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KARL MARX

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PARIS<br />

103<br />

Just now [he wrote to Ruge in March 1843], the president of the<br />

Israelites here has paid me a visit and asked me to help with a parliamentary<br />

petition on behalf of the Jews; and I agreed. However<br />

obnoxious I find the Israelite beliefs, Bauer's view seems to me nevertheless<br />

to be too abstract. The point is to punch as many holes as possible<br />

in the Christian state and smuggle in rational views as far as we can.<br />

That must at least be our aim - and the bitterness grows with each<br />

rejected petition. 56<br />

Marx's willingness to help the Jews of Cologne suggests that his article<br />

was aimed much more at the vulgar capitalism popularly associated with<br />

Jews than at Jewry as such - either as a religious body or (still less) as an<br />

ethnic group. Indeed, the German word for Jewry - Judentum - has the<br />

secondary sense of commerce and, to some extent, Marx played on this<br />

double meaning. It is significant, moreover, that some of the main points<br />

in the second section of Marx's article - including the attack on Judaism<br />

as the embodiment of a money fetishism - were taken over almost verbatim<br />

from an article by Hess - who was the very opposite of an anti-semite.<br />

(Mess's article, entitled 'On the Essence of Money', had been submitted<br />

for publication in the Deutsch-Franzosische Jahrbiicher but the journal collapsed<br />

before it could appear). 57<br />

The second of Marx's articles in the Deutsch-Franzosische Jahrbiicher<br />

was written after his arrival in Paris: it revealed the immense impact made<br />

on him by his discovery there of the class to whose emancipation he was<br />

to devote the rest of his life. Paris, the cultural capital of Europe, had a<br />

large population of German immigrant workers - almost 100,000. Some<br />

had come to perfect the techniques of their various trades; some had<br />

come simply because they could find no work in Germany. Marx was<br />

immediately impressed:<br />

When communist artisans form associations, education and propaganda<br />

are their first aims. But the very act of associating creates a new need<br />

- the need for society - and what appeared to be a means has become<br />

an end. The most striking results of this practical development are to<br />

be seen when French socialist workers meet together. Smoking, eating<br />

and drinking are no longer simply means of bringing people together.<br />

Company, association, entertainment which also has society as its aim,<br />

are sufficient for them; the brotherhood of man is no empty phrase but<br />

a reality, and the nobility of man shines forth upon us from their toilworn<br />

bodies. 58<br />

Marx attended the meetings of most of the French workers' associations,<br />

but was naturally closer to the Germans - particularly to the League of<br />

ilie Just, the most radical of the German secret societies and composed<br />

of emigre artisans whose aim was to introduce a 'social republic' in

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