A.D. Gordon: The Religion of Labor
Zionist thinker who advocated a return to nature.
By Matt Plen
The late 19th century was a time of spiritual and ideological
ferment for the Jews of Eastern Europe. For many, traditional Jewish beliefs became
untenable and the old observant lifestyle lost much of its appeal. In Russia, thousands
of young, educated Jews rejected their religion in favor of new, revolutionary
ideologies--in particular socialism and nationalism. These Jews were attracted
by the promise of new truths and by the dream of a changed world. Yet the new
ideologies were uncompromisingly secular and proved unable to fill the
spiritual hole that, for many, had been opened up by the abandonment of
traditional Judaism.
Was it possible for young Jews to find spiritual
fulfillment, without eschewing their revolutionary beliefs and returning to
outmoded Jewish tradition? A.D. Gordon attempted to create just such a
synthesis of modernity, radicalism, and spirituality.
From Podolia to Palestine
Aaron David Gordon was born in Podolia--then part of the
Russian Empire--in 1856. He worked for wealthy relatives as the manager of a
large estate and was a supporter of the nascent Zionist movement. In 1904,
having lost his job, Gordon decided to immigrate to the Land of Israel. Gordon
was part of the Second Aliyah, the wave of Jewish immigrants who reached
Palestine in the years before the First World War. But he was far from typical.
In contrast to the young, secular pioneers, Gordon was
middle-aged, physically weak, habituated to white-collar work, and religiously
observant (he gradually stopped observing the commandments after arriving in
Palestine). Nonetheless, he threw himself into the pioneer lifestyle of hard
manual labor in the agricultural settlements, first in Petah Tikva and
ultimately at one of the first communal settlements or kvutzot--Degania.
Working by day and writing by night, Gordon became a kind of guru for his young
counterparts, both articulating and embodying the principles of a new "religion
of labor."
Rejecting Socialism
Gordon was different from the mainstream of the Second
Aliyah in one other important respect: he was not a socialist Although he emphasized the values of labor,
solidarity, and social equality, Gordon was resolutely opposed to Marxism's
view that class struggle was the driving force of history. Rather, the
seemingly socialist values in Gordon's belief system derived from his
uncompromisingly nationalist outlook. In "Nationalism and Socialism"
Gordon wrote:
"Building a nation is not like building a society. The
foundation stones are laid not merely for an improved system of economic life
nor for the social justice which is desired in that life; here we are laying
the foundation for a new collective life and also for a new national
spirituality...All this demands a profound inner unification of all the
elements of the nation where even their inner conflict, the conflict of ideas
and of hopes, must be internal without the interference of an alien force or an
alien influence."
Returning to Nature
Gordon's thought also had universal elements. He believed in
the organic unity of the cosmos, of nature, and of all people. But human beings
have "degraded and profaned the nature of the universe" by regarding
nature as a commodity to be exploited. According to Gordon, capitalist
exploitation also corrupts social relations, engendering indifference to human
suffering and deprivation. The solution--the regeneration of universal nature--must
therefore be achieved through the regeneration of individual human nature. But
the required reorientation of human beings must itself be achieved by the
immersion of human beings in nature. In
his essay "Human-Nation" Gordon wrote:
"Man in his own narrow confines of life is like the
worm burrowing within a bitter herb, ignorant of a better and greater world
beyond his little restricted domain. A human being must broaden his horizons to
include the larger life, the infinite world around him, the world with which he
must maintain relations."
How is this "immersion" to be achieved? The answer
relates to the apparent contradiction between the universal and the particular
in Gordon's thought. For the Jews' immersion in nature and their reconnection
to the oneness of the cosmos was to be achieved through manual labor in the
Land of Israel.
The Conquest of Labor
In "People and Labor," Gordon wrote that, "the
Jewish people has been completely cut off from nature and imprisoned within
city walls these two thousand years...We lack the habit of labor--not labor
performed out of external compulsion, but labor to which one is attached in a
natural and organic way. This kind of labor binds a people to its soil and to
its national culture."
The "conquest of labor" was a central plank in the
platform of all varieties of socialist Zionism, as a means toward the creation
of an economically self-sufficient, egalitarian Jewish society. But instead of
socialism, Gordon was influenced by the romantic attitude to the land
associated with Tolstoy and the Russian Narodnik movement. As such, his focus was
not primarily economic, but spiritual. Gordon believed that Diaspora existence
had crippled the Jewish people, cutting it off from its essential source of
sustenance, and forcing it to survive through the dried up resources of history
and religion. The revival of the Jewish people demanded the reestablishment of
the bond between the Jews and their land. Employing vivid biological metaphors,
Gordon wrote in "Our Tasks Ahead":
"We come to our Homeland in order to be planted in our
natural soil from which we have been uprooted, to strike our roots deep into
its life-giving substances, and to stretch out our branches in the sustaining
and creating air and sunlight of the Homeland...Here, in Palestine, is the
force attracting all the scattered cells of the people to unite into one living
national organism."
As a religious--almost mystical--thinker, Gordon was
something of an anomaly in the resolutely secular Zionist Labor movement of the
early twentieth century. Yet the "religion of labor" advocated in his
writings provided an inspiration for generations of Zionist pioneers and was
the driving force behind the settlement of the land, the creation of a Jewish
economy, and the ultimate establishment of the State of Israel.
Gordon's Relevancy Today
A century later, Gordon's worldview seems increasingly incompatible
with the values of Israeli society. Far from prizing labor, many Israelis are
unwilling to undertake physical work in agriculture or industry. Those who are
forced to take on these low paying jobs are not an ideological elite, but
represent the bottom of the social pile. In an era when Israeli Jews aspire to
work in high-tech and the free professions--reflecting a return to traditional
diasporic occupational patterns--do A.D. Gordon's ideas have anything to teach
us?
Gordon's most obvious audience is the contemporary settler
movement, whose all-consuming goal is to sink roots in the Land of Israel
through creating Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank). However,
although they agree with Gordon about the importance of settling the land, a
minority of today's settlers share his estimation of manual labor's supreme
importance. Moreover, since the Oslo Accords and the Disengagement Plan, the
very future of the settlement enterprise is under direct threat. Perhaps Gordon's
ideas are relevant to the establishment of new agricultural settlements in the
Galilee and the Negev, but these are marginal ventures in today's Israel.
A second opening for Gordon's values is the area of
environmentalism. For Gordon, the goal of the return to labor, and of Zionism
itself, was the repair of human nature and, ultimately, of universal nature. The
idea that industry should serve rather than damage nature mandates the curbing
of consumerist excess and the shaping of the economy in line with the
principles of sustainable development and environmental protection. In this
sense, Gordon's message takes on global, rather than purely Jewish-Israeli significance.
Finally, modern Israel suffers from a wide gap between rich
and poor (among developed countries, only the USA has a higher inequality
index), the erosion of workers' rights, and the employment of migrant workers
at salaries so low that Israelis cannot afford to take the jobs. Gordon's
belief in the dignity of labor combined with his passion for social justice
provide a trenchant critique of this state of affairs.
Yet Gordon's relevance is that his commitment to equality
sprang not from doctrinaire and possibly outdated ideology, but from a basic
faith in national and human solidarity. In "Human-Nation" he wrote: "Most
clear-thinking people now feel that no man with a soul can be happy in the
possession of luxuries while there are those in want of the material
necessities of life. Neither can a regenerated humanity rest content in its
spiritual wealth when there are so many whose souls are poverty-stricken."
Matt Plen grew up in
London before making aliyah to
Jerusalem in 1998. He teaches history at the Masorti High School and modern
Jewish thought at the Conservative Yeshiva in Jerusalem. Matt holds an MA
in Jewish Studies from the Jewish Theological Seminary and is currently
pursuing doctoral studies at the Hebrew University, where his thesis topic is
Radical Education and Israeli Ideologies of Social Justice.