Wolf Gordin


Wolf Lvovich Gordin, also known as Beoby/Beobi, was an anarchist and the creator of a constructed language called AO.

Early life

Born in Mikhalishki to Rabbi Yehudah Leib Gordin and Khaye Esther Sore, elder brother of Abba Gordin, Wolf was influenced by labor Zionist and anarchist ideas as a young man. In 1908, Wolf and Abba Gordin opened Ivria, an experimental cheder, a school for the teaching of secular Hebrew, in the town of Smorgon. Working together, the two brothers created their own educational press, Novaya Pedagogika, writing and publishing numerous pamphlets on pedagogy between 1907–1914 as well as a single issue of a Yiddish-language journal, Der yunger yid in Vilna in 1911. Their libertarian teaching philosophy bridged the non-authoritarian style of Leo Tolstoy's school for peasant children at Yasnaya Polyana and the egoism of Max Stirner.

Revolutionary period

When the First World War swept through the region, Wolf and Abba traveled along the Dnieper River through Ukraine, making a living by giving private lessons. The outbreak of the October Revolution of 1917 found Abba in Moscow and Wolf in Petrograd. There, in April 1917, Wolf founded an organization, the Union of the Five Oppressed—a title expressing the combination of struggles against capitalism, conformism, patriarchy, colonialism, and ageism—and became chief editor of the anarchist newspaper Burevestnik in November, following a split in the editorial collective. Subsequently, Wolf joined his brother in Moscow.
This began a period of intense creativity and revolutionary agitation for Wolf and Abba, who signed their many collaborations in Russian as "the Gordin Brothers". "They did not so much write books, as 'bake' them, so prolific was their literary output", Boris Yelensky recounts, singling out for special admiration their children's fable, Pochemu? ili Kak muzhik popal v stranu Anarkhiya. In 1921, the Bolshevik and former anarchist Victor Serge noted that

he two Gordin brothers have played a key role in the Russian anarchist movement of these past few years. Tireless orators and propagandists, prolific writers, journalists, pamphleteers, and initiators of multiple enterprises, combatants at the barricades of July and October 1917, thanks to their ever-working imaginations they have greatly contributed to creating and sustaining both the life and the waste of this movement.

Pananarchism

A "Pananarchist Manifesto" was printed in 1918 by the Moscow Federation of Anarchist Groups under the collective name of the Gordin Brothers; however, Abba Gordin credits Wolf Gordin with its authorship. In keeping with the prefix pan-, in the sense of "all", "pananarchism" was to be "an expanded and articulate anarchism" that encompassed the concerns of the Five Oppressed groups, addressing them via a comprehensive program of communism, individualism, "gynanthropism", "cosmism", and "pedism". In this sense, the Gordins understood pananarchism as an alternative to Volin's concept of a "synthesis" between different anarchist tendencies.
Pananarchism also entailed an extension of anarchist principles to "everything", including the fields of knowledge and culture: it meant a critique of both religion and science from a "sociotechnical" perspective.

The Sociotechnicum

In 1918, the Gordin Brothers issued a "Declaration of the First Central Sociotechnicum", a manifesto for the creation of "a special institution of social experimentation" dedicated to the proposition that "social apparatuses can be invented, perfected and cultivated artificially". Sociotechnics, as a field of experimental work, rejected the Marxist conception of "social science" but asserted "the need for a sociotechnical attitude to social issues, in other words, the need to admit the same freely building and restructuring, the same free and inventive attitude toward social nature, which humanity, thanks to civilization, has achieved in relation to the physical environment". The Sociotechnicum, as an institution dedicated to sociotechnics, was also intended to "shelter sociotechnicians, i.e., social builders and inventors, from persecution both by those in power and by public opinion".
In 1919, the Gordin Brothers were interrogated in connection with the September 25th bombing of the Moscow Committee of the Russian Communist Party in Leontiev Lane. Wolf Gordin's manuscript for a book on "Sociophilosophy" was seized by the Cheka. Cheka director Felix Dzerzhinsky, after "a long personal conversation with the Gordins," decided that "both they and their 'Social-Technicum' group had neither taken part, nor even knew about the impending assassination attempt on the Mosc. Com. RCP ... Their 'Social-Technicum' is 10–12 communist sectarians who have renounced private property".

AO

After 1919, Wolf Gordin and Abba Gordin ceased to write collaboratively, and Wolf pursued his interest in what Serge called "the idée fixe of a universal language of which he is the inventor and which is written in numbers, the language AO."
Wolf's concept for a "cosmic" language—not only an "international language" like Esperanto, but a genuinely universal "language of humanity"—first emerged in his fictional writing in collaboration with Abba. In Strana Anarkhiia , five refugees representing the Five Oppressed are guided by an unnamed person, "the man from the Land of Anarchy". In their "pan-technical" utopia, technology has so completely overcome the difference between nature and artifice that "he winds and thunderstorms and storms and thunder and lightning obey us", the guide explains, but then clarifies:
I only figuratively put it: "obedient." There can be no talk of any obedience, since there is no command in the land of Anarchy. In our language there is no imperative , but only an intercessory ... You had lying, hypocrisy, flattery; these three forces weakened, defiled, destroyed the word. We do not have them, and the word has recuperated. It works wonders for us. But, I repeat, we have no commands, no orders, only requests .

The name AO, according to Sergei N. Kuznetsov, literally just means "invention": the phoneme "A" signifies the verb, "to invent", and the "O" forms a suffix used for substantives. As such, it forms part of a "philosophy of invention", of "pan-inventism" or "All-Invention". In Grammatika logicheskogo yazyka AO, Wolf Gordin writes that
he first and primary basis of modern economics and ideology, technology and culture, is invention. It is not the noun, found ready-made, that drives civilization, but the verb, the invention realized in tools and machines. The verb itself, in AO, is therefore no longer a verb, but an invention... "A" is therefore symbolized by the sign '✕,' since invention alone multiplies social wealth.
For this reason, Wolf sought to sharply distinguish AO from other constructed languages, especially Esperanto. In a 1920 pamphlet, Gordin urged his readers to "oycott natural languages, national, state, and international", denouncing Esperanto as merely "the language of 'international' European imperialism". One distinguishing mark was its orthography: AO was written entirely in numerical symbols. Wolf revised his design for AO in 1924, retaining the use of numerals for consonants but using mathematical operators for vowels.
AO's "logical" character was signaled by its simplicity and consistency: Gordin boasted that because of the "economy of the sounds, only eleven", used to form its words, it would be more easily acquired than any other language, "truly accessible to all of Humanity and worthy of the name 'The Language of Humanity.'" Moreover, AO's phonetics had been designed in accordance with its semantics, so that each basic sound stood for a fundamental concept.
By methodically combining these signs, the speaker of AO could, in theory, spell out anything conceivable.

The Association of Inventors-Inventists

The AO language formed part of Wolf Gordin's overall "Philosophy of Invention" or "Inventist Philosophy". A further extension of Gordin's "Inventism" was the founding of the Association of Inventors-Inventists, with its headquarters located at 68 Tverskaya Street in Moscow. Members of the AIIZ adopted AO as their language, giving themselves new names in this idiom:
Russian nameAO name spelled in AO-2AO name spelled in the English alphabetMeaning of AO name
Wolf Lvovich Gordin1+01√BeobiSociety-Me
Alexander Sergeevich Suvorov√2✕1√IbtsabiInvent yourself
Georgy Andreevich Polevoi+4+51√EfalbiUniversal
Ivan Stepanovich Belyaev5+3051√LeedolbiSeeing the fulfillment of his hopes
Olga Viktorovna Kholoptseva+4041√EfofbiCitizen of the universe
Zakhar Grigorievich Piatetski+3√41√Edifby
Efim Moiseevich Serzhanov1√✕+51√Biaelby
Shvil’pe1√✕1√Biabi

In 1925, after posting anti-government material in the window of the AIIZ headquarters, Gordin was arrested and subjected to a forensic psychiatric examination. Serzhanov and Suvorov went on a hunger strike to protest Gordin's detention, demanding that he be allowed to travel to Mexico to lecture on AO and sociotechnics. Soon afterward, Gordin fled the country, making his way to the United States.
The AIIZ continued its activities after Wolf Gordin went into exile. In 1927, in honor of the tenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution and Konstantin Tsiolkovskii's seventieth birthday, the AIIZ curated an international exhibit of designs for interplanetary vehicles. Included in the exhibit was a massive display explaining the AO language.

Exile

Wolf Gordin arrived in the United States in January 1926. From this point on, the existing biographical information is highly incomplete. The historian Paul Avrich writes that after his 1925 arrest, Wolf Gordin "fled to America and became, mirabile dictu, a Protestant missionary", attributing this to "a reliable source". Others allege that he became a Trotskyite. However, these may be in error, perhaps confusing Wolf with his younger brother, Morris Gordin, whose disenchantment with the Soviet Union, after his early involvement in Bolshevism, led him to Trotskyism and then to a religious conversion to Protestantism and missionary work. Moreover, Wolf Gordin continued to speak in anarchist circles and publish in anarchist journals in the years of his exile.
In the 1930s, Wolf Gordin contributed a number of articles, signed with his AO name "W. Beoby," to his brother's English-language anarchist journal, The Clarion, and to E. Armand's French-language anarchist journal, L'En-Dehors. These further developed the philosophical tenets of his "Inventism", which he connected with the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead and the pragmatism of William James.

Works

Sole authorship

In Russian

In Hebrew