Living History: Anarchism in the Kibbutz
Movement<http://feministreview.blogspot.com/2009/12/living-history-anarchism-in-kibbutz.html>
<http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_N1z2eNV3TTs/Su66JDqFRkI/AAAAAAAAA6s/EfLNzLRjO1c/s1600-h/Picture+9.png>By
James Horrox
AK Press

“I am neutral on Israel,” I said as I helped lay out the first issue of a
women’s newspaper one evening in the early seventies. “After all, I am not
Jewish.” Like many critical of nationalism, I was silent. After all,
comments on Israeli policy can be matches igniting discussions among friends
and co-workers that end in bitterness, charges of anti-Semitism, or in the
case of Jewish critics, of being “self-hating Jews.” Frankly, only the
bombing of Lebanon in 2006 and the invasion of Gaza last winter pushed me
into open criticism of Israeli policies and my first participation in
protests. White phosphorus, like napalm, is just plain wrong.

Against the current occupation of Gaza, is there a positive aspect to the
project of a Jewish homeland that led to this tragedy? The answer is “yes,”
if one returns to early in the last century to the early kibbutz movement.
For this, A Living Revolution: Anarchism in the Kibbutz
Movement<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1904859925?ie=UTF8&tag=feminrevie-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1904859925>by
James Horrox has done so much to make anti-authoritarian thought more
widely available.

Horrox begins his history of the kibbutz movement with an introduction to
modern anarchism, starting with Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, credited with giving
this political philosophy its name. Also, Horrox addresses the
often-repeated libel that “anarchist” is synonymous with “terrorist.” Yes,
there have been instances of violence, but the violence is miniscule
compared to the violent deeds of those committed to other political
philosophies, for example, nationalists. The Jewish socialists who dreamed
of an egalitarian, nonauthoritarian society were deeply influenced by Peter
Kropotkin, the Russian aristocrat who worked with Jewish workers during his
exile in England and spoke fluent Yiddish. Who knew? His ideas about the
need for a balance of intellectual and physical labor, rejection of the wage
system, and holding property in common were ones that inspired those who
went to what is now Israel at the beginning of the last century to
revitalize a people.

Inspired by him and other thinkers, they founded cooperatives that served
the member/owners in all aspects of their lives. Governmental power (Turkish
and British) was weak at the time, so the kibbutzim were relatively free to
create these self-managed organizations whose members met each other’s needs
rather than looking to an authority. Most of the farms of the first wave of
immigrants defaulted to hierarchical management and the employment of Arab
workers, replicating old patterns from Russia and Eastern Europe. Many
efforts at economic self-sufficiency through agriculture were hamstrung by
conditions placed on Rothschild family funding, which required that agents
manage the farms and supervise the workers and that a single crop be
planted. They were dependent on capitalist money. (Think Bill Gates and his
predilection for genetically engineered seeds and you get the idea.)

The Second Aliya, the next wave of immigrants were shocked that the old
patterns of exploitation were being reconstituted in these first farms, and
the newcomers were determined to be self-sufficient. Their farm, Degania,
the progenitor of the kibbutz, was successful and its members ran it their
way: egalitarian with a mix of crops. The utopian movement they started
lasted a lot longer than the Paris Commune and the communes of revolutionary
Spain. Even so, Horrox argues, their influence was eroded by the Israeli
push for a state and the machinations of the British.

In this unacknowledged history, today’s radical will find cautionary and
inspiring stories, even if neither Jewish nor anarchist.

Review by Frances Chapman


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You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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