandment, coupled with a growing sense that modernity posed a unique danger to the system of beliefs and values they cherished. In the three decades leading up to World War I, spokesmen for a host of divergent visions of Jewishness waged a battle over who controlled the heritage of the past, and they wrestled with the question of the appropriate Jewish identity to be established in the Old Country, the new lands of immigration, and perhaps Palestine.
Jewish Emancipation
The confrontation between traditionalism and modernist visions of Jewish self-organization was fundamental. But Jewish political modernism, so to speak, was hardly a unitary politics. Quite the contrary. Our period saw the emergence of two new political visions, Jewish nationalist and socialist ideologies, that jointly stood in tension not only with traditionalism but also with the first great Jewish modernist ideology, the liberal ideology of emancipation born a century earlier. Both Jewish nationalism and Jewish socialism insisted that Jews, or particular classes of Jews, would have to pursue something much more far-reaching than legal emancipation for Jews as individuals; either Jewish national liberation (“autoemancipation”) or the transformation of the very terms of global social life through socialist revolution. Yet Jewish national self-understandings and Jewish social radicalisms also quickly entered into profound tension and contention with each other. In particular, many Jewish socialists rejected the idea of Jewish political nationhood with no less vigor than they did religious traditionalism and its associated structures of authority and patriarchy. And yet, having said all that, there were also surprising forms of dialogue, exchange, and synthesis among all four of the notional “camps” in Jewish political life: traditionalists, integrationists, nationalists, and social radicals. Not least because questions of ethnicity, religious difference, class (or poverty), rights, and antisemitic reaction were so profoundly entangled in the real lives of most Jews—especially in Eastern Europe and the Ottoman world—many Jewish nationalists embraced leftist social visions, and some Jewish liberals and socialists alike embraced ideals of Jewish nationhood and national autonomy.
The 1880–1918 era is distinct in Jewish political life not only because of this proliferation of ideologies but also because of unprecedented degrees of democratization and mass mobilization in Jewish communities around the world. Texts in the Posen Library engage with the challenges posed to millions of Jews around the world by the increasing politicization of the modern experience. They offer a broad and multifaceted panorama of responses to the trials of modernity, positive and negative. Readers will find optimistic yearnings for full integration and, in sharp contrast, warnings about the threats of the changing milieu, including the disturbing rise of antisemitism. The selections map out the contours of ideological platforms that would eventually lead to concrete political programs that would transform some Jews’ lives profoundly, as well as a selection of defensive and/or adaptive strategies to a variety of political, social, and cultural realities in a fluctuating world that Jews could only affect marginally.
Religious Ideology and Rituals
The Posen Library also contains many texts from between 1880 and 1914 about Jewish religious ideology and rituals. These texts express the emerging counterpolitics of traditionalist Jews pushed into a defensive stance in the face of technological innovations, political changes, and the cultural tide. Others, by contrast, reflect the religious ideals that flourished in some nontraditional circles, among integrated and integrationist Jews, especially in the West. These years saw the formation of an Orthodoxy that was notably heterogeneous and religiously inconsistent but tended to unite against the threat of the range of unorthodox alternatives to traditional Judaism. This period also produced modern interpretations of Judaism and its texts that were unprecedented in traditional society. Indeed, this period marked the first time that large masses of Jews were attracted to new Jewish political movements, cultural ideals, or one of the modern religious currents that spread from Europe to the lands of immigration overseas.
World War I greatly accelerated the disintegration of the traditional modes of existence in the diaspora and brought this dialogue to its climax. The war was seen by many Jews as a catastrophe that wreaked havoc and destruction on the old Jewish world, but also as an introduction to a new world order. But even before the war, more than a few of the political, cultural, and artistic visions born in the space between rationalism and radicalism were also powered by apocalyptic, millenarian, and messianic urges.
The extraordinary variety of political, cultural, and religious texts in the Posen Library bespeak the kaleidoscopic effects of modernity and the bewilderingly wide range of influences to which Jewish thought was suddenly subjected. The reader will encounter political essays, art criticism, political party posters, movement manifestoes, a speech by a Jewish laborer at a social-democratic conference, political anthems such as the Bund’s “Di shvue” (The Oath) or the Zionist “Tikvatenu” (Our Hope), a proposal for a Jewish studies curriculum in a Zionist spirit, an outline of gymnastics classes designed to develop a “new Jew,” the prospectus of a book publisher, a popular Yiddish biography of exemplary figures such as Karl Marx, and also halakhic works, an anti-Zionist rabbinical sermon, and a proposal for a movement of Jewish religious revival. This diversity highlights the internationalism of the new Jewish political discourse but also the continuity of rabbinic creativity that challenged or sometimes totally disregarded these changes. At the same time, the texts expose profound local and regional variation. They also sometimes include allusions—in both content and form—to religious Jewish texts from earlier periods, which have been removed from their original theological and historical contexts and integrated into the nontraditional discourse.
Notes
María Eugenia Vázquez Semadeni, La formacíon de una cultura política republicana: el debate público sobre el masonería, México, 1821–1830 (Mexico City: Universidad Autónoma de México, 2010), 14.
Related Primary Sources
Primary Source
A Secret Letter to London
Primary Source
To America or to the Land of Israel
Primary Source
Letter from Crémieux Agricultural Colony to Peretz Smolenskin
Primary Source
Socialist Jews Confront the Pogroms
Primary Source
The Voice of the Youth
Primary Source
Autoemancipation: The Birth of Jewish Nationalism
Primary Source
A Voice from Balta
Primary Source
At Dusk, Let There Be Light
Primary Source
Tikvatenu (Our Hope)
Primary Source
Perversion of Justice (in Serbia)
Primary Source
Editorial: On Creating Barnard College
Primary Source
Diary Entries
Primary Source
Truth from the Land of Israel
Primary Source
To the Worker Women
Primary Source
Speech: Against Antisemitic Persecution
Primary Source
Der arbayter fraynd (cover)
Primary Source
A Trip to the Land of Israel in 2040
Primary Source
Jews Will Accept Hardship Only in the Holy Land
Primary Source
A Jewish Worker’s May Day Speech
Primary Source
Speech: On the Organization (National Council of Jewish Women)
Primary Source
Announcement Establishing the Zentralverein Organization
Primary Source
Women Wage Workers: With Reference to Directing Immigrants
Primary Source
The Monopoly of Man
Primary Source
Letter to Yehalel: On Creating a Yiddish (National) Newspaper
Primary Source
Letter in al-Hilal: Arguing for Women’s Equality in the Arab World
Primary Source
A Women’s Gathering
Primary Source
A Turning Point in the History of the Jewish Labor Movement
Primary Source
The Jewish State
Primary Source
Antigoyism in Zion
Primary Source
Letter to Herzl from Egypt’s First Zionist Society
Cairo, Egypt
Founded the 1st of Adar I 5657February 1897Central Headquarters
Mr. Theodor Herzl
Editor of the “Neue Freie Presse”
ViennaSir, dear coreligionist in your Jewish…
Primary Source
An Ottoman Jewish Zionist Volunteers for the Greek Army
Primary Source
The Basel Program
- The promotion, on suitable…
Primary Source
Editorial Statement of Der nayer gayst
Primary Source
The Hunt in Bohemia
Primary Source
Speech at the First Zionist Congress
Primary Source
Protest against Zionism
Primary Source
Moral Benefits, Part 2
Primary Source
The Fez as a Sign of Patriotism: An Appeal for Imperial Allegiance during the Greco-Ottoman War
Primary Source
The Jewish State and the Jewish Problem
Primary Source
The Russian Jew in America
Primary Source
Nationalism and Jewish Emancipation
Primary Source
The Jewish Problem and the Socialist Jewish State
Primary Source
The Third Party Convention
Primary Source
Zionism
Primary Source
A Proposal
Primary Source
Altneuland (Old-New Land)
Primary Source
Devil Sucking the Blood of a Sweatshop Tailor
Primary Source
Alliance with the Sultan
Primary Source
The Mizrachi Manifesto
Primary Source
Proclamation
Primary Source
Proclamation of the Jewish Labor Bund
Primary Source
Jewish Women and Zionism
Primary Source
Official Postcard of the Sixth Zionist Congress
Primary Source
Letter to the Editor: On Zionism and the Mizrachi
Primary Source
Flesh and Spirit
Primary Source
We, Jewish Socialists
Primary Source
Our Political Tasks
Primary Source
What Paths Should Our Movement Take?
Primary Source
The National Question and Class Struggle
Primary Source
Our Demands
Primary Source
Resolution of the Sixth Congress of the Bund: On the Various Zionist-Socialist Factions
Primary Source
Sermon: On Zionism
Primary Source
Women’s Farming Schools Abroad: Travel Notes and Impressions
Primary Source
Po‘ale Tsiyon’s Approach on Palestine
Primary Source
Banner of the London Bakers’ Union
Primary Source
Protest at the Funeral of Anti-Tsarist Revolutionaries
Primary Source
Rally in Memory of Fallen Worker Kagan
Primary Source
A Call to the Jewish Youth Whose Hearts Lie with Their People and with Zion
Primary Source
The East Africa Offer
Primary Source
About Autonomism: Decisions from the First Zionist Socialist Workers Party Congress
Primary Source
On the Tasks of the Folkspartay
Primary Source
An Ottoman Jewish Activist in Cairo Proposes Settling Jews in the Sudan
Primary Source
American Jewish Committee
Primary Source
More on Zionism
Primary Source
The Helsingfors Program
Primary Source
Our Goal for Ha-Po‘el ha-tsa‘ir
Primary Source
Editorial Statement of Der onfang
Primary Source
The Theoretical System of Marx in the Light of Recent Criticism
Primary Source
Speech Given upon Being Elected Mayor of Rome
Primary Source
On the Question of Ethical Behavior
Primary Source
Jaffa Changes Its Face
Primary Source
The Jews and the Fatherland
Primary Source
Reactions in Mosul to the Young Turk Revolution
Primary Source
Order of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor
Primary Source
Mission of Ha-Ḥerut
Primary Source
Ottoman Jewish Opposition to Zionism
Primary Source
The Platform of Hashomer
Primary Source
Letter to Henrietta Szold
Primary Source
Bar-Kokhba
Primary Source
Dos naye lebn (cover)
Primary Source
The Eighth Party Convention
Primary Source
The Crisis of Jewish Colonization in Argentina
Primary Source
Our Goal
Primary Source
Prophet Marx Speech
Primary Source
Our Demands: A Ladino Socialist Manifesto
Primary Source
Speech: On American Judaism
Primary Source
A European Feminist Decries Sex Trafficking in the Ottoman Empire
Primary Source
Founding Program
Primary Source
The War for Our Nation
Primary Source
Our Renaissance
Primary Source
To My Soldier Son
Primary Source
Lecture: On Feminism and Suffrage
Primary Source
A Proposal to Make Salonica an International City
Primary Source
The Invigoration of Western Jewishness
Primary Source
Women and Internationalism in Europe
Primary Source
Hymn of Hate against England
Primary Source
Merchavia: A Jewish Co-operative Settlement in Palestine
Primary Source
Zionism Needs a Living Content
Primary Source
A Satirical Song in Judeo-Arabic Describing the Events of the First World War
Primary Source
The Jewish Problem: How to Solve It
Primary Source
About Jews
Primary Source
Diary Excerpt: Against the War
Primary Source
Zionism and the Jewish Women of America
Primary Source
The Angola Plan for Jewish Colonization
Primary Source
Prepared
Primary Source
No Room in My Heart for Jewish Suffering
Primary Source
The Jewish Census (Judenzählung)
Primary Source
The Future of American Jews
Primary Source
The Jewish Question in Hungary
Primary Source
Address to the Jury on the Meaning of American Democracy
Primary Source
The Revolutionary Land of Russia
Primary Source
May Revolution (1810-1917)
Primary Source
Albert Antebi at a Red Crescent Fundraiser during World War I
Primary Source
A Zionist Manifesto
Primary Source
The Workers University of Our International Union
Primary Source
Unmasked
Primary Source
Letter about the Choir
Primary Source
Interpolation of the Sokolover Rebbe
Primary Source
Who Is Trotsky?
Primary Source
Marx on Judaism and Judaism in Marx
Primary Source
Angels of Peace
Primary Source
Letter to Herzl from Zionists in Morocco
18 Adar, 5663
Safi—May He Who is on high make its Foundation firm
(Morocco)To His Honor, the Exalted President, Lover of His People, Glory of His Nation, Our Distinguished Lord, Dr. Theodo…
Primary Source
Letter to Ha-Shaḥar on Reviving the Hebrew Language
Primary Source
On the Art of Painting in General and among Jews in Particular
Primary Source
A Jewish Reform Project with Particular Consideration Given to Its Ethical Aspect
Primary Source
To the Readers (of Yerushalayim)
Primary Source
Letter to Mendele
Primary Source
The World of Emanation: Reflections on the Volozhin Yeshiva
Primary Source
Letters to Sholem Aleichem
Primary Source
The Trial of Shomer
Primary Source
Call to Sephardim to Immigrate to Mexico
Primary Source
In the Land of Israel
Primary Source
Jewish Military Service in the Ottoman Empire: A New Era of Inclusion
Primary Source
Mission-Work among the Unenlightened Jews
Primary Source
Opening Address of the Jewish Women’s Congress
Primary Source
Speech: On Jews and Nationalism
Primary Source
Our Monthly: Mi-mizraḥ u-mi-ma‘arav
Primary Source
Hebraism and Universalism in Hebrew Literature
Primary Source
Jewish Women’s Education in Ottoman Istanbul
Primary Source
Yontev-bletlekh: “Why Is This Night Different (Ma nishtanah)?”
Primary Source
Meeting Notes: On Implementing a Full Hebrew Curriculum
Primary Source
The Mission of Ha-Shiloaḥ
Primary Source
An Argument: On Expanding Our Literature
Primary Source
Ivrit be-‘ivrit (Hebrew in Hebrew)
Primary Source
To the Modern Girl: A Rebuke of Modernity
Primary Source
Popular Poetry of the Russian Jews
Primary Source
Zionism or Socialism?
Primary Source
An Anti-Zionist’s Comment to the Polish Jewish Intelligentsia
Primary Source
Me‘am Lo‘ez to the Song of Songs
Primary Source
The Universalism of Judaism: An Italian Sephardic Perspective
Primary Source
Lesser Ury (and Jewish Art)
Primary Source
Feuilleton: On Varshavsky’s Jewish Folk Songs
Primary Source
A Few Words to My Critic
Primary Source
A Reply to Mr. Sholem Aleichem
Primary Source
Artistic Masterwork
Primary Source
Ost und West Editorial Statement
Primary Source
A Jewish University
Primary Source
Ha-Shiloaḥ: Our Goal
Primary Source
Muscle Jewry
Primary Source
The Mission of Ha-Mitspeh
Primary Source
To the Reader of Ha-Me‘orer
Primary Source
New Movements among the Jewish Proletariat
Primary Source
About Art
Primary Source
Letters to Shimon Dubnow
Primary Source
Jewish Music, Language, and Nation
Primary Source
Speech Given to the General Assembly of the Jewish Colonization Association
Primary Source
Obligations of the Students
- To perform their work in the workshop for three complete years from the day of their entry, not to cease at all during this tenure, and not to be hired by another artisan, neither as an apprentice nor…
Primary Source
Ha-‘Olam Editorial Statement
Primary Source
Jewish Ethnopoetics
Primary Source
Czernowitz Conference Speech: On National Education
Primary Source
To the Readers of Literarishe monatsshriften
Primary Source
Czernowitz Conference Speech Celebrating Yiddish
Primary Source
Yiddish Literature and Its Writers
Primary Source
Di yugend Editorial Statement
Primary Source
The Seed of Every Kind: A Scientific Conversation for the Youth
Primary Source
The Negation of the Diaspora
Primary Source
The Affirmation of the Diaspora
Primary Source
Sermon on the Melting Pot
Primary Source
A Manifesto for Turkish Jewish Literature
Primary Source
An Open Letter about Literature
Primary Source
Tolstoy and the Jews
Primary Source
The Counterfeit Culture and the Sought-After Culture
Primary Source
Heine and the Consequences
Primary Source
Assimilation or Polonization?
Primary Source
How Does One Produce Culture?
Primary Source
The First Pioneers
Primary Source
The Problem of Jewish Education in New York City
Primary Source
Prospectus for Moledet
Primary Source
Meeting Minutes on the Brenner Affair
Primary Source
Deteriorating (In Defense of Y. H. Brenner)
Primary Source
In the Footsteps of Literature
Primary Source
Will the Old Sephardim Welcome the New?
Primary Source
German Jewish Parnassus
Primary Source
An Exchange on the Jewish Question
Primary Source
Letter to Ludwig Strauss on Zionism
Primary Source
An Introductory Talk on the Yiddish Language
Primary Source
The Common Names of Plants
Primary Source
Protest: For the Hebraicization of the Technion
Please publish the following remarks in your newspaper:We, the students in the upper classes of the Palestinian high schools, sent a protest as follows to Messrs Shmaryahu Levi[n], Ah…
Primary Source
The Sanctification of the Name
Primary Source
The Hebrew Book
Primary Source
A Doctor’s Lectures
Primary Source
Self-Criticism
Primary Source
All of the Books That Have Arrived at the Editor’s Desk
-
Future [Tsukunft], first compilation. Published by Tsukunft, St. Petersburg (1913).
Ben-Ami, Big Fayvl and Little Fayvl (a short story). Published by Far undzere kinder…
Primary Source
The Mind of the Orient
Primary Source
The Advantages of Hebrew
Primary Source
Our Status in the Country, or the Question of Learning Arabic
Primary Source
The State of Yiddish Children’s Literature
Primary Source
The New York Libraries and Readers
Primary Source
Manifesto
Primary Source
Tanakh Class in Jaffa
Primary Source
After the Aliyah (Immigration to the Land of Israel)
Primary Source
New Jewish Artists in the Holy Land
Primary Source
“Oriental,” Not Sephardi
Primary Source
Letter to Rachel Bluwstein
Primary Source
Letter to the Working Committee of the Hebrew University
To the [Hebrew] University working committee in St. Petersburg
July 7, 1914Dear Sirs,1. J. C. T. transferred 500 Rubles to me on your behalf, the receipt of which I…
Primary Source
Letter to a Nursing Convention in St. Louis
Primary Source
Judaism and the Jews, or, On Jewish Apostasy
Primary Source
The National-Radical Schools
Primary Source
Feminist Manifesto
Primary Source
Handbook for Establishing a Jewish Library
Primary Source
An Open Response to Dezső Szabó
Primary Source
Sephardi, Not Oriental
Primary Source
Halachah and Aggadah
Primary Source
Letter to Margaret Sanger on Birth Control
Primary Source
Speech: The Frank Tragedy, the Jews, and the Negroes
Primary Source
The Library, Center of Social and Cultural Life
Primary Source
Excerpt from a Letter to A. D. Gordon on Labor and Nature
Primary Source
The Spaniolische (Sephardic) Woman
Primary Source
Speech on the Hebrew Kindergarten
Primary Source
Vida nuestra (cover)
Primary Source
Higher School for Jewish Studies
Primary Source
On Guard
Primary Source
Discussion of the Founding of the Demievka School
Primary Source
Intellectual Abstinence or Assimilation (Not Exactly a Letter to the Editor)
Primary Source
The Jewish Woman’s Opportunity for Service
Primary Source
Letter to Bialik on Hebrew Culture
Primary Source
Lecture on the Elementary School
Primary Source
The Youth of Jewish Prague
Primary Source
One Literature in Two Languages
Primary Source
Editorial Statement of The Palestine News’ Literary Supplement
Primary Source
A Report Concerning the Art College
Primary Source
A Portrait of Karl Marx
Primary Source
Tendencies in Jewish Education
Primary Source
Lacking a Family Life
Primary Source
Language Insomnia
Primary Source
The Problems of Jewish Music
Primary Source
The Sexual Life
Primary Source
Letter to Shmuel Niger on the New Jewish Book
Primary Source
Letter to the Editor: On Preferring English
Primary Source
Prospectus (from Stybel’s Publishing House)
Primary Source
The System of Translations
Primary Source
Art-Literature and the Revolutionary Public
Primary Source
Our War Experience
Primary Source
Song without Words
Primary Source
Responsum: On Uniting European Jewry
Primary Source
Ketubah Abstract
Primary Source
Turkish Music in the Synagogue: Objections of a Rabbi
Primary Source
Responsum: On the Burial of an Uncircumcised Boy
Primary Source
Letter to the Editor: On Kashering for Passover
Primary Source
The Pittsburgh Platform
Primary Source
The Advocate
Primary Source
Return, Israel
Primary Source
An Open Letter
Hear, congregation of the Lord and…