FROM PARIS TO IZMIR, ROME, AND JERUSALEM: ARMAND LÉVY AS THE MISSING LINK BETWEEN POLISH ROMANTIC NATIONALISM AND ZIONISM
FROM PARIS TO IZMIR, ROME, AND JERUSALEM: ARMAND LÉVY AS THE MISSING LINK BETWEEN POLISH ROMANTIC NATIONALISM AND ZIONISM
Author(s): Marcos SilberSubject(s): Political history, Jewish Thought and Philosophy, Politics and society, Nationalism Studies, 19th Century, Inter-Ethnic Relations
Published by: Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: nationalism; Zionism; romanticism; Adam Mickiewicz; Moses Hess; Armand Lévy;
Summary/Abstract: This article focuses on Armand Lévy, Adam Mickiewicz’s secretary, as the missing link between Romantic Polish nationalism and proto-Zionism. It examines Lévy’s interpretation of Adam Mickiewicz’s use of Jewish motifs and how Lévy’s interpretation provided his friend and neighbour in Paris, Moses Hess, a German- Jewish socialist, colleague and rival of Karl Marx, with a repertoire he had lacked to structure his proto-Zionist ideas. The article discusses how ideas from one cultural sphere were transferred to others. Mickiewicz, seeking to find ways to strengthen the Polish nation-building process following the partition of his motherland, used his interpretation of the contemporary Jewish Diaspora as a model. His secretary, the Frenchman Armand Lévy, reinterpreted Mickiewicz’s interpretation. His convoluted life course eventually led him to think about the Jews in nationalist terms via the discursive tools he acquired from Mickiewicz. Going beyond the latter’s views, Lévy regarded the Jews as a diasporic nation aspiring to gain political statehood. He championed Jewish messianism as a concrete step towards the Jews’ sovereignty. This, in turn, provided Moses Hess with a repertoire he had lacked until this point: namely, an acquaintance with Jews who were committed to renewing the sovereign Jewish life as of old.
Journal: Acta Poloniae Historica
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 123
- Page Range: 95-116
- Page Count: 22
- Language: English