Asher Ginzberg (Ahad Ha'am)

Aḥad
Haʿam , (Hebrew: “One of the People”:
)original name Asher Ginzberg (b. Aug.
18, 1856, Skvira, near Kiev, Russian
Empire [now in Ukraine]—d. Jan. 2, 1927,
Tel Aviv, Palestine [now in Israel]),
Zionist leader whose concepts of Hebrew
culture had a definitive influence on
the objectives of the early Jewish
settlement in Palestine.
Reared
in Russia in a rigidly Orthodox Jewish
family, he mastered rabbinic literature
but soon was attracted to the
rationalist school of medieval Jewish
philosophy and to the writings of the
Haskala (“Enlightenment”), a liberal
Jewish movement that attempted to
integrate Judaism with modern Western
thought.
At the
age of 22, Aḥad Haʿam went to Odessa,
the centre of the Jewish nationalist
movement known as Hibbat Zion (“Love of
Zion”). There he was influenced both by
Jewish nationalism and by the
materialistic philosophies of the
Russian nihilist D.I. Pisarev and the
English and French positivists. After
joining the central committee of Hibbat
Zion, he published his first essay, “Lo
ze ha-derekh” (1889; “This Is Not the
Way”), which emphasized the spiritual
basis of Zionism.
In
1897, after two visits to Palestine, he
founded the periodical Ha-Shiloaḥ, in
which he severely criticized the
political Zionism of Theodor Herzl, the
foremost Jewish nationalist leader of
the time. Aḥad Haʿam remained outside
the Zionist organization, believing that
a Jewish state would be the end result
of a Jewish spiritual renaissance rather
than the beginning. He called for a
renaissance of Hebrew-language culture,
and to that end he did urge the creation
of a Jewish national homeland in
Palestine as the centre and model for
Jewish life in the Diaspora (i.e., the
settlements of Jews outside Palestine).
Aḥad
Haʿam was an intimate adviser to the
Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann during the
time that Weizmann was playing a leading
role in eliciting from the British
government its Balfour Declaration of
1917, a document supporting a Jewish
homeland in Palestine. His last years
were spent in Palestine, editing his
Iggerot Aḥad Haʿam, 6 vol. (1923–25;
“Letters of Aḥad Haʿam”). Further
letters, principally from the last phase
of his life, and his memoirs were
published in Aḥad Haʿam: Pirqe zikhronot
we-iggerot (1931; “Collected Memoirs and
Letters”). His essays comprise four
volumes (1895, 1903, 1904, and 1913).
While
stressing the rational and moral
character of Judaism, Aḥad Haʿam
believed that the goal of re-creating
Jewish nationhood could not be achieved
by purely political means but rather
required spiritual rebirth. The clarity
and precision of his essays made him a
major Hebrew-language stylist and an
influential force in modern Hebrew
literature.