France
became the first nation in
the modern era to grant its Jews emancipation under the law—full equality of citizenship
rights and the removal of all traditional
encumbrances that had been historically placed on the community—on
September 28, 1791 by Emperor Napoleon I. The edict was in line with the liberating
thought of the Enlightenment,
and the 1789 Declaration of the Rights
of Man and of the Citizen which guaranteed freedom of religion and free exercise of worship. The
new edict when further both in its specificity and in provisions
that recognized the freedom of the Jewish community, as well as individuals
including lifting what ghetto restraints remained in France.
But France was not absolutely the
first nation to do so. More than 500
years earlier the 1264, the Polish
Prince Boleslaus the Pious issued the Statute of Kalisz—The General Charter of Jewish Liberties in Poland,
an unprecedented document in medieval
history that allowed Jews personal freedom, legal autonomy, and separate tribunal
for criminal matters as well as safeguards against forced baptism and blood libel. The Charter is ratified again by subsequent Polish Kings including Casimir the Great in 1334, Casimir IV in 1453, and Sigismund I the Old in 1539.
Poland was then on the cultural
fringes of Europe, and most importantly, only tenuously connected to
the power of the Catholic Church. General religious
tolerance flourished along with Lutherans,
Reform (Calvinist), and the paleo-unitarian Polish Brethren. Poland was also under-populated and
needed both Jewish peasants and artisans. Meanwhile elsewhere in Europe Jews were being blamed
for the Black Plague which resulted
in waves of pogroms; draconian
strictures on residence, occupation, and worship; and eventually the
persecution of the Inquisition. Jews had flocked to Poland and soon it
had the largest communities in Europe in which a rich shtetl culture emerged. However, the Jesuits eventually re-asserted Catholic supremacy in Poland,
wiping out Protestant dissent and introducing rising anti-Semitism into the population.
Now Poland, like much of Europe was a dangerous place for its
many Jews.
The
Middle Ages and Renaissance were tough on Jews across Europe. They were expelled from England,
Spain, Portugal, and the Low
Countries. Everywhere
they were confined to ghettos and prohibited from most professions—except money lending since The Church forbad usury by Christians. That
made them essential to urban BĂĽrgermeisters,
nobles, and royalty but also despised for charging interest. In
most countries Jews could not go abroad on the streets without a Judenhut—a kind of identifying conical
hat—or yellow badges, either of
which could invite street assault.
The dawning of the Enlightenment in
the late 17th and early 18th Centuries, gave Jews a
glimmer of hope because it not only challenged the orthodoxy
of the Catholic Church, but of Protestant ones as well. Increasing religious diversity among
the most literate and creative members of society inevitably
led to demands for religious liberty and
eventually for what we would call separation
of church and state or either the disestablishment of state religion or the allowance
of free worship outside them. Originally
Jews were excluded from this calculation. But ideas like this are hard to keep
in a bottle. By the later part of
the 1700’s and under the influence of the American
and French Revolutions, most advanced thinkers were including Jews
in their vision of religious liberty.
Among the Jews of Western Europe, a
small minority had prospered and began to mix more with Gentile society. They were exposed to the scientific and philosophical
currents of the wider society and hoped to adapt insular Jewish life to it.
Some, like Spinoza and Salomon Maimon gained respect
as philosophers. Out of this grew
the so-called Jewish Enlightenment or
Haskalah which advocated adopting
enlightenment values, pressing for better integration into European society,
and increasing education in secular
studies, Hebrew language,
and Jewish history outside of the
scriptures. It was at odds with the
closed communities of the ghetto and shtetl, with Jewish mysticism, and
traditional Orthodox scholarship.
The interests of the Haskalah
and Napoleon coincided. The Emperor
hoped that emancipation would eventually lead to assimilation, intermarriage,
voluntary conversion or at least abandonment of Judaism as a faith, and
eventually virtual disappearance as an identifiable
minority.
In later decrees, Napoleon extended
emancipation to all the territories he conquered. Greece, upon winning its independence
from the Ottomans followed suit in
1830.
By the 1840’s the numbers of
educated and westernized Jews were ballooning rapidly. Many were becoming politically active
in their countries and were often leading voices in the reform and revolutionary
movements that swept Europe. After
the revolutionary year of 1848 emancipation spread rapidly over Europe including
German states, Austria-Hungary,
Scandinavia, and the United
Kingdom. Although de
facto discrimination, especially in education and positions in public service continued to be
wide-spread, legal encumbrances were fast fading.
But it was not until after the turn
of the 20th Century that those cradles
of the Inquisition Spain and Portugal declared emancipation. Russia,
the home of millions of Jews, did not act until the Revolution in 1917.
Americans have been known to boast that the United States never had to emancipate its Jews because it never discriminated
against them. While this is true of the government
under the Constitution, it was not
true of the states. Most of the founding colonies had
some legal restrictions on Jews. The
outstanding exception was Rhode Island which
became home to the country’s first Synagogue
at Newport. Quaker Pennsylvania had few restrictions
and individual Jews like the Financier of the Revolution Robert Morris prospered there. Thomas
Jefferson’s Virginia Statue of Religious Liberty annulled
the citizenship barriers that previously existed.
But each state had to act on
its own. The US Constitutional ban
against the establishment of religion was not then considered binding on the individual states, several
of which had established churches—the New
England Standing Order and Anglicanism/Episcopalians
in most of the Middle and Southern States—and many had
restrictions on Jews voting, holding office, or even testifying in court.
One by one the states did abolish
these restrictions. The last to do so
was New Hampshire in 1877.
The rise of European Jewry was accompanied by a rise in a
new kind of anti-Semitism. The
famous forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion first surfaced in Russia in 1903 and theories of various Jewish conspiracies
to rule the world spread.
The assimilated Jews of Western
Europe largely felt secure in their emancipation by the early 20th
Century. They were wrong. Adolph
Hitler and the Nazis voided a century and a half of
progress and unleashed unimaginable horrors.
But that is another story.
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