Gustav Landauer
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Gustav Landauer (7 April 1870 in Karlsruhe, Germany — 2 May 1919 in Munich, Germany) was a German anarchist and revolutionary who was involved in establishing the short-lived Bayerische Räterepublik (Bavarian Soviet Republic) and serving as its Commissioner of Enlightenment and Public Instruction in April of 1919. Landauer is also known for his study and translation of William Shakespeare's works into German.
Landauer grew up in a prosperous and assimilated family in Germany. He became a radical as a university student and by age 21 he became the editor of a journal, The Socialist. Despite its name, Landauer espoused an anarchist philosophy that he learned and adapted from the French thinker, Pierre Proudhon and the Russian thinker, Peter Kropotkin.
He argued that the State was the enemy of freedom and should be replaced by de-centralised workers, farmers and consumer cooperatives. To some extent, he idealised the peasant for rejecting bourgeois values and embodying a collectivist ideal. This placed him at odds not only with the authoritarian German government and the established elites, but with the mainstream socialist movement, the Social Democratic Party. It sought to gain power through electoral means and reshape German society through nationalisation of big business and the creation of a welfare state. In 1893 and again in 1899, Landauer was imprisoned for acts of civil disobedience, serving a total of 17 months.
He continued to develop his non-violent revolutionary ideology in the years before to World War I and influenced Jewish intellectuals in search of libertarian solutions, including Ernst Bloch (see essay on Bloch), Gershom Scholem, Walter Benjamin and Martin Buber. He became a close friend of Martin Buber, who introduced him to Hasidic legends that appeared to fulfill his vision of an egalitarian society. In a review of Buber’s The Legends of the Baal Shem Tov, written in 1908, Landauer claimed “…Judaism is a not an external contingency but an inalienable inner property, which transforms a number of individuals into a single community.” He also considered Jesus a Jewish prophet and embraced the prophetic belief in the coming of a messianic age of peace and justice, albiet one brought into existence exclusively by human effort.
Landauer synthesised his views of human and Jewish liberation in an essay, “Are These the Ideas of a Heretic?” which appeared in a collection published by a Zionist student organisation in Prague in 1913. He believed that Jews would play a critical role in the coming world revolution precisely because, as an international people, they transcended national divisions. He anticipated the transformation of Europe into a confederation of egalitarian communities where Jews would take their place as a people united by fate, history and common ideals. Although he saw the Jewish communal kibbutzim as a partial realisation of his ideal society, he did not see the need for a Jewish state and criticised Zionists for undermining Jewish life in the Diaspora. Nevertheless, his communitarian ethic influenced Hashomer Hatzair, the socialist Zionist youth movement, and he frequently lectured before Zionist organisations in Berlin.
Landauer had diverse intellectual interests. He pursued careers as a free-lance journalist and a literary critic. He was involved in the Berlin Theatre, wrote and lectured on Shakespeare and wrote novels and short stories. His interest in English and American literature led him to translate Oscar Wilde, George Bernard Shaw and Walt Whitman into German. In 1914, as Europe moved closer toward war, Landauer worked with Buber to organise an anti-war conference, but the war broke out while it was still in the planning stage. (Buber initially greeted the war whereas Landauer remained in opposition.) However, Germany’s defeat in 1918 triggered a series of events that thrust Landauer into sudden prominence and caused his tragic death.
As revolution spread throughout Germany in 1918-1919, a radical socialist government, supported by worker’s and peasant’ councils, took power in the state of Bavaria. Landauer praised the councils as heralding a new age of “action, life and love.” Under the leadership of a left-wing Jewish socialist, Kurt Eisner, it declared itself an independent republic. (This is not to be confused with the Spartacist Uprising in Berlin, led by Karl Leibknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, although it ultimately met the same fate.)
Unlike the Bolsheviks in Russia, Eisner eschewed violence and allowed free elections that would have brought a more conservative government to power. Instead, Bavaria was thrown into chaos when Eisner was assassinated in February 1919 by a right wing fanatic, followed by the assassination of a moderate socialist unjustly suspected of murdering Eisner. Landauer delivered the eulogy at Eisner’s funeral.
The unions declared a general strike and armed militias raged through the streets of Munich. A “Council Republic” was declared, made up of radical socialists and anarchists, including Landauer’s disciple, Jewish playright Ernest Toller. Landauer became Minister of Education. He pledged to open the University of Munich to all 18 year olds, to encourage student self-government and abolish exams. He summed up his educational program as follows: “Every Bavarian child at the age of 10 is going to know Walt Whitman by heart.”
When one faction tried to curb the power of the workers councils, the Communists, led by another Jew, Eugen Levine, seized power. Landauer opposed the Communist coup d’etat and was dismissed. Civil war broke out. The counterrevolutionaries called on the central government in Berlin for military assistance. Although led by the Social Democratic Party, it dispatched the Freikorps, a right wing militia made up of war veterans, notorious for its animus toward socialists, trade unionists, democrats and Jews. In May 1919, the Freikorps conquered with a vengeance. Its minions murdered one thousand leftists, including Landauer, who they sadistically stomped to death. His last words to his murderers were “To think that you are human.” Buber wrote “Landauer fell like a prophet and a martyr of the human community to come.”
Landauer drew inspiration from the Prophetic teaching that spirit will triumph over force (for example, Zechariah 4:6). Historians have justly described his ideas as “an anarchist form of Jewish messianism,” infused with spiritual atheism. However, Landauer’s greatest contribution to modern secular Jewish thought may be his insights into reconciling Jewish and non-Jewish identities:
“My German self and my Jewish self do nothing against and a great deal for each other. Like two brothers, a first born and a Benjamin (Jacob and Rachel’s youngest son), whose mother loves them in different ways, but equally…I experience this strange but familiar juxtaposition as something delightful, and find neither element in this relationship primary or secondary…I accept the complex entity that I am, and hope I am even more varied than I know.”
- This is taken from an essay which can be found here
[edit] Further Reading
- R.L.S. Hyman, Gustav Landauer: Philosopher of Utopia (1973)
- Laundauer, Gustav. Anarchism in Germany and other Essays
- Eugene Lunn, Prophet of Community: The Romantic Socialism of Gustav Landauer (1977).

