Morris Alexander
Morris Alexander | |
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מארים אַלעקסאנדער | |
Member of the House of Assembly for Cape Town Castle | |
In office 1931 – 23 January 1946 | |
In office 15 September 1910 – 12 June 1929 | |
Member of the Cape Parliament for Cape Town | |
In office 1908–1910 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Znin, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire (now Żnin, Poland) | 4 December 1877
Died | 24 January 1946 Cape Town, South Africa | (aged 68)
Political party |
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Spouses |
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Children | 3 |
Alma mater | |
Morris Alexander KC (Yiddish: מארים אַלעקסאנדער; 4 December 1877 – 24 January 1946) was a South African lawyer and politician who was a leading figure of Cape Town's Jewish community. He is best known for his successful campaign to have Yiddish recognized as a European language by colonial authorities, allowing thousands of Jews to immigrate to South Africa. A prominent liberal, Alexander served in the South African House of Assembly from 1910 until his death in 1946.
Biography
[edit]Morris Alexander was born on 4 December 1877 as the eldest of seven children of Abraham Alexander and Flora Lewin, in Znin, then part of the Kingdom of Prussia in the German Empire, .[1][2] His family were German Jews; they moved to the South Africa in 1881. He interrupted his private education in Cape Town in 1891 to help his parents in Johannesburg, taking jobs first as a clerk for the National Bank and then as an employee of the Cape Colony rail service.[1][3]
Alexander began his studies at South African College in 1893, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1897. He then attended St John's College, Cambridge, receiving a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1900. He was called to the bar in June of that year and began a law practice in Cape Town on 15 November 1900. In 1919, Alexander was appointed King's Counsel.[1][3] He also taught law at Diocesan College.[4]
As a young lawyer in Cape Town, Alexander joined journalist Dovid Goldblat in a campaign for the reclassification of Yiddish as a European language in South Africa.[5][6] A 1902 law required that prospective immigrants to South Africa take a European language examination; the pair "fought so that Yiddish might be considered one such language, and thus Jewish immigrants would be able to enter the country".[5] In 1903, Alexander led a delegation of Jewish community leaders to the Cape Colony's attorney general Thomas Graham, who accepted their request to recognize Yiddish as European, which allowed thousands of Jews to immigrate to South Africa.[3][6] This represented a shift away from traditional Jewish politics (shtadlanut), as Jews were traditionally forbidden to represent themselves as Jews in matters not related to religion. Alexander would later consider the recognition of Yiddish to be "the most important achievement of his public life".[7]
On 4 September 1904, Alexander organized the delegation of community leaders into the Cape Colony Jewish Board of Deputies, which became the dominant Jewish organization in the colony.[1][8] He would serve as its chairman and as vice president of the unified South African Jewish Board of Deputies from the organizations' foundations until the 1930s.[4][9] An active Zionist, he was also the president of the New Hebrew Congregation in Cape Town for forty years.[10][11]
Alexander was elected to the Cape Town City Council in 1905, serving until 1913.[1][3] He was elected to the Parliament of the Cape of Good Hope in the 1908 election as a member of the Progressive Party, receiving 5,027 votes in the Cape Town constituency.[1][12] He served in the Cape Parliament until 1910, when it was merged with the other colonial parliaments following the establishment of the Union of South Africa. Alexander was elected to the unified South African House of Assembly in the 1910 election for the Cape Town Castle constituency , and would serve as a member of parliament until his death in 1946.[4][13][note 1]
In addition to being a leading figure in Cape Town's Jewish community,[note 2] Alexander was also a prominent liberal and an advocate against discriminatory laws affecting non-white communities .[11][16] In June 1907, he married Ruth Schechter – an acquaintance from his time at Cambridge and the daughter of Solomon Schechter, the president of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America – in New York.[17][18] The couple's home in Cape Town would become a meeting place for visiting Indian dignitaries, through which Alexander became associated with Mahatma Gandhi.[18] He was also associated with W. E. B. Du Bois and Bertha Solomon.[4][19]
Beginning in the 1920s, Alexander and Ruth developed irreconcilable political differences. She was a Marxist feminist; he, a more traditional liberal. In the 1921 general election, she convinced Alexander not to join Jan Smuts's South African Party – which she viewed as increasingly racist – and instead run as an independent candidate.[18][20][note 3] Alexander was re-elected as a member of the newly-formed Constitutional Democratic Party, and would serve as the party's president and sole parliamentary member from 1921 until 1929.[15][21] He did join the South African Party in 1931 despite his criticism of its efforts to restrict Jewish immigration over the previous decade.[1][22] Ruth was more irked with her husband in 1923 when he declared that Judaism was "the very antithesis of Bolshevism" in a speech condemning the Rand Rebellion. She was further radicalized when her sister was arrested at the Loray Mill strike in the United States.[23]
The couple's breaking point came in 1930, when Alexander supported a successful bill enacted by the government of J. B. M. Hertzog which gave white women the right to vote. Ruth, increasingly frustrated with her husband's pragmatic liberalism, criticized this law as regressive for excluding non-white women and for being a method to further dilute the non-white vote.[14][18] Ruth initially declared her intention to not register to vote, but upon being informed by Alexander that not registering was a crime, she instead stated her intent to divorce him "the moment their children were old enough to care for themselves".[24][25] Ruth left South Africa with her lover in 1933; two years later, the couple divorced.[20] Two months after his divorce, Alexander married Enid Asenath Baumberg of Sydney, Australia.[26][17] Throughout the 1930s, Alexander was a strong opponent of the growing Nazi movement in South Africa.[3]
Alexander died in Cape Town on 24 January 1946.[1][10] His second wife Enid published his biography in 1957, and his papers are held at the University of Cape Town Libraries.[9][26]
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Alexander was briefly out of parliament after his defeat in the 1929 election, but was re-elected in 1931.[1][14]
- ^ Alexander was seen as being able to unite both the traditional Anglo-Jewish elite amongst whom he was raised and the impoverished Eastern European Jews for whom he advocated.[15]
- ^ The Unionist Party, which Alexander had belonged to since the union in 1910, had merged into the South African Party in 1921.[13]
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i Abrahams 1968, p. 10.
- ^ Neame 1929, p. 179.
- ^ a b c d e "Mr. Morris Alexander, K.C.: Noted South African Passes Through Perth". The Westralian Judean. 1 November 1934. pp. 9–10. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d Schrire 2013, p. 15.
- ^ a b Kharlash 1956, p. 37.
- ^ a b Pimlott 2023, p. 11.
- ^ Pimlott 2023, pp. 11–12.
- ^ Pimlott 2023, p. 12.
- ^ a b Skolnik 2007, p. 624.
- ^ a b "Morris Alexander, Prominent Jewish Legislator, Dies in South Africa". JTA Daily News Bulletin. Vol. 13, no. 21. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 24 January 1946. p. 5. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
- ^ a b Abrahams 1968, pp. 10–11.
- ^ Smith 1980, p. 262.
- ^ a b Neame 1929, p. 180.
- ^ a b Atkinson 2010, p. 684.
- ^ a b Wilson 2009, p. 210.
- ^ Shimoni 2003, pp. 171–172.
- ^ a b "Morris Alexander". Olive Schreiner Letters Online. 2012. Retrieved 2024-08-14.
- ^ a b c d "Ruth Alexander". South African History Project. 22 July 2011. Retrieved 2024-08-15.
- ^ "Letter from W. E. B. Du Bois to Morris Alexander, July 31, 1925" – via University of Massachusetts Amherst.
- ^ a b Atkinson 2010, p. 683.
- ^ Neame 1929, pp. 179–181.
- ^ "South Africa Does Not Discriminate Against Jewish Immigration, Declares Minister of Interior". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1 January 1924. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
- ^ Atkinson 2010, pp. 683–684.
- ^ Reisenberger 1998, p. 56.
- ^ Schrire 2013, p. 16.
- ^ a b Abrahams 1968, p. 11.
Works cited
[edit]- Abrahams, Israel (1968). "Alexander, Morris". In De Kock, W. J. (ed.). Dictionary of South African Biography. Vol. 1 (1st ed.). OCLC 85921202.
- Atkinson, John (2010). "Benjamin Farrington: Cape Town and the Shaping of a Public Intellectual". South African Historical Journal. 62 (4): 671–692. doi:10.1080/02582473.2010.519938. hdl:11427/28188.
- Skolnik, Fred, ed. (2007). "Alexander, Morris". Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). ISBN 978-0-02-865929-9.
- Kharlash, Yitskhok (1956). "Goldblat, Dovid". Biographical Dictionary of Modern Yiddish Literature (in Yiddish). Vol. 2.
- Neame, Lawrence Elwin (1929). Some South African Politicians. Cape Town: Maskew Miller. NLA 92910.
- Pimlott, William (2023). "The Yiddish Press and the Making of South African Jewry in the British World: Exclusion, Libel, and Jewish Nationalism, 1890–1914" (PDF). Jewish Historical Studies. 55: 1–26. doi:10.14324/111.444.jhs.2024v55.02. ISSN 0962-9696. JSTOR 48756534.
- Reisenberger, Azila (1998). "Status of Jewish Woman in South Africa: With Special Reference to Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Eras". Journal for the Study of Religion. 11 (2): 52–61. ISSN 1011-7601. JSTOR 24764103.
- Schrire, Gwynne (2013). "The Cape Board, the Silver Salver and Bertha's Bill" (PDF). Jewish Affairs. South African Jewish Board of Deputies. ISSN 0021-6313.
- Shimoni, Gideon (2003). Community and Conscience: The Jews in Apartheid South Africa. Hanover: University Press of New England. ISBN 978-1-58465-329-5.
- Smith, Alan John Charrington (1980). General Elections in the Cape Colony, 1898 - 1908. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
- Wilson, Jean Moorcroft (2009). Isaac Rosenberg: The Making of a Great War Poet: A New Life. Evanston: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-8101-2604-6.
Further reading
[edit]- Alexander, Enid Baumberg (1953). Morris Alexander: A Biography. Cape Town: Juta. OCLC 4708223.
- Potgieter, Dirk J., ed. (1970). "Alexander, Morris". Standard Encyclopaedia of Southern Africa. Vol. 1 (1st ed.). Cape Town: National Educational Publishing House. OCLC 1416596628.
- Saron, Gustav; Hotz, Louis, eds. (1955). The Jews in South Africa: A History. Cape Town: Oxford University Press. OCLC 652380.
- Saron, Gustav (1966). Morris Alexander, Parliamentarian and Jewish Leader: A Memorial Lecture on the 20th Anniversary of His Death. Johannesburg: South African Jewish Board of Deputies. OCLC 17088077.
- 1877 births
- 1946 deaths
- People from Żnin County
- Politicians from Cape Town
- 20th-century South African politicians
- United Party (South Africa) politicians
- Unionist Party (South Africa) politicians
- South African Party (Union of South Africa) politicians
- Members of the House of Assembly of the Cape Colony
- Jewish South African politicians
- 20th-century South African lawyers
- Yiddish-speaking people
- Language activists
- 20th-century South African Jews
- Cape Colony Jews
- Jewish South African anti-apartheid activists
- South African anti-apartheid activists
- University of Cape Town alumni
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- South African Zionists
- 20th-century King's Counsel
- South African Queen's Counsel