Beyond Whiteness: Revisiting Jews in Ethnic America
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Beyond Whiteness - Jonathan Karp
Introduction: Two Cheers for Ethnicity
by Jonathan Karp
This volume’s title, Beyond Whiteness: Revisiting Jews in Ethnic America, highlights two contrasting approaches to minority group relations in the modern US: on the one hand, race and Whiteness Studies,
on the other, ethnicity. Although deriving from the Greek ethnos, the latter term is of only recent vintage, first deployed in its now familiar usage in the early 1940s.¹ Likewise, although race
is a long-familiar term (even if its meaning has repeatedly changed), racism
is a modern, essentially twentieth-century construction, while whiteness
as an analytical concept only came in to vogue in the early 1990s.² Ethnicity came to the fore after the Nazi horrors had discredited race as a neutral descriptive term. It differed from race not only in its relative absence of prejudicial baggage but in its implicit linkage of ancestry with distinctive if hybrid group culture, a component that race seemed to lack. Whiteness Studies, in contrast, is less interested in culture per se than in ideology. It presupposes that the use of whiteness to describe a body of human beings is a construct rather than an actual fact of nature or a scientifically valid description of group character. It assumes that ascribed whiteness is a social mechanism for creating racialized hierarchies, with roots in Renaissance and Enlightenment outlooks but more systematically harnessed for the purposes of white supremacy in nineteenth- and twentieth-century America.³
The fact that Whiteness Studies emerged at a slightly later date than Ethnic Studies suggests that the two may be seen as rival sociological approaches. And indeed, despite their significant overlap, we can contrast them as constituting alternative understandings. The earlier social scientific focus on ethnicity implied that the descendants of immigrant groups in America persisted in maintaining distinct identities and patterns of behavior for generations after their forebears arrived, even or especially when these features were modified and adapted over time. In contrast, the somewhat later approach defined by Whiteness Studies sees racial hierarchy building as the true organizing principle of American history, one in which ethnicity is reconceived as a strategy deployed to assimilate the descendants of European immigrants under the banner of whiteness while excluding those deemed racial others. African Americans, especially, but to a degree also non-white Hispanics
and Asians, constitute these marginalized groups stigmatized by racial non-whiteness.
In this sense Whiteness Studies views ethnicity as an epiphenomenon, marking a relatively short-lived phase centered in the mid-twentieth century during which Europeans were pressured to conform to the white/black racial binary and collaborate in the work of perpetuating it. For descendants of Irish, Southern Italian, Slavic, and Jewish immigrants, being an ethnic
effectively meant being a white ethnic,
a transitional state of tutelage preceding full admission to the blessed condition of undifferentiated whiteness. That precisely these groups had been targeted by nativists during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as alien and lower breeds
is not without significance. On the contrary, that they were now—by the immediate postwar decade—being incorporated as provisional white Americans fostered the notion that the American Melting Pot (whether in its extreme amalgamationist or its more moderate pluralistic form) remained operative. America was a land of equal opportunity for all those deemed sufficiently or effectively white.⁴
Beyond Whiteness seeks to modify but not to refute the Whiteness Studies model. As a collection of essays by historians, sociologists, anthropologists, and literary scholars, it can hardly be said to advance any one approach, let alone argument. And not all of its contributors would agree that ethnicity
deserves to make a comeback—certainly not in its classic formulation of the immediate post-War era. Still, by returning the focus to Jews in ethnic America,
the contributions all make the case that ethnicity has constituted an important phase in the American Jewish experience and might even retain relevance going forward.
Chapters 1 and 2, by Elissa Sampson and Robert Zecker, respectively, focus on one of the earliest models of multiethnic and interracial cooperation, that facilitated by the International Workers Order (IWO), an umbrella organization for workers of different national minorities that was founded in 1930 by leftist pro-Soviet Jews. Despite its ideological blinders (though inspired by its doctrinal commitments), the IWO took great pains to foster collaboration between workers speaking different languages and stemming from different backgrounds but also across racial lines. In Chapter 3 Jeffrey Gurock shifts the ground and perspective from the prewar ethnic working class to the postwar move into middle class suburbia. He does so by examining two different types of post-World War II American Jewish residential settings, the suburban model epitomized by Levittown, New York and the more urban, though less studied, enclave of white ethnics
in the Northeast Bronx neighborhood of Parkchester. Gurock’s findings are instructive if counterintuitive. While neither setting fostered the kind of thoroughgoing interethnic amalgamation that students of whiteness formation might have expected, a greater degree of assimilation occurred in the more urban than the suburban locale. At the same time, however, even in the case of Parkchester, where Jewish ethnic distinctiveness was not self-consciously fostered, it nevertheless stubbornly persisted. For despite the relative comity prevailing between the white Jews and Irish Catholics residentially congregated there, the two groups effectively lived separately together.
In Chapter 4 Jonathan Karp argues that the black/white binary inhibits a more nuanced and spectral understanding of group status and interrelations. He makes the case specifically for the utility of comparing Jewish and Asian American experiences in the modern US and argues that despite their own racial stigmatization post-World War II, the history of Asian Americans bears comparison with that of American Jews, particularly in terms of educational achievement and upward mobility. Similarly, in Chapter 5 Julian Levinson shows that both Jews and Mormons can be described as ethnoreligious
groups, in which ancestral heritage may be seen as coterminous with a sacred tradition.
Indeed, their ethnoreligious character may provide a key to understanding just why American Jews still retain their distinctive identity. Despite alarmist projections of rising intermarriage and declining synagogue affiliation, Jews have not ceased to exhibit distinctive educational, occupational, and voting patterns, among other markers of group cohesiveness. Even when not displayed in standardly or stereotypically religious terms, Jewishness has always strongly attached itself to a metaphorical notion of peoplehood, a kind of permeable tribalism, which is likewise a feature held in common with Mormons.
Yet tribalism has its own vocabulary. The very word Jew
can resonate with a harsh particularity, off-putting not only to some non-Jews. In Chapter 6 Hana Wirth-Nesher, like Levinson a literary scholar, explores some of the ethnic dimensions of the J-Word
in American Jewish literature from the mid-twentieth century to today. In a tour that begins with Hortense Calisher and ends with Philip Roth, Wirth-Nesher shows how American Jewish writers have variously critiqued the constructed meanings around the word Jew
while also painfully acknowledging the futility of seeking to escape from it.
Indeed, however illuminating inter-ethnic comparisons are, Jewishness demonstrates an historically sui generis character, at least when it comes to unfathomable longevity of Jew hatred. One way of coping with this inherited trauma is through humor. Alternately black, self-abasing, ironic, or absurdist, Jewish humor has continued to thrive in twenty-first century America, long after prognosticators of assimilation would have predicted its dissolution. In Chapter 7 Jarrod Tanny’s discussion of Jewish comedy in modern America offers two important insights: first, that humor is one of those important folkways,
ranging from food traditions to speech patterns to Israel Day parades, that continue to mark out a Jewish ethnic distinctiveness; and second, that recent Jewish humor has served as a means of linking Jews to other minorities, especially marginalized ones of color, in a way that complicates the simplistic identification of Jews and their acquired/desired whiteness.
Finally, in Chapter 8, sociologist Bruce Philips turns the preceding narratives upside down (or is it right side up?) through his analysis of the Jews of Color phenomenon—the increasing salience of Jews of mixed ethnic parentage for whom the old criteria of descent and blood do not readily apply. On the contrary, as Phillips shows in recounting their at times painful stories, Jews of Color have too often been met with misunderstanding, suspicion and even hostility from other Jews who operate on the basis of older categories of Jewish self-definition, including whiteness. The growing consciousness of Jews of Color may indeed point to a future when both race and ethnicity become decreasingly relevant in structuring Jewish American identity.
Ethnic America
has the ring of a bygone era, albeit one that could be recalled nostalgically only by those prone to romanticizing the past. Its various champions, the disciples of Horace Kallen and Randolph Bourne who coined the notion of ethnic pluralism, or later social scientists like Nathan Glazer and Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who believed that ethnic inclusivity would eventually triumph over racism, were certainly blinkered in their failure to recognize that Blacks were not just another in a long line American sub-groups gradually ascending the ladder of inclusion.⁵
Yet the fact that these social commentators failed to recognize how deep and stubborn the roots of American racism are should not entirely count against them. The impulse to subsume Blacks into the ethnic model was premature if not naïve, yet it was not fundamentally wrong. After all, in the 1970s and 1980s many Black leaders themselves sought to make Afro-American
and then African American
into the standard group label. And what lay behind this effort if not the insistence that Blacks should enjoy parity with every and any other ethnic group in America? In ethnic America to be a hyphenated American (even sans hyphen) was to be a fully-fledged American in a nation of immigrants.
And if African Americans were involuntary and coerced immigrants, the equality long denied them could, it was believed, be advanced through a public recognition of their own hybrid ethnic status as both Africans and Americans, akin to Irish and Americans, Italians and Americans, Asians and Americans.⁶
For that matter, it is somewhat paradoxical or ironic that it was Jews who seemed to have resisted the label Jewish Americans,
preferring instead to be called simply American Jews. The stubborn insistence on remaining different, even in the process of fitting in,
demonstrates how challenging it is to definitively characterize group identity even in ethnic America.
Notes
1. Werner Sollors, ed., Theories of Ethnicity: A Classical Reader (New York: New York University Press, 1996), x. Although the literature on ethnicity is massive and stretches well beyond the American context, one introductory work particularly stands out: Steve Fenton’s Ethnicity (Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2010). For a recent discussion of Jews and American ethnicity, see Eli Lederhendler, ed., Ethnicity and Beyond: Theories and Dilemmas of Jewish Group Demarcation , Studies in Contemporary Jewry XXV (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).
2. Primary credit for inaugurating the field goes to the independent scholar Theodore Allen, who published a series of pamphlets in the early 1970s which provided some of the theoretical framework of what later became Whiteness Studies. See Jeffrey Perry’s fascinating introduction in the 2006 republication of Allen’s 1975 Class Struggle and the Origin of Racial Slavery: The Invention of the White Race,
accessed September 10, 1923, https://www.jeffreybperry.net/attachments/allen_class_struggle.pdf .
3. For an overview and critical assessment, see Peter Kolchin, Whiteness Studies: The New History of Race in America,
The Journal of American History 89, no. 1 (June 2002): 154–73. Worth singling out among the many works that prefigured Whiteness Studies is Winthrop D. Jordan, White over Black: American Attitudes toward the Negro, 1550–1812 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968).
4. Interestingly, by the 1970s, if not sooner, Asian Americans began to achieve a status as a racial group with certain of the approved characteristics of white ethnics.
See Jonathan Karp’s essay, Overrepresented Minorities: Comparing the Jewish and Asian American Experiences
in this volume.
5. Nathan Glazer later admitted as much in his veritable mea culpa, We Are All Multiculturalists Now (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997).
6. During the 1980s the Reverend Jesse Jackson led a concerted and sensationally successful campaign to supplant black with African American, commenting in a December 1988 interview: Every ethnic group has a reference to some land base, some historical cultural base. African-Americans have hit that level of cultural maturity. There are Armenian-Americans and Jewish-Americans and Arab-Americans and Italian-Americans; and with a degree of accepted and reasonable pride, they connect their heritage to their mother country and where they are now.
Quoted in Ben L. Martin, From Negro to Black to African American: The Power of Names and Naming,
Political Science Quarterly 106, no. 1 (Spring, 1991): 83–107, at 83.
Bibliography
Allen, Theodore William. Class Struggle and the Origin of Racial Slavery: The Invention of the White Race.
Hoboken Education Project, 1975. Republished with an introduction by Jeffrey B. Perry, 2006. Accessed September 10, 1923. https://www.jeffreybperry.net/attachments/allen_class_struggle.pdf.
Fenton, Steve. Ethnicity. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2010.
Glazer, Nathan. We Are All Multiculturalists Now. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997.
Jordan, Winthrop D. White over Black: American Attitudes toward the Negro, 1550–1812. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968.
Kolchin, Peter. Whiteness Studies: The New History of Race in America.
The Journal of American History 89, no. 1 (June 2002): 154–73.
Lederhendler, Eli, ed.Ethnicity and Beyond: Theories and Dilemmas of Jewish Group Demarcation, Studies in Contemporary Jewry XXV. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.
Martin, Ben L. From Negro to Black to African American: The Power of Names and Naming.
Political Science Quarterly 106, no. 1 (Spring, 1991): 83–107.
Sollors, Werner, ed.Theories of Ethnicity: A Classical Reader. New York: New York University Press, 1996.
Yiddish Leftists as Early Inter-Ethniks
by Elissa Sampson
INTRODUCTION
An older cousin recently joined me at dinnertime. When the conversation turned to food and desserts, I asked him: "Do you like mandelbrot? He answered
Of course I do, I’m Jewish. Indeed, many in my generation see a New York Jewish identity often expressed in food and other preferences as decidedly ethnic, suggesting that this category remains useful. Yet understandings of ethnicity and similar naturalized identities are shifting rapidly. The category has arguably become less salient for younger Jews and perhaps for those whose elders were once thought
unmeltable ethnics." Moreover, the recognition that the concept ethnicity has tended to elide processes of racialization leaves it analytically suspect.
Given recent debates on ethnicity versus race, it is useful to review an earlier phase in the career of United States immigrant ethnicity. The prewar model of ethnicity expressed in America by immigrant pro-Soviet Jews known as Di Linke (the Left) at once allowed for work with other ethnic groups and offered a Yiddishist home in a political/cultural formation that eschewed Jewish nationalism. If part of the debate on what we call ethnicity is whether it undermines working class solidarity, this essay documents a perhaps unusual case from the first half of the twentieth century of an organizing strategy based on ethnic affiliation and shared class struggle.
Thus, after immigration to the US had been halted, Yiddish speaking immigrants founded a fraternal benefits order (not a typical communist proposition) and then invited non-Jewish groups into what would become a uniquely inter-ethnic and inter-racial fraternal order. Fraternalism was part of the IWO’s critique of capitalism: its builders
took no commissions when they signed up lodge members for benefits protecting precarious workers. With this move, the pro-Soviet Jewish left worked to promote mutual aid and inter-ethnic solidarity and to fight antisemitism, racism, and anti-immigrant actions. In doing so, they voted against melting pot ideology in favor of immigrant cultural competence and generational transmission.
THE AGE OF IMMIGRATION MEETS THE AGE OF MASS INDUSTRIALIZATION
How did Leftist, pro-Soviet Jewish immigrants articulate ethnicity in America in the wake of the Bolshevik Revolution? The key thing to be aware of in studying this process is the rapid mass immigration of a third of East Europe’s Jews to North America within a few decades, ending officially in 1924 with the passage of the Johnson-Reed national quotas act. The antagonistic Congressional Dillingham Hearings (1907–1910) viewed the rapid urban influx of the New Immigrants
(Southern Italians and East European Jews) as a threat to America’s identity. The Commission’s over forty published volumes, most famously Folkmar’s Dictionary of Race, demonstrated that its categorization of national was related to its interest in race.
Immigrant industrial workers with their associated visible differences were at the forefront of debates on what it meant to be American, and Jews were in the Commission’s cross-hairs. Three quarters of East European Jewish immigrants were urban, poor, Yiddish speakers working in the garment trade, living in highly concentrated areas often called ghettos. The Lower East Side in those years was the densest place on planet Earth; Jews were visibly, geographically, and economically concentrated in what became the world’s largest Jewish city. Its proximity to the ghettoized areas of Chinatown and Little Italy was not accidental, and its political and cultural evolution were tied to those areas.
These same dense, miserable working and living conditions stimulated a flourishing of Yiddish culture as well as its radicalization. As young women were incorporated into the work force, profound shifts in gender roles affected familial life as well as labor organizing. While Yiddish theater and publishing blossomed, tragedies such as the Triangle Fire of 1911, when 146 garment workers perished due to locked fire doors, were understood as predictable outcomes baked into a system of labor in which Jewish and Italian young female immigrant lives were less valued than the goods they produced.¹ The Uprising of the 20,000, the first US women-led strike, was a 1909 shirtwaist strike by ostensibly unorganizable young women workers, headed by immigrant firebrand Clara Lemlich.² A precursor to the events at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory (strikers protested its safety conditions while demanding higher wages), the call for the strike issued at Cooper Union was issued by Lemlich in Yiddish and then immediately translated into Italian. Lemlich later became a founding figure for Di Linke, busy organizing Jewish homemakers and working with African American women on food and rent issues during the Depression. Sparked by exploitation and disasters such as the Fire, socialist politics famously flourished in the wake of mass immigration, ushering in the election of immigrant Socialist Congressman Meyer London from 1915 to 1919. Although it took twenty years, labor unions benefitted from achieving a critical mass of organized workers. So did the usually less political landsmanshaftn (hometown benefit societies) and fraternal societies which served as critical safety nets and reinforced immigrant ties. Within immigrant Jewish leftist circles, these new conditions further stimulated existing debates about the categorization of Jewish workers: their distinctive answers to the Jewish Question looked to combine Jewish socialism with more particularistic or universalistic visions of Jewish labor and life in addressing how best to change existing conditions and shape futurity, not least in regard to antisemitism.
By way of contrast, already established German Jews,
that is Jews of German or Central European descent, were adamantly opposed to anything that smacked of race, nation, or ethnicity rather than religion to explain Jewish difference. For Jews who came from German-speaking areas, relegating difference to the religious confessional sphere allowed for American acculturation marked by endogamy. This earlier approach which prioritized religion as that which was distinctive, was stretched to avoid other formulations of Jewish commonality: East European Jews were referred to as co-religionists.
Labor tensions erupted where German Jews were employers in the men’s garment trades, as in the 1910 Protocols of Labor negotiated by Meyer London with German Jewish manufacturers represented by attorneys Louis Brandeis and Louis Marshall. These distinctions did not necessarily play well with poorer East European Jewish workers whose identity remained far more marked and racialized. For secular Yiddish speakers, the setting for Jewish as ethnic
was associated with the influx from mass immigration as distinct from religious identity per se.
East European Jewish immigrants enthusiastically greeted the overthrow of the Tzar in early 1917. Once Russia’s Bolshevik Revolution followed later that year, the ruptures concerning Socialism and Communism became larger in Jewish leftist circles and in the American left generally. A decade of splits (1920–1930) consumed the Jewish Socialist Federation (JSF) as well as the Socialist Arbeter Ring (Workmen’s Circle), a labor fraternal benefits society that offered insurance, ran a publishing house, and organized Yiddish culture schools and summer camps. One of those splits eventuated in the creation of the International Workers Order (IWO), including its Jewish Section, later known as the Jewish People’s Fraternal Organization (JPFO), and popularly known as Di Linke.
DI LINKE IN THE INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER (IWO)
Di Linke’s original five thousand Yiddish speaking members, after breaking off from the Workmen’s Circle, founded the pro-Soviet International Workers Order (IWO) in 1930. They subsequently invited other groups—initially leftist immigrant Slovak, Russian and Hungarian fraternal benefits organizations—to join its IWO fraternal umbrella as separate sections, at which point the Jewish component became the IWO’s Jewish (later its Jewish American) Section. Although the IWO’s leadership typically belonged to the CPUSA, few of its members did. By the time it was renamed the Jewish People’s Fraternal Order (JPFO) in 1944, its Jewish section remained the IWO’s largest section and had grown to encompass almost fifty thousand members with three hundred lodges in over sixty communities. Next to B’nai B’rith, the JPFO was one of the largest lodge-based Jewish fraternal organizations.
At its height in 1947, the inter-ethnic, inter-racial IWO had sixteen separate sections with approximately 200,000 fraternal members; but by December, 1953, it was defunct, shut down by New York State during the Cold War.³ During the Depression and after, many joined IWO lodges to obtain low-cost, non-discriminatory health and death benefit insurance coverage, and participate in cultural and political activities explicitly allied with opposing Jim Crow and antisemitism.⁴ The Great Depression underscored the need for medical care, housing and jobs for precarious immigrants, African Americans, and coal miners.
The IWO’s English language 1930 recruitment brochure was explicit about the organization’s Jewish origins:
Its basic group consists of Jewish workers, many of whom split away from the Workmen’s Circle and the Independent Workmen’s Circle. The Order, however, will not confine itself to the works of one particular nationality. Plans are on foot to have a number of other language fraternal organizations, Hungarian, Russian, Ukrainian, etc., join the International Workers’ Order. Every block of language branches joining the Order will have its culture commission which will conduct the work in the mother tongue of its members. At the same time the Order will be an organization bringing together the workers of various languages and thus introducing in life that which is indicated in its name, the International Workers Order.⁵
The IWO’s sixteen sections eventually encompassed Jewish, Hungarian, Ukrainian, Garibaldi (Italian), Polonia Society (Polish), Romanian, Cervantes (Hispanic), Hellenic (Greek), Finnish, Carpatho-Russian (Rusyn), American-Russian, Slovak, and Croatian national affiliates, as well as interracial general
lodges for its English section members. (The African American Douglass-Lincoln lodges were belatedly created in 1950 as a new national section although the National Organizing Committee for Work Among Negroes was added as a section by 1944.) Evolving notions of ethnicity were in play in this novel formation.
At the very same time that it opened up its organization, Di Linke continued to claim the sole mantle of secular Yiddishism, a movement which started in late nineteenth century Europe. Although Yiddishland
lacked a national homeland, Yiddish as a language cut across the map of Europe. Di Linke’s emphasis on fostering an all-encompassing Yidishe Kultur was consistent with its overall focus on harnessing Kultur-Arbet (Cultural Work) for overtly political ends. For the Jewish section/JPFO, this included its edgy ARTEF theater group, Modicut marionettes, and superb Yiddish musical choirs and mandolin orchestras. Its publishing house became one of the largest Yiddish presses, publishing high-quality Yiddish classics as well as modern writers from Europe including the Soviet Union. Its extensive children’s Yiddish afterschool Shule system was reinforced in the summer by Camp Kinderland, which celebrates its centenary in 2023. While the Yiddish writers Sholem Aleichem and Dovid Bergelson were pivotal figures for Di Linke, they also insisted on the importance of inserting mainstream American Jewish figures such as financier Haim Solomon and Nobel Prize winner Albert Michelson into a stream of American history