Steiner's insistence upon a textual rather than a geopolitical home, in which aliyah means going to the book rather than going to the land, is at the heart of his attempt to preserve what could be called a "third way" in modern Judaism, one which remains true to his tradition of critical humanism. This third way is fraught with uncertainty and ambivalence, for it is predicated upon clerical "truth-seeking" rather than upon accepted truths. On the one hand, secular Zionism, which Steiner rightly connects to other nineteenth-century European nationalist movements, requires unswerving patriotic devotion; the result is Israel's disastrous political situation, for not only is it "armed to the teeth" but it is "compelled to make other men homeless, servile, disinherited, in order to survive from day to day." 20 On the other hand, the Orthodox position, requiring strict halakhic observance and the hope of a messianic return, likewise proves unacceptable to the modern, skeptical Jewish intellectual.
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Steiner is somewhat more sympathetic to the Orthodox position than to secular Zionism, but like so many Jews today, he feels that he has "no part in the beliefs and ritual practices which underwrite it." 21 What he preserves from the Orthodox stance is that which so powerfully shaped the thinking of his most important precursors: messianism. Surely the most volatile element of modern Jewish thought, messianism, as Anson Rabinbach explains,
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| | demands a complete repudiation of the world as it is, placing its hope in a future whose realization can only be brought about by the destruction of the old order. Apocalyptic, catastrophic, utopian and pessimistic, Messianism captured a generation of Jewish intellectuals before the First World War. The Messianic impulse appears in many forms in the Jewish generation of 1914secular and theological, as a tradition that stands opposed to both secular rationalism and what has been called "normative Judaism." 22
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Despite his claim that he is most drawn to "the Nietzschean gaiety in the face of the inhuman," 23 it seems to me that book for book, essay for essay, Steiner is given to Kulturpessimismus to a much greater degreeand that this dark brooding stems from a messianic desire, usually held back, to "press for the end." To be sure, Steiner is no full-fledged apocalyptic messianisthe is too much the representative of Central European humanismbut like the conservative Talmudist drawn to the theurgy of Kabbalah, Steiner is lured again
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