Brandeis, Louis
Brandeis, Louis D. 1856 - 1941 Brandeis was born in Louisville,
Kentucky in 1856 to a family tolerant of Jewish and Christian rituals.
In later life Brandeis might be best described as a secular-humanist.
Although he completed his secondary education in Germany, he returned
to the United States where he studied law at Harvard. After settling in
Boston, Brandeis became a successful lawyer spending a good deal of his
time pursuing cases with a political bent. In particular, he enjoyed representing
small companies against giant corporations, and aiding the cause of the
minimum wage against companies opposed to this principle. In 1912, he
supported Woodrow Wilson's nomination for Presidency and in 1916, was
appointed a Supreme Court judge, the first Jew ever to be appointed to
this position.
Brandeis showed little interest in Jewish affairs until the turn of
the century when a combination of his professional work and a changing
political climate brought about an alteration. He was introduced to Zionism
by Jacob de Haas, an English Zionist, and later still by Aaron Aaronsohn,
the Palestinian botanist and founder of Nili.
Brandeis became active in Zionist affairs during the First World War,
when he accepted the role of Chairperson of the Provisional Executive
Committee for General Zionist Affairs. Brandeis had a major impact on
the American branch of the Zionist movement, drawing to it a number of
sympathisers, improving its organization and its finance.
Whilst he resigned his official position on joining the Supreme Court,
he nonetheless worked behind the scenes to influence President Woodrow
Wilson to support the Zionist cause. After the war, Brandeis headed a
delegation of American Zionists to London where at a conference differences
emerged between Weizmann and himself. These arguments over the role of
the organization and its pursuit of political activities caused a rift
between the two leaders with Weizmann gaining the upper hand. Brandeis
withdrew from Zionist activity although he continued to take part in Eretz-Israel
economic affairs. Brandeis did intervene from time to time in political
matters for example he appealed to Roosevelt to oppose the British partition
scheme of 1937 calling instead for the whole area of Eretz-Israel to become
a Jewish National Home.
Brandeis represented a rather different genre of Zionism, one born out
of the American context that affirmed Zionism as part of American ethnic
identity. It was Brandeis who coined the term that "to be a good American
meant that local Jews should be Zionists." He died in Washington D.C.in
1941.
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