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General Jewish Labour Bund

The General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia (Yiddish: ‏אַלגעמײנער ייִדישער אַרבעטער־בונד אין ליטע, פּױלן און רוסלאַנד, romanizedAlgemeyner Yidisher Arbeter-bund in Lite, Poyln un Rusland),[2] generally called The Bund (Yiddish: דער בונד, romanizedDer Bund, cognate to German: Bund, lit.'federation' or 'union') or the Jewish Labour Bund (Yiddish: דער יידישער ארבעטער־בונד, romanizedDer Yidisher Arbeter-Bund), was a secular Jewish socialist party initially formed in the Russian Empire and active between 1897 and 1920. In 1917 the Bund organizations in Poland seceded from the Russian Bund and created a new Polish General Jewish Labour Bund which continued to operate in Poland in the years between the two world wars. The majority faction of the Russian Bund was dissolved in 1921 and incorporated into the Communist Party. Other remnants of the Bund endured in various countries. A member of the Bund was called a Bundist.

General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia
‏אַלגעמײנער ייִדישער אַרבעטער־בונד אין ליטע, פּױלן און רוסלאַנד
Founded7 October 1897; 126 years ago (1897-10-07)
Dissolved19 April 1921; 103 years ago (1921-04-19)
Merged intoRussian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) (majority faction)
Communist Party of Lithuania (members in Lithuania)
Succeeded byGeneral Jewish Labour Bund in Poland
"Bund" in Latvia
Social Democratic Bund
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing
Party flag

Founding edit

The "General Jewish Labour Bund in Russia and Poland" was founded in Vilna on October 7, 1897.[3][4] The name was inspired by the General German Workers' Association.[5] The Bund sought to unite all Jewish workers in the Russian Empire into a united socialist party, and also to ally itself with the wider Russian social democratic movement to achieve a democratic and socialist Russia. The Russian Empire then included Lithuania, Latvia, Belarus, Ukraine and most of present-day Poland, areas where the majority of the world's Jews then lived.[6] They hoped to see the Jews achieve a legal minority status in Russia. Of all Jewish political parties of the time, the Bund was the most progressive regarding gender equality, with women making up more than one-third of all members.[7]

The Bund actively campaigned against antisemitism. It defended Jewish civil and cultural rights and rejected assimilation. However, the close promotion of Jewish sectional interests and support for the concept of Jewish national unity (klal yisrael) was prevented by the Bund's socialist universalism. The Bund avoided any automatic solidarity with Jews of the middle and upper classes and generally rejected political cooperation with Jewish groups that held religious, Zionist or conservative views. Even the anthem of the Bund, known as "the oath" (Di Shvue in Yiddish), written in 1902 by S. Ansky, contained no explicit reference to Jews or Jewish suffering.[8]

At the heart of the vision of the future of the Bund was the idea that there is no contradiction between the national aspect on the one hand and the socialist aspect on the other, as a strictly secular organization, the Bund renounced the Holy Land and the sacred language (Hebrew) and chose to speak Yiddish.[9]

After Kremer and Kossovsky were arrested, a new party leadership emerged. A new central committee was set up under the leadership of Dovid Kats (Taras).[10] Other key figures in the new party leadership were Leon Goldman, Pavel (Piney) Rozental and Zeldov (Nemansky).[10] The 2nd Bund conference was held in September 1898.[10] The 3rd Bund conference was held in Kovno in December 1899.[10][11] John Mill had returned from exile to attend the conference, at which he argued that the Bund should advocate for Jewish national rights. However, Mill's line did not win support from the other conference delegates.[10] The 3rd conference affirmed that the Bund only struggled for civil, not national, rights.[10]

In 1901, the word "Lithuania" was added to the name of the party.[5][12]

The Bund's membership grew to 900 in Łódź and 1,200 in Warsaw in the fall of 1904.[13]

During the period of 1903–1904, the Bund was harshly affected by Czarist state repression. Between June 1903 and July 1904, 4,467 Bundists were arrested and jailed.[14]

In its early years, the Bund had remarkable success, gaining an estimated 30,000 members in 1903 and an estimated 40,000 supporters in 1906, making it the largest socialist group in the Russian Empire.[8]

As part of the Russian Social Democracy edit

Given the Bund's secular and socialist perspective, it opposed what it viewed as the reactionary nature of traditional Jewish life in Russia. Created before the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party (RSDLP),[15] the Bund was a founding collective member at the RSDLP's first congress in Minsk in March 1898.[16][17] Three out of nine delegates at the Minsk congress were from the Bund, and one of three members of the first RSDLP Central Committee was a Bundist.[18] For the next 5 years, the Bund was recognized as the sole representative of the Jewish workers in the RSDLP, although many Russian socialists of Jewish descent, especially outside of the Pale of Settlement, joined the RSDLP directly.

At the RSDLP's second congress in Brussels and London in August 1903,[19] the Bund's autonomous position within the RSDLP was rejected,[20] with both the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks voting against, and the Bund's representatives left the Congress, the first of many splits in the Russian social democratic movement in the years to come.[21][22] The five representatives of the Bund at this Congress were Vladimir Kossowsky, Arkadi Kremer, Mikhail Liber, Vladimir Medem and Noah Portnoy.[23]

During this period two trade unions, the Union of Bristle-Makers (Bersther-Bund) and the Union of Tanners (Garber-Bund), were affiliated to the Bund.[24] In its report to the 1903 Russian Social Democratic Labour Party congress, the Bund claimed to have district organizations in Vilna (Sventiany, etc.), Kovno (Ponevezh, Vilkomir, Shavli, Onikshty, Keydany, Yanovo, Shaty, Utena...), Grodno (Kartuz-Bereza, etc.), Białystok, Dvinsk (Rezhitsa ...), Minsk (Borisov, Pinsk, Mozyr, Bobruisk, Parichi ...), Vitebsk (Beshankovichy, Liozna, Lyady ...), Warsaw, Łódź, Siedlce,[25] Płock, Suwałki, Mariampol, Gomel (Dobryanyka, Vietka ...), Mogilev (Shklow, Orsha, Bykhov, Kopys ...), Zhytomyr, Berdichev, Odessa, Nizhyn, Bila Tserkva, Podolian Governorate (Vinnitsa, Bratslav, Tulchina, Nemirov), Lutsk, Volhynian Governorate, as well as the districts of the Union of Bristle-Makers; Nevel, Kreslavka, Vilkovyshki, Kalvaria, Vladislavovo, Verzhbolovo, Vystinets, Mezhdurechye [ru], Trostyan, Knyszyn, and the districts of the Union of Tanners; Smorgon, Oshmyany, Krynki, Zabludovo, Shishlovichi [ru], etc.[26]

Per Vladimir Akimov's account of the history of social democracy 1897–1903, there were 14 local committees of Bund – Warsaw, Łódź, Belostok, Grodno, Vilna, Dvisnk, Kovno, Vitebsk, Minsk, Gomel, Mogilev, Berdichev, Zhitomir, Riga. Per Akimov's account the local committees had six types of councils; trade councils (fakhoye skhodki), revolutionary groups, propaganda councils, councils for intellectuals, discussion groups for intellectuals and agitators' councils. The Bristle-Makers Union and Tanners Union had committee status. Bund had organizations that weren't full-fledged committees in Pinsk, Sedlice, Petrokov, Płock, Brest-Litovsk, Vilkomir, Priluki, Rezhitsa, Kiev, Odessa, Bobruisk, and many smaller townships.[27]

4th conference edit

The 4th Bund conference was held in Białystok in April 1901.[10] The main topic of debate of the 4th Bund conference was the expansion of the Bund into Ukraine and building alliances with existing Jewish labour groups there.[28] The 4th conference reversed the line of the 3rd conference and adopted a line of demanding Jewish national autonomy.[10]

5th conference edit

The fifth conference of the Bund met in Zürich in June 1903.[29][30] Thirty delegates took part in the proceedings, representing the major city branches of the party and the Foreign Committee. Two issues dominated the debates; the upcoming congress of the RSDLP and the national question. During the discussions, there was a division between the older guard of the Foreign Committee (Kossovsky, Kremer and John (Yosef) Mill) and the younger generation represented by Medem, Liber and Raphael Abramovitch. The younger group wanted to stress the Jewish national character of the party. No compromise could be reached, and no resolution was adopted on the national question.[31]

1905 Revolution and its aftermath edit

 
Members of the Bund with the bodies of their comrades, murdered during the Odessa pogrom in 1905

In February 1905, by a decision of the 6th Bund conference held in Dvinsk, a Polish District Committee (Yiddish: פוילישן ראיאן-קאמיטעט) was formed; gathering the local party branches in the areas of Congress Poland (covering 10 governorates, but not including the two main centres of Bundist activity in Poland: the cities of Warsaw and Łódz).[32][33][34][35]

In the Polish areas of the Russian empire, the Bund was a leading force in the 1905 Revolution. At that time, the organization probably reached the height of its influence. It called for an improvement in living standards, a more democratic political system and the introduction of equal rights for Jews.[8] At least in the early stages of the first Russian Revolution, the armed groups of the "Bund" were likely the strongest revolutionary force in Western Russia.[36] During the following years, the Bund went into a period of decay. The party tried to concentrate on labour activism around 1909–1910 and led strikes in ten cities. The strikes resulted in a deepened backlash for the party, and as of 1910 there were legal Bundist trade unions in only four cities, Białystok, Vilnius, Riga and Łódź. Total membership in Bundist unions was around 1,500. At the time of the eighth party conference only nine local branches were represented (Riga, Vilnius, Białystok, Łódź, Bobruisk, Pinsk, Warsaw, Grodno and Dvinsk) with a combined membership of 609 (out of whom 404 were active).[37]

The Bund formally rejoined the RSDLP when all of its faction reunited at the Fourth (Unification) Congress in Stockholm in April 1906, with the support of the Mensheviks,[21] but the RSDLP remained fractured along ideological and ethnic lines. The Bund generally sided with the party's Menshevik faction led by Julius Martov and against the Bolshevik faction led by Vladimir Lenin during the factional struggles in the run-up to the Russian Revolution of 1917.[21]

The 7th Bund conference was held in Lemberg (Galicia) August 28 – September 8, 1906.[38] The main topic for debate was the relation with the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party.[38] At the time, the Bund had 33,890 members and 274 functioning local organizations.[38]

After the RSDLP finally split in 1912, the Bund became a federated part of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Menshevik) (by this time the Mensheviks had accepted the idea of a federated party organization).[39]

Parliamentary representation edit

At the 1906 First Duma elections, the Bund made an electoral agreement with the Lithuanian Labourers' Party (Trudoviks), which resulted in the election to the Duma of two (apparently non-Bundist) candidates supported by the Bund: Dr. Shmaryahu Levin for the Vilna province and Leon Bramson for the Kovno province. In total, there were twelve Jewish deputies in the Duma, falling to three in the Second Duma (February 1907 to June 1907), two in the Third Duma (1907–1912) and again three in the fourth, elected in 1912, none of them being affiliated to the Bund.[40]

Political outlook edit

The Bund eventually came to strongly oppose Zionism,[1] arguing that emigration to Palestine was a form of escapism. The Bund did not advocate separatism. Instead, it focused on culture, rather than a state or a place, as the glue of Jewish "nationalism". In this they borrowed extensively from the Austro-Marxist school, further alienating the Bolsheviks and Lenin. The Bund also promoted the use of Yiddish as a Jewish national language and to some extent opposed the Zionist project of reviving Hebrew.[41][42]

The Bund won converts mainly among Jewish artisans and workers, but also among the growing Jewish intelligentsia. It led a trade union movement of its own. It joined with the Poalei Zion (Labour Zionists) and other groups to form self-defense organisations to protect Jewish communities against pogroms and government troops. During the Russian Revolution of 1905 the Bund headed the revolutionary movement in the Jewish towns, particularly in Belarus and Ukraine.

Importance of Yiddish edit

The Bund recognized the Yiddish language as a social identifier. To maintain its national-cultural autonomy, the Bund advocated for the Polish Jewish minority to use its own language and maintain its cultural institutions in areas where it was considered a sizable portion of the local population.[43]

As a Germanic language, Yiddish also helped maintain the Bund's European identity. This can be compared to the anti-Yiddish campaign taking place in Palestine during the early twentieth century, where Yiddish newspapers were banned and physical attacks took place against Yiddish speakers.[43]

The Bund had a major role in maintaining and developing Yiddish, including Yiddish literature and other secular cultural uses of the language. The Bund was the first political party to publish a Yiddish paper – Der yidisher arbeyter – in tsarist Russia in 1896.[43]

Activities abroad edit

Less than a year after the founding of the party, its Foreign Committee was set up in Geneva. Also within the same timespan, Bundist groups began to constitute themselves internationally. However, the Bund did not construct any world party (as did Poalei Zion). On the contrary, the Bund argued that it was a party for action inside the Russian empire. The Bundist groups abroad were not included into the party structures. In 1902, a United Organization of Workers' Associations and Support Groups to the Bund Abroad was founded. The groups affiliated to the United Organization played an important role in raising funds for the party.[44]

Between 1901 and 1903, the Foreign Committee was based in London.[44]

The United Organization, the Foreign Committee as well as the Union of Russian Social Democrats Abroad were all dissolved at the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917.[44]

Separation of the Polish Bund edit

When Poland fell under German occupation in 1914, contact between the Bundists in Poland and the party centre in St. Petersburg became difficult. In November 1914 the Bund Central Committee appointed a separate Committee of Bund Organizations in Poland to run the party in Poland.[45] Theoretically the Bundists in Poland and Russia were members of the same party, but in practice the Polish Bundists operated as a party of their own.[46] In December 1917 the split was formalized, as the Polish Bundists held a clandestine meeting in Lublin and reconstituted themselves as a separate political party.[47]

Revolutions of 1917 edit

 
A Bundist demonstration, 1917
 
Election poster of the Bund hung in the Kiev electoral district, 1917. Heading: "Where we live, there is our country!" Inside frame: "Vote List 9, Bund". Bottom: "A democratic republic! Full national and political rights for Jews!"

The Bund was the only Jewish party that worked within the soviets.[48] Like other socialist parties in Russia, the Bund welcomed the February Revolution of 1917, but it did not support the October Revolution in which the Bolsheviks seized power. Like Mensheviks and other non-Bolshevik parties, the Bund called for the convening of the Russian Constituent Assembly long demanded by all Social Democratic factions.[49] The Bund's key leader in Petrograd during these months was Mikhail Liber, who was to be roundly denounced by Lenin. With the Russian Civil War and the increase in anti-Semitic pogroms by nationalists and Whites, the Bund was obliged to recognise the Soviet government and its militants fought in the Red Army in large numbers.

At the time of the 1917 upheavals, Mikhail Liber was elected president of the Bund.[50]

The 10th conference of the Bund was held in Petrograd April 14–17, 1917.[51] It was the first Bund conference to be held openly inside Russia.[51] 63 delegates had decisive voting rights at the conference, 20 had consultative votes.[51] Isaiah Eisenstadt (Yudin), Arn Vaynshteyn (Rakhmiel), Mark Liber, Henrik Erlich and Moisei Rafes were the delegates of the Central Committee at the conference.[51] The Brushworkers' Union had two delegates. The other delegates with decisive votes represented 37 cities across the country – three delegates each from Vitebsk, Minsk, Mohilev, Kiev, Kharkov, Petrograd (including Max Weinreich), Moscow (including Aleksandr Zolotarev), Yekaterinoslav, two delegates each from Odessa, Berdichev, Gomel, Kremenchuk, Nizhny Novgorod and one delegate each from Slutsk, Bobruisk, Gorodok, Nevel, Polotsk, Smolensk, Zhitomir, Mariupol, Bakhmut, Alexandrovsk, Simferopol, Rostov-on-Don, Kazan, Tambov, Samara, Baku, Tomsk/Novonikolayevsk, Saratov, Ufa, Novomoskovsk, Bogorodsk, Voronezh, and Rivne.[51]

In May 1917, a new Central Committee of the Bund was formed, consisting of Goldman, Erlich, Medem, and Jeremiah Weinsthein. One Central Committee member, Medem, was in Poland at the time and could not travel to Saint Petersburg to meet with the rest of the committee.[52]

Four Bund bureaus were represented as such among the 60 delegates to the May 1918 Menshevik Party conference: Moscow (Abramovich), Northern (Erlich), Western (Goldshtein, Melamed), and Occupied Lands (Aizenshtadt).[53]

The political changes at the time of the Russian revolution resulted in splits in the Bund. In Ukraine, Bund branches in cities like Bobruisk,[clarification needed] Ekaterinoburg[clarification needed] and Odessa had formed 'leftwing Bund groups' in late 1918. In February 1919, these groups (representing the majority in the Bund in Ukraine) adopted the name Communist Bund (Kombund), re-constituting themselves as an independent party. Moisei Rafes, who had been a leading figure of the Bund in Ukraine, became the leader of the Ukrainian Kombund.[54][55][56] The Communist Bund supported the Soviet side in the Russian Civil War.[57][58] Other members of the Bund (representing the minority in the Bund in Ukraine) at the end of 1918 formed the Social Democratic Bund (Bund-SD). Leaders of the Ukrainian Social Democratic Bund – Sore Foks, A. Litvak (see Litvak), David Petrovsky (Lipets) openly opposed the Communist ideology and policy of confiscation of property, usurpation of political power, arrests and persecution of political opponents.[59]

The Bund also had elected officials at the local level. During the 1917 October Revolution and Russian Civil War, the mayor of the predominantly Jewish Ukrainian town of Berdychiv (53,728 inhabitants, 80% of whom were Jewish at the 1897 census) was a Bundist, David Petrovsky (Lipets).[60]

11th Bund conference edit

The 11th Bund conference was held in Minsk on March 16–22, 1919, with delegates from Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Latvia and Lithuania.[61] The conference was marked by a sharp division in the party, with a sector of the Bund being increasing in line with the Bolsheviks.[61] There were 48 delegates with decisive voting rights and 19 with consultative vote.[61] The delegates with decisive votes represented Minsk 5 delegates, Vilna 5, Gomel 5, Baranavichy 4, Bobruisk 2, Kiev 2, Yekaterinoslav 2, Kletsk 2, Nyasvizh 2 and one each from Kharkov, Riga, Moscow, Mohyliv, Konotop, Kurenets, Haradok, Shklow, Ufa/Samara, Smolensk, Rechytsa, Penza, Igumen, Mozyr, Pukhavichy, Ivianiec, Voronezh, Vitebsk and Dvinsk.[61]

In Latvia edit

The first local Bund organizations in Latvia had been established on 1900 in Daugavpils and on 1902 in Riga. In the autumn of 1904, the Riga Committee of the Latvian Social Democratic Workers Party and the Riga Committee of the Bund signed a co-operation agreement and founded the Riga Federative Committee. The main liaisons were the engineer Jānis Ozols ("Zars") and the railwayman Samuel Klevansky ("Maksim"). Bund was active during the 1905 Russian revolution, organizing demonstrations and fighting units.[62]

In December 1918 the Latvia District Committee of the Bund began publishing the newspaper Undzer Tsayt ('Our Time').[63] As Latvia declared independence, the Bund held the position that Latvian independence should only be a temporary solution and that the area should eventually become part of a democratic socialist Russia.[63] The Bund obtained two seats in the People's Council of Latvia, represented by A. Sherman and M. Papermeister.[63] Moreover, the party obtained four seats in the provisional city council of Riga.[63]

In 1919, a separate Latvian Bund party was formed.[64]

Bund and the Central Rada of Ukraine edit

After the issuing of the First Universal of the Central Rada (Council) of Ukraine, the Southern Bureau of the Bund issued a statement rejecting the declaration of Ukrainian autonomy.[65] The Bund feared that minorities, such as the Jews, would suffer if a centralized Ukrainian state emerged.[66] Rather the Bund proposed that the Russian Provisional Government convene an all-Ukrainian territorial conference with representatives of both the Rada and non-Ukrainian forces, to establish an autonomous administration.[65]

Bund and the Belarusian People's Republic edit

The Bund was among the political parties that participated in the Rada (Council) of the Belarusian People's Republic, which declared independence in 1918 on territories occupied by the German Imperial Army.[67] During the March 24–25, 1918 session of the Rada, the Bund argued against declaring independence from Russia.[68] Bund member Mojżesz Gutman became a Minister without portfolio in the government of the newly created republic and drafted its constitution.[citation needed] The Bund later left the government bodies of the Belarusian People's Republic.[citation needed]

Gomel conference edit

The remainder Bund in Russia its 12th conference on April 12–19, 1920 in Gomel, where the majority adopted a Communist position and the anti Bolshevik minority reconstituted themselves as separate party (the Bund (S.D.)).[69][70]

The fourteen point of the resolution "On the Present Situation and the Tasks of Our Party" of the Gomel conference stated that

Summing up the experience of the last year, the Twelfth Conference of the Bund finds:

  1. that the Bund, in principle, had adopted the communist platform since the Eleventh Conference,
  2. that the Programme of the Communist Party, which is also the programme of the Soviet government, corresponds with the fundamental platform of the Bund,
  3. that a ’united socialist front’ with principled opponents of Soviet power, who draw a line between the proletariat and its government, is impossible,
  4. that the moment has come when the Bund can relinquish its official oppositional stand and take upon itself responsibility for the Soviet government's policy.[71]

The resolution on organisational questions stated that

The logical consequence of the political stand adopted by the Bund is the latter's entry into the [Russian Communist Party] on the same basis as the Bund's membership of the R.S.D.L.P.. The conference authorised the C.C. of the Bund to see to it, as an essential condition, that the Bund preserve within the R.C.P. the status of an autonomous organisation of the Jewish proletariat.[71]

Dissolution of the Bund in Lithuania edit

In Lithuania, the majority of the Bund had become Communists and at a conference held in Kaunas April 18–19, 1921 the Bund organization in Lithuania was declared dissolved and its members encouraged to join the Communist Party of Lithuania.[72] The anti-Communist minority of the party in Lithuania abandoned Bundist politics altogether.[73]

Unity talks and dissolution edit

Esther Frumkin and Aron Isaakovich (Rakhmiel) Vainsthein were the key leaders of the Communist Bund 1920–1921.[74] Communist Bund organs, such as Der Veker, were published irregularly in Belarus.[75]

Following the Gomel Conference, a process of negotiations for a merger between the Communist Party and the Communist Bund took place.[74][76] As noted above, the Communist Bund argued that it should be affiliated as an autonomous organization within the Communist Party on the same terms as the Bund had joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1903.[76] Furthermore, the Bund demanded that a commission be set up to discuss the terms of the merger.[77] The Communist Party ceded to this request and a 7-member commission was formed (3 Communist Party representatives, 3 Bund representatives and 1 Comintern representative as arbiter).[77] On May 6, 1920, the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party (bolshevik) discussed the question of "The Conditions for the Bund's Admission to Membership of the R.C.P." and resolved "that Kamenev, Stalin and Preobrazhensky be authorised to receive the representatives of the Bund and hear their proposals".[71] Within the Communist Party, its Jewish section (Yevsektsiya) strongly opposed the Bund and argued against allowing the Bund to form an autonomous body within the party.[77]

On June 9, 1920, the Communist faction of the Fareynikhte party merged into the Communist Bund.[78]

Eventually the Comintern arbiter in the unity commission was convinced by the Yevsektsiya argumentation, and the Comintern ordered the Bund to dissolve itself.[77] At an Extraordinary All-Russian Bundist Conference, held in Minsk on March 5, 1921, the delegates representing some 3,000 party members debated disbanding the Communist Bund.[71][79][80] Vainsthein spoke in favour of disbanding the Communist Bund and merging with the Communist Party.[81] Perel represented the minority view, arguing that the Bund should be retained as a separate party.[81] 47 delegates voted against Perel's proposal, 23 delegates abstained from voting.[81] In April 1921 the Communist International called on all Bundists to join the Communist Party.[74] The Communist Bund was subsequently disbanded.[81] In Belarus, the Communist Party of Byelorussia agreed to provide automatic party membership to any bundist that joined the party, and one bundist was included in the CP(b)B Central Bureau and two bundists in CP(b)B District Committees.[80] Symbolically marking the merger, a ceremony was held in a theatre in Minsk on April 19, 1921, where bundists handed over their banners to the CP(b)B.[80] Der Veker became the organ of the Yevsektsiya (Jewish section of the Communist Party) in the Byelorussian SSR.[80] After their party was dissolved, many former members of the Communist Bund joined the RCP(b) as individuals[82]

Legacy edit

Around 1923, the remnants of the Bund (S.D.) had ceased to function in Soviet Russia.[70] Many former Bundists, like Mikhail Liber and David Petrovsky, perished during Stalin's purges in the 1930s. The Polish Bundists continued their activities until 1948. During the latter half of the 20th century the Bundist legacy was represented through the International Jewish Labor Bund, a federation of local Bundist groups around the world. A leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943 was Bundist Marek Edelman.

In West Belarus, areas that came under Polish rule between the two world wars, the remnants of the Russian Bund eventually merged into the Polish Bund, while many activists chose to join the Polish Communist Party.

Former Bundists who became high level officials in the USSR edit

The Bundists in North America edit

Among the exiled Bundists who went on with Socialist politics in America was Baruch Charney Vladeck (1886–1938), elected to the New York Board of Aldermen as a Socialist in 1917, defeated in 1921 but re-elected in 1937 to the newly formed New York City Council running on the American Labor Party ticket. He was also the manager of The Jewish Daily Forward from 1918 till his death.[84]

Moishe Lewis (1888–1950) was a Bundist leader in his Polish (now Belarusian) hometown Svislosz before he emigrated to Canada in 1922.[85] He was the father of David Lewis (1909–1981), a leader of the New Democratic Party in Canada.

The American Labour leader David Dubinsky (1892–1982), though never formally a member of the party, had joined the bakers' union, which was controlled by the Bund, and was elected assistant secretary within the union by 1906. He made his way to the United States in 1911. He later became a member of the Socialist Party of America, helped found the American Labor Party in 1936 and was from 1932 till 1966 the leader of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union.[86]

Between 1913 and 1917, working under the name Max Goldfarb, David Petrovsky (1886–1937) was a member of the Central Committee of the Jewish Socialist Federation of America, a member of the Socialist Party of America, and the labor editor of The Forward.

Sara Szweber (1875–1966) was active in the Bund émigré community and took part in Bund's fourth World Congress at the age of ninety.[87]

See also edit

References edit

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  9. ^ TLV-01, von (2017-12-27). "Der letzte Bundist". haGalil (in German). Retrieved 2020-01-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  11. ^ The Jewish Labor Bund: a pictorial history, 1897-1957. Farlag Unser Tsait. 1958. p. 7.
  12. ^ Zimmerman, Joshua D. (2004). Poles, Jews, and the Politics of Nationality. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780299194604.
  13. ^ Zimmerman, Joshua D. (2004-01-26). Poles, Jews, and the Politics of Nationality: The Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in Late Tsarist Russia, 1892–1914. Univ of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-19463-5.
  14. ^ Minczeles, Henri. Histoire générale du Bund: un mouvement révolutionnaire juif. Paris: Editions Austral, 1995. p. 119
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Further reading edit

  • Jack Jacobs (ed.), Jewish Politics in Eastern Europe: The Bund at 100. New York: New York University Press, 2001.
  • Alfred Katz, "Bund: The Jewish Socialist Labor Party", The Polish Review, vol. 10, no. 3 (Summer 1965), pp. 67–74.
  • Scott Ury, Barricades and Banners: The Revolution of 1905 and the Transformation of Warsaw Jewry. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2012, ch. 3.

External links edit

general, jewish, labour, bund, this, article, about, original, jewish, labour, bund, russian, empire, other, disambiguation, lithuania, poland, russia, yiddish, לגעמײנער, יי, דישער, רבעטער, בונד, אין, ליטע, ױלן, און, רוסלא, נד, romanized, algemeyner, yidisher,. This article is about the original Jewish Labour Bund in the Russian Empire For other General Jewish Labour Bunds see General Jewish Labour Bund disambiguation The General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania Poland and Russia Yiddish א לגעמײנער יי דישער א רבעטער בונד אין ליטע פ ױלן און רוסלא נד romanized Algemeyner Yidisher Arbeter bund in Lite Poyln un Rusland 2 generally called The Bund Yiddish דער בונד romanized Der Bund cognate to German Bund lit federation or union or the Jewish Labour Bund Yiddish דער יידישער ארבעטער בונד romanized Der Yidisher Arbeter Bund was a secular Jewish socialist party initially formed in the Russian Empire and active between 1897 and 1920 In 1917 the Bund organizations in Poland seceded from the Russian Bund and created a new Polish General Jewish Labour Bund which continued to operate in Poland in the years between the two world wars The majority faction of the Russian Bund was dissolved in 1921 and incorporated into the Communist Party Other remnants of the Bund endured in various countries A member of the Bund was called a Bundist General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania Poland and Russia א לגעמײנער יי דישער א רבעטער בונד אין ליטע פ ױלן און רוסלא נד Founded7 October 1897 126 years ago 1897 10 07 Dissolved19 April 1921 103 years ago 1921 04 19 Merged intoRussian Communist Party Bolsheviks majority faction Communist Party of Lithuania members in Lithuania Succeeded byGeneral Jewish Labour Bund in Poland Bund in LatviaSocial Democratic BundIdeologyBundismSocialismJewish AutonomismAnti Zionism 1 Political positionLeft wingParty flagPolitics of RussiaPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 Founding 2 As part of the Russian Social Democracy 3 4th conference 4 5th conference 5 1905 Revolution and its aftermath 6 Parliamentary representation 7 Political outlook 8 Importance of Yiddish 9 Activities abroad 10 Separation of the Polish Bund 11 Revolutions of 1917 12 11th Bund conference 13 In Latvia 14 Bund and the Central Rada of Ukraine 15 Bund and the Belarusian People s Republic 16 Gomel conference 17 Dissolution of the Bund in Lithuania 18 Unity talks and dissolution 19 Legacy 19 1 Former Bundists who became high level officials in the USSR 19 2 The Bundists in North America 20 See also 21 References 22 Further reading 23 External linksFounding editThe General Jewish Labour Bund in Russia and Poland was founded in Vilna on October 7 1897 3 4 The name was inspired by the General German Workers Association 5 The Bund sought to unite all Jewish workers in the Russian Empire into a united socialist party and also to ally itself with the wider Russian social democratic movement to achieve a democratic and socialist Russia The Russian Empire then included Lithuania Latvia Belarus Ukraine and most of present day Poland areas where the majority of the world s Jews then lived 6 They hoped to see the Jews achieve a legal minority status in Russia Of all Jewish political parties of the time the Bund was the most progressive regarding gender equality with women making up more than one third of all members 7 The Bund actively campaigned against antisemitism It defended Jewish civil and cultural rights and rejected assimilation However the close promotion of Jewish sectional interests and support for the concept of Jewish national unity klal yisrael was prevented by the Bund s socialist universalism The Bund avoided any automatic solidarity with Jews of the middle and upper classes and generally rejected political cooperation with Jewish groups that held religious Zionist or conservative views Even the anthem of the Bund known as the oath Di Shvue in Yiddish written in 1902 by S Ansky contained no explicit reference to Jews or Jewish suffering 8 At the heart of the vision of the future of the Bund was the idea that there is no contradiction between the national aspect on the one hand and the socialist aspect on the other as a strictly secular organization the Bund renounced the Holy Land and the sacred language Hebrew and chose to speak Yiddish 9 After Kremer and Kossovsky were arrested a new party leadership emerged A new central committee was set up under the leadership of Dovid Kats Taras 10 Other key figures in the new party leadership were Leon Goldman Pavel Piney Rozental and Zeldov Nemansky 10 The 2nd Bund conference was held in September 1898 10 The 3rd Bund conference was held in Kovno in December 1899 10 11 John Mill had returned from exile to attend the conference at which he argued that the Bund should advocate for Jewish national rights However Mill s line did not win support from the other conference delegates 10 The 3rd conference affirmed that the Bund only struggled for civil not national rights 10 In 1901 the word Lithuania was added to the name of the party 5 12 The Bund s membership grew to 900 in Lodz and 1 200 in Warsaw in the fall of 1904 13 During the period of 1903 1904 the Bund was harshly affected by Czarist state repression Between June 1903 and July 1904 4 467 Bundists were arrested and jailed 14 In its early years the Bund had remarkable success gaining an estimated 30 000 members in 1903 and an estimated 40 000 supporters in 1906 making it the largest socialist group in the Russian Empire 8 As part of the Russian Social Democracy editGiven the Bund s secular and socialist perspective it opposed what it viewed as the reactionary nature of traditional Jewish life in Russia Created before the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party RSDLP 15 the Bund was a founding collective member at the RSDLP s first congress in Minsk in March 1898 16 17 Three out of nine delegates at the Minsk congress were from the Bund and one of three members of the first RSDLP Central Committee was a Bundist 18 For the next 5 years the Bund was recognized as the sole representative of the Jewish workers in the RSDLP although many Russian socialists of Jewish descent especially outside of the Pale of Settlement joined the RSDLP directly At the RSDLP s second congress in Brussels and London in August 1903 19 the Bund s autonomous position within the RSDLP was rejected 20 with both the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks voting against and the Bund s representatives left the Congress the first of many splits in the Russian social democratic movement in the years to come 21 22 The five representatives of the Bund at this Congress were Vladimir Kossowsky Arkadi Kremer Mikhail Liber Vladimir Medem and Noah Portnoy 23 During this period two trade unions the Union of Bristle Makers Bersther Bund and the Union of Tanners Garber Bund were affiliated to the Bund 24 In its report to the 1903 Russian Social Democratic Labour Party congress the Bund claimed to have district organizations in Vilna Sventiany etc Kovno Ponevezh Vilkomir Shavli Onikshty Keydany Yanovo Shaty Utena Grodno Kartuz Bereza etc Bialystok Dvinsk Rezhitsa Minsk Borisov Pinsk Mozyr Bobruisk Parichi Vitebsk Beshankovichy Liozna Lyady Warsaw Lodz Siedlce 25 Plock Suwalki Mariampol Gomel Dobryanyka Vietka Mogilev Shklow Orsha Bykhov Kopys Zhytomyr Berdichev Odessa Nizhyn Bila Tserkva Podolian Governorate Vinnitsa Bratslav Tulchina Nemirov Lutsk Volhynian Governorate as well as the districts of the Union of Bristle Makers Nevel Kreslavka Vilkovyshki Kalvaria Vladislavovo Verzhbolovo Vystinets Mezhdurechye ru Trostyan Knyszyn and the districts of the Union of Tanners Smorgon Oshmyany Krynki Zabludovo Shishlovichi ru etc 26 Per Vladimir Akimov s account of the history of social democracy 1897 1903 there were 14 local committees of Bund Warsaw Lodz Belostok Grodno Vilna Dvisnk Kovno Vitebsk Minsk Gomel Mogilev Berdichev Zhitomir Riga Per Akimov s account the local committees had six types of councils trade councils fakhoye skhodki revolutionary groups propaganda councils councils for intellectuals discussion groups for intellectuals and agitators councils The Bristle Makers Union and Tanners Union had committee status Bund had organizations that weren t full fledged committees in Pinsk Sedlice Petrokov Plock Brest Litovsk Vilkomir Priluki Rezhitsa Kiev Odessa Bobruisk and many smaller townships 27 4th conference editThe 4th Bund conference was held in Bialystok in April 1901 10 The main topic of debate of the 4th Bund conference was the expansion of the Bund into Ukraine and building alliances with existing Jewish labour groups there 28 The 4th conference reversed the line of the 3rd conference and adopted a line of demanding Jewish national autonomy 10 5th conference editThe fifth conference of the Bund met in Zurich in June 1903 29 30 Thirty delegates took part in the proceedings representing the major city branches of the party and the Foreign Committee Two issues dominated the debates the upcoming congress of the RSDLP and the national question During the discussions there was a division between the older guard of the Foreign Committee Kossovsky Kremer and John Yosef Mill and the younger generation represented by Medem Liber and Raphael Abramovitch The younger group wanted to stress the Jewish national character of the party No compromise could be reached and no resolution was adopted on the national question 31 1905 Revolution and its aftermath edit nbsp Members of the Bund with the bodies of their comrades murdered during the Odessa pogrom in 1905In February 1905 by a decision of the 6th Bund conference held in Dvinsk a Polish District Committee Yiddish פוילישן ראיאן קאמיטעט was formed gathering the local party branches in the areas of Congress Poland covering 10 governorates but not including the two main centres of Bundist activity in Poland the cities of Warsaw and Lodz 32 33 34 35 In the Polish areas of the Russian empire the Bund was a leading force in the 1905 Revolution At that time the organization probably reached the height of its influence It called for an improvement in living standards a more democratic political system and the introduction of equal rights for Jews 8 At least in the early stages of the first Russian Revolution the armed groups of the Bund were likely the strongest revolutionary force in Western Russia 36 During the following years the Bund went into a period of decay The party tried to concentrate on labour activism around 1909 1910 and led strikes in ten cities The strikes resulted in a deepened backlash for the party and as of 1910 there were legal Bundist trade unions in only four cities Bialystok Vilnius Riga and Lodz Total membership in Bundist unions was around 1 500 At the time of the eighth party conference only nine local branches were represented Riga Vilnius Bialystok Lodz Bobruisk Pinsk Warsaw Grodno and Dvinsk with a combined membership of 609 out of whom 404 were active 37 The Bund formally rejoined the RSDLP when all of its faction reunited at the Fourth Unification Congress in Stockholm in April 1906 with the support of the Mensheviks 21 but the RSDLP remained fractured along ideological and ethnic lines The Bund generally sided with the party s Menshevik faction led by Julius Martov and against the Bolshevik faction led by Vladimir Lenin during the factional struggles in the run up to the Russian Revolution of 1917 21 The 7th Bund conference was held in Lemberg Galicia August 28 September 8 1906 38 The main topic for debate was the relation with the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party 38 At the time the Bund had 33 890 members and 274 functioning local organizations 38 After the RSDLP finally split in 1912 the Bund became a federated part of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party Menshevik by this time the Mensheviks had accepted the idea of a federated party organization 39 Parliamentary representation editAt the 1906 First Duma elections the Bund made an electoral agreement with the Lithuanian Labourers Party Trudoviks which resulted in the election to the Duma of two apparently non Bundist candidates supported by the Bund Dr Shmaryahu Levin for the Vilna province and Leon Bramson for the Kovno province In total there were twelve Jewish deputies in the Duma falling to three in the Second Duma February 1907 to June 1907 two in the Third Duma 1907 1912 and again three in the fourth elected in 1912 none of them being affiliated to the Bund 40 Political outlook editThe Bund eventually came to strongly oppose Zionism 1 arguing that emigration to Palestine was a form of escapism The Bund did not advocate separatism Instead it focused on culture rather than a state or a place as the glue of Jewish nationalism In this they borrowed extensively from the Austro Marxist school further alienating the Bolsheviks and Lenin The Bund also promoted the use of Yiddish as a Jewish national language and to some extent opposed the Zionist project of reviving Hebrew 41 42 The Bund won converts mainly among Jewish artisans and workers but also among the growing Jewish intelligentsia It led a trade union movement of its own It joined with the Poalei Zion Labour Zionists and other groups to form self defense organisations to protect Jewish communities against pogroms and government troops During the Russian Revolution of 1905 the Bund headed the revolutionary movement in the Jewish towns particularly in Belarus and Ukraine Importance of Yiddish editThe Bund recognized the Yiddish language as a social identifier To maintain its national cultural autonomy the Bund advocated for the Polish Jewish minority to use its own language and maintain its cultural institutions in areas where it was considered a sizable portion of the local population 43 As a Germanic language Yiddish also helped maintain the Bund s European identity This can be compared to the anti Yiddish campaign taking place in Palestine during the early twentieth century where Yiddish newspapers were banned and physical attacks took place against Yiddish speakers 43 The Bund had a major role in maintaining and developing Yiddish including Yiddish literature and other secular cultural uses of the language The Bund was the first political party to publish a Yiddish paper Der yidisher arbeyter in tsarist Russia in 1896 43 Activities abroad editLess than a year after the founding of the party its Foreign Committee was set up in Geneva Also within the same timespan Bundist groups began to constitute themselves internationally However the Bund did not construct any world party as did Poalei Zion On the contrary the Bund argued that it was a party for action inside the Russian empire The Bundist groups abroad were not included into the party structures In 1902 a United Organization of Workers Associations and Support Groups to the Bund Abroad was founded The groups affiliated to the United Organization played an important role in raising funds for the party 44 Between 1901 and 1903 the Foreign Committee was based in London 44 The United Organization the Foreign Committee as well as the Union of Russian Social Democrats Abroad were all dissolved at the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917 44 Separation of the Polish Bund editWhen Poland fell under German occupation in 1914 contact between the Bundists in Poland and the party centre in St Petersburg became difficult In November 1914 the Bund Central Committee appointed a separate Committee of Bund Organizations in Poland to run the party in Poland 45 Theoretically the Bundists in Poland and Russia were members of the same party but in practice the Polish Bundists operated as a party of their own 46 In December 1917 the split was formalized as the Polish Bundists held a clandestine meeting in Lublin and reconstituted themselves as a separate political party 47 Revolutions of 1917 edit nbsp A Bundist demonstration 1917 nbsp Election poster of the Bund hung in the Kiev electoral district 1917 Heading Where we live there is our country Inside frame Vote List 9 Bund Bottom A democratic republic Full national and political rights for Jews The Bund was the only Jewish party that worked within the soviets 48 Like other socialist parties in Russia the Bund welcomed the February Revolution of 1917 but it did not support the October Revolution in which the Bolsheviks seized power Like Mensheviks and other non Bolshevik parties the Bund called for the convening of the Russian Constituent Assembly long demanded by all Social Democratic factions 49 The Bund s key leader in Petrograd during these months was Mikhail Liber who was to be roundly denounced by Lenin With the Russian Civil War and the increase in anti Semitic pogroms by nationalists and Whites the Bund was obliged to recognise the Soviet government and its militants fought in the Red Army in large numbers At the time of the 1917 upheavals Mikhail Liber was elected president of the Bund 50 The 10th conference of the Bund was held in Petrograd April 14 17 1917 51 It was the first Bund conference to be held openly inside Russia 51 63 delegates had decisive voting rights at the conference 20 had consultative votes 51 Isaiah Eisenstadt Yudin Arn Vaynshteyn Rakhmiel Mark Liber Henrik Erlich and Moisei Rafes were the delegates of the Central Committee at the conference 51 The Brushworkers Union had two delegates The other delegates with decisive votes represented 37 cities across the country three delegates each from Vitebsk Minsk Mohilev Kiev Kharkov Petrograd including Max Weinreich Moscow including Aleksandr Zolotarev Yekaterinoslav two delegates each from Odessa Berdichev Gomel Kremenchuk Nizhny Novgorod and one delegate each from Slutsk Bobruisk Gorodok Nevel Polotsk Smolensk Zhitomir Mariupol Bakhmut Alexandrovsk Simferopol Rostov on Don Kazan Tambov Samara Baku Tomsk Novonikolayevsk Saratov Ufa Novomoskovsk Bogorodsk Voronezh and Rivne 51 In May 1917 a new Central Committee of the Bund was formed consisting of Goldman Erlich Medem and Jeremiah Weinsthein One Central Committee member Medem was in Poland at the time and could not travel to Saint Petersburg to meet with the rest of the committee 52 Four Bund bureaus were represented as such among the 60 delegates to the May 1918 Menshevik Party conference Moscow Abramovich Northern Erlich Western Goldshtein Melamed and Occupied Lands Aizenshtadt 53 The political changes at the time of the Russian revolution resulted in splits in the Bund In Ukraine Bund branches in cities like Bobruisk clarification needed Ekaterinoburg clarification needed and Odessa had formed leftwing Bund groups in late 1918 In February 1919 these groups representing the majority in the Bund in Ukraine adopted the name Communist Bund Kombund re constituting themselves as an independent party Moisei Rafes who had been a leading figure of the Bund in Ukraine became the leader of the Ukrainian Kombund 54 55 56 The Communist Bund supported the Soviet side in the Russian Civil War 57 58 Other members of the Bund representing the minority in the Bund in Ukraine at the end of 1918 formed the Social Democratic Bund Bund SD Leaders of the Ukrainian Social Democratic Bund Sore Foks A Litvak see Litvak David Petrovsky Lipets openly opposed the Communist ideology and policy of confiscation of property usurpation of political power arrests and persecution of political opponents 59 The Bund also had elected officials at the local level During the 1917 October Revolution and Russian Civil War the mayor of the predominantly Jewish Ukrainian town of Berdychiv 53 728 inhabitants 80 of whom were Jewish at the 1897 census was a Bundist David Petrovsky Lipets 60 11th Bund conference editThe 11th Bund conference was held in Minsk on March 16 22 1919 with delegates from Russia Belarus Ukraine Latvia and Lithuania 61 The conference was marked by a sharp division in the party with a sector of the Bund being increasing in line with the Bolsheviks 61 There were 48 delegates with decisive voting rights and 19 with consultative vote 61 The delegates with decisive votes represented Minsk 5 delegates Vilna 5 Gomel 5 Baranavichy 4 Bobruisk 2 Kiev 2 Yekaterinoslav 2 Kletsk 2 Nyasvizh 2 and one each from Kharkov Riga Moscow Mohyliv Konotop Kurenets Haradok Shklow Ufa Samara Smolensk Rechytsa Penza Igumen Mozyr Pukhavichy Ivianiec Voronezh Vitebsk and Dvinsk 61 In Latvia editThe first local Bund organizations in Latvia had been established on 1900 in Daugavpils and on 1902 in Riga In the autumn of 1904 the Riga Committee of the Latvian Social Democratic Workers Party and the Riga Committee of the Bund signed a co operation agreement and founded the Riga Federative Committee The main liaisons were the engineer Janis Ozols Zars and the railwayman Samuel Klevansky Maksim Bund was active during the 1905 Russian revolution organizing demonstrations and fighting units 62 In December 1918 the Latvia District Committee of the Bund began publishing the newspaper Undzer Tsayt Our Time 63 As Latvia declared independence the Bund held the position that Latvian independence should only be a temporary solution and that the area should eventually become part of a democratic socialist Russia 63 The Bund obtained two seats in the People s Council of Latvia represented by A Sherman and M Papermeister 63 Moreover the party obtained four seats in the provisional city council of Riga 63 In 1919 a separate Latvian Bund party was formed 64 Bund and the Central Rada of Ukraine editAfter the issuing of the First Universal of the Central Rada Council of Ukraine the Southern Bureau of the Bund issued a statement rejecting the declaration of Ukrainian autonomy 65 The Bund feared that minorities such as the Jews would suffer if a centralized Ukrainian state emerged 66 Rather the Bund proposed that the Russian Provisional Government convene an all Ukrainian territorial conference with representatives of both the Rada and non Ukrainian forces to establish an autonomous administration 65 Bund and the Belarusian People s Republic editThe Bund was among the political parties that participated in the Rada Council of the Belarusian People s Republic which declared independence in 1918 on territories occupied by the German Imperial Army 67 During the March 24 25 1918 session of the Rada the Bund argued against declaring independence from Russia 68 Bund member Mojzesz Gutman became a Minister without portfolio in the government of the newly created republic and drafted its constitution citation needed The Bund later left the government bodies of the Belarusian People s Republic citation needed Gomel conference editThe remainder Bund in Russia its 12th conference on April 12 19 1920 in Gomel where the majority adopted a Communist position and the anti Bolshevik minority reconstituted themselves as separate party the Bund S D 69 70 The fourteen point of the resolution On the Present Situation and the Tasks of Our Party of the Gomel conference stated that Summing up the experience of the last year the Twelfth Conference of the Bund finds that the Bund in principle had adopted the communist platform since the Eleventh Conference that the Programme of the Communist Party which is also the programme of the Soviet government corresponds with the fundamental platform of the Bund that a united socialist front with principled opponents of Soviet power who draw a line between the proletariat and its government is impossible that the moment has come when the Bund can relinquish its official oppositional stand and take upon itself responsibility for the Soviet government s policy 71 The resolution on organisational questions stated that The logical consequence of the political stand adopted by the Bund is the latter s entry into the Russian Communist Party on the same basis as the Bund s membership of the R S D L P The conference authorised the C C of the Bund to see to it as an essential condition that the Bund preserve within the R C P the status of an autonomous organisation of the Jewish proletariat 71 Dissolution of the Bund in Lithuania editIn Lithuania the majority of the Bund had become Communists and at a conference held in Kaunas April 18 19 1921 the Bund organization in Lithuania was declared dissolved and its members encouraged to join the Communist Party of Lithuania 72 The anti Communist minority of the party in Lithuania abandoned Bundist politics altogether 73 Unity talks and dissolution editEsther Frumkin and Aron Isaakovich Rakhmiel Vainsthein were the key leaders of the Communist Bund 1920 1921 74 Communist Bund organs such as Der Veker were published irregularly in Belarus 75 Following the Gomel Conference a process of negotiations for a merger between the Communist Party and the Communist Bund took place 74 76 As noted above the Communist Bund argued that it should be affiliated as an autonomous organization within the Communist Party on the same terms as the Bund had joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1903 76 Furthermore the Bund demanded that a commission be set up to discuss the terms of the merger 77 The Communist Party ceded to this request and a 7 member commission was formed 3 Communist Party representatives 3 Bund representatives and 1 Comintern representative as arbiter 77 On May 6 1920 the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party bolshevik discussed the question of The Conditions for the Bund s Admission to Membership of the R C P and resolved that Kamenev Stalin and Preobrazhensky be authorised to receive the representatives of the Bund and hear their proposals 71 Within the Communist Party its Jewish section Yevsektsiya strongly opposed the Bund and argued against allowing the Bund to form an autonomous body within the party 77 On June 9 1920 the Communist faction of the Fareynikhte party merged into the Communist Bund 78 Eventually the Comintern arbiter in the unity commission was convinced by the Yevsektsiya argumentation and the Comintern ordered the Bund to dissolve itself 77 At an Extraordinary All Russian Bundist Conference held in Minsk on March 5 1921 the delegates representing some 3 000 party members debated disbanding the Communist Bund 71 79 80 Vainsthein spoke in favour of disbanding the Communist Bund and merging with the Communist Party 81 Perel represented the minority view arguing that the Bund should be retained as a separate party 81 47 delegates voted against Perel s proposal 23 delegates abstained from voting 81 In April 1921 the Communist International called on all Bundists to join the Communist Party 74 The Communist Bund was subsequently disbanded 81 In Belarus the Communist Party of Byelorussia agreed to provide automatic party membership to any bundist that joined the party and one bundist was included in the CP b B Central Bureau and two bundists in CP b B District Committees 80 Symbolically marking the merger a ceremony was held in a theatre in Minsk on April 19 1921 where bundists handed over their banners to the CP b B 80 Der Veker became the organ of the Yevsektsiya Jewish section of the Communist Party in the Byelorussian SSR 80 After their party was dissolved many former members of the Communist Bund joined the RCP b as individuals 82 Legacy editAround 1923 the remnants of the Bund S D had ceased to function in Soviet Russia 70 Many former Bundists like Mikhail Liber and David Petrovsky perished during Stalin s purges in the 1930s The Polish Bundists continued their activities until 1948 During the latter half of the 20th century the Bundist legacy was represented through the International Jewish Labor Bund a federation of local Bundist groups around the world A leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943 was Bundist Marek Edelman In West Belarus areas that came under Polish rule between the two world wars the remnants of the Russian Bund eventually merged into the Polish Bund while many activists chose to join the Polish Communist Party Former Bundists who became high level officials in the USSR edit Israel Moiseevich Leplevsky 1894 1938 Bundist in 1904 1907 Minister People s Commissar of Internal Affairs of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic 1937 1938 Moisei Leibovits Ruhymovych 1889 1939 Bundist in 1904 1913 Minister People s Commissar for military affairs of the Donetsk Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic 1917 1918 and Minister People s Commissar for Defense Industry of the USSR 1936 1937 David Petrovsky 1886 1937 Bundist in 1902 1919 a Chief of the General Directorate of military educational institutions GUVUZ 83 of the Red Army 1920 1924 a member of the Presidium of the Executive Committee of the Communist International 1924 1929 a member of the Presidium to the Supreme Soviet of the National Economy 1929 1932 a Chief of the Department of higher and secondary technical educational institutions GLAVVTUZ in the Ministry People s Commissariat of Soviet Heavy Industry 1932 1937 The Bundists in North America edit See also International Jewish Labor Bund Among the exiled Bundists who went on with Socialist politics in America was Baruch Charney Vladeck 1886 1938 elected to the New York Board of Aldermen as a Socialist in 1917 defeated in 1921 but re elected in 1937 to the newly formed New York City Council running on the American Labor Party ticket He was also the manager of The Jewish Daily Forward from 1918 till his death 84 Moishe Lewis 1888 1950 was a Bundist leader in his Polish now Belarusian hometown Svislosz before he emigrated to Canada in 1922 85 He was the father of David Lewis 1909 1981 a leader of the New Democratic Party in Canada The American Labour leader David Dubinsky 1892 1982 though never formally a member of the party had joined the bakers union which was controlled by the Bund and was elected assistant secretary within the union by 1906 He made his way to the United States in 1911 He later became a member of the Socialist Party of America helped found the American Labor Party in 1936 and was from 1932 till 1966 the leader of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union 86 Between 1913 and 1917 working under the name Max Goldfarb David Petrovsky 1886 1937 was a member of the Central Committee of the Jewish Socialist Federation of America a member of the Socialist Party of America and the labor editor of The Forward Sara Szweber 1875 1966 was active in the Bund emigre community and took part in Bund s fourth World Congress at the age of ninety 87 See also editArmenian Social Democratic Workers Organization an Armenian organization inspired by the Bund The Workers Circle an American organization inspired by the BundReferences edit a b Laqueur Walter 2003 The History of Zionism Tauris Parke Paperbacks p 273 ISBN 978 1 86064 932 5 N A Bukhbinder The History of the Jewish Labor Movement in Russia According to unpublished archive material Tamar 1931 Hirsz Abramowicz Eva Zeitlin Dobkin Dina Abramowicz Jeffrey Shandler David E Fishman 1999 Profiles of a Lost World Memoirs of East European Jewish Life Before World War II Wayne State University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 8143 2784 5 Troen S Ilan Fish Rachel 2017 02 27 Essential Israel Essays for the 21st Century Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 02719 1 a b Minczeles Henri Histoire generale du Bund un mouvement revolutionnaire juif Paris Editions Austral 1995 p 61 Tenenbaum Marcel 2016 Of Men Monsters and Mazel Surviving the Final Solution in Belgium Xlibris Corporation ISBN 9781514475072 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Shepherd Naomi 1994 A price below rubies Jewish women as rebels and radicals Harvard University Press p 139 ISBN 978 0 674 70411 4 a b c Mendes Philip 30 November 2013 The Rise and Fall of the Jewish Labor Bund jewishcurrents org Retrieved 17 January 2020 TLV 01 von 2017 12 27 Der letzte Bundist haGalil in German Retrieved 2020 01 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f g h Jonathan Frankel 8 November 1984 Prophecy and Politics Socialism Nationalism and the Russian Jews 1862 1917 Cambridge University Press pp 219 220 ISBN 978 0 521 26919 3 The Jewish Labor Bund a pictorial history 1897 1957 Farlag Unser Tsait 1958 p 7 Zimmerman Joshua D 2004 Poles Jews and the Politics of Nationality University of Wisconsin Press p 123 ISBN 9780299194604 Zimmerman Joshua D 2004 01 26 Poles Jews and the Politics of Nationality The Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in Late Tsarist Russia 1892 1914 Univ of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 19463 5 Minczeles Henri Histoire generale du Bund un mouvement revolutionnaire juif Paris Editions Austral 1995 p 119 Hilbrenner Anke Judische Geschichte Digitales Handbuch zur Geschichte und Kultur Russlands und Osteuropas PDF epub ub uni muenchen de Retrieved 20 December 2019 Khrushchev Nikita Sergeevich Khrushchev Serge 2004 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Commissar 1918 1945 Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 02332 8 Sirutavcius Vladas 2011 A Pragmatic Alliance Jewish Lithuanian Political Cooperation at the Beginning of the 20th Century Central European University Press ISBN 9786155053177 Retrieved 20 December 2019 International Socialism The rise and fall of the Jewish Labour Bund Khrushchev Nikita Sergeevich Khrushchev Serge 2004 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Commissar 1918 1945 Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 02332 8 Bhambra Gurminder K Narayan John 2016 10 26 European Cosmopolitanism Colonial Histories and Postcolonial Societies Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 33572 6 a b c Angel Smith Stefan Berger 1999 Nationalism Labour and Ethnicity 1870 1939 Manchester University Press p 150 ISBN 978 0 7190 5052 7 Mullin Richard James 2010 06 08 Lenin and the Iskra faction of the RSDLP 1899 1903 doctoral thesis University of Sussex Vital David 2001 A people apart a political history of the Jews in Europe 1789 1939 Oxford University Press p 944 ISBN 978 0 19 924681 6 Retrieved 2009 11 05 Jewish social studies 1968 p 248 Rusiniak Karwat Martyna The Siedlce branch of the Bund 1902 1939 Virtual Shtetl Retrieved 6 December 2020 Rossijskaya social demokraticheskaya rabochaya partiya Sezd Institut marksizma leninizma Moscow Russia 1959 Vtoroj sezd RSDRP iyul avgust 1903 goda Gos izd vo polit lit ry p 507 Vladimir Akimov 1969 Vladimir Akimov on the Dilemmas of Russian Marxism 1895 1903 The Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party A Short History of the Social Democratic Movement in Russia CUP Archive p 227 GGKEY QTN35JK3C26 Di Geshikhṭe fun Bund National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 109 The Relations between the Jewish Bund and the RSDRP 1897 1903 ora ox ac uk Retrieved 17 December 2019 Frankel Jonathan 1984 11 08 Prophecy and Politics Socialism Nationalism and the Russian Jews 1862 1917 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26919 3 Minczeles Henri Histoire generale du Bund un mouvement revolutionnaire juif Paris Editions Austral 1995 p 130 ח ל פא זנא נסקי 1938 מעמוא רן פון א בונדיסט p 282 Joshua D Zimmerman 2004 Poles Jews and the Politics of Nationality The Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in Late Tsarist Russia 1892 1914 University of Wisconsin Press p 317 ISBN 978 0 299 19460 4 ספר צ נסטוחוב Entsiḳlopedyah shel galuyot 1967 p 5 Doyres bundistn National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 184 Strauss Herbert A 2011 09 06 Austria Hungary Poland Russia Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 088329 9 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 pp 33 34 a b c Di Geshikhṭe fun Bund National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 361 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 p 35 Levin Dov 2000 The Litvaks a short history of the Jews in Lithuania Berghahn Books p 283 ISBN 978 1 57181 264 3 Retrieved 2009 11 07 Fishman David E 2005 The Rise of Modern Yiddish Culture University of Pittsburgh Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 8229 4272 6 Schreiber Mordecai Schiff Alvin I Klenicki Leon 2003 The Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia Schreiber Pub p 56 ISBN 978 1 887563 77 2 a b c Brumberg Abraham 1999 Anniversaries in Conflict On the Centenary of the Jewish Socialist Labor Bund Jewish Social Studies 5 3 196 217 doi 10 1353 jss 1999 0002 ISSN 1527 2028 S2CID 143856851 a b c Jacobs Jack Lester Jewish Politics in Eastern Europe The Bund at 100 Basingstoke Palgrave 2001 pp 46 51 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 p 37 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 pp 52 53 61 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 pp 69 70 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 p 56 Robert Paul Browder Alexander F Kerensky 1961 The Russian Provisional Government 1917 Documents Stanford University Press p 428 ISBN 978 0 8047 0023 8 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 p 59 a b c d e Di Geshikhṭe fun Bund National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 92 Johnpoll Bernard K The Politics of Futility The General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 1967 p 61 Brovkin Vladimir N 1991 The Mensheviks after October socialist opposition and the rise of the Bolshevik dictatorship Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 201 204 ISBN 978 0 8014 9976 0 Retrieved 2009 11 10 Nora Levin 1991 01 01 Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917 Paradox of Survival NYU Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 8147 5051 3 Abraham Malamat Haim H Ben Sasson 1976 A History of the Jewish People Harvard University Press p 966 ISBN 978 0 674 39731 6 Benjamin Pinkus 1990 01 26 The Jews of the Soviet Union The History of a National Minority Cambridge University Press p 128 ISBN 978 0 521 38926 6 Elizabeth A Wood 2005 Performing Justice Agitation Trials In Early Soviet Russia Cornell University Press p 261 ISBN 978 0 8014 4257 5 Haim Hillel Ben Sasson March 2007 Geschichte des judischen Volkes Von den Anfangen bis zur Gegenwart C H Beck p 1186 ISBN 978 3 406 55918 1 Joshua Meyers A Portrait of Transition From the Bund to Bolshevism in the Russian Revolution Jewish Social Studies n s 24 no 2 Winter 2019 107 134 Copyright c 2019 The Trustees of Indiana University doi 10 2979 jewisocistud 24 2 09 Ettinger Shmuel Shmuel Spector 2008 Berdichev Encyclopaedia Judaica Retrieved 6 December 2009 a b c d Di Geshikhṭe fun Bund National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 216 Jews During the Revolution of 1905 a b c d Di Geshikhṭe fun Bund National Yiddish Book Center 1999 p 200 The Jewish Labor Bund a pictorial history 1897 1957 Farlag Unser Tsait 1958 p 8 a b George O Liber 1 January 2016 Total Wars and the Making of Modern Ukraine 1914 1954 University of Toronto Press pp 59 60 ISBN 978 1 4426 2708 6 David R Marples 13 October 2014 Motherland Russia in the Twentieth Century Taylor amp Francis p 53 ISBN 978 1 317 87385 3 Jonathan D Smele 19 November 2015 Historical Dictionary of the Russian Civil Wars 1916 1926 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 183 ISBN 978 1 4422 5281 3 David Marples 11 October 2013 Belarus A Denationalized Nation Routledge p 4 ISBN 978 1 134 41190 0 Michael Brenner Derek J Penslar 1998 In Search of Jewish Community Jewish Identities in Germany and Austria 1918 1933 Indiana University Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 253 21224 5 a b Fruma Mohrer Marek Web eds 1998 Guide to the Yivo Archives Yivo Institute for Jewish Research M E Sharpe p 43 ISBN 978 0 7656 0130 8 a b c d explanatory note to Lenin Vladimir I April 19 May 6 1920 To Members of the Politbureau of the C C R C P B Marxists Internet Archive Lenin Internet Archive 2003 Retrieved 2009 11 10 from documents archived at the Central Party Archives Institute of Marxism Leninism of the C C C P S TJ Ocherki istorii Kommunisticheskoǐ partii Lituj 1920 1940 Mintis 1980 p 45 Bernard K Johnpoll 1967 The politics of futility the General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Cornell University Press p 135 a b c Andrew Sloin 13 February 2017 The Jewish Revolution in Belorussia Economy Race and Bolshevik Power Indiana University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 253 02463 3 Zvi Gitelman 8 March 2015 Jewish Nationality and Soviet Politics The Jewish Sections of the CPSU 1917 1930 Princeton University Press p 254 ISBN 978 1 4008 6913 8 a b Zvi Gitelman 2001 A Century of Ambivalence The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union 1881 to the Present Indiana University Press p 73 ISBN 0 253 21418 1 a b c d Bernard K Johnpoll 1967 The politics of futility the General Jewish Workers Bund of Poland 1917 1943 Cornell University Press p 103 Pinkus Benjamin Jews of the Soviet Union A History of a National Minority S l Cambridge 1990 p 129 Nora Levin December 1990 The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917 Paradox of Survival NYU Press p 63 ISBN 978 0 8147 5051 3 a b c d Elissa Bemporad 29 April 2013 Becoming Soviet Jews The Bolshevik Experiment in Minsk Indiana University Press pp 55 56 ISBN 978 0 253 00827 5 a b c d Baruch Gurevitz 15 September 1980 National Communism in the Soviet Union 1918 28 University of Pittsburgh Pre p 35 ISBN 978 0 8229 7736 0 Gershon David Hundert Yivo Institute for Jewish Research 28 May 2008 The YIVO encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe Yale University Press p 1039 ISBN 978 0 300 11903 9 The General Directorate of military educational institutions Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation Encyclopedia http encyclopedia mil ru encyclopedia dictionary details rvsn htm id 5376 morfDictionary Gitelman Zvi Y 2003 The Emergence of Modern Jewish Politics Bundism and Zionism in Eastern Europe University of Pittsburgh Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 8229 4188 0 Retrieved 2009 12 04 Fuerstenberg Adam The Marvellous Trajectory of David Lewis Life and Career Toronto Beth Tzedec Congregation Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 25 November 2009 Robert D Parmet 2005 07 30 The Master Of Seventh Avenue David Dubinsky And The American Labor Movement NYU Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 8147 6711 5 Gertrud Pickhan Sara Szweber in Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia 1 Further reading editJack Jacobs ed Jewish Politics in Eastern Europe The Bund at 100 New York New York University Press 2001 Alfred Katz Bund The Jewish Socialist Labor Party The Polish Review vol 10 no 3 Summer 1965 pp 67 74 Scott Ury Barricades and Banners The Revolution of 1905 and the Transformation of Warsaw Jewry Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2012 ch 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to General Jewish Labour Union Bund article at The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe Algemeyner Yidisher Arbeyter Bund Collection at the International Institute of Social History Jewish Workers Bund Archive at marxists org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title General Jewish Labour Bund amp oldid 1225018289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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