ABSTRACT

This paper investigates the construction of social identity in Israeli historian of religion Gershom Scholem’s letter to American political theorist Hannah Arendt in the wake of the Eichmann trial. The paper asks, first, whether Arendt is depicted as a natural insider or a moral outsider of the relevant human community and what this construction entails as to the nature of the group itself. And second, what the relationship may be between (non-) members of the group and the universal demand of writing about the Holocaust in a morally just way. In pursuing these issues, it is suggested that Scholem’s ultimate account as to Arendt’s subject position is that of the Jewish anti-Semite: a person who is Jewish but by her acts effectively renounces this position. The closing parts of the paper analyse the implications of the letter and the resulting relationship constructed between the political tradition of Judaism and that of liberalism.