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Vladimir Medem - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vladimir Medem

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Picture of Medem from the Medem Library in Paris

Vladimir Davidovich Medem, né Grinberg (Russian: Владимир Давидович Медем), (1879, Liepāja, Russian Empire, – 1923, New York City), 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.

Contents

Life

Son of a Russian medical officer who had converted from Judaism to Christianity, 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.

Medem only learned Yiddish at the age of 22; the language was taboo in his family environment. Because of a student strike in 1898, he had to leave the university and joined the Minsk socialists, inspired by 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.

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.

Part of a series of articles on the
Jewish Labour Bund
Ac.manif1917.jpgאַלגעמײַנער ײדישער אַרבעטער בּונד אין ליטע פוילין און רוסלאַנד

1890s to World War I
Russia · Austria-Hungary

Interwar years and World War II
Belarus · Latvia · Lithuania · Poland · Romania · Soviet Union

After 1945
International Jewish Labor Bund
Branches: Australia · France · Israel · United Kingdom

People
Viktor Alter · Henryk Ehrlich · Esther Frumkin · Vladimir Medem · Noah Meisel · Anna Rozental · Szmul Zygielbojm

Press
Arbeiter Fragen · Arbeiterstimme · Der yidisher arbeyter · Folkstsaytung · Lodzer veker

Associated organisations
Klain Bund · Kultur Lige · Morgnshtern · S.K.I.F. · Tsukunft · Tsukunft shturem

Splinter groups
Communist Bund (Poland) · Communist Bund (Russia) · Communist Bund (Ukraine) · Komtsukunft

Categories
Bundism · Jewish history · Socialist parties

Main writings

External links

Vladimir Medem in the German National Library catalogue (German)

See also


This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.

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