The Emergence of the Secular Jew in Russia
Summary
of the lecture given on December 8, 2008, by Yakov M. Rabkin
Emancipation
of Jews in Western and Central Europe in the course of the
nineteenth century made Jewish identity optional. Those who wanted to
practice Judaism remained Jewish, others gradually assimilated and
dissolved in the ambient society. But when adapted to the situation of
the Jews of the Russian Empire, where the emancipation had been slow in
coming and where Jews lived in relatively compact communities, the idea
of an “optional Jewish religion” produced an entirely different effect.
In Russia, secularization undermined the practice of Judaism without
diluting the Jews’ sense of cultural belonging. Compared to Jews in
France and Germany, the Jews of Russia had few opportunities to
assimilate into the surrounding society: most of them were obliged to
live within the Pale of Settlement.
Thus crystallized the concept of the “secular Jew.” The new concept,
which quickly gained popularity in Eastern Europe, and particularly in
the Russian Empire, eliminated the religious — and thus normative —
dimension
of the Jewish identity and retained only its biological and cultural
dimensions. Jewishness would no longer depend on what one did, but on
what one was.
It was a replica of the concept of the Jew promoted by the then nascent
movement of racial anti-Semitism. Certain rabbinical thinkers have
asserted that racial anti-Semitism raised its head in Europe a few
years after the emergence of a secular Jewish identity, thereby
intimating a cause-and-effect relationship between the two. It is
beyond doubt that the idea of a secular Jew constituted the cornerstone
of the Zionist project, and remains the pillar of Israeli society to
this day.
The Zionist movement appeared at first as a paradox, incongruous and
yet threatening. For, while it claimed to be a force for modernization
against the dead weight of tradition and history, it idealized the
biblical past, manipulated the traditional symbols of religion and
proposed to transmute into reality the millennia-long dreams of the
Jews. But above all, Zionism put forward a new definition of what it
means to be Jewish. Israeli historian Yosef Salmon, explains why the
Zionist idea continues to provoke opposition from traditional Jews:
“Put briefly, the general rabbinical conception of Zionism was that of
a secularizing force in Jewish society... Since its major programs were
associated with the Holy Land — the object of traditional messianic
hopes — it was infinitely more dangerous than any other secularizing
force in Judaism and, accordingly, it had to be attacked.”
Indeed, the Zionists’ redefinition of the Jewish people, with pride of
place accorded to the national dimension of Jewish identity, provoked
an outcry among rabbinical thinkers. For them, the concept of nation
must be based on allegiance to the Torah rather than identification
with an ethnic group or a given territory. They viewed the nationalist
approach as a contradiction in adjecto: one cannot be both Jewish and
an atheist, that is to say, Jew and non-Jew, at the same time. The
majority of Russian rabbis, closer to the reality that had fuelled
Zionism’s popularity, relegated the Zionist movement to the same
category as earlier efforts to eradicate the Torah.
Indeed, Jewish radical movements of Eastern Europe sought to eliminate
every notion of religious responsibility. By the latter decades of the
nineteenth century, they had come to see themselves as the first
generation to have cast off any obligation stemming from the Torah.
A striking example of the way in which Jewish nationalism came to
substitute for Judaism was the call issued by a young Jew to Vladimir
Jabotinsky (1880–1940), a Russian author and Zionist leader: “Our life
is dull and our hearts are empty, for there is no God in our midst;
give us a God, sir, worthy of dedication and sacrifice, and you will
see what we can do”. The answer was swift and clear : “Iron, from which
everything that the national machine requires should be made. Does it
require a wheel? Here I am. A nail, a screw, a girder? Here I am.
Police? Doctors? Actors? Water carriers? Here I am. I have no features,
no feelings, no psychology, no name of my own. I am a servant of Zion,
prepared for everything, bound to nothing, having one imperative:
Build!” There is a utopian political flavour to this rhetoric: iron and
steel were the Bolsheviks’ and later the Fascists’ metaphors of choice.
Stalin’s nom de guerre means “man of steel”.
Russian Zionists formed the elite of the new society and their
descendants have largely retained political power in Israel. Moreover,
only in Russia did Jews participate in great numbers in terrorist
movements, and some of them would later use this experience to conquer
Palestine from the indigenous population. Albeit atheists, they used
Biblical verses to legitimate the Zionist project, and this paradox did
not escape the sharp wit of some observers. According to Professor
Raz-Krokotzkin of the Ben Gurion University in Israel, the Zionists’
claim to this land can be put in a nutshell: “God does not exist, and
he promised us this land”.
Professor Rabkin teaches the history of science and Jewish history at
the University of Montreal. His book A Threat from Within: A Century of
Jewish Opposition to Zionism has been translated into
several languages
and was nominated for Canada’s Governor General Award.
*The views expressed in the essay belong
solely to the author and do not represent the official position of any
organizations to which the author is permanently or was temporarily
affiliated.
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