“No Heart for Faith”: Depicting Freethinkers and Debating Freethought in the American Yiddish Press (1880s-1920s) Restricted; Files Only
Britingham, Matthew (Spring 2023)
Abstract
Between the 1880s and 1920s, nearly two and a half million Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe to the United States, where they developed a robust Yiddish print culture in cities like New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Among these immigrants was a broad range of Jews who considered themselves freethinkers. Bound up with the wider history of freethought in the modern period, Jewish freethinkers emerged with the gradual decline of religion as the principal framework shaping notions of truth and authority and the concomitant rise of science and rationalism as competing systems. In America’s Jewish immigrant communities, the most vocal freethinkers tended to embrace radical political ideologies, namely socialism or anarchism—ideologies originally considered at odds with expressions of Jewish particularity. Should freethinking radicals ignore religion or actively fight against it? How should they relate to religious family, friends, and coworkers? Could freethinking Jews maintain some sense of Jewishness? If so, could historically religious rituals play a role in their secular lives? Freethinking Jewish immigrants took to the American Yiddish press to debate the answers to these questions while being shaped by dramatic events on both sides of the Atlantic. Yiddish writers—radical, conservative, or anywhere in-between—also used fictional Jewish freethinkers to pose questions about religion’s past, present, and future meaning. Focusing on the late 1880s to the early 1920s, this study considers how Yiddish journalists in America discussed freethought and depicted freethinkers, how these discussions and depictions changed over time, and the role they played in navigating America’s religious context. It draws primarily, though not exclusively, on editorials, short stories, and advice columns appearing in the popular Yiddish press. And, since debates about freethought and depictions of freethinkers were particularly meaningful to Jewish radicals, this study pays considerable attention to the radical Yiddish press, especially the popular socialist Yiddish press.
Table of Contents
ABSTRACT
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
INTRODUCTION: Frum Freethinkers and the American Yiddish Press ………………… 1
Freethought and Jewish Religion in Modern Times ………………….…………………...... 8
Freethinkers or Apikorsim? Notes on Terminology ………………………………………... 17
Religion and Irreligion in the Study of American Jewish History: Approach and Methodology ……………………………………………………………………………….. 22
Chapters ……………………………………………………………………………………. 27
PART ONE: 1880s-1904 ……………………………………………………………………... 32
CHAPTER ONE: “A Mockery of the Jewish Faith”: Jewish Radical Politics and Antireligious Agitation (1886-1897) …………………………………………………………. 33
Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………... 33
Jewish Immigrant Radicals and Antireligious Propaganda in the 1880s ………………….. 35
How Should a Freethinker Behave? Toward an Antireligious Middle Path ………………. 52
Is a Middle Path Possible?: Tensions in Antireligious Tendencies ………………………... 68
Embracing Piety’s Power: Radical Politics as Religion …………………………………… 77
Conclusion …………………………………………………………………………………. 85
CHAPTER TWO: “What Are We Then?”: Freethought, Religion, and Jewishness in the Socialist Yiddish Press (1897-1904) …………………………………………………………. 87
Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………... 87
Division and Discord in Socialist Politics (1897-1899) …………………………………… 90
Leon Kobrin and Fraygezonenheyt in “Anna’s Ma Nishtana” (1899) …………………….. 95
Leon Kobrin, Ibergangs-Menshen, and the Controversy Surrounding “What is He?” (1899) ……………………………………………………………………………………………... 109
Acculturation, Tolerance, and the American Yiddish Press (1900-1902) ………………... 119
Antisemitism, Jewishness, and Religion after Kishinev (1903) ………………………….. 132
Debating Tolerance and Freethought in the Radical Yiddish Press (1904) ………………. 141
Conclusion ………………………………………………………………………………... 154
PART TWO: 1905-1914 …………………………………………………………………….. 156
CHAPTER THREE: Freethought, Religion, and Jewishness in American Yiddish Literature (1905-1914) ……………………………………………………………………… 157
Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………. 157
New Arrivals, Nationalism, and the Poetry of the Past …………………………………... 161
Fictional Freethinkers at the Intersection of Nation and Religion ………………………. 173
The Conservative Yiddish Press and Jewish Freethinkers After 1905 ………………...... 190
Conclusion ……………………………………………………………………………...... 205
CHAPTER FOUR: Debating Freethought and Religion in the American Yiddish Press (1905-1914) ………………………………………………………………………………….. 207
Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 207
Tensions and Tolerance: D.M. Hermalin and the Varhayt ................................................. 211
Yankev Pfeffer: Apikorses as Religion and Socialism as Religion .................................... 223
Rethinking Antireligious Propaganda: Reviewing Benyomen Faygenboym’s Kosher and treyf (1909) ......................................................................................................................... 231
Debating Religion, Freethought, and Jewishness in the Forverts ...................................... 243
Conclusion ……………………………………………………………………………….. 258
PART THREE: 1914 and Beyond …………………………………………………………. 259
CHAPTER FIVE: Depicting Freethinkers during the Great War and in the Early Interwar Period ………………………………………………………………………………………... 260
Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 260
War and Peace on the Jewish Street .................................................................................... 262
Debating the War’s Impact on Religion .............................................................................. 274
Freethought and Religion Moving into the Interwar Period ................................................ 282
Conclusion ........................................................................................................................... 294
EPILOGUE: An After(Free)thought? American Jews and the Religious-Secular Mélange...................................................................................................................................... 302
BIBLIOGRAPHY .................................................................................................................... 314
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