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{{Short description|Russian Jewish politician and activist}}
{{Infobox person/Wikidata
[[File:VladimirMedem.jpg|right|250px|thumb|Picture of Medem from the Medem Library in Paris]]
|image = VladimirMedem.jpg
'''Vladimir Davidovich Medem''', né ''Grinberg'' ({{Langx|ru|Владимир Давидович Медем}}, {{Langx|lv|Vladimirs Mēdems}}; 30 July 1879 – 9 January 1923), was a Russian Jewish politician and ideologue of the [[General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia|Jewish Labour Bund]]. The [[Medem Library]] in [[Paris]], the largest European [[Yiddish]] institution, bears his name.
|caption = Picture of Medem from the Medem Library in Paris
}}
'''Vladimir Davidovich Medem''', né ''Grinberg'' ({{Lang-ru|Владимир Давидович Медем}}; 30 July 1879 in [[Liepāja]], [[Russian Empire]] – 9 January 1923 in [[New York City]]), was a Russian Jewish politician and ideologue of the [[General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia|Jewish Labour Bund]]. The [[Medem library]] in [[Paris]], the largest European [[Yiddish]] institution, bears his name.
{{Jewish Labour Bund}}
{{Jewish Labour Bund}}


== Life ==
== Life ==
Son of a Russian medical officer who had converted from Judaism to Lutheranism,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Medem_Vladimir_Davidovich|title=YIVO {{!}} Medem, Vladimir Davidovich|website=www.yivoencyclopedia.org|access-date=2016-12-09}}</ref> Vladimir Medem was educated in a Minsk gymnasium. He studied later at the [[Kiev University]] and developed an interest in the Yiddish-speaking proletariat and their harsh living conditions. He was preoccupied by the fact that the Russian Jews had no nation and no right to strike. In spite of his interest in Jewish affairs, Medem did not re-convert to Judaism.
Son of a Russian medical officer who had converted from Judaism to [[Lutheranism]],<ref name="Gechtman">{{Cite web|url=http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Medem_Vladimir_Davidovich|last=Gechtman |first=Roni | date=30 August 2010 |title=Medem, Vladimir Davidovich|work=YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe|access-date=2016-12-09}}</ref> Vladimir Medem was educated in a [[Minsk]] [[Gymnasium (school)|gymnasium]]. He studied later at the [[Kiev University]] and developed an interest in the Yiddish-speaking proletariat and their harsh living conditions. He was preoccupied by the fact that the Russian Jews had no nation and no right to strike. In spite of his interest in Jewish affairs, Medem did not re-convert to Judaism. However, when arrested in 1901 for activities as a Bund member, he identified himself to the police as a Jew.<ref name=":0">{{Citation |title=An Introduction to Bundism (1897-1903) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZU6dwGD6dk |access-date=2023-07-19 |language=en}}</ref>


Medem only learned Yiddish at the age of 22; the language was taboo in his family environment. Because of a student strike in 1899, he had to leave the university, and at that time, inspired by [[Marxism|Marxist]] friends, he joined the Minsk socialists. His great interest in the world of Yiddish-speaking workers, and in the problem of political [[antisemitism]], drew him to become active in the Jewish Labour Bund (whose supporters were known as Bundists). Founded in 1897 in Vilna, Russian Empire (modern [[Vilnius]], Lithuania) Medem would be crucial in shaping both the politics and the ideology of the Bund. Under Medem's influence the Bund adopted [[Jewish secularism|anti-clericalist]], anti-assimilationist, and [[Anti-Zionism|anti-Zionist]] policies; highlighted by the Fourth Congress of the General Jewish Labour Bund in [[Białystok]], April 1901 where the Bund adopted an official position rejecting both the [[Jewish state#Criticism|establishment of a Jewish State]] and the [[Revival of the Hebrew language|revival of the Hebrew Language]].<ref name=":0" /> This led to the secession of the party's Zionist faction into the [[Zionist Socialist Workers' Union]] under [[Ber Borochov]]; which in turn helped Medem and [[Arkadi Kremer]] solidify the Bund's position within the [[Russian Social Democratic Labour Party|RDLSP]].<ref name=":0" /> Medem viewed Zionism as an existential threat to the Bundist cause, since he believed emigration of [[Jewish socialism|Jewish revolutionaries]] from the Russian Empire would dilute their strength.<ref>{{Citation |title=The Second Aliyah (1905-1915) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqot1i03I6w |access-date=2023-07-19 |language=en}}</ref> This Bundist authority was undone at the [[2nd Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party|2nd Congress of the RSDLP]] however after [[Julius Martov]]'s [[Mensheviks|faction of the RSDLP]] voted against recognising the Bund as the "sole representative of the Jewish [[Proletariat]]", causing Medem and Kremer to leave the Congress in protest, and thus leading to [[Vladimir Lenin]]'s [[Bolsheviks|majority faction]] gaining control of the party.<ref name=":0" />
Medem only learned Yiddish at the age of 22; the language was taboo in his family environment. Because of a student strike in 1899, he had to leave the university and joined the Minsk socialists, inspired by [[Marxism|Marxist]] friends. His great interest in the world of Yiddish-speaking workers and the political [[anti-semitism]] made him the leading ideologue of the Jewish Labour Bund, whose supporters were especially well represented among the immigrants in Paris, and were also called Bundists. Medem emigrated to New York in 1921 and died less than two years later. He is buried at the Mount Carmel Cemetery in Queens, NY.


In 1918 the Bund was reestablished as a separate party in newly independent [[Second Polish Republic|Poland]], where Medem once again became its leading theorist.<ref name="Gechtman" />
The Jewish Labour Bund, founded in 1897 in the Lithuanian [[Vilnius]], was committed to the cultural and national rights of Jews in Eastern Europe. In this regard, Medem dared to oppose the view of Russian Marxists, and even of [[Lenin]]. These objectives received support in Central and Western Europe, ''e.g.'' from Austromarxists, and especially in several Jewish immigrant workers' clubs in Paris, whose members described themselves as Bundists. One such club, which also saw the education of the workers as its main task was given the name ''Arbeter-klub afn nomen Vladimir Medem'' (''Workers' Club on behalf of Vladimir Medem''). His educational policy ambitions culminated in 1929 in the founding of the [[Medem Library]], which at 30,000 volumes is now the largest Yiddish cultural institution in Europe.

Medem emigrated to the United States in 1921, arriving in New York in mid January; in the U.S. he served as a representative of the [[General Jewish Labour Bund in Poland|Bund in Poland]].<ref name="Forverts">"[https://www.nli.org.il/en/newspapers/frw/1923/01/10/01/article/6/?e=-------en-20--1--img-txIN%7ctxTI--------------1 Genose Medem toyt]". ''[[The Forward|Forverts]]'', 10 January 1923, p. 1, 8. English translation by Daniela Goodman Rabner, available at ''[https://jewishstudiescolumbia.com/myny/arts/comrade-medem-is-dead/ Mapping Yiddish New York]''. Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, Columbia University. jewishstudiescolumbia.com. Retrieved 2022-10-10.</ref> He died in New York less than two years later, on 9 January 1923. He is buried at [[Mount Carmel Cemetery (Queens)|Mount Carmel Cemetery]] in Queens, NY.<ref name="Forverts"/>

== Influence and legacy ==
The Jewish Labour Bund was committed to the cultural and national rights of Jews in Eastern Europe. In this regard, Medem dared to oppose the view of Russian Marxists, and even of [[Lenin]]. These objectives received support in Central and Western Europe, ''e.g.'' from [[Austromarxists]], and especially in several Jewish immigrant workers' clubs in Paris, whose members described themselves as Bundists. One such club, which also saw the education of the workers as its main task was given the name ''Arbeter-klub afn nomen Vladimir Medem'' (''The Vladimir Medem Workers' Club''). His educational policy ambitions culminated in 1929 in the founding of the {{ill|Medem Library|de|Maison de la culture yiddish – Bibliothèque Medem|fr|Maison de la culture yiddish – Bibliothèque Medem}}, which at 30,000 volumes is now the largest Yiddish cultural institution in Europe.


== Main writings ==
== Main writings ==
* 1904: ''Social Democracy and the National Question''
* 1916: The doctrine of the Bund
* 1916: The doctrine of the Bund
* 1938 (posthumous): {{lang-yi|''Di legende fun der jidišher arbeter-bawegung''}} (Hg. Gros, Naftole; Gros, Naftoli). Verlag Kinder-Ring, 87 S., illustrated; reedited by National Yiddish Book Center, Amherst, Mass. (USA) 1999. Collection: "[[Steven Spielberg]] digital Yiddish library" No. 06827
* 1938 (posthumous): {{langx|yi-Latn|Di legende fun der jidišher arbeter-bawegung}} (Hg. Gros, Naftole; Gros, Naftoli). Verlag Kinder-Ring, 87 S., illustrated; reedited by National Yiddish Book Center, Amherst, Mass. (USA) 1999. Collection: "[[Steven Spielberg]] digital Yiddish library" No. 06827


==See also==
==See also==
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* {{DNB portal|119158744|TYP=}}
* {{DNB portal|119158744|TYP=}}
* [http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/printarticle.aspx?id=2118 YIVO Encyclopedia of East European Jewry]
* [http://www.yivoencyclopedia.org/printarticle.aspx?id=2118 YIVO Encyclopedia of East European Jewry]
* [https://www.marxists.org/subject/jewish/medem-terror.pdf Vladimir Medem, "On Terror"], 1918
* [https://www.marxists.org/subject/jewish/medem-nat-question.pdf Roni Gechtman, "National-Cultural Autonomy and 'Neutralism': Vladimir Medem's Marxist Analysis of the National Question, 1903-1920"] 2007
* {{cite book|author=Vladimir Medem|title=Vladimir Medem, the life and soul of a legendary Jewish socialist|url=https://archive.org/details/vladimirmedemlif0000mede|url-access=registration|date=1 June 1979|publisher=Ktav Pub. House|isbn=978-0-87068-332-9}}
* A photo of the graves of Vladimir Medem, [[Sholem Aleichem]], [[Morris Rosenfeld]] and others at the Mt Carmel Cemetery: [https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3130/3167996037_74c2ed37e6_o_d.jpg]
* A photo of the graves of Vladimir Medem, [[Sholem Aleichem]], [[Morris Rosenfeld]] and others at the Mt Carmel Cemetery: [https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3130/3167996037_74c2ed37e6_o_d.jpg]
* {{cite book|author=Vladimir Medem|title=Vladimir Medem, the life and soul of a legendary Jewish socialist|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XDMiAAAAMAAJ|date=1 June 1979|publisher=Ktav Pub. House|isbn=978-0-87068-332-9}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:1879 births]]
[[Category:1879 births]]
[[Category:1923 deaths]]
[[Category:1923 deaths]]
[[Category:Members of the Central Committee of the 5th Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party]]
[[Category:People from Liepāja]]
[[Category:Politicians from Minsk]]
[[Category:People from Courland Governorate]]
[[Category:People from Courland Governorate]]
[[Category:Latvian Jews]]
[[Category:Latvian Jews]]
[[Category:Jewish socialists]]
[[Category:Bundists]]
[[Category:Bundists]]
[[Category:Latvian emigrants to the United States]]

Latest revision as of 16:24, 17 November 2024

Picture of Medem from the Medem Library in Paris

Vladimir Davidovich Medem, né Grinberg (Russian: Владимир Давидович Медем, Latvian: Vladimirs Mēdems; 30 July 1879 – 9 January 1923), was a Russian Jewish politician and ideologue of the Jewish Labour Bund. The Medem Library in Paris, the largest European Yiddish institution, bears his name.

Life

[edit]

Son of a Russian medical officer who had converted from Judaism to Lutheranism,[1] Vladimir Medem was educated in a Minsk gymnasium. He studied later at the Kiev University and developed an interest in the Yiddish-speaking proletariat and their harsh living conditions. He was preoccupied by the fact that the Russian Jews had no nation and no right to strike. In spite of his interest in Jewish affairs, Medem did not re-convert to Judaism. However, when arrested in 1901 for activities as a Bund member, he identified himself to the police as a Jew.[2]

Medem only learned Yiddish at the age of 22; the language was taboo in his family environment. Because of a student strike in 1899, he had to leave the university, and at that time, inspired by Marxist friends, he joined the Minsk socialists. His great interest in the world of Yiddish-speaking workers, and in the problem of political antisemitism, drew him to become active in the Jewish Labour Bund (whose supporters were known as Bundists). Founded in 1897 in Vilna, Russian Empire (modern Vilnius, Lithuania) Medem would be crucial in shaping both the politics and the ideology of the Bund. Under Medem's influence the Bund adopted anti-clericalist, anti-assimilationist, and anti-Zionist policies; highlighted by the Fourth Congress of the General Jewish Labour Bund in Białystok, April 1901 where the Bund adopted an official position rejecting both the establishment of a Jewish State and the revival of the Hebrew Language.[2] This led to the secession of the party's Zionist faction into the Zionist Socialist Workers' Union under Ber Borochov; which in turn helped Medem and Arkadi Kremer solidify the Bund's position within the RDLSP.[2] Medem viewed Zionism as an existential threat to the Bundist cause, since he believed emigration of Jewish revolutionaries from the Russian Empire would dilute their strength.[3] This Bundist authority was undone at the 2nd Congress of the RSDLP however after Julius Martov's faction of the RSDLP voted against recognising the Bund as the "sole representative of the Jewish Proletariat", causing Medem and Kremer to leave the Congress in protest, and thus leading to Vladimir Lenin's majority faction gaining control of the party.[2]

In 1918 the Bund was reestablished as a separate party in newly independent Poland, where Medem once again became its leading theorist.[1]

Medem emigrated to the United States in 1921, arriving in New York in mid January; in the U.S. he served as a representative of the Bund in Poland.[4] He died in New York less than two years later, on 9 January 1923. He is buried at Mount Carmel Cemetery in Queens, NY.[4]

Influence and legacy

[edit]

The Jewish Labour Bund was committed to the cultural and national rights of Jews in Eastern Europe. In this regard, Medem dared to oppose the view of Russian Marxists, and even of Lenin. These objectives received support in Central and Western Europe, e.g. from Austromarxists, and especially in several Jewish immigrant workers' clubs in Paris, whose members described themselves as Bundists. One such club, which also saw the education of the workers as its main task was given the name Arbeter-klub afn nomen Vladimir Medem (The Vladimir Medem Workers' Club). His educational policy ambitions culminated in 1929 in the founding of the Medem Library [de; fr], which at 30,000 volumes is now the largest Yiddish cultural institution in Europe.

Main writings

[edit]
  • 1904: Social Democracy and the National Question
  • 1916: The doctrine of the Bund
  • 1938 (posthumous): Yiddish: Di legende fun der jidišher arbeter-bawegung (Hg. Gros, Naftole; Gros, Naftoli). Verlag Kinder-Ring, 87 S., illustrated; reedited by National Yiddish Book Center, Amherst, Mass. (USA) 1999. Collection: "Steven Spielberg digital Yiddish library" No. 06827

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Gechtman, Roni (30 August 2010). "Medem, Vladimir Davidovich". YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. Retrieved 2016-12-09.
  2. ^ a b c d An Introduction to Bundism (1897-1903), retrieved 2023-07-19
  3. ^ The Second Aliyah (1905-1915), retrieved 2023-07-19
  4. ^ a b "Genose Medem toyt". Forverts, 10 January 1923, p. 1, 8. English translation by Daniela Goodman Rabner, available at Mapping Yiddish New York. Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, Columbia University. jewishstudiescolumbia.com. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
[edit]