|
Generation Two: Preserving Peoplehood
Next: Generation Three: Suburbs
Up: From Ethnic to
Previous: Generation One: The
What the German founders never did appreciate was the positive pull of
peoplehood on the Jewish psyche. How could they? When they arrived
here, their claim to belonging was precisely the fact that they were
not a people at all; they were a religion. That claim had been
implicit in the Enlightenment all along. Even Moses Mendelssohn had
known that. Back in the early 1700s he would meet on a Shabbat
afternoon for a friendly game of chess with his Catholic friend,
Father Lavater, rejoicing in his new-found Prussian residency that he
could and did justify only because he was a man of reason and as such,
deserved equal rights before God. As to nationality, however, he was a
German. He spoke German, therefore, and even translated the Bible into
German so that his fellow German Jews could read it in translation.
When Lavater tried nonetheless to convert him to Christianity,
Mendelssohn responded that he preferred to remain a Jew, not because
the Jewish People had any claim upon him, but because Judaism
as a religion was so perfectly rational that he could think of
no reason why any rational thinking soul would want to leave it.
By the time the French Revolution had furthered this noble
Enlightenment goal, even massive revolution against the old order was
being justified by shouts of ``Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité,''
all worthy values if (and only if) all human beings really are free,
equal and fraternal --- which is to say, members of the same family,
all one people, so to speak, the people of God known also as the human
race, but divided into national enclaves called states purely for
purposes of administration. Napoleon thus overturned age-old national
boundary markers --- the rivers and valleys that accidentally staked
off one duchy from another. Starting from scratch, he subdivided
Europe into squares called consistories, each of which corresponded to
nothing deeper than lines of arbitrary latitude and longitude. Forget
the age-old claims made by Europe's several peoples, the German
Volk, for instance, which could and should be swallowed up into the
international and wholly rational redrawn map of Europe. The Sanhedrin
of Jews that assembled in Paris on February 4, 1807, told Napoleon
exactly what he wanted to hear when it announced it was a religion,
and implicitly renounced any and all claims of Jewish Peoplehood.
To some extent the second migration of Germans had watered down
these radical claims of the Enlightenment. Having lived through the
reactionary era that denied Napoleonic geography, they had experienced
the reassertion of the German Volk. Only by the 1880s would
that nationalism flare up into full-fledged anti-Semitism, which Jews
tried to ignore as a passing fancy, in any case. They celebrated
their identity as both Jews (by religion) and Germans (by national
culture). Religion was one thing; citizenship and loyalty to the
United States were another; but national culture was yet a third.
Until the First World War, German Americans (Jews included) saw no
conflict between their European culture and their American home. As
late as 1900, 90% of the Lutherans in the mid-west still worshipped
in their European language, not in English. In 1816, the philosopher
Hegel was appointed to the coveted chair of philosophy at the
University of Heidelberg, where he taught that history reached its
zenith in the German state. By 1870, Hegel had been dead for 39 years,
but he was alive and well among German Jews who agreed with him
absolutely, to the point of doubting whether anything worth while
could be expected from a cultural backwater such as the United States,
without Germanic culture to help it along.
As much as German Jews celebrated their German heritage, they
were ambivalent about their Jewish tradition, which looked far too
medieval to be proudly displayed as the equal of what Germanic culture
seemed to offer. Modern Jewish scholars therefore spent the century
redeploying the literary output of the Rabbis, featuring the things
they liked and ignoring what they didn't. They coined the term ``Golden
Age'' for Spain, because Spain had given us philosophy and poetry, the
highest cultural carriers as German aesthetics viewed them. Rabbi
David Einhorn of Baltimore composed the forerunner for the Union
Prayer Book almost solely in German, and he epitomized his generation
of rabbis by delivering flowery (and long!) German sermons to German
auditors who were supposed to identify progress with the spirit of
Germanic culture. He was by no means ashamed of his Jewish heritage,
even though the heritage he championed was a selective perception of
what Judaism really had been. He preached a kind of Judaism that
resembled Germanism, which he regarded as the model for cultural value
and the standard to which Jewish creativity should strive. He was all
three: an American by citizenship, a Jew by religion, and German by
culture.
By the end of our high water decade of the 1870s, that purely
religious view of Judaism was about to be challenged by the largest
wave of Jewish immigrants ever to move to one place at one time. They
would stand the entire German scheme of things on its head. Whereas
the German project entailed building Judaism as a religion, the new
immigrants, from eastern Europe, came here with almost no regard for
religion at all. We distort reality if we picture only pious Chasidic
synagogues on New York's Lower East Side. It takes a mere instant to
discover that the whole tenement district is dominated by the building
that once housed The Daily Forward, hardly a bastion of
religion. The stone facade above its door now carries Korean
characters affixed by new owners who bought it from the Jews, but
scrape away the Korean (and the Chinese under that), and you find the
carved-out images of the people who really mattered to the eastern
Europeans: not Moses and Abraham but the American socialist leader who
ran for president five times, Eugene V. Debs (1855--1926) and his
German equivalent Rosa Luxemburg (1871--1919)! Some of these Russian
Jews trashed the whole Jewish project, so enamored were they of the
rival Marxist promise of a classless society --- the second
aliyah to Israel actually kept May Day more than they did Yom
Kippur. But most remained true to Jewish identity, being careful only
to differentiate ``Jewish'' from ``religious.'' It was religion that
they despised. They were Jewish as a matter of peoplehood.
They arrived at that conclusion because Napoleon did not triumph
in eastern Europe. The transformation of Judaism into a matter of
modern western faith occurred only in the western orbit of the
Parisian Sanhedrin, never in the yeshivot of Vilna and
Volhynia, and certainly not among the rank and file socialists, the
intellectual Yiddishists, the land-intoxicated Zionists, or any of the
other ideological luftmenschen who argued their way through
every passing day. For sure, the idea that we are just a religion
never dawned on the masses, whether or not they attended the
synagogues and shtuebels of the time. Neither classical Hebrew
nor Yiddish even has a native ``Jewish'' word for ``religion'' as
western thought understands it. Religion is a western concept through
and through, a generalization offered up by 18th- and 19th-century
academe in its quest for the equivalents of Protestantism among the
peoples of the world. It is what western Jews decided they must be, if
Napoleon was not to kick them out; what German Jews had to aspire to
if they were to rate citizenship in the Prussian state.
Eastern European Jews knew instead they were a people, a
nationality like the other groups who constituted Czarist Russia and
after that the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. ``Republics,''
note! Like Latvians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, and Bessarabians ---
national groupings all, peoples, with customs and a language and a
land, all their own. No wonder debate among the Jews who filled the
Eastern European coffee-houses focussed on the Zionist question of
land, the missing ingredient in the Jewish equation if Jews like the
others were to be a licit people, not only a religion.
Both in the west and in the east, therefore, modern Jewish
strategy circled round the question of how to justify inclusion in the
body politic. In the west, inclusion meant being a religion, so the
west gave us religious reform, a means by which Jews who had a
medieval thing called Judaism could emerge with that medievalism
retooled and reshaped into western style religion. In the east, it was
land, not religion, that was missing, so there Jewish thinkers divided
into ``territorialists'' who wanted to carve out a Jewish state in
eastern Europe (where Yiddish, the language of the masses would be
spoken), and Zionists who insisted on returning to the land of our
ancestors (and their ancient language also).
In any case,
religious reform did not capture the attention of Generation Two,
who came to these shores not to seek religion but to celebrate
peoplehood. Here they needed no separate land. They did, however,
establish Yiddish theater, a Yiddish press, and a fully Yiddish
ambience without much religion, for which they (frequently as
socialists anyway) had little regard.
But they quickly discovered that Jews here were expected to have
a religion. This was a Protestant country after all, and Protestants
knew a religion when they saw one. German reformers were aghast at the
very thought that their eastern European cousins would join them in
their Temples, but eastern Europeans were equally offended by the
Protestantized religiosity that Reform temples had developed. So a
compromise was reached. Wealthy Reform bankers bailed out a bankrupt
place called The Jewish Theological Seminary, making that the home for
eastern European Jewish strivings. By 1910, the beginning of the
emblematic decade for Generation Two, Jews had settled into a happy
divide: western European Jews in Reform Temples where Judaism as a
faith was preached, and Judaism as a variant version of Protestant
religion was celebrated; and eastern European Jews in Conservative
synagogues, where Judaism as an ethnic enterprise reigned supreme.
Mordecai Kaplan's Reconstructionism was the logical consequence
of Conservative Judaism, as we might expect from this American master
who arrived at his ideas while teaching homiletics at the Jewish
Theological Seminary itself. If Judaism is essentially a people's
ethnic folkways, Judaism must be not just a religion but a
civilization. In America, where even peoples ought to have religions,
it must be a religious civilization. Synagogues should be more than
sanctuaries, then. They should be gathering places for the clan,
houses of assembly, even community centers of a mildly religious sort.
How ironic that Kaplan, the most American of all Jewish thinkers,
influenced most by Thomas Dewey and American pragmatism, should have
missed the very essence of America's religiosity, its insistence on
religion as the dominating hallmark of what Jews must be.
Much much later, his Reconstructionist descendants would modify
his radicalism, inviting, as president, Arthur Green, a religious
seeker rooted in the very Chasidic mystical tradition that Kaplan's
rationalism deplored. The changeover in approach had been heralded
when the federation of chavurot had joined the ranks of the
old-time Reconstructionist Movement. But in the heyday of Generation
Two, the era when Conservative Judaism was just being born and
Kaplan's ideas were only coming into being, these developments were a
long way off. No one would then have predicted just how much even
eastern European Jews would return to religion as a source of their
identity. That return is the essence of the spiritual quest that
dominates the Fourth Generation of our time. But before turning to
ourselves, we need to analyze the Third Generation, which reached its
pinnacle in the suburbs in the 1950s.
Next: Generation Three: Suburbs
Up: From Ethnic to
Previous: Generation One: The
Excelsior Computer Services
Wed Oct 30 14:12:52 EST 1996
|