‘I merely belong to them'

Judith Butler
LRB | Vol. 29 No. 9
dated 10 May 2007

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n09/butl02_.html

The Jewish Writings by Hannah Arendt ed. Jerome Kohn ·
Schocken, 559 pp, $35.00

‘You know the left think that I am conservative,'
Hannah Arendt once said, ‘and the conservatives think I
am left or I am a maverick or God knows what. And I
must say that I couldn't care less. I don't think the
real questions of this century get any kind of
illumination by this kind of thing.' The Jewish
Writings make the matter of her political affiliation
no less easy to settle. In these editorials, essays and
unfinished pieces, she seeks to underscore the
political paradoxes of the nation-state. If the nation-
state secures the rights of citizens, then surely it is
a necessity; but if the nation-state relies on
nationalism and invariably produces massive numbers of
stateless people, it clearly needs to be opposed. If
the nation-state is opposed, then what, if anything,
serves as its alternative?

Arendt refers variously to modes of ‘belonging' and
conceptions of the ‘polity' that are not reducible to
the idea of the nation-state. She even formulates, in
her early writings, an idea of the ‘nation' that is
uncoupled from both statehood and territory. The nation
retains its place for her, though it diminishes between
the mid-1930s and early 1960s, but the polity she comes
to imagine, however briefly, is something other than
the nation-state: a federation that diffuses both
claims of national sovereignty and the ontology of
individualism. In her critique of Fascism as well as in
her scepticism towards Zionism, she clearly opposes
those disparate forms of the nation-state that rely on
nationalism and create massive statelessness and
destitution. Paradoxically, and perhaps shrewdly, the
terms in which Arendt criticised Fascism came to inform
her criticisms of Zionism, though she did not and would
not conflate the two.

She stated the matter quite clearly in The Origins of
Totalitarianism, published in 1951. Statelessness was
not a Jewish problem, but a recurrent 20th-century
predicament of the nation-state. What happened to the
Jewish people under Hitler should not be seen as
exceptional but as exemplary of a certain way of
managing minority populations; hence, the reduction of
‘German Jews to a non-recognised minority in Germany',
the subsequent expulsions of the Jews as ‘stateless
people across the borders', and the gathering of them
‘back from everywhere in order to ship them to
extermination camps was an eloquent demonstration to
the rest of the world how really to "liquidate" all
problems concerning minorities and the stateless'.
Thus, she continues,

    after the war it turned out that the Jewish
    question, which was considered the only insoluble
    one, was indeed solved -- namely, by means of a
    colonised and then conquered territory -- but this
    solved neither the problem of the minorities nor
    the stateless. On the contrary, like virtually all
    other events of the 20th century, the solution of
    the Jewish question merely produced a new category
    of refugees, the Arabs, thereby increasing the
    number of stateless and rightless by another
    700,000 to 800,000 people. And what happened in
    Palestine within the smallest territory and in
    terms of hundreds of thousands was then repeated in
    India on a large scale involving many millions of
    people.

It may well have been such views, along with her
criticisms of Zionism in 1944 and 1948, that led to
Gershom Scholem's sharp allegations against Arendt in
an exchange of letters in 1963, after the publication
of Eichmann in Jerusalem. Scholem called her
‘heartless' for concentrating dispassionately on
Eichmann's understanding of himself as a functionary.
Her text was controversial on a number of accounts.
There were those who thought she misdescribed the
history of the Jewish resistance under Fascism and
unfairly foregrounded the collaborative politics of the
Jewish Councils, and those who wanted her to name and
analyse Eichmann himself as an emblem of evil. Her
account of his trial, moreover, tries to debunk
speculations as to his psychological motives as
irrelevant to the exercise of justice. And though she
agrees with the decision of the Israeli court that
Eichmann is guilty and deserving of the death penalty,
she takes issues with the proceedings and with the
grounds on which that judgment is based. Some objected
to her public criticism of the court, arguing that it
was untimely or unseemly to criticise Israeli political
institutions. That she finds Eichmann careerist,
confused, and unpredictably ‘elated' by renditions of
his own infamy failed to satisfy those who sought to
find in his motivations the culmination of centuries of
anti-semitism in the policies of the Final Solution.

Arendt refused all these interpretations (along with
other psychological constructs such as ‘collective
guilt') in order to establish, first, that ‘one cannot
extract any diabolical or demonic profundity from
Eichmann' and that if he is in this sense ‘banal', he
is not for that reason ‘commonplace'; and, second, that
accounts of his action on the basis of ‘deeper
explanations' are debatable, but that ‘what is not
debatable is that no judicial procedure would be
possible on the basis of them.'

Scholem went on to impugn Arendt's personal motives:
‘In the Jewish tradition there is a concept, hard to
define and yet concrete enough, which we know as
Ahabath Israel: "Love of the Jewish people". In you,
dear Hannah, as in so many intellectuals who came from
the German left, I find little trace of this.' Arendt,
after disputing that she was from the German left (and,
indeed, she was no Marxist), replies:

    You are quite right -- I am not moved by any ‘love'
    of this sort, and for two reasons: I have never in
    my life ‘loved' any people or collective -- neither
    the German people, nor the French, nor the
    American, nor the working class or anything of that
    sort. I indeed love ‘only' my friends and the only
    kind of love I know of and believe in is the love
    of persons. Secondly, this ‘love of the Jews' would
    appear to me, since I am myself Jewish, as
    something rather suspect. I cannot love myself or
    anything which I know is part and parcel of my own
    person. To clarify this, let me tell you of a
    conversation I had in Israel with a prominent
    political personality who was defending the -- in
    my opinion disastrous -- non-separation of religion
    and state in Israel. What [she] said -- I am not
    sure of the exact words any more -- ran something
    like this: ‘You will understand that, as a
    socialist, I, of course, do not believe in God; I
    believe in the Jewish people.' I found this a
    shocking statement and, being too shocked, I did
    not reply at the time. But I could have answered:
    the greatness of this people was once that it
    believed in God, and believed in Him in such a way
    that its trust and love towards Him was greater
    than its fear. And now this people believes only in
    itself? What good can come out of that? Well, in
    this sense I do not ‘love' the Jews, nor do I
    ‘believe' in them; I merely belong to them as a
    matter of course, beyond dispute or argument.

Both the tone and substance of Arendt's argument raise
questions about her understanding of Jewish belonging.
What did she mean by saying she was a Jew as a matter
of course, beyond dispute or argument? Was she saying
she was only nominally a Jew, by virtue of genetic
inheritance or historical legacy, or a mixture of the
two? Was she saying that she was sociologically in the
position of the Jew? When Scholem calls her a ‘daughter
of our people', Arendt sidesteps the attribution of
kinship but avows her belonging: ‘I have never
pretended to be anything else or to be in any way other
than I am, and I have never felt even tempted in that
direction. It would have been like saying that I was a
man and not a woman -- that is to say, kind of insane.'
She goes on to say that ‘to be a Jew' is an
‘indisputable fact of my life' and adds: ‘There is such
a thing as a basic gratitude for everything that is as
it is; for what has been given and not made; for what
is physei and not nomo¯.'

Being a woman and being a Jew are both referred to as
physei and, as such, naturally constituted rather than
part of any cultural order. But Arendt's answer hardly
settles the question of whether such categories are
given or made; and this equivocation hardly makes her
position ‘insane'. Is there not a making of what is
given that complicates the apparent distinction between
physei and nomo¯? Arendt presents herself as a Jew who
can and will take various political stands, whether or
not they conform to anyone else's idea of what views a
Jew should hold or what a Jew should be. Whatever this
mode of belonging might be for her, it will not involve
conforming to nationalist political views. Moreover, it
is difficult to read her response to Scholem as
anything other than an effort to make sense of, or give
a particular construction to, the physei that she is.
And since, in the 1930s, she had subscribed to the idea
that the Jewish people were a ‘nation', and had even
dismissed those Jews who held themselves aloof from
this idea, one has to wonder: what happened to Arendt's
views of the nation and of modes of cultural belonging
between the 1930s and the mid-1960s?

Throughout The Jewish Writings, Arendt struggles with
what it means to be Jewish without strong religious
faith, and why it might be important to distinguish, as
she does, between the secular and the assimilated Jew.
She does, after all, mark herself as a Jew, which
constitutes a failure of assimilation (the task of
which is to lose the mark altogether). In an unfinished
piece dated around 1939, Arendt argues that Zionism and
assimilationism emerge from a common dogmatism.
Assimilationists think that Jews belong to the nations
that host them (the anti-Zionist philosopher Hermann
Cohen wrote at the turn of the 20th century that German
Jews were first and foremost German and could thrive
and receive protection only within a German state),
whereas Zionists think the Jews must have a nation
because every other nation is defined independently of
its Jewish minorities. Arendt rebukes them both: ‘These
are both the same shortcoming, and both arise out of a
shared Jewish fear of admitting that there are and
always have been divergent interests between Jews and
segments of the people among whom they live.' In other
words, living with others who have divergent interests
is a condition of politics that one cannot wish away
without wishing away politics itself. For Arendt, the
persistence of ‘divergent interests' does not
constitute grounds for either the absorption or the
separation of national minorities. Both Zionists and
assimilationists ‘retain the charge of foreignness'
levelled against the Jews: assimilationists seek to
rectify this foreignness by gaining entrance into the
host nation as full citizens, while Zionists assume
that there can be no permanent foreign host for the
Jewish people, that anti-semitism will visit them in
any such arrangement, and that only the establishment
of a Jewish nation could provide the necessary
protection and place.

Moreover, both positions subscribe to a particular
logic of the nation that Arendt starts to take apart,
first in the 1930s in her investigations into anti-
semitism and the history of the Jews in Europe, then
throughout the war years in editorials on Palestine and
Israel published in Aufbau, the German-Jewish
newspaper, and in her trenchant critique of the nation-
state and the production of stateless persons in The
Origins of Totalitarianism in the early 1950s.

Obviously, it would be an error to read her response to
Scholem as an espousal of assimilationism. She was a
secular Jew, but secularity did not eclipse her
Jewishness so much as define it historically. She
lived, as she put it, in the wake of a certain lost
faith. Her experience of Fascism, her own forced
emigration to France in the 1930s, her escape from the
internment camp at Gurs and emigration to the US in
1941 gave her a historically specific perspective on
refugees, the stateless and the transfer and
displacement of large numbers of peoples. Arendt's
critique of nationalism emerged, in part, from the
experience of exile and displacement that especially
affected the Jews in the 1930s and 1940s, but for her,
dispossession and displacement were not exclusively
‘Jewish' problems. There was, she believed, a political
obligation to analyse and oppose deportations,
population transfers and statelessness in ways that
refused a nationalist ethos. Hence her critique of both
Zionism and assimilationism. Hence, also, the apparent
nominalism of her remark to Scholem that she doesn't
‘love' the Jews or ‘believe' in them, but merely
‘belongs' to them. Here both ‘love' and ‘believe' are
housed in quotation marks, but is it not also the
generality, ‘the Jews', to which she objects? After
all, she has said she can love not a ‘people', only
‘persons'.

What is wrong with the notion of loving the Jewish
people? In the late 1930s, Arendt argued that efforts
to ‘emancipate' the Jews in 19th-century Europe were
invested less in their fate than in a certain principle
of progress, one that required that the Jews be thought
of as an abstraction: ‘Liberation was to be extended
not to Jews one might know or not know, not to the
humble peddler or to the lender of large sums of money,
but to "the Jew in general".' Just as there were
exceptional Jews, such as Moses Mendelssohn, who came
to stand for ‘the Jews in general', so the ‘Jew' came
to stand for the progress of human rights. The effect,
according to Arendt, was to sever the principle from
the person: progressive Enlightenment opposition to
anti-semitism consistently cast the ordinary Jew as
noxious at the same moment as it championed the rights
of the Jews in general. So when Arendt refuses to love
‘the Jewish people', she is refusing to form an
attachment to an abstraction that has supplied the
premise and the alibi for anti-semitism.

Scholem's rebuke is especially problematic since he is
writing from Israel in 1963 and objecting to Arendt's
merciless account of the Israeli court procedures at
the Eichmann trial. He is accusing her not only of not
loving the Jewish people, but of questioning whether
Israel and its courts -- and perhaps also its
strategies of demonisation -- were working in
legitimate ways. Effectively, when he refers to the
Jewish people, he excludes the diasporic or non-Zionist
Jew, and so rhetorically reproduces the schism within
Jewish culture and politics between the self-loving and
those who are not.

Arendt is clearly opposed to a Jewish nationalism
founded on secular presumptions. But she doesn't find a
polity based on religious grounds any more acceptable.
A just polity will extend equality to all citizens and
to all nationalities: that is the lesson she learns
from opposing Fascism. She worries openly about the
devolution of Judaism from a set of religious beliefs
into a national political identity. ‘Those Jews who no
longer believe in their God in a traditional way but
continue to consider themselves "chosen" in some
fashion or other,' she writes, ‘can mean by it nothing
other than that by nature they are better or wiser or
more rebellious or salt of the earth. And that would
be, twist and turn it as you like, nothing other than a
version of racist superstition.' She claims at one
point that ‘our national misery' began when the Jews
relinquished religious values: ‘Ever since then we have
proclaimed our existence per se -- without any national
or usually any religious content -- as a thing of
value.' Although she understands the struggle to
survive as an indispensable aspect of being Jewish in
the 20th century, she finds it unacceptable that
‘survival itself' has trumped ideals of justice,
equality or freedom.

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Arendt thought that
the Jews might become a nation among nations, part of a
federated Europe; she imagined that all the European
nations that were struggling against Fascism could ally
with one another, and that the Jews might have their
own army that would fight against Fascism alongside
other European armies. She argued then for a nation
without territory, a nation that makes sense only in a
federated form, that would be, by definition, a
constitutive part of a plurality. Later she would
prefer the proposal of a federated Jewish-Arab state to
the established notion that the state of Israel should
be based on principles of Jewish sovereignty. Indeed,
‘Jewish sovereignty' would be a dire category mistake,
since it allies a single nation with the state in ways
that would inevitably produce massive injustice for
minorities. ‘Palestine can be saved as the national
homeland of Jews only if (like other small countries
and nationalities) it is integrated into a federation,'
she wrote in 1943.

Although this is a secular political solution, in 1941
she states the rationale for it by referring to a
religious parable. ‘As Jews,' she writes, ‘we want to
fight for the freedom of the Jewish people, because "If
I am not for me -- who is for me?" As Europeans we want
to fight for the freedom of Europe, because "If I am
only for me -- who am I?"' This is the famous question
of Hillel, the Jewish commentator of the first century
ad. Here, and elsewhere, she draws on the Jewish
religious tradition to formulate political principles
capable of organising the secular field of politics
(which is something other than grounding a secular
politics on religious principles). Arendt doesn't quote
Hillel when she writes to Scholem 22 years later --
there, she refuses to offer a religious formulation of
her own identity -- but an echo of Hillel can be heard
in the words she does use: ‘I cannot love myself or
anything which I know is part and parcel of my own
person'; and ‘now this people believes only in itself?
What good can come out of that?' She cannot be only for
herself, for then who would she be? But if she is not
for herself, who will be?

In the 1930s and early 1940s, the non-Jew Arendt has in
mind is, of course, the European gentile. Later, she
would make some effort to think about what ‘belonging'
might mean for Jews and Arabs who inhabit the same
land, but her views throughout this early period are
emphatically Eurocentric. ‘We enter this war as a
European people,' she insisted in December 1941,
skewing the history of Judaism by marginalising the
Sephardim and Mizrachim (mentioned as ‘Oriental Jews'
in Eichmann). A presumption about the cultural
superiority of Europe pervades much of her later
writings too, and is clearest in her intemperate
criticisms of Fanon, her debunking of the teaching of
Swahili at Berkeley, and her dismissal of the black
power movement in the 1960s. She clearly does not have
racial minorities in mind when she thinks about those
who suffer statelessness and dispossession. She appears
to have separated the nation from the nation-state, but
to the degree that the conception of ‘minorities' is
restricted to national minorities, ‘nation' not only
eclipses ‘race' as a category, but renders race
unthinkable. By the same token, if the Jews are a
‘nation' without a nation-state, does that allow for a
racially and geographically dispersed conception of
Jewish heritage that would include the Sephardim and
the Mizrachim?

In the 1930s, national belonging is an important value
for Arendt, but nationalism is noxious. Her views then
vacillate during the next ten years. In 1935, she
praised Martin Buber and the socialist project of the
kibbutzim. In the early 1940s, she supported the Jewish
emigration from Europe to Palestine, but only on the
condition that Jews also fought for recognition as a
‘nation' within Europe; at the same time, she published
several editorials in which she asked that the idea of
nation be separated from that of territory. She
defended the proposal for a Jewish army on that basis,
and strongly criticised the British government's
‘equivocal' relation to the Jews, as evidenced by the
famous White Paper of 1939 that limited the number of
Jewish refugees permitted to enter Palestine. In the
late 1930s, though, she also wrote that ‘the bankruptcy
of the Zionist movement caused by the reality of
Palestine is at the same time the bankruptcy of the
illusion of autonomous, isolated Jewish politics.' In
1943, she worried that the proposal for a binational
state in Palestine could be maintained only by
enhancing the reliance of Palestine on Britain and
other major powers, including the United States.
Sometimes, she worried that binationalism could work
only to the advantage of the Arab population and to the
disadvantage of the Jews. In ‘Zionism Reconsidered'
(1944), however, she argued forcefully that the risks
of founding a state on principles of Jewish sovereignty
could only aggravate the problem of statelessness that
had become increasingly acute in the wake of the First
and Second World Wars. By the early 1950s, Arendt was
arguing that Israel was founded through colonial
occupation with the assistance of superpowers and on
the basis of citizenship requirements that were anti-
democratic. In the 1930s she had worried that the Jews
were becoming increasingly stateless; in the late 1940s
and early 1950s, the displacement of Palestinians made
it imperative that she develop a more comprehensive
account of statelessness.

In ‘Zionism Reconsidered', she calls ‘absurd' the idea
of setting up a Jewish state in a ‘sphere of interest'
of the superpowers. Such a state would suffer under the
‘delusion of nationhood': ‘Only folly could dictate a
policy which trusts a distant imperial power for
protection, while alienating the goodwill of
neighbours.' On the one hand, she is clearly anxious to
find ways for Israel/Palestine to survive; on the
other, she predicts that the foundations proposed for
the polity will result in ruin. ‘If the Jewish
commonwealth is obtained in the near future . . . it
will be due to the political assistance of American
Jews,' she writes. ‘But if the Jewish commonwealth is
proclaimed against the will of the Arabs and without
the support of the Mediterranean peoples, not only
financial help but political support will be necessary
for a long time to come. And that may turn out to be
very troublesome indeed for Jews in this country, who
after all have no power to direct the political
destinies of the Near East.'

In 1948, after the UN had sanctioned the state of
Israel, Arendt predicted that ‘even if the Jews were to
win the war [of independence], its end would find the .
. . achievements of Zionism in Palestine destroyed . .
. The "victorious" Jews would live surrounded by an
entirely hostile Arab population, secluded inside ever
threatened borders, absorbed with physical self-defence
to a degree that would submerge all other interests and
activities.' She stated once again that partition could
not work, and that the best solution would be a
‘federated state'. Such a federation, in her view,
‘would have the advantage of preventing the
establishment of sovereignty whose only sovereign right
would be to commit suicide.'

Arendt's investment in the idea of federation was based
on the hope that it would undercut nationalism and
address the problem of statelessness. If the polity
that would guarantee rights is not the nation-state,
then it would be either a federation, in which
sovereignty is undone through a distribution of its
power, or a human rights framework that would be
binding on those who collectively produced it. Rights
do not belong to individuals, in Arendt's view, but are
produced in concert through their exercise. This post-
metaphysical view was appropriate to the post-national
federation she imagined for the Jews of Europe in the
late 1930s, which is why a Jewish army could represent
the ‘nation' of Jews without any presumption of state
or territory. It was also what she came to imagine in
1948 for Jews and for Palestinians, in spite of the
founding of the state of Israel on nationalist premises
and with claims of Jewish sovereignty. She can be
faulted for naivety, but not for her prescience in
predicting the recurrence of statelessness and the
persistence of territorial violence.

Arendt could be said to have embraced a diasporic
politics, centred not on a Jewish homeland but on the
rights of the stateless. To read her now is to be
reminded of the passages in Edward Said's book Freud
and the Non-European where he suggests that Jews and
Palestinians might find commonality in their shared
history of exile and dispossession, and that diaspora
could become the basis of a common polity in the Middle
East. Said sees the basis of solidarity, in part, as
the ‘irremediably diasporic, unhoused character of
Jewish life', which aligns it ‘in our age of vast
population transfers' with ‘refugees, exiles,
expatriates and immigrants'. If Arendt sometimes argues
for home and for belonging (though she does this less
frequently over time), it is not to call for a polity
built on those established ties of fealty. A polity
requires the capacity to live with others precisely
when there is no obvious mode of belonging. This is the
vanquishing of self-love -- the movement away from
narcissism and nationalism -- which forms the basis for
a just politics that would oppose both nationalism and
those forms of state violence that reproduce
statelessness and its sufferings.

Arendt's opposition to the dispossessions that afflict
any and every minority represents a departure for
Jewish thinking about justice. Her position does not
universalise the Jew, but opposes the sufferings of
statelessness regardless of national status. That the
‘nation' continues to restrict her conception of the
dispossessed minority is clear, and she leaves
unanswered a set of important questions: is there an
‘outside' to every federated polity? Must a federation
assume ‘sovereignty' in the context of international
relations? Can international relations be organised on
the basis of federative politics and, if so, can
international federations enforce their laws without
recourse to sovereignty?

We have become accustomed over recent years to the
argument that modern constitutions retain a sovereign
function and that a tacit totalitarianism functions as
a limiting principle within constitutional democracies.
Giorgio Agamben's reading of Carl Schmitt pays
particular attention to the exercise of sovereign power
to create a state of exception that suspends
constitutional protections and rights of inclusion for
designated populations within established democratic
polities. Arendt's Jewish Writings offer a valuable
counter-perspective. Although Agamben is clearly
indebted to Arendt's The Human Condition in his
elaboration of ‘bare life' (the life which, jettisoned
from the polis, is exposed to raw power), it is the
nation-state rather than sovereignty that is Arendt's
focus in her work on totalitarianism. By insisting that
statelessness is the recurrent political disaster of
the 20th century (it now takes on new forms in the
21st), Arendt refuses to give a metaphysical cast to
‘bare life'. Indeed, she makes it quite clear in The
Origins of Totalitarianism that the ostensible ‘state
of nature' to which displaced and stateless people are
reduced is not natural or metaphysical at all, but the
name for a specifically political form of destitution.

Adalah, ‘the legal centre for Arab minority rights in
Israel', recently proposed a ‘democratic constitution'
that starts out not with the question, ‘Who is a Jew?',
but with the question, ‘Who is a citizen?' Although it
does not seek to adjudicate on what establishes the
legitimate territory of this state, it does propose a
systematic separation of nation and state, and so
resonates with an Arendtian politics. Arendt's idea of
a federated polity is not the same as prevailing
pluralist modes of multiculturalism, but it does posit
a political way of life that is not merely a fractious
collection of sovereign cultural identities, but
disperses sovereignty, nationalism and individualism
alike into new forms of social and political co-
existence. Hopeful, perhaps naive, but not for that
reason something we can permanently do without -- at
least not without the ceaseless territorial violence
that Arendt warned against.

--------------------
Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor in the
Departments of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature at
Berkeley, is writing a book on the critique of state
violence in Jewish thought.

_____________________________________________

Portside aims to provide material of interest
to people on the left that will help them to
interpret the world and to change it.

Submit via email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Submit via the Web: portside.org/submit
Frequently asked questions: portside.org/faq
Subscribe: portside.org/subscribe
Unsubscribe: portside.org/unsubscribe
Account assistance: portside.org/contact
Search the archives: portside.org/archive

Reply via email to