Zionism as Revolution? Zionism as Rebellion? Author(s): David Vital Source: Modern Judaism, Vol. 18, No. 3, 100 Years of Zionism and the 50th Anniversary of the State of Israel (Oct., 1998), pp. 205-215 Published by: Oxford University Press Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1396697 Accessed: 01-12-2018 13:23 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Oxford University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Modern Judaism This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms David Vital ZIONISM AS REVOLUTION? ZIONISM AS REBELLION?* I Was there a Zionist revolution? If there was, what was its nature? And what happened to it? These, as best I can phrase them, are the questions to which I should like to sketch some preliminary answers. That there is something to be said for regarding the impact of Zionism on the history of the Jews as at least verging on the revolutionary is beyond all question, it seems to me. Equally beyond question are the extraordinary consequences of the rise of Zionism in the international sphere. The general point can be made, that whatever it was particular Zionists thought they were doing at any particular moment, their movement, all in all, did mount the most penetrating attack on the established social and political structure of the Jewish people in modern times ever attempted. Yet, somehow, the more closely one examines the case, the less clear cut the specifically revolutionary character of the movement appears to be. There was, for example, never any question of it being a violent revolution. If a revolution it was, it was not therefore of the class that normally catches the public eye. There were, needless to say, no Bastilles or Winter Palaces to storm, no kings to be decapitated, no parliaments to be dispersed, no generals to form ajunta or, alternatively, to be shot. It is not that violence was unknown among the Zionists-any more than it was unknown in Jewry generally. But it was always of negligible proportions and, certainly, it was never central to the enterprise.' Was Zionism then in the category of what Macaulay called "noiseless revolutions,' those whose progress, as he put it, "is rarely indicated by what historians are pleased to call important events... [that] are not achieved by armies, or enacted by senates, [that] are sanctioned by no treaties, and recorded in no archives."?2 Zionism does not seem to have been quite in that class, either. But it is worth recalling that all revolu*An earlier version of this paper was presented at the Brandeis University-Hebrew University Symposium on the 100th Anniversary of the Zionist Movement. Modern Judaism 18 (1998): 205-215 @ 1998 by The Johns Hopkins University Press This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 206 David Vital tions-noisele common, th that which r that which th One of the d positive side striving for, cific, they w deeply char sions of it p Zionism, cu "monistic" Z them quite o than once. It members of litical indepe for all of th were quite a sovereignty natural justi all-embracin circumstance precisely th out of his wa But then th disinclination and by turn thereafter, t about the po eventually to There were Programme i the Endziel o the moveme the status and such a state was an absen the State-to-b state-and the Why this sh which nobod Whether thi poses in ful source of we This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Zionism as Revolution? 207 debate. Conceivably, i ture of Zionism-seen w tance-lay elsewhere. It recommendation, and neutral sense I have in was against, what it wis modify and diminish 1939 and all options apotheosis of 1948-tha its fundamental dynam Jewish social landscap and the first few decad tion of Zionism by the tively by some, passivel deliberate calculation b as a matter of course. Why was this so; and what does it tell us? However incoherent the Zionists were in other respects, there was on on which they were united: they were modernists. They might be vided on where the Jews should go (actually or figuratively) on what cultural baggage they should take with them, on what they should discar and on what precisely they should do with themselves upon arrival their destination. But what none of them doubted at any time was th the Jewish people in its entirety was very painfully in need of radical ag giornamento, of being brought up to date, in one form or another. Of th goal they made no secret, and it sufficed to bring them into inexorab conflict with those who, on the contrary, maintained-if anything wit greater passion and conviction-that it was of the very essence of Ju daism that in all major departments of private and collective existenc everything of importance had already been ordained. For those f whom even change at a virtually imperceptible rate was problematic, free, serious, and open-ended discussion of the question whether, and so, by what means (but most especially to what extent), the Tradition its established form should or should not be preserved was, of cour anathema. What was at issue and at work here was not the familiar matter of the rigor or otherwise of religious observance. Nor was it even that of the dismay, given the accelerating rate of alienation, dissidence, and disaffection at the edges ofJewry, with which those still faithful to Orthodoxy regarded the outlook for the Jewish people as a whole. What was This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 208 David Vital hardest for ticular class retain a pres and in due c that was the phrase went, lutions passe the strictly the First Wo fensive Ortho traditionalist to the autho who wielded threatened. tury later, th After all, the Zionists were not alone in their modernism. There were others who brought into question the established patterns of personal and collective conduct, as well as the thinking and beliefs that we crudely, but usefully gather together under the portmanteau term tradition. There were the Bundists, the Russifiers, the Polonizers, the Germans of Mosaic persuasion, the Israelites of France, the Jewish Englishmen, the various contending schools of religious reformers, and so on. All favored an aggiornamento of one kind or another. Some were prepared to go a good deal further in their antitraditionalism than the Zionists. Yet, no great alliance of modernists, no counterpart and rival to Agudat Israel, was ever formed. One obvious obstacle to anything of that kind was the division in the modernist camp on the issue of Jewish nationhood and nationality. Yet even there, the Zionists were not alone. The Autonomists and, with reservations, the Bundists, too, had similar ideas. Where the Zionists were unique was in the view they took of the existential basis ofJewry and Judaism: the condition of Exile itself. The Zionists asked whether it was tenable in practice. They went on to pose the trickier question whether it was tolerable in principle. Having given a flatly negative answer to both questions, they proceeded to consider on what other basis Jewry might be held together and have its particular needs and interests met. Most urgently of all, they took the position, that if indeed it was imperative to re-examine the condition of the Jews, and to do so in a frank and even favorable anticipation of change, the always nervous matter of relations between Jews and Gentiles on which so much in Jewry itself hinged, had to be radically revised. On all this, they parted company with the other modernists. They did so, moreover, in a way that struck at the foundations of the other, the lay wing of established authority in Jewish society in late nineteenth-century Europe-the plutocratic. In This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Zionism as Revolution? 209 the first instance, it quo. But there were tw engaged the plutocrat which it is appropriate, III The Zionists stood for policy on the major issues confront being subject to free and open debate. They wanted decisio rived at competitively, rationally, disinterestedly, and accordin tablished procedure. They had been taught by Herzl that t claimed to lead the Jews needed to be publicly answerable t stitutions of some kind. If there was considerable wavering from time to time, they did broadly stick to this position: righ cause it was one of the principal sources of their moral str of it, however, was, or could be, remotely acceptable to the the Schiffs, the Guenzburgs, and the other great men of late n and early twentieth-century Jewry. Nor was it to the individu and devoted figures who labored in the Jewish interest in men's shadows and to some extent on their behalf-the Pau the Lucien Wolfs, the Sylvain LUvys, and their like. The other respect in which the Zionists struck at what may called the Jewish Establishment-its plutocratic lay compon first instance, but indirectly and for different reasons at i component as well-was that of migration. Let me be clear a have the years prior to the First World War in mind. Altho tive forces were less desperate than later, they were power poverty, persecution, and deepest of all, perhaps, the desire the externally and internally determined trammels by whic patedJews in Eastern Europe were hemmed in. Their lives w dered solitary, to be sure, but were certainly lives Hobbes recognized as nasty, brutish, and short. It will be recalled th gration and immigration were still relatively free at this st entry were therefore matters of personal choice and the ra lation of advantage. It did not seem to anyone in those days tha legitimate to debate the pros and cons and general social an desirability of Jews leaving the lands of their birth en masse. I stances of firm opposition from on high in Jewry to any smacked of mass movement were legion. In the West, it wa fear, lest the integrationist boat be dangerously rocked. In was chiefly for fear, lest the credentials of Jews as loyal su Tsar or perhaps the King of Romania be laid open to em question. It was not, of course, directly and exclusively a fun This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 210 David Vital appearance of ceded them b others who p tion; and did the catastroph that the Jew foresaw what arguably poin nation, denig that it was un coming to his than palliative at all events, lated by Pins That rescue was in many ran counter t then conceived. None were more fervent in this belief than those who saw themselves, and who were seen by most others, as the natural leaders of Jewry. This was as true of those in Eastern Europe who h been denied the advantages of emancipation thus far no less than o those who were, as anyone could see, its greatest beneficiaries. To ad to the possibility of a catastrophe engulfing the greater part of the Jew ish people in the unspecified, but by no means remote, future was tantamount to abandoning this confidence in the stability and validity of very social order that had allowed every single one of them, in his o way, to rise to those degrees of wealth, comfort, influence, and so prominence that quite ordinary Jews had for so many centuries been the habit of assuming were fair indicators not only of legitimate po but of social and political wisdom. But alas for consistency and neat dichotomies in human affairs, was not many years before the so-called catastrophic foundations o Zionism began to be played down by the Zionists themselves; even, a tonishingly, by the all-important Russian Zionists. But then they, t were men of their time. By 1905 Herzl was in his grave, Nordau was fectively in retirement, and a semi-constitutional, marginally liberal regime had been instituted in Russia. That upper-class, semi-Russif Jews would begin to think about the prospects for the Jews in the priso house of nations, and therefore the merits or otherwise of their own involvement in Russia's political affairs, in somewhat different terms t in the past was inevitable. And so, more than a little contradictorily, con sidering the terrible impact the Revolution of 1905 had on the Jews Russia, the notion that the problem of the Jews was one of extreme gency and requiring radical treatment was set aside for the time bei This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Zionism as Revolution? 211 A new "synthetic" Zioni the Turks for a Charter Palestine, as opposed to " energy than before. The rose to the top of the ag It could be argued, of c gency was not new. Aha even if catastrophe wer sources of the movement Ahad-Ha-'Amian (and, I for decades. When the f ably, in the immediate aft one, was not sure he even Still, the defining issu mixed feelings about the its impropriety. On wha tion (or repudiation) of were (once upon a time) was commensurate neith that finally and definitive icant movement in conte most painful weapon in the only one to prove long, that is, as those wh wield it. Of course, in our own day, it is exceedingly rare for a sharp distinction between the reality and the propriety of the Exile to be drawn. Some think it unnecessary. Some think it is impolite. Many, in their innocence, fail to see its significance. Such, more or less, has been the fate of that other equally old, valid and latterly understated, underlying principle of the movement, namely that its character and intentions were not, and could not be, other than secular. An entire school of thought is currently committed to denying mightily that such was or ever could have been the case. There are other ways, too, in which, having regard to the discounting of what it once stood for, it is possible to discern the central contemporary truth about the Zionist Revolution-if that is what it was-that is, as is the way with all revolutions sooner or later, it is over, all passion spent. But was it ever a revolution? I should like to try, in the little space left to me, to deal quite summarily with this question. This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 212 David Vital IV The Zionists were certainly engaged in the promotion of a revolutio for a time, at least. There is a strong sense in which their final achiev ment, the State of Israel, constituted a revolutionary event-no othe term is appropriate-in the lives of the Jews immediately concerned, well as in those of their neighbors. But beyond that? Perhaps a "noise less" revolution in the sense in which Macaulay used the term? Even th is uncertain. Once one separates out that which pertains to the u doubted reality and authority of the sovereign state of Israel from th which pertains to the hearts and minds of the Jews as such, and in a parts; and when one bears in mind that a "noiseless" revolution, too, d notes mutation, sea-change; and, generally speaking, much being lef behind never to be present or available again-the questions multiply So I return to my point that it is the resistance to revolution an the consequent dialectic between the revolutionaries and the counter revolutionaries-if, indeed, that is what they were-that offer the be keys to understanding and assessing such cases. Seen in this light, it w be noted that Zionism met instantly-and from its point of view prom ingly-with very great hostility because, indeed, there were aspects the movement that the more perceptive spirits in the Jewish world were quick to grasp and to fear. On the other hand, not very many decade passed before this hostility largely waned, fear subsided, and the boge man was admitted to the club. Why so? Was this because the putativ revolutionaries had won? Was it, contrariwise, because their teeth had been pulled? Or had it much more to do with that old, deep-seated determinacy within the movement itself about its aims and purposes which I have alluded earlier? Was it then, less a revolution than a rebe lion? A great rebellion, to be sure, but, as the term implies, perhaps phase in the history of the Jews rather than a true turning point? I hesitate to offer an answer. A single century may be too short a period for the general trend in Jewry in so important a matter to emer with adequate clarity. Even the full significance of the Emancipation h yet to work its way through the Jewish body politic. More than enou has happened in the past hundred years to have altered the structur features, and not least, the aspirations of the Jewish people. What th Jews are actually in process of making of the great changes wrought the events that have overtaken them is, however, still far from clear. Although the Zionist movement's material and political achievements have been greater than any of its pioneers could have imagine none of the issues which fueled it doctrinally have been resolved. Tha they have not been resolved either in fact or in principle in the Jewi Diaspora may be unfortunate but is readily understandable.5 That the has been a consistent failure to resolve them in what one was entitled to This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Zionism as Revolution? 213 suppose was Zionism' aster. Consider the fundamental operative principle that dro founders of the movement. It is easily stated. It is that public po the Jewish people must be geared before all else to the core inte the Jews themselves, men, women, and children: their safety, their fare, and their dignity. Considerations of an abstract and collective acter, not excluding those that may rightly be thought to be of ver importance in themselves-the national cultural and religiou tion, attachment to the ancestral land, and so forth-must be secondary. It was this goal that ruled the minds of Herzel and Nordau, and Pinsker before them, and in his odd way, Zangwill, too. Their successors did not go so far as to deny that this was what Zionism was ultimately about. But they dithered perpetually. And now, for all to see, old battles are being refought, old wounds reopened, old dissatisfactions revived. So perhaps: not really a revolution; rather a rebellion. In which case the decisive transformation ofJewry, the real revolution, is still to come. Will it come? I myself an inclined to think that it will. But then I am among those who would hate to see this stupendous enterprise being reduced to mediocrity, its work only half done. TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY NOTES 1. It is the case, or so it seems to me, that the men and w movement over in the 1930s and pushed the Zionist enter conclusion had something in common with their exact c rulers of Soviet Russia: absolute devotion to Party, ferocio and the habit of being economical with the truth. It was not their enemies, and even some of their friends, called them it is an important but, there was no Dzerzhinsky or Yagod bianka, no Gulag, certainly no Stalin; and if Ben-Gurion, l maker of political structures, he had nothing like the fanati compromising ruthlessness of the maker of Soviet Russia. 2. T. B. Macaulay, "History," Miscellaneous Essays (Londo 3. For example: A conference of Jewish notables conv October 1872 to discuss the miserable condition of Romani as to declare, that it "unanimously rejected all thought of soil of Romania" and that such thinking was "regarded as Jews of Romania whose devotion to their country was sple the course of the conference deliberations." It went on to a decision would amount to a casting of an aspersion on the ian Christians to whom their brothers, the Romanian Jews This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 214 David Vital port in the eff land." ("La con de la Roumani les Isra61ites r I'6clat dans les d6cision serait les Israelites ro et consolider l 1872, p. 56. Ci ra'lite Univers 1876)'; Revue d When, a gener don in the wak of Russia had although, fortu out any attemp the Russian Em connected gro of Lord Roths those who had back on their so timorous, t their belief and gration from hinderung der criteria guidin uns bei unsere Verhinderung sondern sofor Betroffenen ih denem Umfan "Documents on 1973), p. 150, n what was requi tives of the re furt to draw learned. At thi In the event, t ference the Zio mind a very m was to meet in into the proble not only the e organization so cally Zionist c ideas on anyon tion, and atten the intolerable This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Zionism as Revolution? 215 Jews in all parts and o Wolffsohn's conference, asco. Almost to a man, t invitation down, the m prevent the conference fused to put in an appe tion to the rule of non Nathan of the German H in that of nanny, the g make sure the Zionists g invites admiration for th it is necessary to unders To have invited the Zio as legitimate members o about the Zionists in t known to be involved i the equipping ofJewish itself, both on the strai also because the Zionist other radicalJewish org the strict philanthrop strongly disapproved, a indirectly. There was, charity nor having any nization was in no posit of the victims of the po ists that the convenors keeping the Zionists out sohn in his conference in Brussels several weeks later was of a somewhat different order. It had to do with the overall view of the collective and public affairs of the Jews taken in each case. Here, the salient differences between the contending schools were unbridgeable. 4. "We must not be told as the Poles are trying to do [we find Weizmann writing privately to the Foreign Editor of the Times], 'You have your Palestine, clear out of here!' [For] if so, we shall have all the miserable refugees who will be driven out of Poland, Galicia, Rumania, etc., at the doors of Palestine. We shall be swamped in Palestine and shall never be able to set up a community worth having there." Letter to H. Wickham Steed, 30 November 1918. The Letters and Papers of Chaim Weizmann (New Brunswick, N.J., 1980) Vol. 9, No. 45, p. 50. 5. Of all the oxymorons with which the world of ideas is cluttered, Diaspora Zionism is surely one of the silliest. This content downloaded from 147.251.55.15 on Sat, 01 Dec 2018 13:23:01 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms