Ben-Gurion's Ref le etions on Berl Katznelson on 20t1i Anniversary of His Death by DAVID BEN-GURION Berl KatznelSon was the greatest intellectual force produced by the Second Aliya, which was the prod- uct of disillusionment wth Zionism and Socialism. With the death of Herzl, many feared that the move- ment was at an end. But there were those who realized that Zionism would only have a meaning if they devoted their lives to working on the land. These men also were disillu- sioned with the Russian Revolution and Socialism — by 1906 they had little hope for this cause. These two factors produced the Second Aliya — they believed that Zionism meant working on the land and in labor as the soul and spirit of the national revival. They were Social- ists but not the preaching kind; for them it meant evolving a way of living for a free working commun- ity. Their ideas emerged from their experiences, they learned by their mistakes, by constantly searching for improvements. And the man who gave the fullest expression to their searchings and thinking was Bea Before he came here, he was less of a Zion- ist than many others. The Social- ist vision was part of him from his youth. He was, however, dis- illusioned by the Socialism in Russia. Berl came here in 1909, prefer- ring not to join either of the two existing workers' parties, not agree- ing with either of them in full. In those early years I hardly knew him, I met him once or twice at meetings of agricultural workers. I really got to know him after I re- turned from America with Ben-Zvi in the Jewish Legion, and met him in the desert, at Tel-el-Kabir. I had come across an article of his, "To- wards the Future," in an anthology called "Work." On reading it, I said to myself — this is what I be- lieve, too . . . So I went to see him. Berl wrote of the workers' mission to create a free Jewish society of men living by their own labor, of the resolve to redeem the nation and of the desire to free the work- ers — both aims being part and parcel of the same cause; that the message of the Jewish worker could not be put across by routine methods but through his life and d3RAA, Mfitavd are a oi (end remember, only Bass makes Weejune9 Only Weejuns can mike you feel so exactly right — with their comfortable, classic elegance, poised casual styling and band sewn moccasin detail.. ' - The only thing 'just like" Weejuns is another pair of Weejuns. You're so smart not to settle for less! AVAILABLE FOR MEN ONLY AT PHILLIP LAYNE Fine Shoes for Men DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 162 Bagley 162 S. Woodward WO 1-4545 his work; he called for mass immi- gration, creation of farming and in- dustry with the full cooperation of science and cultural work. No one said those things before him. The ideas had a tremendous impact. Above all, he had a brilliant style. In his day there was no one like him. What Bialik was to poetry, he was to prose. I know of no writer who bettered him in the form and richness of expression. He outlined the path to future greatness. Unity was important to Berl, be- cause he did not regard the work- ers as a separate class, in opposi- tion to Left Poalei Zion, but as part of the nation and as respon- sible for its fate. - Berl always lived with the idea that what we were doing was not just for the sake of a party but for the common good. He opposed me about Partition in 1937. He dreamed of the integ- rity of the land. But he did agree finally to the formula that if the Mandatory Government would keep to the Partition scheme, with cer- tain improvements — Jerusalem and the borders — we would dis- cuss it. Then came his article, dur- ing World War II, in a pamphlet entitled "The Crucible," where he wrote of the immediate need for a Jewish State, arguing that the Man- date would not last and that the State would not cover all parts of the land. That was his strength— he realized that conditions change and that we must adjust our poli- tical thinking accordingly. Berl was a teacher. He would certainly object to the title of leader. Not just out of modesty, but because the concept of "lead- ership" was foreign to him. He was a teacher who understood that his pupil might differ. Berl was no Rabbi, for a Rabbi requires disciples. Berl sought pupils, not disciples. He was capable of admitting that he had no solution to a problem. One of his great qualities was his de- termination that his pupils should think for themselves. He wished to convey his mode of thought, his view of things, and that his pupils should then reach their own conclusions, He died before his time. He could have given so much to the State— but not in an official position. I doubt whether he would have wanted to be a Cabinet Minister. . . . If he had lived, he would have witnessed the great change in the Jewish people. For some time he feared that the Holocaust had des- troyed our people. He was very pes- simistic. If he could have lived he would have seen, not only the ca- tastrophe, but also the State. He would have seen the Oriental im- migration which hardly existed be- fore. He would have seen how things change, that there are re- quirements of State, that there is a need for the Army, that there are Government services—and that all these require pioneering as well —it seems to me that I know what his attitude would have been. Berl definitely envisaged a Jew- ish State. The idea was raised as far back as 1919. I recall that, when I came back from one of my trips abroad in 1940, I was told that Berl had come round to recognize the immediate necessity of Statehood. Ever since I got to know him we worked in unison. He was more ac- tive in the educational and ideo- logical spheres and I in political affairs, I do not regard myself as his suc- cesor or his pupil. We came from different ends of the line. He was not always a Zionist. I was born a Zionist, my father was a member of the Hovevei Zion before the Zionist Movement. Berl came here with a considerable knowledge of Hebrew literature. He was profound and without platitudes. There is no man who can fill his place. On his level there is no one. * * * Katznelson the Teacher by NAHUM PUNDAK Berl Katznelson was only 58 when he died 20 years ago, on the 23rd of Ab which in 1944 fell on August 12. He was a great leader because he was a great human being. He occupied few official positions; he wanted no publicity. In the 20 years he edited "Davar" his pic- ture did not appear once in that newspaper. He was a leader sim- ply because people followed him; and they followed him because of his qualities. Those who remember him from his first days at Petah Tikva — where he had joined the shmen- drikim, as the old settlers referred to what was to become known as the Second Aliya — cannot tell exactly when he arrived; but they remember well the day Berl left for Kinneret in 1910. He was only 23 years old then. It is difficult to understand the Second or Third Aliya without understanding their heart-aches. Unmarried youngsters in their late teens or early twenties, they often longed desperately for the homes they had left behind, often against their parents' wishes. Starving and ill, these boys and girls toiled in a different cli- mate to which they were not used. In this society, notwith- standing his young age, Berl filled the empty space in the hearts of the halutzim. When he disembarked in Jaffa in 1909, the Yishuv was on the verge of disaster. The Zionist movement had been split by Herzl's desperate acceptance of the Uganda plan in 1903. Zionist leaders in Europe, engaged in debate and speechmak- ing, thought it madness for adoles- cents to go to Palestine without training, without funds and with- out Turkey's recognition of the right to colonize their country. Aliya was something for the luna- tic fringe. Hunger, disease, unem- ployment, Arab attacks and Turk- ish corruption had driven the Jews of this country to the depths of despair. It would be an oversimplifica- tion to say that Berl saved the Second Aliya from collapse single- handed. A. D. Gordon and Yosef Hayyim Brenner, whose cry, "We shall be the last on the ramparts," resounded in Berl's mind, were al- ready in Petah Tikva when he ar- rived. And among the halutzim there were youngsters who were later to show qualities of leader- ship, like Ben-Gurion, Sprinzak, Remez, Ben-Zvi and others. But they were very young, they lacked experience, and despite their de- bates and their dedication they lacked an idea of what society they wanted to build in their homeland. He took a room at the workers' quarter of Ein Gannim. He was not a very good worker at first; but neither were the other youngsters. A friend from Petah Tikva days re- calls how he complained about his two left hands. Later, at Kinneret, Ben Shemen and Jerusalem, he was to become an accomplished vege- table gardner. Berl's restless soul made him leave Kinneret and move on to Ben Shemen, which was a kind of vocational center. It was here that he made the speech that was to become a milestone in his car- eer. Delivered at a meeting of the Union of Agricultural Workers of Judea, it formulated the prin- ciples of the new society that was going to be built in this country: Jewish labor, mutual aid, workers' cooperative settle- ments, national land. Today this may sound trival, but before the First World War it was a daring speech and a clarion call. Viewed by his own standards, Berl's life was tragic. He longed to go back to the land, but his de- sire to fight, to improve and to revolutionize was always the strong- er, and he always answered the call to lead. He forged the ideals of labor movement; he inspired the formation of a host of its institu- tions. He realized what was needed each time and, not a gifted admin- istrator himself, he found men to carry out his project. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, August 14, 1964 27 But he failed in what he consid- ered the supreme task: education. He failed to educate a class of leaders living according to the ideals that were his; and he failed to educate a national working class that would be different from other industrial working classes in the world. 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