2 Friday, February 11, 1977 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Purely Commentary The Party Has No Peer: Rabin Looks Like the Victor TEL AVIV — The battle is on. The struggle for power is in evidence in all party ranks. The demand for "change" persists. But those demanding it are begin- ning to lose faith in their hopes for success and the wiseacres are becoming more cautious in their prophecies. The mere fact that the decisive date will not be on election day in May but at the Labor Party convention on Feb. 23 is evidence of what is certain to occur: the dominant Labor Party will retain power, albeit with a smaller margin of control. Will it be Shimon Peres or Yitzhak Rabin? In the knowledgeable ranks there is the admis- sion, after all the namecalling and efforts to create a strong opposition, that it will be Rabin again. Golda Meir is expected to back him as strongly as when she first swung influence in his behalf against Peres. Minister of Justice Haim Zadok, who is also viewed as one of the "king makers" in Israel, supports Rabin. That settles it. But there will be changes. The Labor Party, with Mapam now in its corner, will surely form the next government. But it is expected to lose 19 seats which may go to Yigal Yadin's Movement for Change. Menahem Begin may lose a few seats. The religious bloc is believed to have a built-in clientele. The anticipation is for a repeated rulership, but the composition of the Cabinet and, of course, the Knesset, will be different. Perhaps it will be more con- troversial. The unity the Israelis hope for is not in sight. Saul Bellow Left His Mark on the People of Israel JERUSALEM — Saul Bellow left a lasting mark on Israelis with his interest in all facets of their ac- tivities, in his explorations of the new life in the reborn Jewish state. . Speculation Rather Than Prediction on Israel's Tempestuous Election Campaign . . . Rabin Foreseen as Victor in Heated Contest . . . Saul Bellow and King David Hotel Barber By Philip Slomovitz The evidence, of course, is in his "To Jerusalem adores Hubert H. Humphrey. Signed photos of Hum- and Back" (Viking Press), and the subtitle "A Personal phrey hang on every wall. He has often cut Hum- Account" emphasizes the intimacies that are evident phrey's hair. He has received senatorial and vice throughout the book. presidential letters from Humphrey. I take the trou- It is not surprising, therefore, that a visitor in ble to go around and read them. They are rich in Israel keeps hearing about the Bellow episodes that congressional corn. Everything is big and open, con- accompanied his tours in the land and his visits with tratulatory, wonderful and frank. people of all ranks. "How do you like that?" says Ephraim. "!Un He didn't even overlook the popular barber in the hombre tan importante que me escribe and me ha dado King David Hotel who has become a legend in his own su retrato - a mi, un barbero sencillo!" The senator time. Ephraim Mizrachi would rather be called a stu- looks extremely healthy and so does his wife. They are dent of Scriptures. He always quotes from the wisdom holding hands and strolling, dressed in sportswear, of the sages. He has a good audience: U.S. notables, through the flowers. members of the government and personalities of note Feeble Mizrachi returns to his snipping. I wonder from all parts of the globe having been treated to his whether my ears will be safe when he unfolds his scissors and brushes in his old-fashioned barber's straight razor. But that is' merely peripheral. What chair. goes through my mind is that Humphrey is rea' In the process of serving so many important awfully clever politician. Thousands of influ. al people from everywhere, Mizrachi's tools also touched American Jews, big givers, stop at the King David. Hubert Humphrey and the two had their many ex- How ingenious of Humphrey to win the barber's heart changes of views on world affairs. Ephraim treasures and cover the walls of this shop with letters and and keeps displaying the Humphrey letters and he photographs. was the Minnesota senator's most consistent suppor- And perhaps Humphrey really lost his heart to ter for the Presidency, Humphrey's ill luck being that the old boy. Anyway, no harm has been done to Miz- the King David barber doesn't have a U.S. vote. rachi, sighing and doddering and Clipping behind me. Saul Bellow couldn't miss Ephraim's chair at the Humphrey is, indeed, a friend of Israel and could be King David. Therefore he included him in his book. counted on to be one even if he had become President. Inter alia, Bellow was not so kind to Humphrey, who So, our Jerusalem barber, who would rather be undoubtedly deserves better at the hands of a fellow labeled Bible Scholar, has gained fame from the most American, but Ephraim Mizrachi is in "To Jerusalem recent Nobel Prize Winner in Literature. But Ep- and Back," with Bellow devoting the following to him: hraim remains the philosopher. When he expressed pride in Bellow's selection of him for the quoted refer- , The old barber at the King David Hotel, Ephraim ence, he turned to the Prophets, and from Jeremiah he Mizrachi, a native of Jerusalem, asks me how old I am. culled the Jeremiad: "Maduah derekh reshayim He then says, "I, too, am sixty." We are speaking matzliakh" — "Why do evil men prosper?" Spanish — Ladino, rather. He is a charmer: his hands So many and so varied are the fascinating ele- shake a bit but he gives an excellent haircut. His blue ments in Israel's population that collectively they eyes are small and overhung with wild white hairs. form a cross section of humanity. And Ephraim Miz- I speak to him about Hubert H. Humphrey, and a rachi, as one of the facets of that collective dynamism, blue flame awakens again in those two embers. A sort rightfully gained recognition from the very observant of senile strength and cheer straighten his body. He Saul Bellow. `Misinterpreted Ideologist of Cultural Zionism' . IF i Clinger Ahad HaAm: Zionist Rationalst, to Tradition i By ELIAHU BEN-YAACOV World Zionist Organization As could have befallen any other father of his generation, Isaiah Ginsburg, the pious Hasid of Skvire, happened to have a rebellious son. Knowing neither games nor friends, the de- licate and taciturn young man immersed himself in Halakha, the law of Judaism. It was as though he were aveng- ing himself through knowledge, that catalyst of deep Jewish resent- ment. Married off at less than 16 years of age, the bril- liant talmudist became a rabbinic consultant and counsellor in Skvire and the environs of Kiev. His father would never have imagined that his only son was mastering Hebrew and furtively studying Maimonides, the Judeu-Spanish philoso- pher who revered the supremacy of reason. During the second half of the 19th Century, perhaps as an offshoot of the democratic revolu- tion of 1848, the literary and cultural E n- glightenment (Haskala) movement began to suc- cessfully disseminate its ideology of humanist rationalsim. The lower-middle and working classes, in Rus- sia's smaller towns and suburban villages, pre- ferred to remain faithful to their own cultural tradition. But the opulent Jews, eager to scale the walls of the "spiritual ghetto" (and the economic one), sought or pretended to soak up the wineskins of the "universal culture" of the Christian West, while divesting themselves of the trappings of their guilt-ridden Judaism. Asher Ginsburg lived in Skvire until the age of 30, opting modestly for intel- lectual ostracism. When he reached Odessa, to try his luck in commerce, Theo- dor Herzl was in Vienna writing mediocre theater pieces. To Odessa, the met- ropolis of literary salons, he brought a knowledge of history, philosophy and positivist sociology, as well as a religious agnos- ticism, a keen practical approach to the Jewish question — and disen- chantment with the En- lightenment. Asher Ginsburg, who was compared to Ghandi and Mazzini by his disci- ple, Chaim Weizmann, lashed out mercilessly against what he called "the spiritual enslave- ment of the 'emancipated' Western Jews". In 1881, the frail lights of the Enlightenment were smashed to pieces by a series of pogroms and the Czar's new anti- Jewish legislation which led a few years later to the massacre at Kishinev, at a time when the first copies of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion 'ap- peared in the streets of Russia. Paris, the center of European civilization, echoed with the sounds of the Dreyfus trial. Theo- dor Herzl was already going from one capital to another in an attempt to resolve "the Jewish prob- lem". Even before choosing the pseudonym Ahad Ha'Am ("one of the people") to sign hundreds of articles and essays which he invariably wrote in Hebrew, Asher Ginsburg understood the Jewish national question more deeply than Theo- dor Herzl. Herzl was, after all, someone who had "re- turned" to Judaism, as a reaction against the as- similationist Enlighten- ment. Ahad Ha'Arn, intensely steeped in Jewish culture, understood that "the Jewish problem" could not be reduced to a mat- ter of persecutions or other anti-Jewish phobias. This gave rise to his later polemics with the so-called Herzlian or Politcal Zionism. It would never have oc- curred to Ahad Ha'Am, the misinterpreted ideologist of cultural Zionism, to propose a Uganda, Madagascar or Argentine plan to "solve the Jewish problem", which is, after all, a chapter in the larger national question of the Jewish people. Even though the physi- cal salvation of the pei'se 1 cuted and oppressed Jews of Eastern Europe was urgent, it was no less ur- gent to redeem the `emancipated' of other communities from their servitude. As Robert Alter main- tains, Ahad Ha'Am feared that the web of Jewish national unity was disintegrating irret- rievably in the vortex of the modern era. Hence, he viewed Israel as a "spiritual center", an ancestral home, to re- plenish a diaspora which in modern parlance, was being rapidly colonized by other cultures. The state envisaged by Ahad Ha'Am was not an end in itself, that is simply a modern and political state, but rather the ex- pression of an indepen- dence which would derive its inspiration from the prophets of Israel. It would not be a haven for persecuted Jews, but rather the center of Judaism. For Ahad Ha'Am, Jewish cultural creativity could develop only in Israel. In this respect, he dif- fered from the historian, Simon Dubnow, who ad- vanced the theory of Jewish cultural nationalism in the Dias- pora. Asher Ginsburg dreamed of the "national self-education" of the Diaspora, which, illumi- nated by the light emanating from the "spiritual center", would at long last reach Zion. Ahad Ha'Am died in Tel Aviv on Jan. 2, 1927. The dramatic events of World War II and the Nazi Holocaust, which he was spared witnessing, re- futed some of his ideas, which had been resisted by Herzlian Zionism and by other sectors of the Jewish people. Nevertheless, his global view of the na- tional question and his conception of the Jewish state as not simply a state composed of Jews, as well as his accurate and tren- chant analysis of Jewish life in the Diaspora (which he predicted would be long-lasting) are today more contempor- ary and vital than in his own polemic days. Herzl was the incredi- ble political dynamo who AHAD HaAM brought about Israeli in- dependence 50 years after the publication of "The Jewish State," but who, to a certain extent, burned himself out. Ahad Ha'Am, by con- trast, is more relevant today than in that bygone era when the very physi- cal existence of the Jewish masses was called into question. In any event, the empty- ing of Jewish communities in the Diaspora as well as the persistence of the Diaspora, only serve to justify Ahad Ha'am's fears. Disillusioned., the Skvire rebel abandoned his intellectual activities as head of "Ha-Shiloakh," the most brilliant and serious publication of its time, and became an employee of the Wis- sotzky Tea Company in London (Wissotzky gave financial backing to "Ha-Shiloakh"). He immigrated to Is- rael in 1921, settling in what today is Tel Aviv. Until his aliya, Ahad Ha'Am had succeeded in _ railing against those w who had falsified his no- compromise Zionism, which was slower and perchance more lacklus- ter than the dynamic Zionism of Herzl's adhe- rents. Nevertheless, there was no escaping his venom for those theoriz- ,ers Of religious refor- mism, for whom "Zion is everywhere", nor for those who invented. the doctrine of "the mission of the Jews", who must continue in a state of dis- persion in order to carry their message to the rest of the peoples. Ahad Ha'Am did not spare those who claimed to "regnerate anti-Semites", by adopting the infp - practice of being apo :c and disseminating "among the ignorant" the current co-called "universal val- ues of Judaism". Ahad Ha'Am never held any official posts within the , political Zionist Movement, in whose ranks were many who sought to refute his positions. His sons took the name Ginosar and his family life was not the drama one might have suspected in Skvire. His remains are inter- red next to those of his great opponent, Max Nordau.