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Cyrus Adler, Non-Zionism, and the Zionist Movement: A Study in Contradictions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 October 2009
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For close to fifty years, Cyrus Adler was one of American Jewry's most influential communal leaders and public servants. Taking part in the founding of the Jewish Publication Society (1888), on whose various committees he would serve as chairman throughout his life, Adler was a founder of the American Jewish Historical Society (1892), and its president for more than twenty years. Together with Louis Marshall, Jacob Schiff, Oscar Straus, Felix Warburg, and his cousin, Judge Mayer Sulzberger, Adler played an instrumental role in organizing the American Jewish Committee (1906), and served as its president from 1929 until his death in 1940. During his thirtytwo years (1908–1940) as president and chief administrative officer of the Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate Learning, Adler shaped the institution into one of the preeminent institutions of higher Jewish learning in America. When Solomon Schechter died in 1915, Adler succeeded him to the presidency of the Jewish Theological Seminary, with which he had been closely associated since its founding in 1886, while remaining president of Dropsie as well. Serving as president of the seminary for twenty-five years, Adler played a central role in the founding of the United Synagogue, whose presidency he also held.
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References
I would like to thank Professors Ismar Schorsch, Paula Hyman, and Jonathan D. Sarna for their encouragement and suggestions in the preparation of this essay.
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2. Adler's reputation as a Jefferson scholar was given recognition when he was invited by the Thomas Jefferson Association of the United States to contribute a study on Jefferson to the memorial edition of his works then being published under its auspices in 1904. His contribution, “Jefferson as a Man of Science,” has been republished in Cyrus Adler, Lectures, Selected Papers, Addresses(Philadelphia, 1933). See Also Adler's interesting paper, “The Jefferson Bible,” which constituted his introduction to Jefferson's The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth(Washington, 1904). This essay is also republished in Adler's Lectures, Selected Papers, Addresses.
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19. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 62, pp. 1–5: Letter to Theodor Herzl, undated draft.
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38. Quoted in Parzen, Architects of Conservative Judaism, p. 121.
39. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 310, p. 3: Letter to Louis Marshall, July 6, 1917. (Adler was subsequently persuaded to relent and remain on the American Jewish Committee's executive.)
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46. Ibid, p. 55.
47. Ibid, p. 72.
48. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 326: Letter to Julian Mack, July 2, 1918.
49. Ibid, no. 102, p. 3: Letter to Israel Zangwill, November 1, 1905.
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51. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 103, pp. 1 and 2: Letter to Oscar Straus, November 12, 1905.
52. The early history of the Reform movement's staunch opposition to Zionism is analyzed in, among other works: Cohen, Naomi Wiener, “The Reaction of Reform Judaism in America to Political Zionism (1897–1922),” Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society 40 (June 1951): 361–394Google Scholar; Sternstein, Joseph P., “Reform Judaism and Zionism, 1895–1904,” Herzl Year Book 5 (1963): 11–31Google Scholar; Greenstein, Howard R., Turning Point: Zionism and Reform Judaism(Chico, Calif.: Scholars Press, 1981)Google Scholar, chap. 1; and Meyer, Michael A., “American Reform Judaism and Zionism: Early Efforts at Ideological Rapprochement,” Studies in Zionism, Spring 1983, pp. 49–64.Google Scholar
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56. Ibid.
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58. It is important to note that Adler's genuine and abiding concern for Jews throughout the world motivated him to aid in the efforts for Jewish agricultural and educational development in Palestine even prior to the 1920s. Thus, for example, when Solomon Schechter of the Jewish Theological Seminary asked Adler to join Louis Marshall, Mortimer L. Schiff, and himself on the American board of trustees of Haifa's Technion, Adler accepted. Always willing to promote the “practical” work of Jewish colonization in Palestine, Adler had (in 1909) urged support for the Jewish Agricultural Experiment Station at Athlit as a means of raising the agricultural productivity of Palestine. He, like Louis Marshall, Jacob Schiff, and other Jewish leaders, became interested through meetings with a young agricultural scientist named Aaron Aaronsohn, who had discovered how to grow a prototype of wheat, barley, rye, and oats. World-renowned German botanists and the United States Department of Agriculture had praised Aaronsohn's discovery. In writing to Louis Marshall, Adler introduced Aaronsohn as “a man who has made important agricultural discoveries…. I believe that if he can carry out his plans, the agricultural regeneration of Palestine can be accomplished; that moreover, they have the greatest importance for all dry lands as indicating a form of reclamation which does not imply the great expense attached to irrigation” (Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 136, p. 1: Letter to Louis Marshall, November 8, 1909). Adler wrote letters of introduction for Aaronsohn to Marshall, Schiff, and Professor Morris Loeb, urging that “the man and his ideas are worthy of a mighty push” (Ibid., no. 136, pp. 1 and 2).
59. Davis, Moshe, “The Human Record: Cyrus Adler at the Peace Conference, 1919,” in Essays in American Jewish History(Cincinnati: American Jewish Archives, 1958), p. 457.Google Scholar
60. Ibid., p. 463.
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63. Knee, , “Jewish Non-Zionism,” p. 212.Google Scholar
64. Louis Lipsky has commented that Adler “refused to go along with the democratic trends in Jewish life.… he seemed to think that democracy was an alien notion in Jewish life.” In his leadership style, Lipsky has suggested, Adler was, at least during most of his career, “critical and caustic, dictatorial and intolerant.” Lipsky, Louis, A Gallery of Zionist Profiles(New York: Farrar, Straus & Cudahy, 1956), pp. 210–212Google Scholar. Herman Rubenovitz, one of Adler's contemporaries and his coworker in the organization of the United Synagogue, would later comment that Adler was “a firm believer in maintaining the established order whereby leadership in Jewish affairs was to be left to certain prominent families of wealth and public spirit. He was entirely out of sympathy with the democratic trends in Jewish life which became manifest at the turn of the century” and found expression in the Zionist movement and the Zionist-inspired campaign for an American Jewish Congress. Herman, and Rubenovitz, Mignon, The Waking Heart(Cambridge, Mass.: Nathaniel Dame, 1967), pp. 55–56.Google Scholar
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66. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 254: Letter to Solomon Schechter, June 9, 1915.
67. Urofsky, , American Zionism, pp. 320–321.Google Scholar
68. “On several occasions,” as Yehuda Reinharz has noted, “Weizmann made it clear that he distrusted the instincts of the masses.” Reinharz, Yehuda, “Chaim Weizmann: The Shaping of a Zionist Leader Before World War I,” Journal of Contemporary History 18, no. 2 (April 1983): 207CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Moreover, as Yosef Gorni has pointed out, “Weizmann underestimated mass action and did not comprehend its political importance.” Gorni, Yosef, “Chaim Weizmann as Zionist Leader,” Midstream, May 1982, p. 47.Google Scholar
69. Gorni, , “Chaim Weizmann as Zionist Leader,” p. 43.Google Scholar
70. Thus, for example, Adler noted in a letter to Judah L. Magnes concerning the board of governors of the Hebrew University: “The insistence of yourself and others of the presence of Dr. Stephen S. Wise on this Board is not likely to make for my continued cooperation, at least, if I have to sit in the room with that gentleman very often.” Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 470, p. 3: Letter to Judah L. Magnes, July 21, 1926.
71. Ibid.
72. Urofsky, , American Zionism, p. 318.Google Scholar
73. Cohen, , Not Free to Desist, p. 151.Google Scholar
74. See, for example, Weizmann's Letters to Felix M. Warburg of November 22, 1929, January 16, 1930, January 17, 1930, February 28, 1930, and June 26, 1930. The Letters and Papers of Chaim Weizmann, vol. 14, series A (Jerusalem: Israel Universities Press, 1978)Google Scholar, letters no. 102, 184, 188, 209, and 328. See also Weizmann's letter to Cyrus Adler of January 4, 1932, in Ibid, vol. 15, series A, letter no. 234.
75. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 533, p. 5: Letter to Felix Warburg, March 31, 1931.
76. Ibid, p. 10.
77. Kling, , “Cyrus Adler and Zionism,” p. 26.Google Scholar
78. Adler, , Lectures, Selected Papers, Addresses, p. 331.Google Scholar
79. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 513, p. 1: Letter to Louis Namier, January 30, 1930. 80. This was published as Memorandum on the Western Wall, Prepared for the Special Commission of the League of Nations on Behalf of the Jewish Agency for Palestine(Philadelphia, 1930).
81. Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 515, p. 3: Letter to Chaim Weizmann, April 2, 1930.
82. Kling, “Cyrus Adler and Zionism,” p. 26.
83. Neuman, Cyrus Adler, p. 212.
84. See, for example, his correspondence with Judah L. Magnes during this period: e.g., his letter to Magnes of March 5, 1930—Cyrus Adler Letters, no. 514a, pp. 1–7.
85. Ibid, no. 546: Letter to Moses A. Leavitt, February 11, 1932.
86. Ibid
87. Friesel, “Jacob H. Schiff Becomes a Zionist,” pp. 56–57.Google Scholar
88. For a thoughtful and detailed discussion of why “SchifPs intention of joining the Zionist Movement was never consummated,” see Ibid, pp. 55–92.