BuberM.Israel and the World. New York: Schocken, 1948, p. 235.
3.
BuberM.Between Man and Man. London: Kegan Paul, 1947, pp. 13–14.
4.
I and Thou, p. 11.
5.
I and Thou, p. 3.
6.
I and Thou, p. 15.
7.
Between Man and Man, p 16.
8.
Between Man and Man, p. 83.
9.
I and Thou, p. 28.
10.
Between Man and Man, pp. 88, 89.
11.
Between Man and Man, p. 93.
12.
Between Man and Man, p. 89.
13.
Between Man and Man, p. 91.
14.
Between Man and Man, p. 87.
15.
Between Man and Man, pp. 89, 90.
16.
BuberM.Pointing the Way. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1957, p. 100.
17.
Pointing the Way, p. 101.
18.
Israel and the World, p. 142.
19.
I and Thou (1958 edition), p. 132.
20.
Between Man and Man, p. 94.
21.
Between Man and Man, p. 96.
22.
“Distance and Relation”, p. 103.
23.
“Distance and Relation”, p. 103.
24.
Between Man and Man, p. 97.
25.
Between Man and Man, p. 100.
26.
Between Man and Man, pp. 99, 100–101.
27.
I and Thou (1958 edition), pp. 132–134.
28.
Between Man and Man, p. 102.
29.
Between Man and Man, p. 102.
30.
Between Man and Man, p. 105.
31.
Between Man and Man, p. 105.
32.
Between Man and Man, p. 106.
33.
Between Man and Man, p. 106.
34.
Between Man and Man, pp. 107–108.
35.
Between Man and Man, p. 114.
36.
Between Man and Man, p. 105.
37.
Pointing the Way, p. 109.
38.
Between Man and Man, p. 110.
39.
Between Man and Man, p. 111.
40.
Between Man and Man, p. 110.
41.
Between Man and Man, p. 115.
42.
Between Man and Man, p. 115.
43.
BuberM.Paths in Utopia. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1949, p. 14.
44.
It is interesting to notice that Buber refers specifically to the Kvuza, not to the Kibbutz. The Kvuza is usually smaller than the Kibbutz, with a population under 200. Here, too, we see the continued influence of Hasidism, which was built on small communities bound together by brotherly love.