Isaac Deutscher (3 April 1907 – 19 August 1967) was a British Marxist historian, journalist and political activist of Polish-Jewish birth. He is best known as a biographer of Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin and commentator upon Soviet affairs.
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Early life
Deutscher was born in Chrzanów, a town in the Galicia region of Poland, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, into a family of religiously observant Jews. He studied with a Hasidic rebbe and was acclaimed as a prodigy in the study of the Torah and the Talmud. By the time of his bar mitzvah, however, he had lost his faith. He "tested God" by eating unkosher food at the grave of a tzadik (holy person) on Yom Kippur. When nothing happened, he became an atheist.
Deutscher first attracted notice as a poet, when at 16 he began publishing poems in Polish literary periodicals. His verse, in Yiddish and Polish, concerned Jewish and Polish mysticism, history and mythology, and attempted to bridge the gulf between Polish and Yiddish culture. He also translated poetry from Hebrew, Latin, German, and Yiddish into Polish.
Student and communist
Deutscher studied literature, history, and philosophy at the Jagellonian University in Kraków. At 18 he left Kraków for Warsaw, where he studied philosophy, and economics and became a Marxist. In 1926 he joined the illegal Polish Communist Party and became the editor of the party's underground press. In 1931 he visited the Soviet Union, where Moscow University offered him a post as a professor of the history of socialism and of Marxist theory. He declined these offers and returned to his underground work in Poland.
Trotskyist
In 1933 Deutscher published an article called "The Danger of Barbarism over Europe", in which he urged the formation of a united socialist-Communist front against Nazism. This contradicted the then official Communist line, which saw the social democrats, or "social fascists", as the greatest enemies of the Communist Party. Deutscher was expelled from the party for "exaggerating the danger of Nazism and was spreading panic in the Communist ranks." He became a Trotskyist, but broke with official Trotskyism in 1938, being opposed to Trotsky's decision to found a Fourth International. Later he joined the Polish Socialist Party.
In the UK
In April 1939 Deutscher left Poland for London. This move saved his life and paved the way for his future career. He never returned to Poland and never saw any of his family again. In London he worked as a correspondent for a Polish-Jewish newspaper and for a while joined the Trotskyist Revolutionary Workers League. When Germany occupied Poland he taught himself English and began writing for English magazines. He was soon a regular correspondent for the leading weekly The Economist. In 1940 he joined the Polish Army in Scotland, but was interned as a dangerous subversive. Released in 1942, he joined the staff of The Economist and became an expert on Soviet affairs and European politics. He also wrote for The Observer as a roving European correspondent.
Biographer of Stalin and Trotsky
Deutscher published his first major work, Stalin, A Political Biography in 1949. This controversial work is more polemical than academic. Deutscher was still a committed Trotskyist, but in the book Deutscher gave Stalin what he saw as his due for building a form of socialism in the Soviet Union, even if it was, in Deutscher's view, a perversion of the vision of Marx, Lenin and Trotsky. Deutscher's name was on Orwell's list, a list of people which George Orwell prepared in March 1949 for the Information Research Department, a propaganda unit set up at the Foreign Office by the Labour government. Orwell considered these people to have pro-communist leanings and therefore to be inappropriate to write for the IRD.[1].
The Stalin biography made Deutscher a leading authority on Soviet affairs and the Russian Revolution. He followed it up with his most ambitious work, a three-volume biography of Trotsky: The Prophet Armed (1954), The Prophet Unarmed (1959) and The Prophet Outcast (1963). These books were based on detailed research into the Trotsky Archives at Harvard University. Much of the material contained in the third volume was previously unknown, since Trotsky's widow, Natalia Sedova, gave him access to the closed section of the Archives. British Prime Minister Tony Blair declared in 2006 that the trilogy "made a very deep impression on me and gave me a love of political biography for the rest of my life."[2] Deutscher planned to conclude his series with a study of Lenin, but this work remained incomplete at the time of his death.
1960s
The upsurge of left-wing sentiment that accompanied the Vietnam War (see The Sixties) made Deutscher a popular figure on university campuses in both Britain and the United States. His Trotskyism had by then become a form of Marxist humanism, although he never renounced Trotsky. In 1965 he took part in the first "Teach-In" on Vietnam at the University of California, Berkeley, where thousands of students listened to his indictment of the Cold War. He was G. M. Trevelyan Lecturer at Cambridge University for 1966-67, and also lectured at the State University of New York, New York University, Princeton, Harvard and Columbia. The G. M. Trevelyan Lectures, under the title The Unfinished Revolution, was published after his sudden and unexpected death in Rome in 1967. A memorial prize honouring him, called the Deutscher Memorial Prize, is awarded annually to a book "which exemplifies the best and most innovative new writing in or about the Marxist tradition".
In relation to Judaism and Zionism
Despite being an atheist and a life-long socialist, Deutscher emphasised the importance of his Jewish heritage. He coined the expression "non-Jewish Jew" to apply to himself and other Jewish humanists. Deutscher admired Elisha ben Abuyah, a Jewish heretic of the 2nd century AD.[citation needed] But he had little time for specifically Jewish politics. In Warsaw, he joined the Communist Party, not the Jewish Bund, whose "Yiddishist" views he opposed.
His definition of his Jewishness was: "Religion? I am an atheist. Jewish nationalism? I am an internationalist. In neither sense am I therefore a Jew. I am, however, a Jew by force of my unconditional solidarity with the persecuted and exterminated. I am a Jew because I feel the pulse of Jewish history; because I should like to do all I can to assure the real, not spurious, security and self-respect of the Jews."[3]
Before World War II, Deutscher opposed Zionism as economically retrograde and harmful to the cause of international socialism, but in the aftermath of the Holocaust he regretted his pre-war views, and argued a case for establishing Israel as a "historic necessity" to provide a home for the surviving Jews of Europe. In the 1960s he became more critical of Israel for its failure to recognize the dispossession of the Palestinians, and after the Six Day War of 1967 he demanded that Israel withdraw from the occupied territories. "This 'six day wonder'", he commented, "this latest, all-too-easy triumph of Israeli arms will be seen one day... to have been a disaster... for Israel itself."[4]
His most famous statement regarding Israel is "A man once jumped from the top floor of a burning house in which many members of his family had already perished. He managed to save his life; but as he was falling he hit a person standing down below and broke that person’s legs and arms. The jumping man had no choice; yet to the man with the broken limbs he was the cause of his misfortune. If both behaved rationally, they would not become enemies. The man who escaped from the blazing house, having recovered, would have tried to help and consol the other sufferer; and the latter might have realized that he was the victim of circumstances over which neither of them had control. But look what happens when these people behave irrationally. The injured man blames the other for his misery and swears to make him pay for it. The other, afraid of the crippled man’s revenge, insults him, kicks him, and beats him up whenever they meet. The kicked man again swears revenge and is again punched and punished. The bitter enmity, so fortuitous at first, hardens and comes to overshadow the whole existence of both men and to poison their minds."[5]
Works by Isaac Deutscher
- Stalin : a Political Biography (1949)
- Soviet Trade Unions (1950)
- Russia After Stalin (1953)
- Russia, What Next? (1953)
- The Prophet Armed: Trotsky, 1879-1921 (1954)
- Heretics and renegades: and other essays (1955)
- Russia in transition, and other essays (1957)
- The Prophet Unarmed : Trotsky, 1921-1929 (1959)
- Great contest: Russia and the West (1960)
- The Prophet Outcast: Trotsky, 1929-1940 (1963)
- Isaac Deutscher on the Israeli-Arab War: an interview with the late Isaac Deutscher (1967)
- The Unfinished Revolution: Russia 1917-1967 (G. M. Trevelyan lectures) (1967)
- Non-Jewish Jew and other essays (Edited by Tamara Deutscher) (1968)
- An Open Letter to Władysław Gomułka and the Central Committee of the Polish Workers Party (1968)
- Russia, China, and the West 1953-1966 (Edited by Fred Halliday) (1970)
- Marxism in our time (Edited by Tamara Deutscher) (1971)
- Marxism, Wars, and Revolutions : essays from four decades (Edited by Tamara Deutscher) (1984)
See also
Notes
- ^ The Guardian John Ezard Blair's babe Did love turn Orwell into a government stooge? Saturday June 21 2003
- ^ The Independent Cahal Milmo Blair reveals an unexpected influence: Trotsky Friday March 3 2006
- ^ Deutscher, Isaac. “Who is a Jew?” In The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays. Tamara Deutscher, ed. and Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 1968. P. 51.
- ^ Deutscher, Isaac. An Interview: On the Israeli-Arab War. New Left Review I/44 (July-August 1967): 30-45.
- ^ Deutscher, Isaac. The Non-Jewish Jew and Other Essays. London: Oxford University Press, pp 136-137
References
- Cliff, Tony, "The End of the Road: Issac Deutscher's Capitulation to Stalinism", 1963.
- Horowitz, David, Isaac Deutscher: The Man and his work. London: Macdonald, 1971.
- Labedz, Leopold "Issac Deutscher: Historian, Prophet, Biographer" pages 33-03 from Survey, Volume 30, Issue # 1-2, March 1988.
- Laqueur, Walter The Fate of the Revolution : Interpretations of Soviet History from 1917 to the Present, New York : Scribner, 1987 ISBN 0-684-18903-8.
- Neil Davidson, "The prophet, his biographer and the watchtower", International Socialism 104, 2004
External links
- Isaac Deutscher Archive at marxists.org
- "Maoism-Its Origins, Background and Outlook", Socialist Register, 1964
- "Ideological Trends in the USSR", Socialist Register, 1968
- Marxism in Our Time A Lecture given in 1965
- The Lubitz TrotskyanaNet provides a biographical sketch and a selective bibliography of Isaac Deutscher
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