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ZIONISM
PAGE III
The Jewish State
Theodor Herzl
1896


Photograph
from the Alice Lev Collection, courtesy of the USHMM Photo Archives.
Yitzhak
Zuckerman, one of the founders of the Jewish Fighting Organization (ZOB) in
Warsaw, and underground leader in the Warsaw Ghetto, speaks at a Zionist
political meeting in the Zeilsheim displaced persons' camp. (1945)
Theodor Herzl
THE
JEWISH STATE
I
n t r o d u c t i o n
It is astonishing how little
insight into the science of economics many of the men who move in the midst of
active life possess. Hence it is that even Jews faithfully repeat the cry of the
Anti-Semites: "We depend for sustenance on the nations who are our hosts,
and if we had no hosts to support us we should die of starvation." This is
a point that shows how unjust accusations may weaken our self-knowledge. But
what are the true grounds for this statement concerning the nations that act as
"hosts"? Where it is not based on limited physiocratic views it is
founded on the childish error that commodities pass from hand to hand in
continuous rotation. We need not wake from long slumber, like Rip van Winkle, to
realize that the world is considerably altered by the production of new
commodities. The technical progress made during this wonderful era enables even
a man of most limited intelligence to note with his short-sighted eyes the
appearance of new commodities all around him. The spirit of enterprise has
created them.
Labor without enterprise is
the stationary labor of ancient days; and typical of it is the work of the
husbandman, who stands now just where his progenitors stood a thousand years
ago. All our material welfare has been brought about by men of enterprise. I
feel almost ashamed of writing down so trite a remark. Even if we were a nation
of entrepreneurs--such as absurdly exaggerated accounts make us out to be--we
should not require another nation to live on. We do not depend on the
circulation of old commodities, because we produce new ones.
The world possesses slaves
of extraordinary capacity for work, whose appearance has been fatal to the
production of handmade goods: these slaves are the machines. It is true that
workmen are required to set machinery in motion; but for this we have men in
plenty, in super-abundance. Only those who are ignorant of the conditions of
Jews in many countries of Eastern Europe would venture to assert that Jews are
either unfit or unwilling to perform manual labor.
But I do not wish to take up
the cudgels for the Jews in this pamphlet. It would be useless. Everything
rational and everything sentimental that can possibly be said in their defense
has been said already. If one's hearers are incapable of comprehending them; one
is a preacher in a desert. And if one's hearers are broad and high-minded enough
to have grasped them already, then the sermon Is superfluous. I believe in the
ascent of man to higher and yet higher grades of civilization; but I consider
this ascent to be desperately slow. Were we to wait till aver age humanity 'had
become as charitably inclined as was Lessing when he wrote "Nathan the
Wise," we should wait beyond our day, beyond the days of our children, of
our grandchildren, and of our great-grandchildren. But the world's spirit comes
to our aid in another way.
This century has given the
world a wonderful renaissance by means of its technical achievements; but at the
same time its miraculous improvements have not been employed in the service of
humanity. Distance has ceased to be an obstacle, vet we complain of insufficient
space. Our great steamships carry us swiftly and surely over hitherto unvisited
seas. Our railways carry us safely into a mountain-world hitherto tremblingly
scaled on foot. Events occurring in countries undiscovered when Europe confined
the Jews in Ghettos are known to us in the course of an hour. Hence the misery
of the Jews is an anachronism -- not because there was a period of enlightenment
one hundred years ago, for that enlightenment reached in reality only the
choicest spirits.
I believe that electric
light was not invented for the purpose of illuminating the drawing-rooms of a
few snobs, but rather for the purpose of throwing light on some of the dark
problems of humanity. One of these problems, and not the least of them, is the
Jewish question. In solving it we are working not only for ourselves, but also
for many other over-burdened and oppressed beings.
The Jewish question still
exists. It would be foolish to deny it. It is a remnant of the Middle Ages,
which civilized nations do not: even yet seem able to shake off, try as they
will. They certainly showed a generous desire to do so when they emancipated us.
The Jewish question exists wherever Jews live in perceptible numbers. Where it
does not exist, it is carried by Jews in the course of their migrations. We
naturally move to those places where we are not persecuted, and there our
presence produces persecution. This is the case in every country, and will
remain so, even in those highly civilized--for instance, France--until the
Jewish question finds a solution on a political basis. The unfortunate Jews are
now carrying the seeds of Anti-Semitism into England; they have already
introduced it into America.
I believe that I understand
Anti-Semitism, which is really a highly complex movement. I consider it from a
Jewish standpoint, yet without fear or hatred. I believe that I can see what
elements there are in it of vulgar sport, of common trade jealousy, of inherited
prejudice, of religious intolerance, and also of pretended self-defense. I think
the Jewish question is no more a social than a religious one, notwithstanding
that it sometimes takes these and other forms. It is a national question, which
can only be solved by making it a political world-question to be discussed and
settled by the civilized nations of the world in council.
We are a
people--one people.
We have honestly endeavored
everywhere to merge ourselves in the social life of surrounding communities and
to preserve the faith of our fathers. We are not permitted to do so. In vain are
we loyal patriots, our loyalty in some places running to extremes; in vain do we
make the same sacrifices of life and property as our fellow-citizens; in vain do
we strive to increase the fame of our native land in science and art, or her
wealth by trade and commerce. In countries where we have lived for centuries we
are still cried down as strangers. and often by those whose ancestors were not
yet domiciled in the land where Jews had already had experience of suffering.
The majority may decide which are the strangers; for this, as indeed every point
which arises in the relations between nations, is a question of might. I do not
here surrender any portion of our prescriptive right, when I make this statement
merely in my own name as an individual. In the world as it now is and for an
indefinite period wilt probably remain, might precedes right. It is useless,
therefore, for us to be loyal patriots, as were the Huguenots who were forced to
emigrate. If we could only be left in peace. . . .
But I think
we shall not be left in peace.
Oppression and persecution
cannot exterminate us. No nation on earth has survived such struggles and
sufferings as we have gone through. Jew-baiting has merely stripped off our
weaklings; the strong among us were invariably true to their race when
persecution broke out against them. This attitude was most clearly apparent in
the period immediately following the emancipation of the Jews. Those Jews who
were advanced intellectually and materially entirely lost the feeling of
belonging to their race. Wherever our political well-being has lasted for any
length of time, we have assimilated with our surroundings. I think this is not
discreditable. Hence, the statesman who would wish to see a Jewish strain in his
nation would have to provide for the duration of our political well-being; and
even a Bismarck could not do that.
For old prejudices against
us still lie deep in the hearts of the people. He who would have proofs of this
need only listen to the people where they speak with frankness and simplicity:
proverb and fairy-tale are both Anti-Semitic. A nation is everywhere a great
child, which can certainly be educated; but its education would, even in most
favorable circumstances, occupy such a vast amount of time that we could, as
already mentioned, remove our own difficulties by other means long before the
process was accomplished.
Assimilation, by which I
understood not only external conformity in dress, habits, customs, and language,
but also identity of feeling and manner--assimilation of Jews could be effected
only by intermarriage. But the need for mixed marriages would have to be felt by
the majority; their mere recognition by law would certainly not suffice.
The Hungarian Liberals, who
have just given legal sanction to mixed marriages, have made a remarkable
mistake which one of the earliest cases clearly illustrates; a baptized Jew
married a Jewess. At the same time the struggle to obtain the present form of
marriage accentuated distinctions between Jews and Christians, thus hindering
rather than aiding the fusion of races.
Those who really wished to
see the Jews disappear through intermixture with other nations, can only hope to
see it come about in one way. The Jews must previously acquire economic power
sufficiently great to overcome the old social prejudice against them. The
aristocracy may serve as an example of this, for in its ranks occur the
proportionately largest numbers of mixed marriages. Jewish families which regild
the old nobility with money become gradually absorbed. But what form would this
phenomenon assume in the middle classes, where (the Jews being a bourgeois
people) the Jewish question is mainly concentrated? A previous acquisition of
power could be synonymous with that economic supremacy which Jews are already
erroneously declared to possess. And if the power they now possess creates rage
and indignation among the Anti-Semites, what outbreaks would such an increase of
power create? Hence the first step towards absorption will never be taken,
because this step would involve the subjection of the majority to a hitherto
scorned minority, possessing neither military nor administrative power of its
own. I think, therefore, that the absorption of Jews by means of their
prosperity is unlikely to occur. In countries which now are Anti-Semitic my view
will be approved. In others, where Jews now feel comfortable, it will probably
be violently disputed by them. My happier coreligionists will not believe me
till Jew-baiting teaches them the truth; for the longer Anti-Semitism lies in
abeyance the more fiercely will it break out. The infiltration of immigrating
Jews, attracted to a land by apparent security, and the ascent in the social
scale of native Jews, combine powerfully to bring about a revolution. Nothing is
plainer than this rational conclusion.
Because I have drawn this
conclusion with complete indifference to everything but the quest of truth, I
shall probably be contradicted and opposed by Jews who are in easy
circumstances. Insofar as private interests alone are held by their anxious or
timid possessors to be in danger, they can safely be ignored, for the concerns
of the poor and oppressed are of greater importance than theirs. But I wish from
the outset to prevent any misconception from arising, particularly the mistaken
notion that my project, if realized, would in the least degree injure property
now held by Jews. I shall therefore explain everything connected with rights of
property very fully. Whereas, if my plan never becomes anything more than a
piece of literature, things will merely remain as they are. It might more
reasonably be objected that I am giving a handle to anti-Semitism when I say we
are a people--one people; that I am hindering the assimilation of Jews where it
is about to be consummated, and endangering it where it is an accomplished fact,
insofar as it is possible for a solitary writer to hinder, or endanger anything.
This objection will be especially brought forward in France. It will probably
also be made in other countries, but I shall answer only the French Jews
beforehand, because these afford the most striking example of my point.
However much I may worship
personality-powerful individual personality in statesmen, inventors, artists,
philosophers, or leaders, as well as the collective personality of a historic
group of human beings, which we call a nation--however much I may worship
personality, I do not regret its disappearance. Whoever can, will, and must
perish, let him perish. But the distinctive nationality of Jews neither can,
will, nor must be destroyed. It cannot be destroyed, because external enemies
consolidate it. It will not be destroyed; this is shown during two thousand
years of appalling suffering. It must not be destroyed, and that, as a
descendant of numberless Jews who refused to despair, I am trying once more to
prove in this pamphlet. Whole branches of Judaism may wither and fall, but the
trunk will remain.
Hence, if all or any of the
French Jews protest against this scheme on account of their own
"assimilation," my answer is simple: The whole thing does not concern
them at all. They are Jewish Frenchmen, well and good! This is a private affair
for the Jews alone. The movement towards the organization of the State I am
proposing would, of course, harm Jewish Frenchmen no more than it would harm the
"assimilated" of other countries. It would, on the contrary, be
distinctly to their advantage. For they would no longer be disturbed in their
"chromatic function," as Darwin puts it, but would be able to
assimilate in peace, because the present Anti- Semitism would have been stopped
for ever. They would certainly be credited with being assimilated to the very
depths of their souls, if they stayed where they were after the new Jewish
State, with its superior institutions, had become a reality. The
"assimilated" would profit even more than Christian citizens by the
departure of faithful Jews; for they would be rid of the disquieting,
incalculable, and unavoidable rivalry of a Jewish proletariat, driven by poverty
and political pressure from place to place, from land to land. This floating
proletariat would become stationary. Many Christian citizens--whom we call
Anti-Semites -n now offer determined resistance to the immigration of foreign
Jews. Jewish citizens cannot do this, although it affects them far more
directly; for on them they feel first of all the keen competition of individuals
carrying on similar branches of industry, who, in addition, either introduce
Anti-Semitism where it does not exist, or intensify it where it does. The
"assimilated" give expression to this secret grievance in
"philanthropic" undertakings. They organize emigration societies for
wandering Jews. There is a reverse to the picture which would be comic, if it
did not deal with human beings. For some of these charitable institutions are
created not for, but against, persecuted Jews; they are created to despatch
these poor creatures just as fast and far as possible. And thus, many an
apparent friend of the Jews turns out, on careful inspection, to be nothing more
than an Anti-Semite of Jewish origin, disguised as a philanthropist.
But the attempts at
colonization made even by really benevolent men, interesting attempts though
they were, have so far been unsuccessful. I do not think that this or that man
took up the matter merely as an amusement, that they engaged in the emigration
of poor Jews as one indulges in the racing of horses. The matter was too grave
and tragic for such treatment. These attempts were interesting, in that they
represented on a small scale the practical fore-runners of the idea of a Jewish
State. They were even useful, for out of their mistakes may be gathered
experience for carrying the idea out successfully on a larger scale. They have,
of course, done harm also. The transportation of Anti-Semitism to new districts,
which is the inevitable consequence of such artificial infiltration, seems to me
to be the least of these evils. Far worse is the circumstance that
unsatisfactory results tend to cast doubts on intelligent men. What is
impractical or impossible to simple argument will remove this doubt from the
minds of intelligent men. What is unpractical or impossible to accomplish on a
small scale, need not necessarily be so on a larger one. A small enterprise may
result in loss under the same conditions which would make a large one pay. A
rivulet cannot even be navigated by boats, the river into which it flows carries
stately iron vessels.
No human being is wealthy or
powerful enough to transplant a nation from one habitation to another. An idea
alone can achieve that and this idea of a State may have the requisite power to
do so. The Jews have dreamt this kingly dream all through the long nights of
their history. "Next year in Jerusalem" is our old phrase. It is now a
question of showing that the dream can be converted into a living reality.
For this, many old,
outgrown, confused and limited notions must first be entirely erased from the
minds of men. Dull brains might, for instance, imagine that this exodus would be
from civilized regions into the desert. That is not the case. It will be carried
out in the midst of civilization. We shall not revert to a lower stage, we shall
rise to a higher one. We shall not dwell in mud huts; we shall build new more
beautiful and more modern houses, and possess them in safety. We shall not lose
our acquired possessions we shall realize them. We shall surrender our well
earned rights only for better ones. We shall not sacrifice our be loved customs;
we shall find them again. We shall nor leave our old home before the new one is
prepared for us Those only will depart who are sure thereby to improve their
position; those who are now desperate will go first after them the poor; next
the prosperous, and, last of all the wealthy. Those who go in advance will raise
themselves to a higher grade, equal to those whose representatives will shortly
follow. Thus the exodus will be at the same time an ascent of the class.
The departure of the Jews
will involve no economic disturbances, no crises, no persecutions; in fact, the
countries they abandon will revive to a new period of prosperity. There will be
an inner migration of Christian citizens into the positions evacuated by Jews.
The outgoing current will be gradual, without any disturbance, and its initial
movement will put an end to Anti-Semitism. The Jews will leave as honored
friends, and if some of them return, they will receive the same favorable
welcome and treatment at the hands of civilized nations as is accorded to all
foreign visitors. Their exodus will have no resemblance to a flight, for it will
be a well-regulated movement under control of public opinion. The movement will
not only be inaugurated with absolute conformity to law, but it cannot even be
carried out without the friendly cooperation of interested Governments, who
would derive considerable benefits from it.
Security for the integrity
of the idea and the vigor of its execution will be found in the creation of a
body corporate, or corporation. This corporation will be called "The
Society of Jews." In addition to it there will be a Jewish company, an
economically productive body.
An individual who attempted
even to undertake this huge task alone would be either an impostor or a madman.
The personal character of the members of the corporation will guarantee its
integrity, and the adequate capital of the Company will prove its stability.
These prefatory remarks are
merely intended as a hasty reply to the mass of objections which the very words
"Jewish State" are certain to arouse. Henceforth we shall proceed more
slowly to meet further objections and to explain in detail what has been as yet
only indicated; and we shall try in the interests of this pamphlet to avoid
making it a dull exposition. Short aphoristic chapters will therefore best
answer the purpose.
If I wish to substitute a
new building for an old one, I must demolish before I construct. I shall
therefore keep to this natural sequence. In the first and general part 1 shall
explain my ideas, remove all prejudices, determine essential political and
economic conditions, and develop the plan.
In the special part, which
is divided into three principal sections, I shall describe its execution. These
three sections are: The Jewish Company, Local Groups, and the Society of Jews.
The Society is to be created first, the Company last; but in this exposition the
reverse order is preferable, because it is the financial soundness of the
enterprise which will chiefly be called into question, and doubts on this score
must be removed first.
In the conclusion, I shall
try to meet every further objection that could possibly be made. My Jewish
readers will, I hope, follow me patiently to the end. Some will naturally make
their objections in an order of succession other than that chosen for their
refutation. But whoever finds his doubts dispelled should give allegiance to the
cause.
Although I speak of reason,
I am fully aware that reason alone will not suffice. Old prisoners do not
willingly leave their cells. We shall see whether the youth whom we need are at
our command--the youth, who irresistibly draw on the old, carry them forward on
strong arms, and transform rational motives into enthusiasm.
II.
T h e .. J e w i s h .. Q u
e s t i o n
__________
No one can deny the gravity of the situation of the Jews. Wherever they live in
perceptible numbers, they are more or less persecuted. Their equality before the
law, granted by statute, has become practically a dead letter. They are debarred
from filling even moderately high positions, either in the army, or in any
public or private capacity. And attempts are made to thrust them out of business
also: "Don't buy from Jews!"
Attacks in Parliaments, in
assemblies, in the press, in the pulpit, in the street, on journeys--for
example, their exclusion from certain hotels--even in places of recreation,
become daily more numerous. The forms of persecution varying according to the
countries and social circles in which they occur. In Russia, imposts are levied
on Jewish villages; in Rumania, a few persons are put to death; in Germany, they
get a good beating occasionally; in Austria, Anti-Semites exercise terrorism
over all public life; in Algeria, there are traveling agitators; in Paris, the
Jews are shut out of the so-called best social circles and excluded from clubs.
Shades of anti-Jewish feeling are innumerable. But this is not to be an attempt
to make out a doleful category of Jewish hardships.
I do not intend to arouse
sympathetic emotions on our behalf. That would be foolish, futile, and
undignified proceeding. I shall content myself with putting the following
questions to the Jews: Is it not true that, in countries where we live in
perceptible numbers, the position of Jewish lawyers, doctors, technicians,
teachers, and employees of all descriptions becomes daily more intolerable? Is
it not true, that the Jewish middle classes are seriously threatened? Is it not
true, that the passions of the mob are incited against our wealthy people? Is it
not true, that our poor endure greater sufferings than any other proletariat? I
think that this external pressure makes itself felt everywhere. In our
economically upper classes it causes discomfort, in our middle classes continual
and grave anxieties, in our lower classes absolute despair.
Everything tends, in fact,
to one and the same conclusion, which is clearly enunciated in that classic
Berlin phrase: "Juden Raus" (Out with the Jews !)
shall now put the Question
in the briefest possible form: Are we to "get out" now and where to?
Or, may we yet remain? And,
how long?
Let us first settle the
point of staying where we are. Can we hope for better days, can we possess our
souls in patience, can we wait in pious resignation till the princes and peoples
of this earth are more mercifully disposed towards us? I say that we cannot hope
for a change in the current of feeling. And why not? Even if we were as near to
the hearts of princes as are their other subjects, they could not protect us.
They would only feel popular hatred by showing us too much favor. By "too
much," I really mean less than is claimed as a right by every ordinary
citizen, or by every race. The nations in whose midst Jews live are all either
covertly or openly Anti-Semitic.
The common people have not,
and indeed cannot have, any historic comprehension. They do not know that the
sins of the Middle Ages are now being visited on the nations of Europe. We are
what the Ghetto made us. We have attained pre-eminence in finance, because
mediaeval conditions drove us to it. The same process is now being repeated. We
are again being forced into finance, now it is the stock exchange, by being kept
out of other branches of economic activity. Being on the stock exchange, we are
consequently exposed afresh to contempt. At the same time we continue to produce
an abundance of mediocre intellects who find no outlet, and this endangers our
social position as much as does our increasing wealth. Educated Jews without
means are now rapidly becoming Socialists. Hence we are certain to suffer very
severely in the struggle between classes, because we stand in the most exposed
position in the camps of both Socialists and capitalists.
PREVIOUS
ATTEMPTS AT A SOLUTION
The artificial means
heretofore employed to overcome the troubles of Jews have been either too petty
-- such as attempts at colonization -- or attempts to convert the Jews into
peasants in their present homes. What is achieved by transporting a few thousand
Jews to another country? Either they come to grief at once, or prosper, and then
their prosperity creates Anti-Semitism. We have already discussed these attempts
to divert poor Jews to fresh districts. This diversion is clearly inadequate and
futile, if it does not actually defeat its own ends; for it merely protracts and
postpones a solution, and perhaps even aggravates difficulties.
Whoever would attempt to
convert the Jew into a hushandman would be making an extraordinary mistake. For
a peasant is in a historical category, as proved by his costume which in some
countries he has worn for centuries; and by his tools, which are identical with
those used by his earliest forefathers. His plough is unchanged; he carries the
seed in his apron; mows with the historical scythe, and threshes with the
time-honored flail. But we know that all this can be done by machinery. The
agrarian question is only a question of machinery. America must conquer Europe,
in the same way as large landed possessions absorb small ones. The peasant is
consequently a type which is in course of extinction. Whenever he is
artificially preserved, it is done on account of the political interests which
he is intended to serve. It is absurd, and indeed impossible, to make modern
peasants on the old pattern. No one is wealthy or powerful enough to make
civilization take a single retrograde step. The mere preservation of obsolete
institutions is a task severe enough to require the enforcement of all the
despotic measures of an autocratically governed State.
Are we, therefore, to credit
Jews who are intelligent with a desire to become peasants of the old type? One
might just as well say to them: "Here is a cross-bow: now go to war!"
What? With a cross-bow, while the others have rifles and long range guns? Under
these circumstances the Jews' are perfectly justified in refusing to stir when
people try to make peasants of them. A cross-bow is a beautiful weapon, which
inspires me with mournful feelings when I have time to devote to them. But it
belongs by rights to a museum. Now, there certainly are districts to which
desperate Jews go out, or at any rate, are willing to go out and till the soil.
And a little observation shows that these districts -- such as the enclave of
Hesse in Germany, and some provinces in Russia -- these very districts are the
principal seats of Anti-Semitism.
For the world's reformers,
who send the Jews to the plough, forget a very important person, who has a great
deal to say on the matter. This person is the agriculturist, and the
agriculturist is also perfectly justified. For the tax on land, the risks
attached to crops, the pressure of large proprietors who cheapen labor, and
American competition in particular, combine to make his life hard enough.
Besides, the duties on corn cannot go on increasing indefinitely. Nor can the
manufacturer be allowed to starve; his political influence is, in fact, in the
ascendant, and he must therefore be treated with additional consideration.
All these difficulties are
well known, therefore I refer to them only cursorily. I merely wanted to
indicate clearly how futile had been past attempts -- most of them well
intentioned -- to solve the Jewish Question. Neither a diversion of the stream,
nor an artificial depression of the intellectual level of our proletariat, will
overcome the difficulty. The supposed infallible expedient of assimilation has
already been dealt with. We cannot get the better of Anti-Semitism by any of
these methods. It cannot die out so long as its causes are not removed. Are they
removable?
CAUSES OF
ANTI-SEMITISM
We shall not again touch on
those causes which are a result of temperament, prejudice and narrow views, but
shall here restrict ourselves to political and economical causes alone. Modern
Anti-Semitism is not to be confounded with the religious persecution of the Jews
of former times. It does occasionally take a religious bias in some countries,
but the main current of the aggressive movement has now changed. In the
principal countries where Anti-Semitism prevails, it does so as a result of the
emancipation of the Jews. When civilized nations awoke to the inhumanity of
discriminatory legislation and enfranchised us, our enfranchisement came too
late. It was no longer possible to remove our disabilities in our old homes. For
we had, curiously enough, developed while in the Ghetto into a bourgeois people,
and we stepped out of it only to enter into fierce competition with the middle
classes. Hence, our emancipation set us suddenly within this middle-class
circle, where we have a double pressure to sustain, from within and from
without. The Christian bourgeoisie would not be unwilling to cast us as a
sacrifice to Socialism, though that would not greatly improve matters.
At the same time, the equal
rights of Jews before the law cannot be withdrawn where they have once been
conceded. Not only because their withdrawal would be opposed to the spirit of
our age, but also because it would immediately drive all Jews, rich and poor
alike, into the ranks of subversive parties. Nothing effectual can really be
done to our injury. In olden days our jewels were seized. How is our movable
property to be got hold of now? It consists of printed papers which are locked
up somewhere or other in the world, perhaps in the coffers of Christians. It is,
of course, possible to get at shares and debentures in railways, banks and
industrial undertakings of all descriptions by taxation, and where the
progressive income-tax is in force all our movable property can eventually be
laid hold of. But all these efforts cannot be directed against Jews alone, and
wherever they might nevertheless be made, severe economic crises would be their
immediate consequences, which would be by no means confined to the Jews who
would be the first affected. The very impossibility of getting at the Jews
nourishes and embitters hatred of them. Anti-Semitism increases day by day and
hour by hour among the nations; indeed, it is bound to increase, because the
causes of its growth continue to exist and cannot be removed. Its remote cause
is our loss of the power of assimilation during the Middle Ages; its immediate
cause is our excessive production of mediocre intellects, who cannot find an
outlet downwards or upwards -- that is to say, no wholesome outlet in either
direction. When we sink, we become a revolutionary proletariat, the subordinate
officers of all revolutionary parties; and at the same time, when we rise, there
rises also our terrible power of the purse.
EFFECTS OF
ANTI-SEMITISM
The oppression we endure
does not improve us, for we are not a whit better than ordinary people. It is
true that we do not love our enemies; but he alone who can conquer himself dare
reproach us with that fault. Oppression naturally creates hostility against
oppressors, and our hostility aggravates the pressure. It is impossible to
escape from this eternal circle.
"No!" Some
soft-hearted visionaries will say: "No, it is possible! Possible by means
of the ultimate perfection of humanity."
s it necessary to point to
the sentimental folly of this view? He who would found his hope for improved
conditions on the ultimate perfection of humanity would indeed be relying upon a
Utopia ! referred previously to our "assimilation". I do not for a
moment wish to imply that I desire such an end. Our national character is too
historically famous, and, in spite of every degradation, too fine to make its
annihilation desirable. We might perhaps be able to merge ourselves entirely
into surrounding races, if these were to leave us in peace for a period of two
generations. But they will not leave us in peace. For a little period they
manage to tolerate us, and then their hostility breaks out again and again. The
world is provoked somehow by our prosperity, because it has for many centuries
been accustomed to consider us as the most contemptible among the
poverty-stricken. In its ignorance and narrowness of heart, it fails to observe
that prosperity weakens our Judaism and extinguishes our peculiarities. It is
only pressure that forces us back to the parent stem; it is only hatred
encompassing us that makes us strangers once more. Thus, whether we like it or
not, we are now, and shall henceforth remain, a historic group with unmistakable
characteristics common to us all.
We are one people--our
enemies have made us one without our consent, as repeatedly happens in history.
Distress binds us together, and, thus united, we suddenly discover our strength.
Yes, we are strong enough to form a State, and, indeed, a model State. We
possess all human and material resources necessary for the purpose.
This is therefore the
appropriate place to give an account of what has been somewhat roughly termed
our "human material." But it would not be appreciated till the broad
lines of the plan, on which everything depends, has first been marked out.
THE PLAN
The whole plan is in its
essence perfectly simple, as it must necessarily be if it is to come within the
comprehension of all.
Let the sovereignty be
granted us over a portion of the globe large enough to satisfy the rightful
requirements of a nation; the rest we shall manage for ourselves.
The creation of a new State
is neither ridiculous nor impossible. We have in our day witnessed the process
in connection with nations which were not largely members of the middle class,
but poorer, less educated, and consequently weaker than ourselves. The
Governments of all countries scourged by Anti-Semitism will be keenly interested
in assisting us to obtain the sovereignty we want.
The plan, simple in design,
but complicated in execution, will be carried out by two agencies: The Society
of Jews and the Jewish Company.
The Society of Jews will do
the preparatory work in the domains of science and politics, which the Jewish
Company will afterwards apply practically.
The Jewish Company will be
the liquidating agent of the business interests of departing Jews, and will
organize commerce and trade in the new country.
We must not imagine the
departure of the Jews to be a sudden one. It will be gradual, continuous, and
will cover many decades. The poorest will go first to cultivate the soil. In
accordance with a preconceived plan, they will construct roads, bridges,
railways and telegraph installations; regulate rivers; and build their own
dwellings; their labor will create trade, trade will create markets and markets
will attract new settlers, for every man will go voluntarily, at his own expense
and his own risk. The labor expended on the land will enhance its value, and the
Jews will soon perceive that a new and permanent sphere of operation is opening
here for that spirit of enterprise which has heretofore met only with hatred and
obloquy.
If we wish to found a State
today, we shall not do it in the way which would have been the only possible one
a thousand years ago. It is foolish to revert to old stages of civilization, as
many Zionists would like to do. Supposing, for example, we were obliged to clear
a country of wild beasts, we should not set about the task in the fashion of
Europeans of the fifth century. We should not take spear and lance and go out
singly in pursuit of bears; we would organize a large and active hunting party,
drive the animals together, and throw a melinite bomb into their midst.
If we wish to conduct
building operations, we shall not plant a mass of stakes and piles on the shore
of a lake, but we shall build as men build now. Indeed, we shall build in a
bolder and more stately style than was ever adopted before, for we now possess
means which men never yet possessed.
The emigrants standing
lowest in the economic scale will be slowly followed by those of a higher grade.
Those who at this moment are living in despair will go first. They will be led
by the mediocre intellects which we produce so superabundantly and which are
persecuted everywhere.
This pamphlet will open a
general discussion on the Jewish Question, but that does not mean that there
will be any voting on it. Such a result would ruin the cause from the outset,
and dissidents must remember that allegiance or opposition is entirely
voluntary. He who will not come with us should remain behind.
Let all who are willing to
join us, fall in behind our banner and fight for our cause with voice and pen
and deed.
Those Jews who agree with
our idea of a State will attach themselves to the Society, which will thereby be
authorized to confer and treat with Governments in the name of our people. The
Society will thus be acknowledged in its relations with Governments as a
State-creating power. This acknowledgment will practically create the State.
Should the Powers declare
themselves willing to admit our sovereignty over a neutral piece of land, then
the Society will enter into negotiations for the possession of this land. Here
two territories come under consideration, Palestine and Argentine. In both
countries important experiments in colonization have been made, though on the
mistaken principle of a gradual infiltration of Jews. An infiltration is bound
to end badly. It continues till the inevitable moment when the native population
feels itself threatened, and forces the Government to stop a further influx of
Jews. Immigration is consequently futile unless we have the sovereign right to
continue such immigration.
The Society of Jews will
treat with the present masters of the land, putting itself under the
protectorate of the European Powers, if they prove friendly to the plan. We
could offer the present possessors of the land enormous advantages, assume part
of the public debt, build new roads for traffic, which our presence in the
country would render necessary, and do many other things. The creation of our
State would be beneficial to adjacent countries, because the cultivation of a
strip of land increases the value of its surrounding districts in innumerable
ways.
PALESTINE OR
ARGENTINE?
Shall we choose Palestine or
Argentine? We shall take what is given us, and what is selected by Jewish public
opinion. The Society will determine both these points.
Argentine is one of the most
fertile countries in the world, extends over a vast area, has a sparse
population and a mild climate. The Argentine Republic would derive considerable
profit from the cession of a portion of its territory to us. The present
infiltration of Jews has certainly produced some discontent, and it would be
necessary to enlighten the Republic on the intrinsic difference of our new
movement.
Palestine is our
ever-memorable historic home. The very name of Palestine would attract our
people with a force of marvelous potency. If His Majesty the Sultan were to give
us Palestine, we could in return undertake to regulate the whole finances of
Turkey. We should there form a portion of a rampart of Europe against Asia, an
outpost of civilization as opposed to barbarism. We should as a neutral State
remain in contact with all Europe, which would have to guarantee our existence.
The sanctuaries of Christendom would be safeguarded by assigning to them an
extra-territorial status such as is well-known to the law of nations. We should
form a guard of honor about these sanctuaries, answering for the fulfillment of
this duty with our existence. This guard of honor would be the great symbol of
the solution of the Jewish question after eighteen centuries of Jewish
suffering.
DEMAND,
MEDIUM, TRADE
I said in the last chapter,
"The Jewish Company will organize trade and commerce in the new
country." I shall here insert a few remarks on that point.
A scheme such as mine is
gravely imperiled if it is opposed by "practical" people. Now
"practical" people are as a rule nothing more than men sunk into the
groove of daily routine, unable to emerge from a narrow circle of antiquated
ideas. At the same time, their adverse opinion carries great weight, and can do
considerable harm to a new project, at any rate until this new thing is
sufficiently strong to throw the "practical" people and their mouldy
notions to the winds.
In the earliest period of
European railway construction some "practical" people were of the
opinion that it was foolish to build certain lines "because there were not
even sufficient passengers to fill the mail-coaches." They did not realize
the truth -- which now seems obvious to us -- that travelers do not produce
railways, but, conversely, railways produce travelers, the latent demand, of
course, is taken for granted.
The impossibility of
comprehending how trade and commerce are to be created in a new country which
has yet to be acquired and cultivated, may be classed with those doubts of
"practical" persons concerning the need of railways. A
"practical" person would express himself somewhat in this fashion:
"Granted that the
present situation of the Jews is in many plates unendurable, and aggravated day
by day; granted that there exists a desire to emigrate; granted even that the
Jews do emigrate to the new country; how will they earn their living there, and
what will they earn? What are they to live on when there! The business of many
people cannot be artificially organized in a day.
To this I should reply: We
have not the slightest intention of organizing trade artificially, and we should
certainly not attempt to do it in a day. But, though the organization of it may
be impossible, the promotion of it is not. And how is commerce to be encouraged?
Through the medium of a demand. The demand recognized, the medium created, it
will establish itself.
If there is a real earnest
demand among Jews for an improvement of their status; if the medium to be
created -- the Jewish Company -- is sufficiently powerful, then commerce will
extend itself freely in the new country.
III.
T h e .. J e w i s h
.. C o m p a n y
__________
OUTLINES
The Jewish Company is partly
modeled on the lines of a great land-acquisition company. It might be called a
Jewish Chartered Company, though it cannot exercise sovereign power, and has
other than purely colonial tasks.
The Jewish Company will be
founded as a joint stock company subject to English jurisdiction, framed
according to English laws, and under the protection of England. Its principal
center will be London. I cannot tell yet how large the Company's capital should
be; I shall leave that calculation to our numerous financiers. But to avoid
ambiguity, I shall put it at a thousand million marks (about £50,000,000 or
$200,000,000); it may be either more or less than that sum. The form of
subscription, which will be further elucidated, will determine what fraction of
the whole amount must be paid in at once.
The Jewish Company is an
organization with a transitional character. It is strictly a business
undertaking, and must be carefully distinguished from the Society of Jews.
The Jewish Company will
first of all convert into cash all vested interests left by departing Jews. The
method adopted will prevent the occurrences of crises, secure every man's
property, and facilitate that inner migration of Christian citizens which has
already been indicated.
NON-TRANSFERABLE
GOODS
The non-transferable goods
which come under consideration are buildings, land, and local business
connections. The Jewish Company will at first take upon itself no more than the
necessary negotiations for effecting the sale of these goods. These Jewish sales
will take place freely and without any serious fall in prices. The Company's
branch establishments in various towns will become the central offices for the
sale of Jewish estates, and will charge only so much commission on transactions
as will ensure their financial stability.
The development of this
movement may cause a considerable fall in the prices of landed property, and may
eventually make it impossible to find a market for it. At this juncture the
Company will enter upon another branch of its functions. It will take over the
management of abandoned estates till such time as it can dispose of them to the
greatest advantage. It will collect house rents, let out land on lease, and
install business managers -- these, on account of the required supervision,
being, if possible, tenants also. The Company will endeavor everywhere to
facilitate the acquisition of land by its tenants, who are Christians. It win,
indeed, gradually replace its own officials in the European branches by
Christian substitutes (lawyers, etc.); and these are not by any means to become
servants of the Jews; they are intended to be free agents to the Christian
population, so that everything may be carried through in equity, fairness and
justice, and without imperiling the internal welfare of the people.
At the same time the Company
will sell estates, or, rather, exchange them. For a house it will offer a house
in the new country; and for land, land in the new country; everything being, if
possible, transferred to the new soil in the same state as it was in the old.
And this transfer will be a great and recognized source of profit to the
Company. "Over there" the houses offered in exchange will be newer,
more beautiful, and more comfortably fitted, and the landed estates of greater
value than those abandoned; but they will cost the Company comparatively little,
because it will have bought the ground very cheaply.
PURCHASE OF
LAND
The land which the Society
of Jews will have secured by international law must, of course, be privately
acquired. Provisions made by individuals for their own settlement do not come
within the province of this general account. But the Company will require large
areas for its own needs and ours, and these it must secure by centralized
purchase. It will negotiate principally for the acquisition of fiscal domains,
with the great object of taking possession of this land "over there"
without paying a price too high, in the same way as it sells here without
accepting one too low. A forcing of prices is not to be considered, because the
value of the land will be created by the Company through its organizing the
settlement in conjunction with the supervising Society of Jews. The latter will
see to it that the enterprise does not become a Panama, but a Suez.
The Company will sell
building sites at reasonable rates to its officials, and will allow them to
mortgage these for the building of their homes, deducting the amount due from
their salaries, or putting it down to their account as increased emolument. This
will, in addition to the honors they expect, will be additional pay for their
services.
All the immense profits of
this speculation in land will go to the Company, which is bound to receive this
indefinite premium in return for having borne the risk of the undertaking. When
the undertaking involves any risk, the profits must be freely given to those who
have borne it. But under no other circumstances will profits be permitted.
Financial morality consists in the correlation of risk and profit. BUILDINGS
The Company will thus barter
houses and estates. It must be plain to any one who has observed the rise in the
value of land through its cultivation that the Company will be bound to gain on
its landed property. This can best be seen in the case of enclosed pieces of
land in town and country. Areas not built over increase in value through
surrounding cultivation. The men who carried out the extension of Paris made a
successful speculation in land which was ingenious in its simplicity; instead of
erecting new buildings in the immediate vicinity of the last houses of the town,
they bought up adjacent pieces of land, and began to build on the outskirts of
these. This inverse order of construction raised the value of building sites
with extraordinary rapidity, and, after having completed the outer ring, they
built in the middle of the town on these highly valuable sites, instead of
continually erecting houses at the extremity.
Will the Company do its own
building, or employ independent architects! It can, and will, do both. It has,
as will be shown shortly, an immense reserve of working power, which will not be
sweated by the Company, but, transported into brighter and happier conditions of
life, will nevertheless not be expensive. Our geologists will have looked to the
provision of building materials when they selected the sites of the towns.
What is to be the principle
of construction?
WORKMEN'S
DWELLINGS
The workmen's dwellings
(which include the dwellings of all operatives) will be erected at the Company's
own risk and expense. They will resemble neither those melancholy workmen's
barracks of European towns, nor those miserable rows of shanties which surround
factories; they will certainly present a uniform appearance, because the Company
must build cheaply where it provides the building materials to a great extent;
but the detached houses in little gardens will be united into attractive groups
in each locality. The natural conformation of the land will rouse the ingenuity
of our young architects, whose ideas have not yet been cramped by routine; and
even ii the people do not grasp the whole import of the plan, they will at any
rate feel at ease in their loose clusters. The Temple will be visible from long
distances, for it is only our ancient faith that has kept us together. There
will be light, attractive, healthy schools for children, conducted on the most
approved modern systems. There will be continuation-schools for workmen, which
will educate them in greater technical knowledge and enable them to be come
intimate with the working of machinery. There will be places of amusement for
the proper conduct of which the Society of Jews will be responsible.
We are, however, speaking
merely of the buildings at present, and not of what may take place inside of
them.
I said that the Company
would build workmen's dwellings cheaply. And cheaply, not only because of the
proximity of abundant building materials, not only because of the Company's
proprietorship of the sites, but also because of the non-payment of workmen.
American farmers work on the
system of mutual assistance in the construction of houses. This childishly
amicable system, which is as clumsy as the block-houses erected, can be
developed on much finer lines.
UNSKILLED
LABORERS
Our unskilled laborers, who
will come at first from the great reservoirs of Russia and Rumania, must, of
course, render each other assistance, in the construction of houses. They will
be obliged to build with wood in the beginning, because iron will not be
immediately available. Later on the original, inadequate, makeshift buildings
will be replaced by superior dwellings.
Our unskilled laborers will
first mutually erect these shelters; and then they will earn their houses as
permanent possessions by means of their work -- not immediately, but after three
years of good conduct. In this way we shall secure energetic and able men, and
these men will be practically trained for life by three years of labor under
good discipline. I said before that the Company would not have to pay these
unskilled laborers. What will they live on?
On the whole, I am opposed
to the Truck system, [the practice of paying the workman's wages in goods
instead of money.] but it will have to be applied in the case of these first
settlers. The Company provides for them in so many ways, that it may take charge
of their maintenance. In any case the Truck system will be enforced only during
the first few years, and it will benefit the workmen by preventing their being
exploited by small traders, landlords, etc. The Company will thus make it
impossible from the outset for those of our people, who are perforce hawkers and
peddlers here, to reestablish themselves in the same trades over there. And the
Company will also keep back drunkards and dissolute men. Then will there be no
payment of wages at all during the first period of settlement. Certainly, there
will be wages for overtime.
THE
SEVEN-HOUR DAY
The seven-hour day is the
regular working day.
This does not imply that
wood-cutting, digging, stone-breaking, and a hundred other daily tasks should
only t performed during seven hours. Indeed not. There will t fourteen hours of
labor, work being done in shifts of three and a half hours. The organization of
all this will be military in character; there will be commands, promotions and
pensions, the means by which these pensions are provided being explained further
on.
A sound man can do a great
deal of concentrated work in three and a half hours. After an interval of the
same length of time -- which he will devote to rest, to his family and to his
education under guidance -- he will be quite fresh for work again. Such labor
can do wonders. The seven-hour day thus implies fourteen hours of joint labor --
more than that cannot be put into a day.
I am convinced that it is
quite possible to introduce the seven-hour day with success. The attempts to do
so in Belgium and England are well known. Some advance political economists who
have studied the subject, declare that a five-hour day would suffice. The
Society of Jew and the Jewish Company will, in any case, make net and extensive
experiments which will benefit the other nations of the world; and if the
seven-hour day prove itself practicable, it will be introduced in our future
State as the legal and regular working day.
Meantime, the Company will
always allow its employee the seven-hour day; and it will always be in a
position to do so.
The seven-hour day will be
the call to summon our people in every part of the world. All must come
voluntarily, for ours must indeed be the Promised Land. ..
Whoever works longer than
seven hours receives his additional pay for overtime in cash. Seeing that all
his needs are supplied, and that those members of his family who are unable to
work are provided for by transplanted and centralized philanthropic
institutions, he can save a little money. Thrift, which is already a
characteristic of our people, should be greatly encouraged, because it will, in
the first place, facilitate the rise of individuals to higher grades; and
secondly, the money saved will provide an immense reserve fund for future loans.
Overtime will only be permitted on a doctor's certificate, and must not exceed
three hours. For our men will crowd to work in the new country, and the world
will see then what an industrious people we are.
I shall nut describe the
mode of carrying out the Truck system, nor, in fact, the innumerable details of
any process, for fear of confusing my readers. Women will not be allowed to
perform any arduous labor, nor to work overtime.
Pregnant women will be
relieved of all work, and will be supplied with nourishing food by the Truck. We
want our future generations to be strong men and women.
We shall educate children as
we wish from the commencement; but this I shall not elaborate either.
My remarks on workmen's
dwellings, and on unskilled laborers and their mode of life, are no more Utopian
than the rest of my scheme. Everything I have spoken of is already being put
into practice, only on an utterly small scale, neither noticed nor understood.
The "Assistance par le Travail," which I learned to know and
understand in Paris, was of great service to me in the solution of the Jewish
question.
RELIEF BY
LABOR
The system of relief by
labor which is now applied in Paris, in many other French towns, in England, in
Switzerland, and in America, is a very small thing, but capable of the greatest
expansion.
What is the principle of
relief by labor?
The principle is: to furnish
every needy man with easy, unskilled work, such as chopping wood, or cutting
faggots used for lighting stoves in Paris households. This is a kind of
prison-work before the crime, done without loss of character. It is meant to
prevent men from taking to crime out of want, by providing them with work and
testing their willingness to do it. Starvation must never be allowed to drive
men to suicide; for such suicides are the deepest disgrace to a civilization
which allows rich men to throw tid-bits to their dogs.
Relief by labor thus
provides every one with work. But the system has a great defect; there is not a
sufficiently large demand for the production of the unskilled workers employed,
hence there is a loss to those who employ them; though it is true that the
organization is philanthropic, and therefore prepared for loss. But here the
benefaction lies only in the difference between the price paid for the work and
its actual value: Instead of giving the beggar two sous, the institution
supplies him with work on which it loses two sous. But at the same time it
converts the good-for-nothing beggar into an honest breadwinner, who has earned
perhaps 1 franc 50 centimes. 150 centimes for 10! That is to say, the receiver
of a benefaction in which there is nothing humiliating has increased it
fifteenfold! That is to say, fifteen thousand millions for one thousand millions
!
The institution certainly
loses 10 centimes. But the Jewish Company will not lose one thousand millions;
it will draw enormous profits from this expenditure .
There is a moral side also.
The small system of relief by labor which exists now preserves rectitude through
industry till such time as the man who is out of work finds a post suitable to
his capacities, either in his old calling or in a new one. He is allowed a few
hours daily for the purpose of looking for a place, in which task the
institutions assist him.
The defect of these small
organizations, so far, has be that they have been prohibited from entering into
competition with timber merchants, etc. Timber merchants are electors; they
would protest, and would be justified in protesting. Competition with State
prison-labor has al been forbidden, for the State must occupy and feed
criminals.
In fact, there is very
little room in an old-establish society for the successful application of the
system "Assistance par le Travail." But there is room in a new
society.
For, above all we require
enormous numbers of unskilled laborers to do the first rough work of settlement,
to lay down roads, plant trees, level the ground, construct railroads, telegraph
installations, etc. All this will be carried out in accordance with a large and
previously settled plan.
COMMERCE
The labor carried to the new
country will naturally create trade. The first markets will supply only the
absolute necessities of life; cattle, grain, working clothes, tools, arms -- to
mention just a few things. These we shall obliged at first to procure from
neighboring States, or from Europe; but we shall make ourselves independent as
soon as possible. The Jewish entrepreneurs will soon realize the business
prospects that the new country offers.
The army of the Company's
officials will gradually introduce more refined requirements of life. (Officials
include officers of our defensive forces, who will always form about a tenth
part of our male colonists. They will be sufficiently numerous to quell
mutinies, for the majority of our colonists will be peaceably inclined.)
The refined requirements of
life introduced by our officials in good positions will create a correspondingly
improved market, which will continue to better itself. The married man will send
for wife and children, and the single for parents and relatives, as soon as a
new home is established "over there." The Jews who emigrate to the
United States always proceed in this fashion. As soon as one of them has daily
bread and a roof over his head, he sends for his people; for family ties are
strong among us. The Society of Jews and the Jewish Company will unite in caring
for and strengthening the family still more, not only morally, but materially
also. The officials will receive additional pay on marriage and on the birth of
children, for we need all who are there, and all who will follow.
OTHER CLASSES
OF DWELLINGS
I described before only
workmen's dwellings built by themselves, and omitted all mention of other
classes of dwellings. These I shall now touch upon. The Company's architects
will build for the poorer classes of citizens also, being paid in kind or cash;
about a hundred different types of houses will be erected, and, of course,
repeated. These beautiful types will form part of our propaganda. The soundness
of their construction will be guaranteed by the Company, which will, indeed,
gain nothing by selling them to settlers at a fixed sum. And where will these
houses be situated? That will be shown in the section dealing with Local Groups.
Seeing that the Company does
not wish to earn anything on the building works but only on the land, it will
desire as many architects as possible to build by private contract. This system
will increase the value of landed property, and it will introduce luxury, which
serves many purposes. Luxury encourages arts and industries, paving the way to a
future subdivision of large properties
Rich Jews who are now
obliged carefully to secrete their valuables, and to hold their dreary banquets
behind lowered curtains, will be able to enjoy their possessions in peace
"over there." If they cooperate in carrying out this emigration
scheme, their capital will be rehabilitated and will have served to promote an
unexampled undertaking. If in the new settlement rich Jews begin to rebuild
their mansions which are stared at in Europe with such envious eyes, it will
soon become fashionable to live over there in beautiful modern houses.
SOME FORMS OF
LIQUIDATION
The Jewish Company is
intended to be the receiver and administrator of the non-transferable goods of
the Jews.
Its methods of procedure can
be easily imagined in the case of houses and estates, but what methods will it
adopt in the transfer of businesses?
Here numberless processes
may be found practicable, which cannot all be enlarged on in this outline. But
none of them will present any great difficulties, for in each case the business
proprietor, when he voluntarily decides to emigrate, will settle with the
Company's officers in his district on the most advantageous form of liquidation.
This will most easily be
arranged in the case of small employers, in whose trades the personal activity
of the proprietor is of chief importance, while goods and organization are a
secondary consideration. The Company will provide a certain field of operation
for the emigrant's personal activity, and will substitute a piece of ground,
with loan of machinery, for his goods. Jews are known to adapt themselves with
remarkable ease to any form of earning a livelihood, and they will quickly learn
to carry on a new industry. In this way a number of small traders will become
small landholders. The Company will, in fact, be prepared to sustain what
appears to be a loss in taking over the non-transferable property of the poorest
emigrants; for it will thereby induce the free cultivation of tracts of land,
which raises the value of adjacent tracts.
In medium-sized businesses,
where goods and organization equal, or even exceed, in importance, the personal
activity of the manager, whose larger connection is also non-transferable,
various forms of liquidation are possible. Here comes an opportunity for that
inner migration of Christian citizens into positions evacuated by Jews. The
departing Jew will not lose his personal business credit, but will carry it with
him, and make good use of it in a new country to establish himself. The Jewish
Company will open a current bank account for him. And he can sell the goodwill
of his original business, or hand it over to the control of managers under
supervision of the Company's officials. The managers may rent the business or
buy it, paying for it by installments. But the Company acts temporarily as
curator for the emigrants, in superintending, through its officers and lawyers,
the administration of their affairs, and seeing to the proper collection of all
payments.
If a Jew cannot sell his
business, or entrust it to a proxy or wish to give up its personal management,
he may stay where he is. The Jews who stay will be none the worse off, for they
will be relieved of the competition of those who leave, and will no longer hear
the Anti-Semitic cry: "Don't buy from Jews!"
If the emigrating business
proprietor wishes to carry on his old business in the new country, he can make
his arrangements for it from the very commencement. An example will best
illustrate my meaning. The film X carries on a large business in dry goods. The
head of the firm wishes to emigrate. He begins by setting up a branch
establishment in his future place of residence, and sending out samples of his
stock. The first poor settlers will be his first customers; these will be
followed by emigrants of a higher class, who require superior goods. X then
sends out newer goods, and eventually ships his newest. The branch establishment
begins to pay while the principal one is still in existence, so that X ends by
having two paying business-houses. He sells his original business or hands it
over to his Christian representative to manage, and goes off to take charge of
the new one.
Another and greater example:
Y and Son are large coal-traders, with mines and factories of their own. How is
so huge and complex a property to be liquidated' The mines and everything
connected with them might, in the first place, be bought up by the State, in
which they are situated. In the second place, the Jewish Company might take them
over, paying for them partly in land, partly in cash. A third method might be
the conversion of "Y and Son" into a limited company. A fourth method
might be the continued working of the business under the original proprietors,
who would return at intervals to inspect their property, as foreigners, and as
such, under the protection of law in every civilized State. All these
suggestions are carried out daily. A fifth and excellent method, and one which
might be particularly profitable, I shall merely indicate, because the existing
examples of its working are at present few, however ready the modern
consciousness may be to adopt them. Y and Son might sell their enterprise to the
collective body of their employees, who would form a cooperative society, with
Limited liability, and might perhaps pay the requisite sum with the help of the
State Treasury, which does not charge high interest.
The employees would then
gradually pay off the loan, which either the Government or the Jewish Company,
or even Y and Son, would have advanced to them.
The Jewish Company will be
prepared to conduct the transfer of the smallest affairs equally with the
largest. And whilst the Jews quietly emigrate and establish their new homes, the
Company acts as the great controlling body, which organizes the departure, takes
charge of deserted possessions, guarantees the proper conduct of the movement
with its own visible and tangible property, and provides permanent security for
those who have already settled
SECURITIES OF
THE COMPANY
What assurance will the
Company offer that the abandonment of countries will not cause their
impoverishment and produce economic crises?
I have already mentioned
that honest Anti-Semites, whilst preserving their independence, will combine
with our officials in controlling the transfer of our estates. But the State
revenues might suffer by the loss of a body of taxpayers, who, though little
appreciated as citizens, are highly valued in finance. The State should,
therefore, receive compensation for this loss. This we offer indirectly by
leaving in the country businesses which we have built up by means of Jewish
acumen and Jewish industry, by letting our Christian fellow-citizens move into
our evacuated positions, and by this facilitating the rise of numbers of people
to greater prosperity so peaceably and in so unparallelled a manner. The French
Revolution had a somewhat similar result, on a small scale, but it was brought
about by bloodshed on the guillotine in every province of France, and on the
battlefields of Europe. Moreover, inherited and acquired rights were destroyed,
and only cunning buyers enriched themselves by the purchase of State properties.
The Jewish Company will
offer to the States that come within its sphere of activity direct as well as
indirect advantages. It will give Governments the first offer of abandoned
Jewish property, and allow buyers most favorable conditions. Governments, again,
will be able to make use of this friendly appropriation of land for the purpose
of certain social improvements.
The Jewish Company will give
every assistance to Governments and Parliaments in their efforts to direct the
inner migration of Christian citizens.
The Jewish Company will also
pay heavy taxes. Its central office will be in London, so as to be under the
legal protection of a power which is not at present Anti-Semitic. But the
Company, if it is supported officially and semi-officially, will everywhere
provide a broad basis of taxatian. To this end, it will establish taxable branch
offices everywhere. Further, it will pay double duties on the two-fold transfer
of goods which it accomplishes. Even in transactions where the Company is really
nothing more than a real estate agency, it will temporarily appear as a
purchaser, and will be set down as the momentary possessor in the register of
landed property.
These are, of course, purely
calculable matters. It will have to be considered and decided in each place how
far the Company can go without running any risks of failure. And the Company
itself will confer freely with Finance ministers on the various points at issue.
Ministers will recognize the friendly spirit of our enterprise, and will
consequently offer every facility in their power necessary for the successful
achievement of the great undertaking.
Further and direct profit
will accrue to Governments from the transport of passengers and goods, and where
railways are State property the returns will be immediately recognizable. Where
they are held by private companies, the Jewish Company will receive favorable
terms for transport, in the same way as does every transmitter of goods on a
large scale. Freight and carriage must be made as cheap as possible for our
people, because every traveller will pay his own expenses. The middle classes
will travel with Cook's tickets, the poorer classes in emigrant trains. The
Company might make a good deal by reductions on passengers and goods; but here,
as elsewhere, it must adhere to its principle of not trying to raise its
receipts to a greater sum than will cover its working expenses.
In many places Jews have
control of the transport; and the transport businesses will be the first needed
by the Company and the first to be liquidated by it. The original owners of
these concerns will either enter the Company's service, or establish themselves
independently "over there." The new arrivals will certainly require
their assistance, and theirs being a paying profession, which they may and
indeed must exercise there to earn a living, numbers of these enterprising
spirits will depart. It is unnecessary to describe all the business details of
this monster expedition. They must be judiciously evolved out of the original
plan by many able men, who must apply their minds to achieving the best system.
SOME OF THE
COMPANY'S ACTIVITIES
Many activities will be
interconnected. For example: the Company will gradually introduce the
manufacture of goods into the settlements which will, of course, be extremely
primitive at their inception. Clothing, linens, and shaes will first of all be
manufactured for our own poor emigrants, who will be provided with new suits oi
clothing at the various European emigration centers. They will not receive these
clothes as alms, which might hurt their pride, but in exchange for old garments:
any loss the Company sustains by this transaction will be booked as a business
loss. Those who are absolutely without means will pay off their debt to the
Company by working over-time at a fair rate of wage.
Existing emigration
societies will be able to give valuable assistance here, for they will do for
the Company's colonists what they did before for departing Jews. The forms
ofsuch cooperation will easily be found.
Even the new clothing of the
poor settlers will have the symbolic meaning. "You are now entering on a
new life." The Society of Jews will see to it that long before the
departure and also during the journey a serious yet festive spirit is fostered
by means of prayers, popular lectures, instruction on the object of the
expedition, instruction on hygienic matters for their new places of residence,
and guidance in regard to their future work. For the Promised Land is the land
of work. On their arrival, the emigrants will be welcomed by our chief officials
with due solemnity, but without foolish exultation, for the Promised Land will
not yet have been conquered. But these poor people should already see that they
are at home.
The clothing industries of
the Company will, of course, not produce their goods without proper
organization. The Society of Jews will obtain from the local branches
information about the number, requirements and date of arrival of the settlers,
and will communicate all such information in good time to the Jewish Company. In
this way it will be possible to provide for them with every precaution.
PROMOTION OF
INDUSTRIES
The duties of the Jewish
Company and the Society of Jews cannot be kept strictly apart in this outline.
These two great bodies will have to work constantly in unison, the Company
depending on the moral authority and support of the Society, just as the Society
cannot dispense with the material assistance of the Company. For example, in the
organizing of the clothing industry, the quantity produced will at first be kept
down so as to preserve an equilibrium between supply and demand; and wherever
the Company undertakes the organization of new industries the same precaution
must be exercised.
But individual enterprise
must never be checked by the Company with its superior force. We shall only work
collectively when the immense difficulties of the task demand common action; we
shall, wherever possible, scrupulously respect the rights of the individual.
Private property, which is the economic basis of independence, shall be
developed freely and be respected by us. Our first unskilled laborers will at
once have the opportunity to work their way up to private proprietorship.
The spirit of enterprise
must, indeed, be encouraged in every possible way. Organization of industries
will be promoted by a judicious system of duties, by the employment of cheap raw
material, and by the institution of a board to collect and publish industrial
statistics.
But this spirit of
enterprise must be wisely encouraged, and risky speculation must be avoided.
Every new industry must be advertised for a long period before establishment, so
as to prevent failure on the part of those who might wish to start a similar
business six months later. Whenever a new industrial establishment is founded,
the Company should be informed, so that all those interested may obtain
information from it.
Industrialists will be able
to make use of centralized labor agencies, which will only receive a commission
large enough to ensure their continuance. The industrialists might, for example,
telegraph for 500 unskilled laborers for three days, three weeks, or three
months. The labor agency would then collect these 500 unskilled laborers from
every possible source, and despatch them at once to carry out the agricultural
or industrial enterprise. Parties of work-men will thus be systematically
drafted from place to place like a body of troops. These men will, of course,
not be sweated, but will work only a seven-hour day; and, in spite of their
change of locality, they will preserve their organization, work out their term
of service, and receive commands, promotions, and pensions. Some establishments
may, of course, be able to obtain their wiorkmen from other sources, if they
wish, but they will not find it easy to do so. The Society will be able to
prevent the introduction of non-Jewish work-slaves by boycotting obstinate
employers, by obstructing traffic, and by various other methods. The seven-hour
workers will therefore have to be taken, and we shall thus bring our people
gradually, and without coercion, to adopt the normal seven-hour day.
SETTLEMENT OF
SKILLED LABORERS
It is clear that what can be
done for unskilled workers can be even more easily done for skilled laborers.
These will work under similar regulations in the factories, and the central
labor agency will provide them when required.
Independent operatives and
small employers, must be carefully taught on account of the rapid progress of
scientific improvements, must acquire technical knowledge even if no longer very
young men, must studp the power of water, and appreciate the forces of
electricity. Independent workers must also be discovered and supplied by the
Society's agency. The local branch will apply, for example, to the central
office: "We want so many carpenters, locksmiths, glaziers, etc." The
central office will publish this demand, and the proper men will apply there for
the work. These would then travel with their families to the place where they
were wanted, and would remain there without feeling the pressure of undue
competition. A permanent and comfortable home would thus be provided for them.
METHOD OF
RAISING CAPITAL
The capital required for
establishing the Company was previously put at what seemed an absurdly high
figure. The amount actually necessary will be fixed by financiers, and will in
any case be a very considerable sum. There are three ways of raising this sum,
all of which the Society will take under consideration. This Society, the great
"Gestor" of the Jews, will be formed by our best and most upright men,
who must not derive any material advantage from their membership. Although the
Society cannot at the outset possess any but moral authority, this authority
will suffice to establish the credit of the Jewish Company in the nation's eyes.
The Jewish Company will be unable to succeed in its enterprise unless it has
received the Society's sanction; it will thus not be formed of any mere
indiscriminate group of financiers. For the Society will weigh, Select and
decide, and will not give its approbation till it is sure of the existence of a
sound basis ior the conscientious carrying out of the scheme. It will not permit
experiments with insufficient means, for this undertaking must succeed at the
first attempt. Any initial failure would compromise the whole idea for many
decades to come, or might even make its realization permanently impossible.
The three methods of raising
capital are: (1) Through big banks; (2) Through small and private banks; (3)
Through public subscription.
The first method of raising
capital is: Through big banks. The required sum could then be raised in the
shortest possible time among the large financial groups, after they had
discussed the advisability of the course. The great advantage of this method
would be that it would avoid the necessity of paying in the thousand millions
(to keep ta the original figure), immediately in its entirety. A further
advantage would be that the credit of these powerful financiers would also be of
service to the enterprise. Many latent political forces lie in our financial
power, that power which our enemies assert to be so effective. It might be so,
but actually it is not. Poor Jews feel only the hatred which this financial
power provokes; its use in alleviating their lot as a body, they have not yet
felt. The credit of our great Jewish financiers would have to be placed at the
service of the National Idea. But should these gentlemen, who are quite
satisfied with their lot, feel indisposed to do anything for their fellow-Jews
who re unjustly held responsible for the large possessions of certain
individuals, then the realization of this plan will afford an opportunity for
drawing a clear line of distinction between them and the rest of Jewry.
The great financiers,
moreover, will certainly not be asked to raise an amount so enormous out of pure
philanthropic motives; that would be expecting too much. The promoters and stock
holders of the Jewish Company are, on the contrary, expected to do agood piece
of business, and they will be able to calculate beforehand what their chances of
success are likely to be. For the Society of Jews will be in possession of all
documents and references which may serve to define the prospects of the Jewish
Company. The Society will in particular have investigated with exactitude the
extent of the new Jewish movement, so as to provide the Company promoters with
thoroughly reliable information on the amount of support they may expect. The
Society will also supply the Jewish Company with comprehensive modern Jewish
statistics, thus doing the work of what is called in France a "societé d'études,"
which undertakes all preliminary research previous to the financing of a great
undertaking. Even so, the enterprise may not receive the valuable assistance of
our moneyed magnates. These might, perhaps, even try to oppose the Jewish
movement by means of their secret agents. Such opposition we shall meet with
relentless determination.
Supposing that these
magnates are content simply to turn this scheme down with a smile:
Is it, therefore, done for?
No.
For then the money will be
raised in another way -- by an appeal to moderately rich Jews. The smaller
Jewish banks would have to be united in the name of the National Idea against
the big banks till they were gathered into a second and formidable financial
force. But, unfortunately, this would require a great deal of financing at first
-- for the £50,000,000 would have to be subscribed in full before starting
work; and, as this sum could only be raised very slowly, all sorts of banking
business would have to be done and loans made during the first few years. It
might even occur that, in the course of all these transactions, their original
object would be forgotten; the moderately rich Jews would have created a new and
large business, and Jewish emigration would be forgotten.
The notion of raising money
in this way is not by any means impracticable. The experiment of collecting
Christian money to form an opposing force to the big banks has already been
tried; that one could also oppose them with Jewish money has not been thought of
until now. But these financial conflicts would bring about all sorts of crises;
the countries in which they occurred would suffer, and Anti-Semitism would
become rampant.
This method is therefore not
to be recommended. I have merely suggested it, because it comes up in the course
of the logical development of the idea.
I also do not know whether
smaller private banks would be willing to adopt it.
In any case, even the
refusal of moderately rich Jews would not put an end to the scheme. On the
contrary, it would then have to be taken up in real earnest.
The Society of Jews, whose
members are not business men, might try to found the Company on a national
subscription.
The Company's capital might
be raised, without the intermediary of a syndicate, by means of direct
subscription on the part of the public. Not only poor Jews, but also Christians
who wanted to get rid of them, would subscribe a small amount to this fund. A
new and peculiar form of the plebiscite would thus be established, whereby each
man who voted for this solution of the Jewish Question would express his opinion
by subscribing a stipulated amount. This stipulation would produce security. The
funds subscribed would only be paid in if their sum total reached the required
amount, otherwise the initial payments would be returned.
But if the whole of the
required sum is raised by popular subscription, then each little amount would be
secured by the great numbers of other small amounts.
All this would, of course,
need the express and definite assistance of interested Governments.
IV.
L o c a l .. G r o u p s
__________
OUR
TRANSMIGRATION
Previous chapters explained
only how the emigration scheme might be carried out without creating any
economic disturbance. But so great a movement cannot take place without
inevitably rousing many deep and powerful feelings. There are old customs, old
memories that attach us to our homes. We have cradles, we have graves, and we
alone know how Jewish hearts cling to the graves. Our cradles we shall carry
with us -- they bold our future, rosy and smiling. Our beloved graves we must
abandon -- and I think this abandonment will cost us more than any other
sacrifice. But it must be so.
Economic distress, political
pressure, and social obloquy have already driven us from our homes and from our
graves. We' Jews are even now constantly shifting from place to place, a strong
current actually carrying us westward over the sea to the United States, where
our presence is also not desired. And where will our presence be desired, so
long as we are a homeless nation?
But we shall give a home to
our people. And we shall give it, not by dragging them ruthlessly out of their
sustaining soil, but rather by transplanting them Carefully to a better ground.
Just as we wish to create new political and economic relations, so we shall
preserve as sacred all of the past that is dear to our people's hearts.
Hence a few suggestions must
suffice, as this part of my scheme will most probably be condemned as visionary.
Yet even this is possible and real, though it now appears to be something vague
and aimless. Organization will make of it something rational.
EMIGRATION IN
GROUPS
Our people should emigrate
in groups of families and friends. But no man will be forced to join the
particular group belonging to his former place of residence. Each will be able
to journey in his chosen fashion as soon as he has settled his affairs. Seeing
that each man will pay his own expenses by rail and boat, he will naturally
travel by whatever class suits him best. Possibly there will even be no
subdivision for classes on board train and boat, so as to avoid making the poor
feel their position too keenly during their long journey. Though we are not
exactly organizing a pleasure trip, it is as well to keep them in good humor on
the way.
None will travel in penury;
on the other hand, all who desire to travel in luxurious ease will be able to
foliow their bent. Even under favorable circumstances, the movement may not
touch certain classes of Jews for several years to come; the intervening period
can therefore be employed in selecting the best modes of organizing the
journeys. Those who are, well off can travel in parties if they wish, taking
their personal friends and connections with them. Jews, with the exception of
the richest, have, after all, very little intercourse with Christians. In some
countries their acquaintance with them is confined to a few spongers, borrowers,
and dependents; of a better class of Christian they know nothing. The Ghetto
continues though its walls are broken down.
The middle classes will
therefore make elaborate and careful preparations for departure. A group of
travellers will be formed in each locality, large towns being divided into
districts with a group in each district, who will communicate by means of
representatives elected for the purpose. This division into districts need not
be strictly ad- hered to; it is merely intended to alleviate the discomfort and
home-sickness of the poor during their journey out- wards. Everybody is free to
travel either alone or attached to any local group he prefers. The conditions of
travel -- regulated according to classes -- will apply to all alike. Any
sufficiently numerous travelling party can charter a special train and special
boat from the Company.
The Company's housing agency
will provide quarters for the poorest on their arrival. Later on, when more
pros- perous emigrants follow, their obvious need for lodgings on first landing
will have to be supplied by hotels built by private enterprise. Some of these
more prosperous colonists will, indeed, have built their houses before becoming
permanent settlers, so that they will merely move from an old home into a new
one.
It would be an affront to
our intelligent elements to point out everything that they have to do. Every man
who attaches himself to the National Idea will know how to spread it, and how to
make it real within his sphere of influence. We shall first of all ask for the
cooperation of our Rabbis.
OUR RABBIS
Every group will have its
Rabbi, travelling with his congregation. Local groups will afterwards form
voluntarily about their Rabbi, and each locality will have its spiritual leader.
Our Rabbis, on whom we especially call, will devote their energies to the
service of our idea, and will inspire their congregations by preaching it from
the pulpit. They will not need to address special meetings for the purpose; an
appeal such as this may be uttered in the synagogue. And thus it must be done.
For we feel our historic unity only through the faith of our fathers as we have
long ago absorbed the languages of different nations to an ineradicable degree.
The Rabbis will receive
communications regularly from both Society and Company, and will announce and
explain these to their congregations. Israel will pray for us and for itself.
REPRESENTATIVES
OF THE LOCAL GROUPS
The local groups will
appoint small committees of representative men under the Rabbi's presidency, for
discussion and settlement of local affairs.
Philanthropic institutions
will be transferred by their local groups, each institution remaining "over
there" the property of the same set of people for whom it was originally
founded. I think the old buildings should not be sold, but rather devoted to the
assistance of indigent Christians in the forsaken towns. The local groups will
receive compensation by obtaining free building sites and every iacility for
reconstruction in the new country.
This transfer of
philanthropic institutions will give another of those opportunities, which occur
at different points of my scheme, for making an experiment in the service of
humanity. Our present unsystematic private philanthropy does little good in
proportion to the great expenditure it involves. But these institutions can and
must form part of a system by which they will eventually supplement one another.
In a new society these organizations can be evolved out of our modern
consciousness, and may be based on all previous social experiments. This matter
is of great importance to us, on account of our large number of paupers. The
weaker characters among us, discouraged by external pressure, spoilt by the
soft-hearted charity of our rich men, easily sink until they take to begging.
The Society, supported by
the local groups, will give greatest attention to popular education with regard
to this particular. It will create a fruitful soil for many powers which now
wither uselessly away. Whoever shows a genuine desire to work will be suitably
employed. Beggars will not be endured. Whoever refuses to do anything as a free
man will be sent to the workhouse.
On the other hand, we shall
not relegate the old to an almshouse. An almshouse is one of the cruelest
charities which our stupid good nature ever invented. There our old people die
out of pure shame and mortification. There they are already buried. But we will
leave even to those who stand on the lowest grade of intelligence the consoling
illusion of their utility in the world. We will provide easy tasks for those who
are incapable of physical labor; for we must allow for diminished vitality in
the poor of an already enfeebled generation. But future generations shall be
dealt with otherwise; they shall be brought up in liberty for a life of liberty.
We will seek to bestow the
moral salvation of work on men of every age and of every class; and thus our
people will find their strength again in the land of the seven-hour day.
PLANS OF THE
TOWNS
The local groups will
delegate their authorized representatives to select sites for towns. In the
distribution of land every precaution will be taken to effect a careful transfer
with due consideration for acquired rights.
The local groups will have
plans of the towns, so that our people may know beforehand where they are to go,
in which towns and in which houses they are to live. Comprehensive drafts of the
building plans previously referred to will be distributed among the local
groups.
The principle of our
administration will be strict centralization of our local groups' autonomy. In
this way the transfer will be accomplished with the minimum of pain.
I do not imagine all this to
be easier than it actually is; on the other hand, people must not imagine it to
be mare difficult than it is in reality.
THE DEPARTURE
OF THE MIDDLE CLASSES
The middle classes will
involuntarily be drawn into the outgoing current, for their sons will be
officials of the Society or employees of the Company "over there."
Lawyers, doctors, technicians of every description, young business people -- in
fact, all Jews who are in search of opportunities, who now escape from
oppression in their native country to earn a living in foreign lands -- will
assemble on a soil so full of fair promise. The daughters of the middle classes
will marry these ambitious men. One of them will send for his wife or fiancée
to come out to him, another for his parents, brothers and sisters. Members of a
new civilization marry young. This will promote general morality and ensure
sturdiness in the new generation; and thus we shall have no delicate offspring
of late marriages, children of fathers who spent their strength in the struggle
for life.
Every middle-class emigrant
will draw more of his kind after him.
The bravest will naturally
get the best out of the new world.
But there we seem
undoubtedly to have touched on the crucial difficulty of my plan.
Even if we succeeded in
opening a world discussion on the Jewish Question in a serious manner --
Even if this debate led us
to a positive conclusion that the Jewish State were necessary to the world --
Even if the Powers assisted
us in acquiring the sovereignty over a strip of territory --
How are we to transport
masses of Jews without undue compulsion from their present homes to this new
country?
Their emigration is surely
intended to be voluntary.
THE
PHENOMENON OF MULTITUDES
Great exertions will hardly
be necessary to spur on the movement. Anti-Semites provide the requisite
impetus. They need only do what they did before, and then they will create a
desire to emigrate where it did not previously exist, and strengthen it where it
existed before. Jews who now remain in Anti-Semitic countries do so chiefly
because even those among them who are most ignorant of history know that
numerous changes of residence in bygone centuries never brought them any
permanent good. Any land which welcomed the Jews today, and offered them even
fewer advantages than that which the Jewish State would guarantee them, would
immediately attract a great influx of our people. The poorest, who have nothing
to lose would drag themselves there. But I maintain, and every man may ask
himself whether I am not right, that the pressure weighing on us arouses a
desire to emigrate even among prosperous strata of society. Now our poorest
strata alone would suffice to found a State; these form the strongest human
material for acquiring a land, because a little despair is indispensable to the
formation of a great undertaking.
But when our
"desperados" increase the value of the land by their presence and by
the labor they expend on it, they make it at the same time increasingly
attractive as a place of settlement to people who are better off.
Higher and yet higher strata
will feel tempted to go over. The expedition of the first and poorest settlers
will be conducted by Company and Society conjointly, and will probably be
additionally supported by existing emigration and Zionist societies.
How may a number of people
be directed to a particular spot without being given express orders to go there!
There are certain Jewish benefactors on a large scale who try to alleviate the
sufferings of the Jews by Zionist experiments. To them this problem also
presented itself, and they thought to solve it by giving the emigrants money or
means of employment. Thus the philanthropists said: "We pay these people to
go there."
Such a procedure is utterly
wrong, and all the money in the world will not achieve its purpose.
On the other hand, the
Company will say: "We shall not pay them, we shall let them pay us. We
shall merely offer them some inducements to go."
A fanciful illustration will
make my meaning more explicit: One of those philanthropists (whom we will call
"The Baron") and myself both wish to get a crowd of people on to the
plain of Longchamps near Paris, on a hot Sunday afternoon. The Baron, by
promising them 10 francs each, will, for 200,000 francs, bring out 20,000
perspiring and miserable people, who will curse him for having given them so
much annoyance. Whereas I will offer these 200,000 francs as a prize for the
swiftest racehorse -- and then I shall have to put up barriers to keep the
people off Longchamps. They will pay to go in: 1 franc, 5 francs, 20 francs.
The consequence will be that
I shall get the half-a-million of people out there; the President of the
Republic will drive up "a la Daumont"; and the crowds will enjoy and
amuse themselves. Most of them will think it an agreeable walk in the open air
in spite of heat and dust; and I shall have made by my 200,000 francs about a
million in entrance money and taxes on gaming. I shall get the same people out
there whenever I like but the Baron will not -- not on any account.
I will give a more serious
illustration of the phenomenon of multitudes where they are earning a
livelihood. Let any man attempt to cry through the streets of a town:
"Whoever is willing to stand all day long through a winter's terrible cold,
through a summer's tormenting heat, in an iron hall exposed on all sides, there
to address every passer-by, and to offer him fancy wares, or fish, or fruit,
will receive two florins, or four francs or something similar."
How many people would go to
the hall? How many days would they hold out when hunger drove them there? And if
they held out, what energy would they display in trying to persuade passers-by
to buy fish, fruit and fancy wares?
We shall set about it in a
different way. In places where trade is active, and these places we shall the
more easily discover, since we ourselves direct trade withersoever we wish, in
these places we shall build large halls, and call them markets. These halls
might be worse built and more unwholesome than those above mentioned, and yet
people would stream towards them. But we shall use our best efforts, and we
shall build them better, and make them more beautiful than the first. And the
people, to whom we had promised nothing, because we cannot promise anything
without deceiving them, these excellent, keen business men will gaily create
most active commercial intercourse. They will harangue the buyers
unweariedly;they will stand on their feet, and scarcely think of fatigue. They
will hurry off at dawn, so as to be first on the spot; they will form unions,
cartels, anything to continue bread-winning undisturbed. And ii they find at the
end of the day that all their hard work has produced only 1 florin, 50 kreutzer,
or 3 francs, or something similar, they will yet look forward hopefully to the
next day, which may, perhaps, bring them better luck.
We have given them hope.
Would any one ask whence the
demand comes which creates the market? Is it really necessary to tell them
again?
I pointed out that by means
of the system "Assistance par le Travail" the return could be
increased fifteenfold. One million would produce fifteen millions; and one
thousand millions, fifteen thousand millions.
This may be the case on a
small scale; is it so on a large one`i Capital surely yields a return
diminishing in inverse ratio to its own growth. Inactive and inert capital
yields this diminishing return, but active capital brings in a marvellously
increasing return. Herein lies the social question.
Am I stating a fact? I call
on the richest Jews as witnesses of my veracity. Why do they carry on so many
different industries! Why do they send men to work underground and to raise coal
amid terrible dangers for meagre pay? I cannot imagine this to be pleasant, even
for the owners of the mines. For I do not believe that capitalists are
heartless, and I do not pretend that I believe it. My desire is not to
accentuate, but to smooth differences.
Is it necessary to
illustrate the phenomenon of multitudes, and their concentration on a particular
spot by references to pious pilgrimages?
I do not want to hurt
anyone's religious sensibility by words which might be wrongly interpreted.
I shall merely refer quite
briefly to the Mohammedan pilgrimages to Mecca, the Catholic pilgrimages to
Lourdes, and to many other spots whence men return comforted by their faith, and
to the holy Hock at Trier. Thus we shall also create a center for the deep
religious needs of our people. Our ministers will understand us first, and will
be with us in this.
We shall let every man find
salvation "over there" in his own particular way. Above and before all
we shall make room for the immortal band of our Freethinkers, who are
continually making new conquests for humanity.
No more force will. be
exercised on any one than is necessary for the preservation of the State and
order; and the requisite force will not be arbitrarily defined by one or more
shifting authorities; it will be fixed by iron laws.
Now, if the illustrations I
gave make people draw the inference that a multitude can be only temporarily
attracted to centers of faith, of business, or of amusement, the reply to their
objection is simple. Whereas one of these objects by itself would certainly only
attract the masses, all these centers of attraction combined would be calculated
permanently to hold and satisfy them. For all these centers together form a
single, great, long-sought object, which our people has always longed to attain,
for which it has kept itself alive, for which it has been kept alive by external
pressure -- a free home! When the movement commences, we shall draw some men
after us and let others follow; others again will be swept into the current, and
the last will be thrust after us.
These last hesitating
settlers will be the worst off, both here and there.
But the first, who go over
with faith, enthusiasm, and courage will have the best positions.
OUR HUMAN
MATERIAL
There are more mistaken
notions abroad concerning Jews than concerning any other people. And we have
become so depressed and discouraged by our historic sufferings that we ourselves
repeat and believe these mistakes. One of these is that we have an immoderate
bye oi business. Now it is well known that wherever we are permitted to take
part in the rising of classes, we give up our business as soon as possible. The
great majority of Jewish business men give their sons a superior education.
Hence, the so-called "Judaizing" of all intellectual professions. But
even in economically feebler grades of society, our love of trade is not so
predominant as is generally supposed. In the Eastern countries of Europe there
are great numbers of Jews who are not traders, and who are not afraid of hard
work either. The Society of Jews will be in a position to prepare scientifically
accurate statistics of our human forces. The new tasks and prospects that await
our people in the new country will satisfy our present handicraftsmen, and will
transform many present small traders into manual workers.
A peddler who travels about
the country with a heavy pack on his back is not so contented as his persecutors
imagine. The seven-hour day will convert all of his kind into workmen. They are
good, misunderstood people, who now suffer perhaps more severely than any
others. The Society of Jews will, moreover, busy itself from the outset with
their training as artisans. Their love of gain will be encouraged in a healthy
manner. Jews are of a thrifty and adaptable disposition, and are qualified for
any means of earning a living, and it will therefore suffice to make small
trading unremunerative, to cause even present peddlers to give it up altogether.
This could be brought about, for example, by encouraging large department stores
which provide all necessaries of life. These general stores are already crushing
small trading in large cities. In a land of new civilization they will
absolutely prevent its existence. The establishment of these stores is further
advantageous, because it makes the country immediately habitable for people who
require more refined necessaries of life.
HABITS
Is a reference to the little
habits and comforts of the ordinary man in keeping with the serious nature of
this pamphlet?
I think it is in keeping,
and, moreover, very important. For these little habits are the thousand and one
fine delicate threads which together go to make up an unbreakable rope.
Here certain limited notions
must be set aside. Whoever has seen anything of the world knows that just these
little daily customs can easily be transplanted everywhere. The technical
contrivances of our day, which this scheme intends to employ in the service of
humanity, have heretofore been principally used for our little habits. There are
English hotels in Egypt and on the mountain-crest in Switzerland, Vienna cafes
in South Africa, French theatres in Russia, German operas in America, and best
Bavarian beer in Paris.
When we journey out of Egypt
again we shall not leave the fleshpots behind.
Every man will find his
customs again in the local groups, but the; will be better, more beautiful, and
more agreeable than before.
V.
S o c i e t y .. o f .. J e w s .. a n d
J e w i s h .. S t a t e
__________
NEGOTIORUM
GESTIO
This pamphlet is not
intended for lawyers. I can therefore touch only cursorily, as on so many other
things, upon my theory of the legal basis of a State.
I must, nevertheless, lay
some stress on my new theory, which could be maintained, I believe, even in
discussion with men well versed in jurisprudence.
According to Rousseau's now
antiquated view, a State is formed by a social contract. Rousseau held that:
"The conditions of this contract are so precisely defined by the nature of
the agreement that the slightest alteration would make them null and void. The
consequence is that, even where they are not express |