Martin Buber

1878–1965

Martin Buber was one of the best-known Jewish thinkers in the Western world in the twentieth century. His neoromanticism and use of völkisch terms of analysis in his early writings exerted an enormous influence on Jewish youth in Central Europe, as did his popular (and frequently unreliable) accounts of Hasidic teachings. Perhaps more than any individual he was responsible for introducing Hasidism to Western-educated Jewish audiences. In 1923, he published his best-known philosophical work, I and Thou. In 1938, he moved to Jerusalem, where he was given a chair at the Hebrew University. Before 1948, he was among those in the Yishuv (mainly German-speaking, Central European intellectuals) who advocated a binational state in which Jews and Arabs would cooperate. After World War II, he was much lauded, both in Europe and America, as a great humanitarian.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Herut: On Youth and Religion

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“God’s writing engraved on the tablets”—read not harut (engraved) but herut (freedom). —Sayings of the Fathers VI, 2 Among all the problems of present-day Jewish life, that of youth’s attitude…

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Genuine Dialogue and the Possibilities of Peace

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I cannot express my thanks to the German Book Trade for the honor conferred on me without at the same time setting forth the sense in which I have accepted it, just as I earlier accepted the Hanseatic…

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The Legend of the Baal-Shem

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This book consists of a descriptive account and twenty stories. The descriptive account speaks of the life of the Hasidim, a Jewish sect of eastern Europe which arose around the middle of…

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On the Renaissance

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We are speaking of the Jewish Renaissance. By this we understand the peculiar and basically inexplicable phenomenon of the progressive rejuvenation of the Jewish people in language, customs, and art…

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Judaism and the Jews

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The question I put before you, as well as before myself, is the question of the meaning of Judaism for the Jews. Why do we call ourselves Jews? Because we are Jews? What does that mean: we are Jews? I…

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Lesser Ury (and Jewish Art)

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The strongest testimony to life is productivity, and the most direct form of productivity is art. That is why those of us who announce a life of the Jewish people inquire into the possibility of…

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A Jewish University

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The purpose of the Jewish University is to offer Jewish youth the opportunity to obtain an education:A. In the general higher disciplines with special consideration given to the Wissenschaft des…