Karl Marx

Marx: On the Jewish Question

By Karl Marx. Introduction by Arthur Kemp BA (Intl. Pol., Pol. Sci., Pub. Ad.). This essay, originally published in 1844 as Zur Judenfrage, must be one of Karl Marx’s most ignored and suppressed works. Marx, himself of Jewish descent, while answering an essay by fellow Hegelist philosopher Bruno Bauer on the topic of the emancipation of Jews in Prussia, raged polemically against Jewish behavior and culture, asking and answering his own questions this way:

“What is the secular basis of Judaism? Practical need, self-interest. What is the worldly cult of the Jews? Huckstering. What is his worldly god? Money! … What is contained abstractly in the Jewish religion — contempt for theory, for art, for history, for man as an end in himself.”

This new edition has been completely reset and contains an introduction by Arthur Kemp which outlines Bauer’s initial works that sparked Marx’s writings, and some further evidence of Marx’s racist sentiments toward African people.

From the introduction:

Given that Jewish Communists went on to establish Communism as an openly-declared world ideology which captured Russia and Eastern Europe for nearly eighty years, and, in the West, as an undeclared form of “socialism” which has now permeated America and Western Europe, Marx’s pronouncements on Jewish behavior and race seem out of place—until the staggering hypocrisy of contemporary Jewish behavior is considered.

In the USA, for example, organized Jewry in the form of the Anti-Defamation League and other Jewish extremist pressure groups continuously agitate for what they call “civil rights” and open borders for America—but at the same time, fanatically support the Jews-only state of Israel which actively discriminates against Palestinians and has a racially-based immigration policy designed to keep Israel as ethnically pure as possible.

This pattern of outright hypocrisy is repeated in all other European nations as well—while taking extensive measures to protect their own identity and actively opposing intermarriage with non-Jews—Jewish organizations and “anti-racist” front organizations lead the way in opposing any European attempts to preserve their identity, even if those Europeans are merely trying to do what the Jews themselves do.

It is this hypocrisy and double-standard—of one rule for Jews, another rule for non-Jews—which has been the hallmark of Marxism, dating from the father of Communism himself, Karl Marx. This will become clear as the reader delves into this work.

About the author: Karl Heinrich Marx (1818–1883) was a Jewish philosopher, economist, sociologist, historian, journalist, and revolutionary socialist. Marx’s work in economics laid the basis for Communism, and his numerous works included The Communist Manifesto (1848) and Das Kapital (1867–1894).

40 pages. Paperback.

$9.95

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Weight 1.88 oz
Dimensions 6 × 0.08 × 9 in
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Karl Marx

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