closeicon
Life & Culture

Kreisky, Israel and Jewish Identity book review: Will the real Bruno please stand up?

An intriguing and forensic new biography of the Jewish former Austrian chancellor

articlemain

Kreisky, Israel and Jewish Identity
By Daniel Aschheim
University of New Orleans Press, £15.32



Bruno Kreisky was the longest-serving Chancellor of Austria (1970-1983).

He was also a Jew who had fled to Sweden when Hitler annexed the country to the Third Reich.

More than 20 family members perished in the Shoah, but he returned to a country where “most Austrians had supported Hitler’s cause to the bitter end”.

Highly intelligent and a deep thinker, he was conflicted about his Jewishness and about Israel, where his disabled brother lived and where his nephew served as a paratrooper.

To figures in the Israeli peace camp such as Aryeh “Lova” Eliav and Uri Avnery, he would open his heart, but close it to Israeli diplomats — often on the same non-political subjects.

Many have written previously about the mass of contradictions that was Bruno Kreisky. The Israeli diplomat Daniel Aschheim has now drawn on all past research, interviewed former ambassadors and examined the archived correspondence between the Israeli embassy in Vienna and the foreign ministry in Jerusalem.

This is a forensic attempt to uncover the real Kreisky — even so, it is akin to walking into a hall of mirrors.

Kreisky came from an acculturated family that belonged to the Jewish upper middle class, rebelled and joined the Socialist party. As it was for Mahler, Schoenberg, Zweig, Freud — and indeed Theodor Herzl — he found being Jewish in Vienna to be a problematic affliction.

As Chancellor, Kreisky attempted to compartmentalise his affiliations at a time when 25 per cent of Austrians, born after the war’s end, held antisemitic views as late as 1979.

Kreisky believed in realpolitik and adopted a cynically, pragmatic approach to former Nazis in public life.

Yet he was married to a Jewish woman who played bridge with her Jewish friends and he also had an affair with the wife of a leading Jewish intellectual. Daniel Aschheim characterises him in private as very much a Central European Jew.

Kreisky allowed Austria to blur its recent past — Hitler, Eichmann and Seyss-Inquart were all Austrians — by according it a victim status of German Nazism.

Indeed he provided a legitimacy to Austrians to contract a historical amnesia. He was also aware that the word “Jew” in post-war Austria was not simply descriptive but also a weapon to be used against him.

A furious lifelong row broke out with the Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal when Kreisky cultivated Friedrich Peter, the chairman of the Freedom Party, in 1975 to ensure his own party’s supremacy in coalition.

Wiesenthal revealed that Peter had served in the First SS Infantry Brigade, which was responsible for the murder of 8,000 Jews.

Kreisky in turn labelled Wiesenthal “a Gestapo collaborator” — one of many emotional, often bizarre outbursts that complicated his identity.

In 1973 Kreisky closed down the transit centre for Soviet Jews at Schönau when members of the Palestinian As-Sa’iqa held hostage new immigrants.

In a face-to-face acrimonious confrontation with Golda Meir, Kreisky rejected the charge that he had “opened the door to terrorism”.

Weeks later, he opened a new camp at Wöllersdorf for Soviet Jews under the remit of the Austrian Red Cross instead of that of the Jewish Agency and gave them the choice of leaving for countries other than Israel.

Aschheim describes the demonising coverage of Kreisky in the Israeli and diaspora press — sometimes justified, often distorted.

This reflected the simplicity of describing Kreisky as a “self-hating” Jew whereas Aschheim’s well-researched book depicts him more as a buffeted subject of the 20th century’s lethal storms. Kreisky never fitted into a conventional Jewish template.

Share via

Want more from the JC?

To continue reading, we just need a few details...

Want more from
the JC?

To continue reading, we just
need a few details...

Get the best news and views from across the Jewish world Get subscriber-only offers from our partners Subscribe to get access to our e-paper and archive