During the 18th century, the Enlightenment exerted a profound influence on Jewish life in western Europe by encouraging the Jews to modernize and assimilate. In Berlin the Haskala (Jewish Enlightenment), led by the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, fought for the modernization of Jewish customs. While Mendelssohn’s disciples emphasized the importance of Western learning, they also championed the literary use of Hebrew. They founded the Hebrew journal Ha-meʾasef (1784–1811; “The Literary Collection”) and—assisted by the Edict of Toleration (1782) under Joseph II—they rapidly spread the Haskala to Galicia (then part of Austria).
Members of the Berlin Haskala, following Mendelssohn, scorned Yiddish as inferior to ancient Hebrew or modern German. Two satiric plays from this period mark the end of Western Yiddish as a literary language. Writing in German but using Hebrew characters, Isaac Euchel wrote Reb Henekh oder vos tut men damit (early 1790s; “Reb Henekh; or, What Is to Be Done?”), in which the foolish characters speak Yiddish (or pompous pseudo-German). Aaron Wolfssohn, from the same circle of Berlin rationalists, wrote Laykhtzin un fremelay (1796; “Frivolity and Piety”), which showed the influences of Euchel’s play and Molière’s Tartuffe. These short plays were not staged, however, and they did not influence the subsequent development of Yiddish drama. Instead, they typify what has been called a “suicidal principle” of Yiddish: the language was used by Enlightenment authors as a means to educate people. They believed that when it had served that purpose, it should be abandoned.
Yiddish books played a more significant role in the dissemination of Hasidism, a spiritualist movement that began in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (now Ukraine). Israel Baʿal Shem Tov, the founder of Hasidism, became the subject of myriad legends. These stories were orally transmitted in Yiddish; they were compiled and published in Hebrew in 1815. Soon after, the first of many compilations written in or translated into Yiddish appeared. Vivid description and graphic language make Shivḥei ha-Besht (1815; In Praise of the Baʿal Shem Tov) an important link in the chain of Judaic literature. The stories recount the life of Israel Baʿal Shem Tov, paying special attention to how he was “revealed” as a spiritual leader and wonder-worker. Many episodes involve supernatural events, including the exorcism of demons. Subsequently, innumerable other Hasidic leaders became the subjects of analogous hagiographic narratives.
Rabbi Naḥman ben Simḥah of Bratslav, great-grandson of the Baʿal Shem Tov, told allegorical Yiddish tales to his disciples. These Sippurey mayses (“Tales”) were collected by his scribe, Nathan Sternharz, and published in a bilingual Hebrew-Yiddish edition in 1815. The Hebrew lends an aura of religious authority to these tales, while the Yiddish is closer to the original language in which Naḥman narrated them in 1806–10. On the surface, they appear to be simple folktales and may be enjoyed as such. On another level, they provide guidance and inspiration to spiritual seekers. To the initiated, moreover, they conceal secrets of Jewish mysticism.
The 1815 edition ascribes 13 canonical tales of varying length and complexity to Rabbi Naḥman. In “The Loss of the Princess,” for example, a man strives to liberate the lost princess by means of spiritual discipline. According to Naḥman, he told this story while traveling, and “whoever heard it had thoughts of repentance.” In cabalistic terms, this quest narrative may represent efforts to free the Shekhinah (immanent Divine Presence) from exile; this exilic condition not only has cosmological underpinnings but also parallels the Jewish Diaspora following the Roman destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. In “The Humble King,” a wise man is sent to fetch a portrait of a hidden king. On one level, the story refers to a paradoxical search for God, whose face cannot be seen. “The Sophisticate and the Simple Man” well expresses the populist ideology behind the Hasidic movement: while the sophisticate has too much learning for his own good, the simple man enjoys his modest life. The skepticism of the sophisticate brings only misfortune. “The Master of Prayer” tells of a leader who strives to convince the world that prayer is the only true purpose of life. The intricate narrative presents both a mystical picture of redemption and a quasi-autobiographical account of Naḥman’s life as a Hasidic leader.
These tales bring together popular folktales and religious teachings of the Hasidic movement. Apparently frustrated by the difficulty of conveying abstract teachings to his disciples, Naḥman turned to narratives with allegorical meanings. By publishing the stories in a bilingual Hebrew-Yiddish edition, Sternharz accorded Yiddish new stature as a language of Hasidic literature. Hence the writer I.L. (Isaac Leib) Peretz commented in 1908 that the roots of modern Yiddish literature lay in Naḥman’s tales. Dozens of Naḥman’s other stories, anecdotes, and even dreams were recorded by disciples of the rebbe. The dream narratives especially, by giving expression to his anxieties, reveal a more personal side of the leader. Starting with Peretz in Yiddish and Martin Buber in German, Hasidic stories have inspired numerous retellings.
As the Enlightenment moved eastward from Berlin, its proponents became adversaries of Hasidic practices. Authors such as Yisroel Aksenfeld, Shloyme Ettinger, Isaac Meir Dik, and I.J. Linetsky attacked what they saw as the antiquated and superstitious ways of the Jewish world.
Aksenfeld, born in Nemirov (Ukraine), was early on a Hasid in the Bratslav circle; he was a disciple of Rabbi Naḥman and a friend of Sternharz. Later Aksenfeld opposed Hasidism, which he thought obstructed the spread of Enlightenment and progress. He knew Russian, Polish, and German and studied law in Odessa. His novel Dos shterntikhl (1861; “The Head-Covering”) is an incisive satire. Aksenfeld was perhaps the first novelist in Yiddish; because of Hasidic opposition he was unable to publish his works, and most have been lost.
Shloyme Ettinger was born to a rabbinic family in Warsaw, and in addition to receiving a traditional Jewish education he read secular works. He studied medicine in Lemberg (now Lviv) and was influenced by the Berlin Enlightenment. A fine Yiddish stylist, influenced by the German playwright Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, he was able to differentiate his characters by their particular language. Like Elijah Bokher Levita and other Old Yiddish authors, Ettinger clearly followed European models and led Yiddish literature in that direction.
Ettinger wrote many important plays, including the comedy Serkele (published 1861). A full-fledged work with a five-act structure, this is one of the most accomplished dramas of the Haskala period. The scholar Dan Miron has speculated that the author of Serkele must have read Molière (in German translation). Ettinger’s criticisms focus less on traditional religious beliefs than on social foibles; the work strives to show that, ultimately, injustice is punished and good prevails. Distorted speech—by characters who affect good breeding in bad German—reflects a deformed reality. For the history of Yiddish drama it is significant that Abraham Goldfaden, subsequently an important producer of early Yiddish theatre, played the lead role in a Serkele performance of 1862.
Isaac Meir Dik was born in Vilna (now Vilnius) and lived most of his life in this centre of rabbinic learning. Among the first champions of the Enlightenment in Lithuania, he laid the foundations for secular Yiddish literature. From the 1850s to the 1880s he was one of the leading Yiddish authors; his hundreds of stories, which comprised some of the earliest secular Yiddish books, sold up to 100,000 copies. Dik thus played a role in creating a wide readership for Yiddish fiction. His goals were didactic: “to educate the masses, improve their customs, familiarize them with the world, cleanse their religious ideas of superstitions and follies, and make them aware of their mistakes” (according to the Yiddish literary historian, Zalman Reyzn [1887–1941]). Like Rabbi Naḥman, but with diametrically opposed goals in respect to religious practice, Dik realized the importance of using stories to reach Yiddish readers. He stated openly that his critical portraits were written only for the sake of his readers’ happiness and well-being. His works discuss issues surrounding education, social and economic reform, and the place of women in Jewish culture. Late in life, as conditions in Russia became harsher, he encouraged immigration to the United States.