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Review: Jabotinsky: A Life

Colossus or neo-fascist?

September 4, 2014 14:26
Surrounded and confounded - Vladimir Jabotinsky (centre) shortly before his death in 1940

By

Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

2 min read

By Hillel Halkin
Yale University Press, £18.99

This is a revelatory exploration of Vladimir Jabotinsky, "father of the Israeli right". He has been projected as a colossus by Menachem Begin and succeeding generations of Likud leaders. The Zionist left, aided and abetted by David Ben-Gurion, depicted him as a neo-fascist. Hillel Halkin's book helps to reclaim the real Jabotinsky through an examination of his literary work and personal letters.

The young Jabotinsky was expected to have a great future as a man of Russian letters but his continuing failure to make a breakthrough - his play Krov closed after two performances in Odessa - was undoubtedly a factor in his rediscovering his Jewishness and recasting himself as a Zionist. He once remarked that he had thrown away the key to that side of his persona. Yet, as Halkin demonstrates, this inner Jabotinsky always resided within the charismatic public figure and magnetic orator. It led to contradiction in his political actions and complexity in his character.

In contrast to past biographies, Halkin uncovers the human Jabotinsky who chased women in his youth in Italy. At the end of the First World War, he was the much-lauded founder of the Jewish Legion that took part in the British conquest of Palestine. Halkin surmises that the private Jabotinsky probably had an affair with Nina Berligne, the daughter of an olive-oil manufacturer in Palestine in 1919. His hitherto faithful wife, Ania, wrote to him: "I hear that you're fine and not living a dull life. I don't intend to either."