DOI: 10.67469/ehj2026.1.1.3 ISSN: 3122-8879

Haim Nachman Bialik in Vienna

David Hannah

This article examines Haim Nachman Bialik’s pivotal activities in Vienna in 1913, during and immediately after the 11th Zionist Congress, highlighting two landmark lectures that advanced core elements of Zionist cultural ideology.In his closing address at the Congress on September 9, 1913, Bialik articulated a powerful vision for establishing “The University of the Jewish People”(later realized as the Hebrew University of Jerusalem). This speech bridged Theodor Herzl’s earlier practical Zionist foundations in Vienna with a deeper spiritual and educational dimension, marking a significant step from abstract ideal to concrete institutional planning.Shortly afterward, on August 26, 1913, at the Second Conference for the Hebrew Language and Culture, Bialik delivered his influential lecture “The Hebrew Book.”The paper presents a new English translation of this lecture (based on the 1913 Ha’Shiloahversion rather than the later edited 1935 collection), accompanied by extensive annotations. Bialik called for a national project to compile, select, and concentrateHebrew literary treasures, both ancient and modern. He advocated “reduction and European Hebrew Journal | Vol. 1, No. 1 (2026)concentration”over unchecked expansion: rescuing Jewish works written in foreign languages through Hebrew translation, distinguishing essential national literature from the peripheral (echoing historical processes of canonization and Genizah), and creating accessible, scientifically grounded yet popular editions for the broader Jewish public.Bialik’s address emphasizes the organic connection between literature and national life, the centrality of the Hebrew language, and the need to reclaim scattered Jewish spiritual assets. The lecture showcases his distinctive stylistic technique of creatively reworking biblical, Talmudic, and rabbinic phrases to generate new meanings.Overall, Bialik’s 1913 Vienna appearances are presented as defining moments in which he championed the spiritual and cultural infrastructure—particularly Hebrew education and literature—as essential complements to political Zionism, laying intellectual groundwork that continues to influence Jewish cultural revival.

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