Freud comes to Palestine. A study of psychoanalysis in a cultural context.
Author: Liban A, Goldman D.
Source:
International journal of psycho-analysis, 81(5), 893-906.
The authors describe the founding of Hashomer Hatzair as a radical Zionist
scouting movement in Eastern Europe between 1913 and 1919, a little known episode
in the rich history of Freud's impact upon this century. As refugees in Vienna,
the young adherents of the movement experienced enormous personal and collective
turmoil. Desperate to construct new, viable identities, these intellectually
vibrant young men and women were drawn to Freud as part of their project of
self-creation. Beginning in the 1920s, as members of Hashomer Hatzair settled in
agriculturally based collectives known as kibbutzim, the educational leadership
of the movement argued that psychoanalytically informed education was the key to
raising children free of bourgeois neuroses. They established strong ties with
European analysts, translated and published psychoanalytic texts, insisted that
educators be analysed or, at least, psychoanalytically informed, and built a
complex educational system founded on their particular understanding of Freudian
insights. For them, psychoanalysis was also seen as a general prophylactic
guaranteeing the mental hygiene of the community as a whole. The authors examine
the complex relationship between Hashomer Hatzair and psychoanalysis. In
particular, they ask why these young adults were so drawn to Freud and what their
particular reading of the psychoanalytic texts was, and demonstrate how these
young pioneers created a 'usable Freud' as part of their project of designing and
building a utopian society.