Confession
By
NATHAN
BIRNBAUM
JEWISH POCKET BOOKS
NEW YORK
1946
Thanks are due to Mr. Sidney Gruenwald for
his help in preparing the translation.
JEWISH POCKET BOOKS
A Project of the Education Department of the
AGUDATH ISRAEL YOUTH COUNCIL OF AMERICA
General editor: Rabbi Joseph Elias
Published by the
SPERO FOUNDATION
dedicated to the advancement of traditional Judaism through the
publication and distribution of Jewish classics, educational
literature, and allied purposeful philanthropic
activities.
[Webmaster's note: The above information was
derived from the first pages of the book. This is an abridged
translation of Dr. Birnbaum's Gottesvolk, published in
1917.]
Introduction
On rare occasions men emerge in history whose
lives mirror their entire age, all its ideals
and errors, achievements and failures. Rarer still
are those who are chosen, at the end of their
pilgrimage through life, to rise above their world
and to attain that ultimate wisdom which is above
time and circumstance. Hence the greatness of
Nathan Birnbaum, among the builders of modern
Judaism.
Birnbaum helped create the major Jewish movements of our time,
Zionism, Autonomism, Yiddishism. He gave to all of them of his
profound humanity and understanding of life. But he passed
from one to the other, a modern Odysseus in the
search for truth, driven by his inexorably logical
mind and incorruptible honesty, until he found his
way home, to the simple yet sublime teachings of
Jewish tradition. It was at the end of his road that
he came to write Gottesvolk, his great manifesto to
the Jewish people, of which Confession is a somewhat abridged
translation. Today we see in it a
deeply moving personal document �one of the great
historical pieces of contemporary Jewish literature�
and, above all, a message to the modern Jew, of
vital significance for him.
Birnbaum was only nineteen years of age when
he founded the first Jewish students' association,
with a national program. That was in the Vienna of
1883, a full decade before Theodor Herzl appeared
on the Jewish scene. In 1884, the first issue of
Selbstemanzipation (Self-Emancipation) appeared, a
journal of which Birnbaum was publisher, editor,
bookkeeper, typist and office boy, all in one. Through
heartbreaking toil he finally gained a hearing for his ideals, for the
trumpet-call of a resurgent Jewish nationalism. In time, the
rising wave of
European anti-Semitism seemed to put victory within the grasp of the
young Zionist movement:
Palestine alone held out hope of peace for the Jew.
Yet, it
was at this moment that Birnbaum broke
with the political Zionism of Herzl. To him, the
Jewish nation was not merely a group of people
held together by a common enemy (Herzl's definition); and its survival
could not be secured by
political concessions in Palestine. The vitality of a
people, Birnbaum felt, depended upon its culture;
and upon this, Jewish nationalism had to be founded. He did not
belittle the importance of Palestine,
but he maintained that Jewish nationhood could be
sustained in the diaspora too, in centers of Jewish settlement,
enjoying cultural autonomy. Such a
center he saw in Eastern European Jewry, as the
truest representative of Jewish vitality, spirit, culture. Hence
his efforts in behalf of the Yiddish
world. Der Weg (The Way), founded in 1903,
served as the mouthpiece of Autonomism. A few
years later, Birnbaum called a conference of the
outstanding Yiddish writers of the time, which
marked the full emergence of a proud Yiddishism.
Once more, however, Birnbaum turned away
from the ideal he himself had helped to launch. Jewish
nationalism must be founded upon Jewish
culture, he had recognized; and now, penetrating
behind its manifold expressions, he came to realize
that its innermost source was the religion of the
Jew: his G-d-consciousness, expressing itself in the
sanctification of life. That, Birnbaum felt, distinguished the
Jew from the heathen; the good life
in the Divine world from the brutality and self-seeking of paganism,
ancient or modern. To Birnbaum, this discovery came as a sudden
overwhelming experience, which forever changed the course
of his life. It revealed to him the true meaning of
world history: the struggle of divine goodness to
conquer the heathen world; and he recognized the
purpose of Jewish existence: to keep the divine light
burning, to whose service the Jew had dedicated
himself at the beginning of his history.
Thus Birnbaum rediscovered the teachings of
Judaism, as they had been cherished, defended, and
died for, through the ages. Thus, also, he declared
war against the desecration of the divine world by
modern paganism. But Gottesvolk, when it appeared
in 1917, did not only present a challenge to the
"heathen rebels"; it also addressed itself to the
loyal Jews. Do they realize, Birnbaum asked, that
Judaism is a revolutionary creed and program, aiming to make
over our world? Do they keep before
their eyes the messianic vision of a world prepared
for the kingdom of G-d?
Birnbaum saw the most fundamental, and dangerous, aspects of the
Jewish problem in the weakening of messianic fervor among the religious
Jewish masses; and in the resulting threat of sterility,
stagnation and death, Gottesvolk was written, above
all, to bring home to the pious Jew the greatness
of his messianic mission. A time has come, Birnbaum
proclaimed, which demands a penitent return
to our divine task: the sanctification of both individual
and world . . . leading to final redemption. The tragic history
of twentieth-century Jewry has
led many others of our leaders to join in the impassioned call for
"repentance and redemption"
which Birnbaum issued in 1917.
His inspired insight into the problem of Jewish life also revealed
itself in his insistence that the
discharge of the Jewish task demands organized
communal cooperation, in behalf of the spiritual
interests and material position of the Jewish people. It was to
this end, in fact, that the outstanding
spiritual leaders of pious Jewry had organized Agudath
Israel. Shortly after writing
Gottesvolk
Bimbaum joined Agudath Israel and became its
General Secretary �a remarkable ending to his long
political Odyssey.
There was a third point in the program which
Birnbaum outlined in Gottesvolk: he felt that the
survival of the various centers of Jewish settlement
depended upon the isolation of Jewish communal
life from the vices and aberrations of modern pagan
life. Hence he called for the establishment of an
order of Olim (Ascenders), living outside the big
cities, devoted to agriculture and handicrafts, immersed in Jewish
spirituality and preserving the
distinctive Jewish language and attire. This project
never came to fruition. The Jewish community in
Eastern Europe, to which Birnbaum looked above
all, was destroyed in terrible fashion. Today Jewish life is
centered on Palestine and America; there
is little prospect that the "community of the ascenders" will
come into existence in these countries1 �and we may feel that Jewry may, in
fact, survive
in the modern world without the adoption of Birnbaum's project.
Yet Birnbaum's insistence upon the unbridgeable gulf between Judaism
and modern paganism,
and his call to arm ourselves against the pagan
influences, are of immense significance for American
and Palestinian Jewry, upon whom the burden of
Jewish survival is now put. Birnbaum's challenge
rings in our ears with an urgency greater than ever
before. Wherever Providence has led the Jew, in
Palestine or the diaspora, his fate is ultimately
governed by the one supreme fact of his loyalty to
the divine teachings of Judaism: "The righteous
liveth by his faith."
1) For this reason the present
translation of Gottesvolk omits the details of Birnbaum's plan
as given in the German text and the appendix to it.
The Road Home
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