- Jewish left
The term "Jewish left" describes
Jew s who identify with or supportleft wing , occasionally liberal causes, consciously as Jews, either as individuals or through organizations. There is no one organization or movement which constitutes the "Jewish left," however. Jews have been major forces in the history of thelabor movement , theSettlement house movement, thewomen's rights movement,anti-racist work, andanti-fascist organizing of many forms.Realizing that the expression "on the left" covers a range of politics, it is worth noting that many well-known figures "on the left" have been Jews, for instance,
Murray Bookchin ,Noam Chomsky ,Eric Hobsbawm ,Karl Marx ,Harold Pinter , andHoward Zinn , who were born into Jewish families and have various degrees of connection to Jewish communities, Jewish culture, Jewish tradition or the Jewish religion in its many variants. It also includes such people as rabbis Michael Lerner andArthur Waskow , both in their own way religiously devout and culturally identified Jews. It includes as well manysecular , cosmopolitan people who nonetheless remain connected to Jewish culture, such asRosa Luxemburg ,Emma Goldman ,Rose Schneiderman ,Muriel Rukeyser andSusan Sontag . Views regardingZionism among those either identified or self-identified as being among the Jewish left can be quite varied, and are often independent of their other political and social views.While there is a slight increase of Jews "on the left" connecting their politics to their
spirituality , this is a somewhat new phenomenon, when contrasted with the long history ofsecular socialist andcommunist Jewish activist history (e.g., "The Workmen's Circle/Arbeter Ring ") as well as anarchist-Jewish activism which was not only explicitly secular but had from time to time denounced religion. From the late 1880s through the mid-1950s, there was a range of Jewish left newspapers (and other publications) in Yiddish that covered the spectrum of Jewish left-wing political and cultural expression in Eastern and Central Europe, as well as both North and South America, and in Mandatory Palestine'sYishuv , as well as the early years of the State of Israel.Jewish religious values and social justice
A range of left-wing values vis-à-vis
social justice can be traced to Jewish religious texts, including theTanakh and later texts, which include a strong endorsement of hospitality to "the stranger" and the principle of redistribution of wealth in the Biblical idea of Jubilee — as well as a tradition of challenging authority, as exemplified by the BiblicalProphet s.In the twentieth century, Jewish theologians — notably
Abraham Joshua Heschel ,Arthur Waskow andMordecai Kaplan , more recently Michael Lerner andDaniel Boyarin — have emphasised these social justice aspects of the religion.:"See also:
Anarchism and Orthodox Judaism "History
Enlightenment and Emancipation
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a movement for
Jewish Emancipation spread acrossEurope , strongly associated with the emergence ofpolitical liberalism , based on the Enlightenment principles ofrights andequality under the law . Because liberals represented the political left of the time (seeleft-right politics ), emancipated Jews, as they entered the political culture of the nations where they lived, became closely associated with liberal parties. Thus, many Jews supported theAmerican Revolution of 1776, theFrench Revolution of 1789, and the European Revolutions of 1848; while Jews in England tended to vote for the Liberal Party, which had led the parliamentary struggle for Jewish Emancipation — an arrangement called by some scholars “the liberal Jewish compromise”.Fact|date=May 2007The emergence of a Jewish working class
In the age of
industrialisation in the late nineteenth century, a Jewishworking class emerged in the cities of Eastern andCentral Europe . Before long, a Jewishlabour movement emerged too. The Jewish Labour Bund –General Jewish Labor Union – was formed inVilna inLithuania in 1897. Distinctive JewishAnarchist andsocialist organisations formed and spread across the JewishPale of Settlement in theRussian Empire . There were also a significant number of people of Jewish origin who did not explicitly identify as Jews per se but were active in anarchist, socialist and social democratic as well as communist organizations, movements and parties.As
Zionism grew in strength as a political movement,socialist Zionist parties were formed, such asBer Borochov ’sPoale Zion .There were non-Zionist left-wing forms of
Jewish nationalism , such asterritorialism (which called for a Jewish national homeland, but not necessarily inPalestine ), autonomism (which called for non-territorial national rights for Jews in multinational empires) and the folkism, advocated bySimon Dubnow , (which celebrated the Jewish culture of theYiddish -speaking masses).As Eastern European Jews migrated West from the 1880s, these ideologies took root in growing Jewish communities, such as
London ’sEast End ,Paris 'sPletzl ,New York ’sLower East Side andBuenos Aires . There was a lively Jewish anarchist scene in London, a central figure of which was, perhaps ironically, the non-Jewish German thinker and writerRudolf Rocker . The important Jewish socialist movement in the United States, with its Yiddish-language daily, "The Forward ", and trade unions such as theInternational Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and theAmalgamated Clothing Workers . Important figures in these milieux includedRose Schneiderman ,Abraham Cahan ,Morris Winchevsky andDavid Dubinsky .In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Jews played a major role in the
Social Democratic parties of Germany, Russia, Austria-Hungary and Poland. HistorianEnzo Traverso has used the term "Judeo-Marxism" to describe the innovative forms ofMarxism associated with these Jewish socialists. These ranged from strongly cosmopolitan positions hostile to all forms ofnationalism (as withRosa Luxemburg and, to a lesser extent,Leon Trotsky ) to positions more sympathetic to cultural nationalism (as with theAustromarxists orVladimir Medem ). Again, it is probable that most of these figures would not have considered themselves to be part of an explicitly "Jewish" left, but the significant number of Jews active in diverse movements and parties "on the left" is relevant.talinism and fascism
:"See also:
Jewish Bolshevism As with the American revolution of 1776, the French revolution of 1789 and the German revolution of 1848, many Jews worldwide welcomed the
Russian revolution of 1917 , celebrating the fall of a regime that had presided over antisemiticpogroms , and believing that the new order in what was to become the Soviet Union would bring improvements in the situation of Jews in those lands. Many Jews became involved inCommunist parties , constituting large proportions of their membership in many countries, including the Great Britain and the U.S. There were specifically Jewish sections of many Communist parties, such as theYevsektsiya in theSoviet Union . The Communist regime in the USSR pursued what could be characterised as ambivalent policies towards Jews and Jewish culture, at times supporting their development as a national culture (e.g., sponsoring significant Yiddish language scholarship and creating an autonomous Jewish territory inBirobidzhan ), at times pursuing antisemitic purges (e.g., the so-calledDoctors' Plot ) and its aftermath, as well as the so-calledDoctors' plot . (See alsoKomzet .)With the advent of
fascism in parts of Europe in the 1920s and 1930s, many Jews responded by becoming actively involved in the left, and particularly the Communist parties, which were at the forefront of theanti-fascist movement. For example, many Jewish volunteers fought in theInternational Brigades in theSpanish Civil War (for instance in the AmericanAbraham Lincoln Brigade and in the Polish-JewishNaftali Botwin Company ). Jews and leftists foughtOswald Mosely 's British fascists at theBattle of Cable Street . This mass movement was influenced by theJewish Anti-Fascist Committee in the Soviet Union.In
World War II , the Jewish left played a major part in resistance to Nazism. For example, Bundists and left Zionists were key inŻydowska Organizacja Bojowa and theWarsaw Ghetto Uprising .Radical Jews in Central and Western Europe
As well as the movements rooted in the Jewish working class, relatively assimilated
middle class Jews in Central and Western Europe began to search for sources of radicalism in Jewish tradition. For example,Martin Buber drew onHassidism in articulating his anarchist philosophy,Gershom Scholem was an anarchist and akabbalah scholar,Walter Benjamin was equally influenced byMarxism and Jewishmessianism ,Gustav Landauer was a religious Jew and alibertarian communist ,Jacob Israël de Haan combined socialism withHaredi Judaism, whileleft-libertarian Bernard Lazare (after a youthful flirtation withantisemitism ) became a passionately Jewish Zionist. InWeimar Germany ,Walther Rathenau was a leading figure of the Jewish left.ocialist Zionism and the Israeli left
In the twentieth century, especially after the
Second Aliyah , socialist Zionism - first developed in Russia by the Marxist Ber Borochov and the non-MarxistsNachman Syrkin andA. D. Gordon - became a powerful force in theYishuv , the Jewish settlement inPalestine . Poale Zion, theHistadrut labour union and theMapai party played a major part in the campaign for an Israeli state, with socialist politicians likeDavid Ben-Gurion andGolda Meir amongst the founders of the nation. At the same time, thekibbutz movement was an experiment in practical socialism.In the 1940s, many on the left advocated a
binational state in Israel/Palestine, rather than an exclusively Jewish state. (This position was taken byHannah Arendt andMartin Buber , for example). Since independence in 1948, there has been a lively Israeli left, both Zionist (the Labour Party, Meretz) andanti-Zionist (Palestine Communist Party , Maki). The Labour Party and its predecessors have been in power in Israel for significant periods since 1948.There are two worldwide groupings of left-wing Zionist organizations. The
World Labour Zionist Movement , associated with the Labor Zionist tendency, is a loose association of the Israeli Labour Party (Avoda), theHabonim Dror Labor Zionist youth movement, theTAKAM kibbutz federation, theHistadrut and theNa'amat . The World Union of Meretz, associated with what was historically known as the Socialist Zionist tendency, is a loose association of the Israeli Meretz party, theHashomer Hatzair Socialist Zionist youth movement, the Kibbutz Artzi Federation and theGivat Haviva research and study center. Both movements exist as factions within theWorld Zionist Organization , as well as regional or country-specific Zionist movements; the two roughly correspond to the interwar split between the Poale Zion Right (the tradition that led to Avoda) and the Poale Zion Left (Hashomer Hatzair, Mapam, Meretz).Contemporary Jewish left
As the Jewish working class died out in the years after the
Second World War , its institutions and political movements did too. TheArbeter Ring in England, for example, came to an end in the 1950s and Jewish trade unionism in the US ceased to be a major force at that time. There are, however, still some survivals of the Jewish working class left today, including theJewish Labor Committee and "Forward" newspaper in New York, the Bund in Melbourne, Australia, orLabour Friends of Israel in the UK.Meanwhile, the 1960s-1980s saw a resurgence in interest in cultural heritage and ethnic identity, prompting a renewal of interest among assimilated Jews in the West in Jewish working class culture and the various radical traditions of the Jewish past. This led to a growth in a new sort of radical Jewish organisations, interested in Yiddish culture, Jewish spirituality and social justice. For example, in the decade of 1980–1992 one organization,
New Jewish Agenda , functioned as a national, multi-issue progressive membership organization with the mission of acting as a "Jewish voice on the Left and a Left voice in the Jewish Community." TheJewish Socialists' Group in Britain and Rabbi Michael Lerner's Tikkun have continued this tradition, while more recently groups likeJewdas andHeeb Magazine have taken an even more eclectic and radical approach to Jewishness.In the U.S. in the last decade, the Jewish vote has gone to Democrats by 76-80% [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/US-Israel/jewvote.html] in each election, leading to the reasonable conclusion that the majority of American Jews remain in at least some way more supportive of the liberal to left side of the political spectrum vs. the conservative to right side of the spectrum.
Because of the emotional connection many Jews have for Israel, the issue has generated strong passions among left-wing Jews. There is a significant Jewish presence in the disparate political movement known variously as "
liberal hawks ", thepro-war left or the "Decent Left ", which is strongly committed to liberal or leftist social policy, while supporting a liberal interventionist,hawkish or pro-Israelforeign policy . (Examples includeJoe Lieberman ,Christopher Hitchens , many of the contributors to "Dissent" magazine and many of the signatories of theEuston Manifesto .) At the same time, there is a significant Jewish presence in the anti-Zionist movement, includingNorman Finkelstein ,Noam Chomsky and key UK advocates of an academic boycott of Israel like Stephen and Hilary Rose.Fact|date=October 2007Contemporary Israeli left
Operating in a parliamentary governmental system based on
proportional representation , left-wing political parties and blocs in Israel have been able to elect members of theKnesset with varying degrees of success. Over time those parties have evolved, with some merging, others disappearing, and new parties arising.Israeli left-wing parties have included:
*
Mapam
*Meretz / Meretz-Yachad
*Progressive List for Peace
*Ratz
*Left Camp of Israel (Sheli)
*This World – New Power Notable figures in these parties have included:
Shulamit Aloni ,Uri Avnery ,Yossi Beilin ,Ran Cohen , Matti Peled,Amnon Rubinstein , andYossi Sarid .ee also
*
Cosmopolitanism
*Internationalism (politics)
*Jewish anarchism
*History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union
**Jewish Bolshevism
**Anti-capitalism
**Anti-Zionism
*Globalization
**Anti-globalization and antisemitism
*Jewish political movements
**Jewish right
**Neoconservatism
*Jewish Communist Party (Poalei Zion)
*Independent Australian Jewish Voices
*Independent Jewish Voices
*J Street
*Liberal elite
*"Progressive Jewish Thought and the New Anti-Semitism "
*Christian left
*Anti-fascism
**Liberal anti-fascism
*Contributions to liberal theory
*List of Jewish American activists
*Jewish feminism
**List of Jewish feminists External links
* [http://www.marxists.org/subject/jewish/index.htm Jews and the workers' movement (Marxist Internet Archive)]
* [http://www.marxists.org/history/usa/eam/lf/lfedjewish.html Yiddish language sections of American socialist parties (Marxist Internet Archive)]
* [http://www.left-wing.net/ Jewish Left-Wing Community]
* [http://www.sp-usa.org/commissions/index.html Socialism and Faith Commission of the Socialist Party USA]
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