For more information on Judah Leon Magnes, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Judah Leon Magnes |
For more information on Judah Leon Magnes, visit Britannica.com.
| Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Judah Magnes |
1877 - 1948
U.S. Reform rabbi, founder and first president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Judah Magnes was born in San Francisco, and received rabbinic ordination at Hebrew Union College in 1900 and a doctorate in philosophy at the University of Berlin and University of Heidelberg. He served as rabbi of New York's Temple Emanuel from 1906 to 1910, when he was forced to resign because he was viewed as too traditional. He then served as rabbi of New York's Conservative Congregation Bʾnai Jeshurun from 1911 to 1912. He was one of the founders of the American Jewish Committee and president of New York's organized Jewish community (the Kehilla) from 1908 to 1922, and he helped to found the Yiddish daily newspaper Der Tag, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the American-Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. He was a delegate to the Zionist Congress in 1905, and served as secretary of the Federation of American Zionists from 1905 to 1908.
Magnes immigrated to Palestine in 1922 and became the first president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1925. He rejected the dominant Zionist notion of "the negation of the Diaspora" and continued to believe that both Zion and the diaspora were of equal importance in Jewish life. His personal contacts and political discussions with Harry St. John Philby, Musa al-Alami, George Antonius, and Nuri Saʿid periodically put him at loggerheads with the official Zionist leadership. He was one of the leaders of the Ihud (unity) movement, a small group of intellectuals who opposed the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine and argued instead for a binational state. Among his colleagues were such notables as Martin Buber, Hans Kohn, Arthur Ruppin, Samuel Hugo Bergman, and Gershom Scholem. A confirmed pacifist for much of his life, Magnes modified his views after Hitler's rise to power. Following the creation of the Jewish state and the outbreak of war in early 1948, Magnes continued to lobby, during the few remaining months of his life, for a confederation of Middle Eastern states and for a conciliatory and humanitarian approach to the conflict.
Bibliography
Brinner, William M., and Rischin, Moses, eds. Like All the Nations?: The Life and Legacy of Judah L. Magnes. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987.
Goren, Arthur A. Dissenter in Zion: From the Writings of Judah L.Magnes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982.
Magnes, Judah Leon. The Magnes-Philby Negotiations, 1929:The Historical Record. Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University, 1998.
— BRYAN DAVES
UPDATED BY NEIL CAPLAN
UPDATED BY CHAIM I. WAXMAN
| Wikipedia: Judah Leon Magnes |
| Judah Leon Magnes | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 5, 1877 San Francisco, California,USA |
| Died | October 27, 1948 (aged 71) New York, New York |
| Spouse(s) | Beatrice Lowenstein |
Judah Leon Magnes, (born in San Francisco, California, July 5, 1877; died in New York, New York, October 27, 1948), was a prominent Reform rabbi in both the United States and Palestine.
As a young boy Magnes's family moved to Oakland, California, where he attended Sabbath school at First Hebrew Congregation, and was taught by Ray Frank, the first Jewish woman to preach formally from a pulpit in the United States.[1] Magnes's views of the Jewish people was strongly influenced by First Hebrew's Rabbi Levy,[2] and it was at First Hebrew's building on 13th and Clay that Magnes first began preaching - his bar mitzvah speech of 1890 was quoted at length in The Oakland Tribune.[3]
Magnes gained a degree of notoriety while studying at the University of Cincinnati in a campaign against censorship of the "Class annual" of 1898 by the university faculty.[4]
In America, he spend most of his professional life in New York, where he helped found the American Jewish Committee in 1906. Magnes was also one of the most influential forces behind the organization of the Jewish community in the city, serving as president throughout its existence from 1908 to 1922. The Kehillah oversaw aspects of Jewish culture, religion, education and labor issues, in addition to helping to integrate America's German and East European Jewish communities. He was also the president of the Society for the Advancement of Judaism from 1912 to 1920.
The religious views Magnes extolled as a Reform rabbi were not all within the mainstream. Magnes favored a more traditional approach to Judaism, fearing the overly assimilationist tendencies of his peers. Magnes delivered a Passover sermon in 1910 at Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York in which he advocated changes in the Reform ritual to incorporate elements of traditional Orthodox Judaism, expressing his concern that younger members of the congregation were driven to seek spirituality in other religions that cannot be obtained at Congregation Emanu-El. He advocated for restoration of the Bar Mitzvah ceremony and criticized the Union Prayer Book, advocating for a return to the traditional prayer book.[5] The disagreement over this issue led him to resign from Congregation Emanu-El that year. From 1911-12 he was Rabbi of the Conservative Congregation B'nai Jeshurun.
Magnes agreed, however, with the overall anti-Zionist Reform attitudes at the time; he strongly disapproved of the denationalization of Judaism, which Zionism represented and supported. To him, Jews living in the Diaspora and Jews living in the Land of Israel were of equal significance to the Jewish nation, and a renewed Jewish community in Eretz Israel would enhance Jewish life within the Diaspora. Magnes emigrated to Palestine in 1922 and maintained that emigration to the Holy Land was a matter of individual choice; it did not reflect any kind of "negation of the Diaspora", or support for Zionism. He thought that the land of Israel should be built in a "decent manner", or not built at all.
In both America and Palestine, Magnes played a key role in founding the internationally reputed Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1918 along with Albert Einstein and Chaim Weizmann. However, they three did not get along, and when, in 1928, Magnes, who was initially responsible only for the finances and the administrative staff of the University, had his authority extended to academic and professional matters, Einstein resigned from the board of Governors. Einstein wrote:
The bad thing about the business was that the god Felix Warburg, thanks to his financial authority ensured that the incapable Magnes was made director of the Institute, a failed American rabbi, who, through his dilettantish enterprises had become uncomfortable to his family in America, who very much hoped to dispatch him honorably to some exotic place. This ambitious and weak person surrounded himself with other morally inferior men, who did not allow any decent person to succeed there ... These people managed to poison the atmosphere there totally and to keep the level of the institution low[6]
Magnes served as the first chancellor of the Hebrew University (1925) and later as president (1935-1948) of the new institution. Magnes believed that the university was the ideal place for Jewish and Arab cooperation, and worked tirelessly to advance this goal.
Magnes's responded to the 1929 Arab revolt in Palestine with a call for a Binational solution to Palestine.[7] Magnes dedicated the rest of his life to reconciliation with the Arabs; he particularly objected to the concept of a specifically Jewish state. In his view, Palestine should be neither Jewish nor Arab. Rather, he advocated a binational state in which equal rights would be shared by all, a view shared by the group Brit Shalom, an organization with which Magnes is often associated, but never joined.[8] When the Peel Commission made their 1937 recommendations about partition and population transfer in Palestine, Magnes sounded the alarm:
With the permission of the Arabs we will be able to receive hundreds of thousands of persecuted Jews in Arab lands [...] Without the permission of the Arabs even the four hundred thousand [Jews] that now are in Palestine will remain in danger, in spite of the temporary protection of British bayonets. With partition a new Balkan is made [..] New York Times, 18 July, 1937.
With increasing persecution of European Jews, the outbreak of World War II and continuing violence in Palestine, Magnes realized that his vision of a voluntary negotiated treaty between Arabs and Jews had become politically impossible. In an article in January 1942 in Foreign Affairs he suggested a joint British-American initiative to prevent the division of mandated Palestine. The Biltmore Conference in May that year caused Magnes and others to break from the Zionist mainstream's changed demand for a "Jewish Commonwealth".[9][10] As a result, he and Henrietta Szold founded the small, binationalist political party, Ihud (Unity).[11]
Just before his death in October 1948, he withdrew from the leadership of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, a committee he had helped establish. The reason was that the organization had not answered his plea for help for the Palestinian refugees: "How can I continue to be officially associated with an aid organization which apparently so easily can ignore such a huge and acute refugee problem?" (p. 519, Magnes 1982)
As a devout pacifist, the 'universalist' principles of compromise and understanding suited Magnes well, and he continued to work towards these ideals until his death in 1948.
Memorializing his passing, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations wrote of Magnes that he was:
"If we cannot find ways of peace and understanding, if the only way of establishing the Jewish National Home is upon the bayonets of some Empire, our whole enterprise is not worthwhile, and it is better that the Eternal People that has outlived many a mighty empire should possess its soul in patience... It is one of the great civilizing tasks before the Jewish people to enter the promised land, not in the Joshua way, but bringing peace and culture, hard work and sacrifice and love, and a determination to do nothing that cannot be justified before the conscience of the world." -- Judah Magnes.
The Judah L. Magnes Museum, in Berkeley, California, the first Jewish Museum of the West, was named in Magnes' honor, and the museum's Western Jewish History Center has a large collection of papers, correspondence, publications, and photographs of Judah Magnes and members of his family. It also contains the conference proceedings of The Life and Legacy of Judah L. Magnes, an International Symposium that the museum sponsored, in 1982.
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