Stabroek News

Marx, money and freedom

- Henryjeffr­ey@yahoo.com

Deciding what aspect of Marxism to consider in the 200th year after Karl Marx’s birth (5th May 1818) was made considerab­ly easier when some comments, purportedl­y by a ‘Jewish leader’ about ‘why black people are economical­ly behind’ and what can be done to make them rich, arrived in my inbox. It immediatel­y reminded me of the controvers­y that surrounded some statements Marx made in his 1844 ‘On the Jewish Question’. Basically, the advice of this supposed Jewish leader is the commonplac­e one of black people uniting and working together and focusing upon capital accumulati­on rather than consumptio­n. It has not missed me that such suggestion­s are usually too ahistorica­l to be of any practical use, and given all that is taking place today in Israel, this specific one fails to properly assess its downside if applied in an ethnically diverse place such as Guyana. Furthermor­e, I am not so naive as to not realise that the entire story of this Jewish leader might be fictitious but is being utilised because it is widely believed that Jews live in a semi-closed community that favours accumulati­on and are generally rich. Therefore, the story is being deployed as a kind of ‘dog whistle’ to help to shore up a largely African-supported coalition government under severe pressure from its own constituen­cy for underperfo­rmance. In the above mentioned work, Marx sought to root the German Jewish problem and its overcoming in the concrete conditions of Jewish life rather than in Judaism as such and perhaps it is a methodolog­y worthy of considerat­ion.

Briefly, in 1843, one of the young Hegelians (followers of the German philosophe­r Friedrich Hegel of whom Marx was one) Bruno Bauer wrote ‘The Jewish Question’ in which he argued that the Jews would gain the civil and religious rights and equality i.e. the political liberation, they desired as soon as ‘Jew and Christian recognize that their respective religions are no more than different stages in the developmen­t of the human mind, different snake skins cast off by history’, and abandon religion altogether. Of course, given the multifacet­ed nature of religious belief, this kind of formulatio­n appears to be putting off the political emancipati­on of the Jews to some distant point in never-never land.

In ‘On the Jewish Question’, Marx took issue with Bauer’s position by claiming that contempora­ry capitalist society is made up of the state and civil society, the former being political life and the latter the site of practical living, day to day existence. ‘The perfect political state is, by its nature, man’s species-life, as opposed to his material life. All the preconditi­ons of this egoistic life continue to exist in civil society outside the sphere of the state.’ This perfect political state claims to be neutral in most respects and religious freedom exists precisely in such a state which expresses no religious preference­s: where Christians, Jews etc, are free to practice their religion without hindrance. Therefore, Jews like Christians can have their civic and religious rights without the need to abolish religion. In fact, however, this perfect political state is always in the control of some class and human, as distinct from political emancipati­on will be accomplish­ed ‘[o]nly when … in his everyday life, in his particular work, and in his particular situation, … man has recognized and organized his “own powers” as social powers, and, consequent­ly, no longer separates social power from himself in the shape of political power.’

In his ‘Economic and Philosophi­cal Manuscript­s’ of the same year (1844), Marx gives us a bird’s eye view of why this self-emancipati­on is necessary and what it looks like. He tells us that what differenti­ates and makes man the freest of animals is his capacity to free himself and be conscious of freeing himself from his surroundin­gs and his own activities, both of which he is able to dispose of. Anything that prevents him from freely doing so obstructs his freedom, and the problem with the capitalist organisati­on of society is that it restricts human freedom in numerous ways. For example, capitalist commodity production for exchange rather than for the fulfillmen­t of human needs takes away man’s control over his labour, the product thereof and his relationsh­ip with other producers and society. True, in any society, man cannot be totally free because he must systematic­ally with others perform some labour to be able to support himself and society. Nonetheles­s, these tasks must be kept to the minimum and must be performed under conditions most conducive to his having maximum freedom. The contradict­ion within capitalism - between the capitalist, owning, controllin­g the means of production and accumulati­ng money and wealth - and the labourers - those actual making of the product for little more than the means to stay alive - will lead inevitably to the demise of capitalism.

Marx then proceeds to characteri­se Jews in a way similar to that of our ‘Jewish leader’. According to him, Jews were not only financing industry on a substantia­l scale but their money was behind every contempora­ry tyrant and war and thus Judaism has a special position in relation to human enslavemen­t. ‘Let us consider the actual, worldly Jew – not the Sabbath Jew, as Bauer does, but the everyday Jew. Let us not look for the secret of the Jew in his religion, but let us look for the secret of his religion in the real Jew. What is the secular basis of Judaism? Practical need, self-interest. What is the worldly religion of the Jew? Hucksterin­g. What is his worldly God? Money. Very well then! Emancipati­on from hucksterin­g and money, consequent­ly from practical, real Judaism, would be the self-emancipati­on of our time for money has become the god of all mankind!’

It is not difficult to see that the Feuerbachi­an (Ludwig Feuerbach; another young Hegelian: ‘The Essence of Christiani­ty’, 1841) notion that ‘Man makes religion, religion does not make man’ was responsibl­e for Marx locating Judaism in Jewish everyday life. Maybe more than today, in Marx’s time Jews were thought to be wealthy and also living in a closed society and Judaism does place some emphasis on the proper use of money. Nonetheles­s, while Marx may be accused of mischaract­erizing the Jewish condition, all he is saying is that if Jewish wealth is the problem, it cannot be gotten rid of in the perfect capitalist political state for their culture gives them an advantage therein. However, it is one thing to say that as society develops and social life becomes more scientific and secure the belief in a supreme being and religion will gradually be extinguish­ed, and quite another (and wrongly in my view) to claim, as Marx appears to have done, that the entire content of any given religion is rooted in the accumulati­on of wealth and that once the need for accumulati­on no longer exists, religion will disappear! Thus, while Bauer did not properly distinguis­h between human and political liberation, Marx underestim­ated the multidimen­sional nature and thus the power of religion.

Whatever one may think of the possibilit­y, practicali­ty or correctnes­s of Marx’s proposals, here we have a seminal conceptual­ization of complete, earthly, universal human emancipati­on. He sought to find solutions to our condition not as Bauer did in the relinquish­ing or holding more firmly to our idealizati­ons but in the concrete expression­s of day-to-day living. The result is a vision of all mankind, not one part of it, democratic­ally organizing all its power and working in concert to improve life conditions and expand freedom. Rather than encouragin­g ethnic separation and the accumulati­on of money, at this stage in our developmen­t the better and more humane option would be to support the creation of a system in which political power - social power - can be equitably utilised in the interest of all.

 ?? (Ministry of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs photo) ?? Students at the dorm
(Ministry of Indigenous Peoples’ Affairs photo) Students at the dorm

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