Anti-Semitism
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The Eternal Jew: 1937 German poster with a Soviet Union map. In his hands are "Zuckerbrot und Peitsche", or "cookies and knout", an allusion to a saying similar to that of "carrot and stick". The header is written in mock-Hebrew script. |
Anti-Semitism (alternatively spelled
antisemitism) is hostility toward or
prejudice against
Jews as a religious, ethnic, or racial group, which can range from individual
hatred to institutionalized, violent
persecution. The highly explicit
ideology of
Adolf Hitler's
Nazism was the most extreme example of this phenomenon, leading to a
genocide of the European Jewry. Anti-Semitism takes different forms:
*
Religious anti-Semitism, or
anti-Judaism. Before the 19th century, most anti-Semitism was primarily religious in nature, based on
Christian or
Islamic interactions with and interpretations of
Judaism. Since Judaism was generally the largest
minority religion in Christian
Europe, Jews were often the primary targets of religiously-motivated violence and persecution from Christian and, to a lesser degree, Islamic rulers. Unlike anti-Semitism in general, this form of prejudice is directed at the religion itself, and so generally does not affect those of Jewish
ancestry who have
converted to another religion, although the case of
Conversos in
Spain was a notable exception. Laws banning Jewish religious practices may be rooted in religious anti-Semitism, as were
the expulsions of Jews that happened throughout the
Middle Ages.
*
Racial anti-Semitism. With its origins in the early and popularly misunderstood
evolutionary ideas of
race that started during the
Enlightenment, racial anti-Semitism became the dominant form of anti-Semitism from the late 19th century through today. Racial anti-Semitism replaced the hatred of Judaism as a religion with the idea that the Jews themselves were a racially distinct group, regardless of their religious practice, and that they were inferior or worthy of animosity. With the rise of racial anti-Semitism,
conspiracy theories about Jewish plots in which Jews were somehow acting in concert to dominate the world became a popular form of anti-Semitic expression. It should be noted, however, that Arabs are a semitic people too.
*
New anti-Semitism. Many analysts and Jewish groups believe there is a distinctly new form of late 20th century anti-Semitism, called the New anti-Semitism, which is associated with the
Left, rather than the
Right, borrowing language and concepts from
anti-Zionism.
[Chesler, Phyllis. The New Anti-Semitism: The Current Crisis and What We Must Do About It, Jossey-Bass, 2003, pp. 158-159, 181.] [Kinsella, Warren. The New anti-Semitism, accessed March 5, 2006.] [Doward, Jamie. "Jews predict record level of hate attacks: Militant Islamic media accused of stirring up new wave of anti-semitism", The Guardian, August 8, 2004.] [Endelman, Todd M. "Antisemitism in Western Europe Today" in Contemporary Antisemitism: Canada and the World, University of Toronto Press, 2005, pp. 65-79.] Some of these analysts identify anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism, arguing that anti-Zionism "advocates denial of the right to self-determination of the Jewish people."
[Matas, David. Aftershock: Anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism, Dundurn Press, 2005, p.31.] |
Cover page of Marr's The Way to Victory of Germanicism over Judaism, 1880 edition |
The word
antisemitic (
in German) was probably first used in 1860 by the Jewish
scholar Moritz Steinschneider in the phrase "antisemitic prejudices" (). Steinschneider used this phrase to characterize
Ernest Renan's ideas about how "
Semitic races" were inferior to "
Aryan races." These
pseudo-scientific theories concerning race, civilization, and "progress" had become quite widespread in
Europe in the second half of the
19th century, especially as
Prussian nationalistic historian
Heinrich von Treitschke did much to promote this form of racism. In Treitschke's writings
Semitic was practically
synonymous with
Jewish, in contrast to its usage by Renan and others.
German political agitator
Wilhelm Marr coined the related
German word
Antisemitismus in his book
"The Way to Victory of Germanicism over Judaism" in 1879. Marr used the phrase to mean
Jew-hatred or
Judenhass, and he used the new word
antisemitism to make hatred of the Jews seem rational and sanctioned by scientific knowledge. Marr's book became very popular, and in the same year he founded the
"League of Anti-Semites" (
"Antisemiten-Liga"), the first German organization committed specifically to combatting the alleged threat to Germany posed by the Jews, and advocating their
forced removal from the country.
So far as can be ascertained, the word was first widely printed in 1881, when Marr published
"Zwanglose Antisemitische Hefte," and
Wilhelm Scherer used the term
"Antisemiten" in the
"Neue Freie Presse" of January. The related word
semitism was coined around 1885. See also the coinage of the term "
Palestinian" by Germans to refer to the nation or people known as
Jews, as distinct from the religion of
Judaism.
Despite the use of the prefix "anti," the terms
Semitic and
Anti-Semitic are not
antonyms. To avoid the confusion of the
misnomer, many scholars on the subject (such as
Emil Fackenheim of the
Hebrew University) now favor the unhyphenated term
antisemitism.
Yehuda Bauer articulated this view in his writings and lectures: (the term) "Antisemitism, especially in its
hyphenated spelling, is inane nonsense, because there is no Semitism that you can be
anti to."
[Bauer, Yehuda. "Problems of Contemporary Antisemitism", accessed March 12, 2006.][Bauer, Yehuda. A History of the Holocaust, Franklin Watts, 1982, p. 52. ISBN 0531056414]The term
anti-Semitism has historically referred to prejudice towards
Jews alone. It does not traditionally refer to prejudice toward other people who speak
Semitic languages (e.g.
Arabs or
Assyrians).
In recent decades some groups have argued that the term should be extended to include prejudice against Arabs,
Anti-Arabism, in the context of accusations of Arab anti-Semitism; further, some, including the
Islamic Association of Palestine, have argued that this implies that Arabs cannot,
by definition, be anti-Semitic. The argument for such extension comes out of the claim that since the
Semitic language family includes
Arabic,
Hebrew and
Aramaic languages, and the historical term "Semite" refers to all those who consider themselves descendants of the Biblical
Shem, anti-Semitism should be likewise inclusive. This usage is not generally accepted.
Definitions of the term
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Anti-semitic caricature (France, 1898) |
Though the general definition of anti-Semitism is hostility or prejudice towards
Jews, a number of authorities have developed more formal definitions.
Holocaust scholar and
City University of New York professor Helen Fein's definition has been particularly influential. She defines anti-Semitism as "a persisting latent structure of hostile beliefs towards Jews as a collective manifested in individuals as attitudes, and in culture as
myth,
ideology,
folklore and imagery, and in actions â€" social or legal discrimination, political mobilisation against the Jews, and collective or state violence â€" which results in and/or is designed to distance, displace, or destroy Jews as Jews."
Professor Dietz Bering of the
University of Cologne further expanded on Professor Fein's definition by describing the structure of anti-Semitic beliefs. To anti-Semites, "Jews are not only partially but totally bad by nature, that is, their bad traits are incorrigible. Because of this bad nature: (1) Jews have to be seen not as individuals but as a collective. (2) Jews remain essentially alien in the surrounding societies. (3) Jews bring disaster on their 'host societies' or on the whole world, they are doing it secretly, therefore the anti-Semites feel obliged to unmask the conspiratorial, bad Jewish character."
There have been a number of efforts by international and governmental bodies to formally define anti-Semitism. The United States Department of State defines anti-Semitism in its 2005 Report on Global Anti-Semitism as "hatred toward Jews â€" individually and as a group â€" that can be attributed to the Jewish religion and/or ethnicity."
["Report on Global Anti-Semitism"'', U.S. State Department, January 5, 2005.]In 2005, the
European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia (EUMC), a body of the
European Union, developed a more detailed working definition: "Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities. In addition, such manifestations could also target the
state of Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity. Antisemitism frequently charges Jews with conspiring to harm
humanity, and it is often used to blame Jews for 'why things go wrong'."
The EUMC then listed "contemporary examples of anti-Semitism in public life, the media, schools, the workplace, and in the religious sphere." These included: Making mendacious, dehumanizing, demonizing, or stereotypical allegations about Jews; accusing Jews as a people of being responsible for real or imagined wrongdoing committed by a single Jewish person or group;
denying the Holocaust; and accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to the interests of their own nations. The EUMC also discussed ways in which attacking Israel could be anti-Semitic, depending on the context (see
anti-Zionism below).
[European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia, "Working Definition of Antisemitism", accessed March 12, 2006.]The earliest occurrence of Anti-Semitism has been the subject of debate among scholars. Professor Peter Schafer of the
Freie University of Berlin has argued that antisemitism was first spread by "the
Greek retelling of ancient
Egyptian prejudices". In view of the anti-Jewish writings of the Egyptian priest
Manetho, Schafer suggests that anti-Semitism may have emerged "in Egypt alone".
[Schafer, Peter. Judeophobia, Harvard University Press, 1997, p 208.] The hostility commonly faced by Jews in the
Diaspora has been extensively described by John M. G. Barclay of the
University of Durham.
[Barclay, John M. G. Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora: From Alexander to Trajan (323 BCE-117 CE), University of California, 1999.] The ancient Jewish philosopher
Philo of Alexandria described an attack on Jews in
Alexandria in 38 CE in
Flaccus, in which thousands of Jews died. In the analysis of Pieter W. Van Der Horst, the cause of the violence in Alexandria was that Jews had been portrayed as
misanthropes.
[Van Der Horst, Pieter Willem. Philo's Flaccus: the First Pogrom, Philo of Alexandria Commentary Series, Brill, 2003.] Gideon Bohak has argued that early animosity against Jews was not
anti-Judaism unless it arose from attitudes held against Jews alone. Using this stricter definition, Bohak says that many Greeks had animosity toward any group they regarded as barbarians.
[Bohak, Gideon. "The Ibis and the Jewish Question: Ancient 'Anti-Semitism' in Historical Context" in Menachem Mor et al, Jews and Gentiles in the Holy Land in the Days of the Second Temple, the Mishna and the Talmud, Yad Ben-Zvi Press, 2003, p 27-43.] The 150 BCE suppression of Jewish religious practice by use of deadly force against civilians, as recounted in
1 Maccabees, then qualifies as anti-Judaism in a broader sense of the term than is used by Bohak. There are other examples of
ancient animosity towards Jews that are not considered by all to fall within the definition of anti-semitism.
The New Testament mentions the edict of
Claudius expelling all the Jews from the city of Rome (Acts 18:2).
Suetonius in his biography of the Emperor (ca. 120 AD) writes about the same decree issued probably around 49 AD and according to the Roman historian the reason was disturbances on account of Chrestus
["Since the Jews were constantly causing disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus, he [Claudius] expelled them from Rome" (Suetonius, Lives of the Caesars, Claudius 5.25.4); in original: "Iudaeos impulsore Chresto assidue tumultuantis Roma expulit" (G. Suetonius Tranquillus, De Vita Caesarum 5.25.4)] (which may possibly be read as an allusion to
Christ).
Anti-Judaism in the New Testament
The
New Testament is a collection of books written by various authors. Most of this collection was written by the end of the first century. The majority of the New Testament was written by Jews who became followers of
Jesus, and all but two books (
Luke and
Acts) are traditionally attributed to such Jewish followers. Nevertheless, there are a number of passages in the New Testament that some see as anti-Semitic, or have been used for anti-Semitic purposes, most notably:
Jesus speaking to a group of
Pharisees: "I know that you are descendants of
Abraham; yet you seek to kill me, because my word finds no place in you. I speak of what I have seen with my Father, and you do what you have heard from your father. They answered him, "Abraham is our father." Jesus said to them, "If you were Abraham's children, you would do what Abraham did. ... You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father's desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, and has nothing to do with the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks according to his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies. But, because I tell the truth, you do not believe me. Which of you convicts me of sin? If I tell the truth, why do you not believe me? He who is of God hears the words of God; the reason why you do not hear them is you are not of God." (
John 8:37-39, 44-47,
RSV)
Stephen speaking before a synagogue council just before his execution: "You stiff-necked people, uncircumcised in heart and ears, you always resist the
Holy Spirit. As your fathers did, so do you. Which of the prophets did not your fathers persecute? And they killed those who announced beforehand the coming of the Righteous One, whom you have now betrayed and murdered, you who received the law as delivered by angels and did not keep it." (
Acts 7:51-53, RSV)
"Behold, I will make those of the synagogue of Satan who say that they are Jews and are not, but lie -- behold, I will make them come and bow down before your feet, and learn that I have loved you." (
Revelation 3:9, RSV).
Some biblical scholars point out that Jesus and Stephen are presented as Jews speaking to other Jews, and that their use of broad accusation against Israel is borrowed from
Moses and the later Jewish prophets (e.g. Deut 9:13-14; 31:27-29; 32:5, 20-21; 2 Kings 17:13-14; Is 1:4; Hos 1:9; 10:9). Jesus once calls his own disciple Peter 'Satan' (Mk 8:33). Other scholars hold that verses like these reflect the Jewish-Christian tensions that were emerging in the late first or early second century, and do not originate with Jesus. Today, nearly all Christian denominations de-emphasize verses such as these, and reject their use and misuse by anti-Semites.
Drawing from the Jewish prophet
Jeremiah (
Jeremiah 31:31-34), the
New Testament taught that with the death of Jesus a
new covenant was established which rendered obsolete and in many respects superseded the first covenant established by Moses (
Hebrews 8:7-13; Lk 22:20). Observance of the earlier covenant traditionally characterizes
Judaism. This New Testament teaching, and later variations to it, are part of what is called
supersessionism. However, the early Jewish followers of Jesus continued to practice
circumcision and observe
dietary laws, which is why the failure to observe these laws by the first
Gentile Christians became a matter of controversy and dispute some years after Jesus' death (Acts 11:3; 15:1ff; 16:3).
The New Testament holds that Jesus' (Jewish) disciple
Judas Iscariot (
Mark14:43-46), the
Roman governor
Pontius Pilate along with Roman forces (
John 19:11; Acts 4:27) and Jewish leaders and people of Jerusalem were (to varying degrees) responsible for the death of Jesus (Acts 13:27); Diaspora Jews are not blamed for events which were clearly outside their control.
After Jesus' death, the New Testament portrays the Jewish religious authorities in
Jerusalem as hostile to Jesus' followers, and as occasionally using force against them. Stephen is executed by stoning (Acts 7:58). Before his conversion, Saul puts followers of Jesus in prison (Acts 8:3;
Galatians 1:13-14;
1 Timothy 1:13). After his conversion,
Saul is whipped at various times by Jewish authorities (
2 Corinthians 11:24), and is accused by Jewish authorities before Roman courts (e.g., Acts 25:6-7). However, opposition from Gentiles is also cited repeatedly (2 Corinthians 11:26; Acts 16:19ff; 19:23ff). More generally, there are widespread references in the New Testament to suffering experienced by Jesus' followers at the hands of others (Romans 8:35;
1 Corinthians 4:11ff; Galatians 3:4;
2 Thessalonians 1:5; Hebrews 10:32;
1 Peter 4:16; Revelation 20:4).
There are a number of passages in the New Testament that are strongly pro-semitic and promote the Jewish nation above the rest of the world. Some famous passages include:
*John 4:22 - salvation and the knowledge of God originates from the Jews;
*Romans 1:16 - salvation is first for the Jews and then for pagans;
*Romans 11 - the Jews have been and will always be the beloved nation of God - they are enemies of the Gospel only for this reason that pagans might also be saved, but at the end of times the Jews will be the last nation to widely accept Christianity; therefore regarding onself as better than Jews (on account of them rejecting the Gospel) is pride that God himself will punish; verse 29 says that the blessing of Abraham (referring to material success such as obtaining riches) remains constantly on the Jews (regardless of their attitude towards Christianity);
Early Christianity
A number of early and influential Church works are strongly anti-Jewish.
During a discussion on the celebration of
Easter during the
First Council of Nicaea in AD 325, Roman emperor
Constantine said,
...it appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice of the Jews, who have impiously defiled their hands with enormous sin, and are, therefore, deservedly afflicted with blindness of soul. (...) Let us then have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd; for we have received from our Saviour a different way.[Eusebius. "Life of Constantine (Book III)", 337 CE, accessed March 12, 2006.]
Prejudice against Jews in the
Roman Empire was formalized in 438, when the
Code of Theodosius II established
Roman Catholic Christianity as the only legal religion in the Roman Empire. The
Justinian Code a century later stripped Jews of many of their rights, and Church councils throughout the sixth and seventh century, including the Council of Orleans, further enforced anti-Jewish provisions. These restrictions began as early as 305, when, in Elvira, (now
Granada), a Spanish town in
Andalusia, the first known laws of any church council against Jews appeared. Christian women were forbidden to marry Jews unless the Jew first converted to Catholicism. Jews were forbidden to extend hospitality to Catholics. Jews could not keep Catholic Christian
concubines and were forbidden to bless the fields of Catholics. In 589, in Catholic Spain, the
Third Council of Toledo ordered that children born of marriage between Jews and Catholic be baptized by force. By the Twelfth Council of Toledo (681) a policy of forced conversion of all Jews was initiated (Liber Judicum, II.2 as given in Roth).
[Roth, A. M. Roth, and Roth, Norman. Jews, Visigoths and Muslims in Medieval Spain, Brill Academic, 1994.] Thousands fled, and thousands of others converted to Roman Catholicism.
Anti-Semitism in the Middle Ages
Accusations of deicide
In the
Middle Ages a main justification of prejudice against Jews in Europe was religious. Though not part of
Catholic dogma, many Christians, including members of the
clergy, have held the Jewish people collectively responsible for killing Jesus, a practice originated by
Melito of Sardis. As stated in the
Boston College Guide to Passion Plays, "Over the course of time, Christians began to accept... that the Jewish people as a whole were responsible for killing Jesus. According to this interpretation, both the Jews present at Jesus' death and the Jewish people collectively and for all time, have committed the sin of
deicide, or God-killing. This accusation can be considered unreasonable as
Roman soldiers crucified Jesus. For 1900 years of Christian-Jewish history, the charge of deicide has led to hatred, violence against and murder of Jews in Europe and America."
[Paley, Susan and Koesters, Adrian Gibbons, eds. "A Viewer's Guide to Contemporary Passion Plays", accessed March 12, 2006.] This accusation was repudiated in 1964, when the Catholic Church under
Pope Paul VI issued the document
Nostra Aetate as a part of
Vatican II.
Restrictions to marginal occupations (tax collecting, moneylending, etc.)
Among socio-economic factors were restrictions by the authorities, local rulers and frequently church officials who closed many professions to the Jews, pushing them into marginal occupations considered socially inferior, such as local tax and rent collecting or
moneylending, seen in these times as a "
necessary evil" due to the increasing population and urbanization during the
High Middle Ages. Catholic doctrine of the time held that moneylending for interest was a
sin, and as such Jews tended to dominate this business. The
Torah and later sections of the
Hebrew Bible criticise
Usury but the Bible is slightly ambiguous. Jews were forced into money lending as there were few other occupations open to them. This provided support for claims that Jews are insolent, greedy, engaged in
usury, and in itself contributed to a negative image. Natural tensions between creditors (typically Jews) and debtors (typically Christians) were added to social, political, religious and economic strains. Peasants who were forced to pay their taxes to Jews could personify them as the people taking their earnings while remaining loyal to the lords on whose behalf the Jews worked.
The Black Death
As the
Black Death epidemics devastated Europe in the mid-14th century, annihilating more than a half of the population, Jews were taken as
scapegoats. Rumors spread that they caused the disease by deliberately
poisoning wells. Hundreds of Jewish communities were destroyed by violence, in particular in the Iberic peninsula and in the Germanic Empire. In
Provence, 40 Jews were burnt in
Toulon as soon as April 1348
[ See Stéphane Barry and Norbert Gualde, La plus grande épidémie de l'histoire ("The greatest epidemics in history"), in L'Histoire magazine, n°310, June 2006, p.47 ]. "Never mind that Jews were not immune from the ravages of the plague ; they were tortured until they "confessed" to crimes that they could not possibly have committed. In one such case, a man named Agimet was ... coerced to say that Rabbi Peyret of
Chambery (near
Geneva) had ordered him to poison the wells in
Venice,
Toulouse, and elsewhere. In the aftermath of Agimet's "confession," the Jews of
Strasbourg were burned alive on February 14, 1349.
[Hertzberg, Arthur and Hirt-Manheimer, Aron. Jews: The Essence and Character of a People, HarperSanFrancisco, 1998, p.84. ISBN 0060638346]Although the
Pope Clement VI tried to protect them by the
July 6,
1348 papal bull and another
1348 bull, several months later, 900 Jews were burnt in
Strasbourg, where the plague hadn't yet affected the city
. Clement VI condemned the violence and said those who blamed the plague on the Jews (among whom were the
flagellants) had been "seduced by that liar, the Devil."
The demonizing of the Jews
From around the
12th century through the
19th there were Christians who believed that some (or all) Jews possessed magical powers; some believed that they had gained these magical powers from making a deal with the
devil. See also
Judensau,
Judeophobia.
Blood libels
Main articles: blood libel, list of blood libels against JewsOn many occasions, Jews were accused of a
blood libel, the supposed drinking of blood of Christian children in mockery of the Christian
Eucharist. According to the authors of these blood libels, the 'procedure' for the alleged sacrifice was something like this: a child who had not yet reached puberty was kidnapped and taken to a hidden place. The child would be tortured by Jews, and a crowd would gather at the place of execution (in some accounts the synagogue itself) and engage in a mock tribunal to try the child. The child would be presented to the tribunal naked and tied and eventually be condemned to death. In the end, the child would be crowned with thorns and tied or nailed to a wooden cross. The cross would be raised, and the blood dripping from the child's wounds would be caught in bowls or glasses. Finally, the child would be killed with a thrust through the heart from a spear, sword, or dagger. Its dead body would be removed from the cross and concealed or disposed of, but in some instances rituals of
black magic would be performed on it. This method, with some variations, can be found in all the alleged Christian descriptions of ritual murder by Jews.
The story of
William of Norwich (d. 1144) is the first known case of ritual murder being alleged by a Christian
monk, while the story of
Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (d. 1255) said that after the boy was dead, his body was removed from the cross and laid on a table. His belly was cut open and his
entrails removed for some
occult purpose, such as a
divination ritual. The story of
Simon of Trent (d. 1475) emphasized how the boy was held over a large bowl so all his blood could be collected. Simon was regarded as a saint, and was canonized by
Pope Sixtus V in 1588. The cult of Simon was disbanded in 1965 by
Pope Paul VI, and the shrine erected to him was dismantled. He was removed from the calendar, and his future veneration was forbidden, though a handful of extremists still promote the narrative as a fact. In the 20th century, the
Beilis Trial in
Russia and the
Kielce pogrom represented incidents of blood libel in Europe. Unproved rumours of Jews killing Christians were used to try and justify real killing of Jews by Christians.
More recently blood libel stories have appeared a number of times in the state-sponsored media of a number of
Arab nations, in Arab television shows, and on websites.
Host desecration
 |
A 15th century German woodcut showing an alleged host desecration. In the first panel the hosts are stolen, in the second the hosts bleed when pierced by a Jew, in the third the Jews are arrested, and in the fourth they are burned alive. |
Jews were sometimes falsely accused of desecrating consecrated
hosts in a reenactment of the
Crucifixion; this crime was known as
host desecration and carried the
death penalty.
Disabilities and restrictions
 |
The yellow badge Jews were forced to wear can be seen in this marginal illustration from an English manuscript. |
Jews were subject to a wide range of legal restrictions throughout the Middle Ages, some of which lasted until the end of the 19th century. Jews were excluded from many trades, the list of excluded occupations varying in different communities, and being determined largely by the political influence of various non-Jewish competing interests. Frequently all occupations were barred against Jews, except money-lending and peddlingâ€"even these at times being prohibited. The number of Jews or Jewish families permitted to reside in different places was limited; they were concentrated in
ghettos, and were not allowed to own land; and they were subjected to discriminatory taxes on entering cities or districts other than their own, forced to swear special
Jewish Oaths, and a variety of other measures, including restrictions on dress.
Clothing
Main article: yellow badge, Judenhut
The
Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 was the first to proclaim the requirement for Jews to wear something that distinguished them as Jews. It could be a coloured piece of cloth in the shape of a star or circle or square, a hat (
Judenhut), or a robe. In many localities, members of the medieval society wore badges to distinguish their social status. Some badges (such as
guild members) were prestigious, while others ostracised outcasts such as
lepers, reformed
heretics and
prostitutes. Jews sought to evade the
badges by paying what amounted to bribes in the form of temporary "exemptions" to kings, which were revoked and re-paid whenever the king needed to raise funds.
The Crusades
The
Crusades were a series of several military campaigns sanctioned by the Papacy that took place during the 11th through 13th centuries. They began as Catholic endeavors to recapture
Jerusalem from the Muslims but developed into territorial wars.
A mob of mainly untrained and uncontrolled civilians, known as the
People's Crusade accompanying the first Crusade attacked the Jewish communities in Germany, France, and England, and put many Jews to death. Entire communities, like those of
Treves,
Speyer,
Worms,
Mayence, and
Cologne, were slain during the first Crusade by a mob army. About 12,000 Jews are said to have perished in the Rhenish cities alone between May and July, 1096. Before the Crusades the Jews had practically a monopoly of trade in Eastern products, but the closer connection between Europe and the East brought about by the Crusades raised up a class of merchant traders among the Christians, and from this time onward restrictions on the sale of goods by Jews became frequent. The religious zeal fomented by the Crusades at times burned as fiercely against the Jews as against the Muslims, though attempts were made by bishops during the First crusade and the papacy during the Second Crusade to stop Jews from being attacked. Both economically and socially the Crusades were disastrous for European Jews. They prepared the way for the anti-Jewish legislation of Pope Innocent III, and formed the turning-point in the medieval history of the Jews.
The expulsions from England, France, Germany, and Spain
Only a few expulsions of the Jews are described in this section, for a more extended list see History of anti-Semitism, and also the History of the Jews in England, Germany, Spain, and France.The practice of expelling the Jews accompanied by confiscation of their property, followed by temporary readmissions for
ransom, was utilized to enrich the French crown during
12th-
14th centuries. The most notable such expulsions were: from
Paris by
Philip Augustus in 1182, from the entirety of France by
Louis IX in 1254, by
Charles IV in 1322, by
Charles V in 1359, by
Charles VI in 1394.
To finance his war to conquer
Wales,
Edward I of England taxed the Jewish moneylenders. When the Jews could no longer pay, they were accused of disloyalty. Already restricted to a limited number of occupations, the Jews saw Edward abolish their "privilege" to lend money, choke their movements and activities and were forced to wear a
yellow patch. The heads of Jewish households were then arrested, over 300 of them taken to the
Tower of London and executed, while others killed in their homes.
See also:-Massacres at London and York (1189â€"1190). The complete banishment of all Jews from the country in 1290 led to thousands killed and drowned while fleeing and the absence of Jews from England for three and a half centuries, until 1655, when
Oliver Cromwell reversed the policy.
In 1492,
Ferdinand II of Aragon and
Isabella of Castile issued
General Edict on the Expulsion of the Jews from
Spain (
see also Spanish Inquisition) and many
Sephardi Jews fled to the
Ottoman Empire, some to the
Land of Israel.
In 1744,
Frederick II of Prussia limited
Breslau to only ten so-called "protected" Jewish families and encouraged similar practice in other
Prussian cities. In 1750 he issued
Revidiertes General Privilegium und Reglement vor die Judenschaft: the "protected" Jews had an alternative to "either abstain from marriage or leave Berlin" (quoting
Simon Dubnow). In the same year, Archduchess of
Austria Maria Theresa ordered Jews out of
Bohemia but soon reversed her position, on condition that Jews pay for readmission every ten years. This
extortion was known as
malke-geld (queen's money). In 1752 she introduced the law limiting each Jewish family to one son. In 1782,
Joseph II abolished most of persecution practices in his
Toleranzpatent, on the condition that
Yiddish and
Hebrew are eliminated from public records and judicial autonomy is annulled.
Moses Mendelssohn wrote that "Such a tolerance... is even more dangerous play in tolerance than open persecution".
Anti-Judaism and the Reformation
 |
Luther's 1543 pamphlet On the Jews and Their Lies |
Martin Luther, an
Augustinian monk and an
ecclesiastical reformer whose teachings inspired the
Reformation, wrote antagonistically about Jews in his book
On the Jews and their Lies, which describes the Jews in extremely harsh terms, excoriating them, and providing detailed recommendation for a
pogrom against them and their permanent oppression and/or expulsion. According to
Paul Johnson, it "may be termed the first work of modern anti-Semitism, and a giant step forward on the road to
the Holocaust."
[Johnson, Paul. A History of the Jews, HarperCollins Publishers, 1987, p.242. ISBN 5551768589] In his final sermon shortly before his death, however, Luther preached "We want to treat them with Christian love and to pray for them, so that they might become converted and would receive the Lord."
[Luther, Martin. D. Martin Luthers Werke: kritische Gesamtausgabe, Weimar: Hermann Böhlaus Nachfolger, 1920, Vol. 51, p. 195.] Still, Luther's harsh comments about the Jews are seen by many as a continuation of medieval Christian anti-Semitism.
See also Martin Luther and AntisemitismAnti-Semitism in 19th and 20th century Catholicism
Throughout the 19th century and into the 20th, the Catholic Church still incorporated strong anti-Semitic elements, despite increasing attempts to separate anti-Judaism, the opposition to the Jewish religion on religious grounds, and racial anti-Semitism.
Pope Pius VII (1800-1823) had the walls of the Jewish
Ghetto in Rome rebuilt after the Jews were
released by Napoleon, and Jews were restricted to the Ghetto through the end of the papacy of
Pope Pius IX (1846-1878), the last Pope to rule Rome. Additionally, official organizations such as the
Jesuits banned candidates "who are descended from the Jewish race unless it is clear that their father, grandfather, and great-grandfather have belonged to the Catholic Church" until 1946. Brown University historian
David Kertzer, working from the Vatican archive, has further argued in his book
The Popes Against the Jews that in the 19th and 20th century the
Roman Catholic Church adhered to a distinction between "good anti-Semitism" and "bad anti-Semitism". The "bad" kind promoted hatred of Jews because of their descent. This was considered un-Christian because the Christian message was intended for all of humanity regardless of ethnicity; anyone could become a Christian. The "good" kind criticized alleged Jewish conspiracies to control newspapers, banks, and other institutions, to care only about accumulation of wealth, etc. Many Catholic bishops wrote articles criticizing Jews on such grounds, and, when accused of promoting hatred of Jews, would remind people that they condemned the "bad" kind of anti-Semitism. Kertzer's work is not, therefore, without critics; scholar of Jewish-Christian relations
Rabbi David G. Dalin, for example, criticized Kertzer in the
Weekly Standard for using evidence selectively. The
Second Vatican Council, the
Nostra Aetate document, and the efforts of
Pope John Paul II have helped reconcile Jews and Catholicism in recent decades, however.
Passion plays
Passion plays, dramatic stagings representing the trial and death of
Jesus, have historically been used in remembrance of Jesus' death during
Lent. These plays historically blamed the Jews for
the death of Jesus in a
polemical fashion, depicting a crowd of Jewish people condemning Jesus to
crucifixion and a Jewish leader assuming eternal collective guilt for the crowd for the murder of Jesus, which,
The Boston Globe explains, "for centuries prompted vicious attacks on Europe's Jewish communities".
[Sennott, Charles M. "In Poland, new 'Passion' plays on old hatreds", The Boston Globe, April 10, 2004.] Time Magazine in its article,
The Problem With Passion, explains that "such passages (are) highly subject to interpretation".
[Van Biema, David. "The Problem With Passion", Time Magazine, August 25, 2003.] Although modern scholars interpret the "blood on our children" () as "a specific group's oath of responsibility" some audiences have historically interpreted it as "an assumption of eternal, racial guilt". This last interpretation has often incited violence against Jews; according to the
Anti-Defamation League, "Passion plays historically unleashed the torrents of hatred aimed at the Jews, who always were depicted as being in partnership with the devil and the reason for Jesus' death".
[Foxman, Abraham H. "'Passion' Relies on Theme of anti-Semitism", The Palm Beach Post, January 25, 2004.] The
Christian Science Monitor, in its article,
Capturing the Passion, explains that "[h]istorically, productions have reflected negative images of Jews and the long-time church teaching that the Jewish people were collectively responsible for Jesus' death. Violence against Jews as 'Christ-killers' often flared in their wake."
[Lampman, Jane. "Capturing the Passion", Christian Science Monitor, July 10, 2003.] Christianity Today in
Why some Jews fear The Passion (of the Christ) observed that "Outbreaks of Christian anti-Semitism related to the Passion narrative have been...numerous and destructive."
[Hansen, Colin. "Why some Jews fear The Passion", Christianity Today, 2004.] The
Religion Newswriters Association observed that :"in Easter 2001, three incidents made national headlines and renewed their fears. One was a column by
Paul Weyrich, a conservative Christian leader and head of the
Free Congress Foundation, who argued that "Christ was crucified by the Jews." Another was sparked by comments from the NBA point guard and born-again Christian
Charlie Ward, who said in an interview that Jews were persecuting Christians and that Jews "had his [Jesus'] blood on their hands." Finally, the evangelical Christian comic strip artist
Johnny Hart published a B.C. strip that showed a menorah disintegrating until it became a cross, with each panel featuring the last words of Jesus, including "
Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."
[ "'Passion' plays out locally" February 17, 2004] In
1988, the Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs of the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops published
Criteria for the Evaluation of Dramatizations of the Passion, in order to ensure that Passion Plays adhere to the teaching of the
Second Vatican Council and the
Pontifical Biblical Commission as expressed in
Nostra Aetate no. 4 (
October 28,
1965). These criteria were summarized for the
Archdiocese of Boston as
[ Sirois, Celia. "Guidelines for Dramatizing the Passion of the Lord"]:
*The overriding preoccupation of any dramatization of the Passion must be, in the words of
Ellis Rivkin, not who killed Christ, but what killed Christ, namely, our sins.
*Those scripting a Passion play must use the best available biblical scholarship to elucidate the gospel texts which were not written to preserve historical facts so much as to proclaim the saving truth about Jesus.
*Harmonizing the four accounts of Jesus' Passion â€"
i.e. constructing a single story of the Passion by combining elements from the four gospel versions â€" risks violating the integrity of the texts, each of which offers a distinct theological interpretation of Jesus ' death.
*Because of the nature of the gospels, the choice of what gospel passages to use in the making of a Passion play must be guided by the Church's teaching that "the Jews should not be presented as rejected or accursed by God as if this followed from Sacred Scripture" (Nostra Aetate 4). The claim that a passage is "in the Bible" does not suffice to justify its inclusion.
*As ignorance of Judaism often leads to misinterpretation of events, the complexity of the Jewish world of Jesus must be carefully researched and correctly represented;
e.g., it is important to know that the high priest was appointed by the Roman procurator.
*Crowd scenes must represent this rich diversity and reflect a range of responses to Jesus among the crowd as among their leaders.
*The Jewishness of Jesus and his followers must be taken seriously. They must be portrayed as Jews among Jews and not set apart by means of costuming or makeup.
*Stereotypes of Jews and Judaism (
e.g. depicting Jews as avaricious) must be avoided. [This is especially important in portraying Judas, whose name means Jew, and who is given money for betraying Jesus.]
*The Pharisees are not mentioned in the gospel accounts of Jesus' Passion and therefore should not be depicted as responsible for his death. The Jews most directly implicated in the death of Jesus are the Temple priests.
*Roman soldiers should be on stage throughout the play to keep before the audience the pervasive and oppressive reality of Roman occupation.
*Problematic passages, like Matthew's "his blood be on us and on our children" (27:25), that can be misconstrued as blaming all Jews of all time for the death of Jesus, should be omitted. As a general rule in these cases, the Bishops suggest that "if one cannot show beyond reasonable doubt that the particular gospel element selected or paraphrased will not be offensive or have the potential for negative influence on the audience for whom the presentation is intended, the element cannot, in good conscience, be used" ("Criteria," p. 12).
On
January 6,
2004, the Consultative Panel on Lutheran-Jewish Relations of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America similarly issued a statement urging any Lutheran church presenting a Passion Play to adhere to their
Guidelines for Lutheran-Jewish Relations, stating that "the New Testament . . . must not be used as justification for hostility towards present-day Jews," and that "blame for the death of Jesus should not be attributed to Judaism or the Jewish people."
["Lutheran Statement on The Passion of the Christ" January 6, 2004]In 2003 and 2004 some compared
Mel Gibson's recent film
The Passion of the Christ to these kinds of passion plays, but this characterization is hotly disputed; an analysis of that topic is in the article on
The Passion of the Christ. See also
Mel Gibson DUI incident Despite such fears, there have been no publicized anti-Semitic incidents directly attributable to the movie's influence. However, the film's reputation for anti-semitism led to the movie being distributed and well-received throughout the Muslim world, even in nations that typically suppress public expressions of Christianity.
Racial anti-Semitism replaced the hatred of Judaism with the hatred of Jews as a group. In the context of the
Industrial Revolution, following the
emancipation of the Jews, Jews rapidly urbanized and experienced a period of greater social mobility. With the decreasing role of religion in public life tempering religious anti-Semitism, a combination of growing
nationalism, the rise of
eugenics, and resentment at the socio-economic success of the Jews led to the newer, and more virulent, racist anti-Semitism.
Nationalism and anti-Semitism
Racial anti-Semitism was preceded, especially in Germany, by anti-Semitism arising from
Romantic nationalism. As racial theories developed, especially from the mid nineteenth-century onwards, these nationalist ideas were subsumed within them. But their origins were quite distinct from racialism. On the one hand they derived from an exclusivist interpretation of the 'Volk' ideas of
Johann Gottfried Herder. This led to anti-Semitic writing and journalism in the second quarter of the 19th century of which
Richard Wagner's
Das Judentum in der Musik (Jewry in Music) is perhaps the most notorious example. On the other hand, radical socialists such as
Karl Marx identified Jews as being both victims and enforced perpetrators of the
Capitalist system - e.g. in his article 'On the Jewish Question'. From sources such as these, and encouraged by the broad acceptance of racial theories as the century continued, anti-Semitism entered the vocabularies and policies of both the right and the left in political thought.
The rise of racial anti-Semitism
|
Image of Jesus as an icon of Nordic racial purity from the Nazi newspaper Der StĂĽrmer; he is glaring at unacceptably "racially alien" Jewish converts to Christianity. |
Modern European anti-Semitism has its origin in 19th century
pseudo-scientific theories that the Jewish people are a sub-group of Semitic peoples; Semitic people were thought by many Europeans to be entirely different from the
Aryan, or
Indo-European, populations, and that they can never be amalgamated with them. In this view, Jews are not opposed on account of their
religion, but on account of their supposed hereditary or genetic
racial characteristics: greed, a special aptitude for money-making, aversion to hard work, clannishness and obtrusiveness, lack of social tact, low cunning, and especially lack of
patriotism.
While enlightened European intellectual society of that period viewed prejudice against people on account of their religion to be declassé and a sign of ignorance, because of this supposed 'scientific' connection to
genetics they felt fully justified in prejudice based on nationality or 'race'. In order to differentiate between the two practices, the term anti-Semitism was developed to refer to this 'acceptable' bias against Jews as a nationality, as distinct from the 'undesirable' prejudice against Judaism as a religion. Concurrently with this usage,
some authors in Germany began to use the term 'Palestinians' when referring to Jews as a people, rather than as a religious group.
As further proof of its pseudo-scientific nature, it is questionable whether
Jews in general looked significantly different from the populations conducting "racial" anti-Semitism. This was especially true in places like
Germany,
France and
Austria where the Jewish population tended to be more secular (or at least less Orthodox) than that of Eastern Europe, and did not wear clothing (such as a
yarmulke) that would particularly distinguish their appearance from the non-Jewish population. Many anthropologists of the time such as
Franz Boas tried to use complex physical measurements like the
cephalic index and visual surveys of hair/eye color and skin tone of Jewish vs. non-Jewish European populations to prove that the notion of a separate "Jewish race" was a myth. The 19th and early 20th century view of race should be distinguished from the efforts of modern population genetics to trace the ancestry of various Jewish groups, see
Y-chromosomal Aaron.
The advent of racial anti-Semitism was also linked to the growing sense of
nationalism in many countries. The nationalist context viewed Jews as a separate and often "alien" nation within the countries in which Jews resided, a prejudice exploited by the elites of many governments.
Elites and the use of anti-Semitism
|
1889 Paris, France elections poster for self-described "candidat antisémite" Adolphe Willette: "The Jews are a different race, hostile to our own... Judaism, there is the enemy!" |
Many analysts of modern anti-Semitism have pointed out that its essence is
scapegoating: features of modernity felt by some group to be undesirable (e.g. materialism, the power of money, economic fluctuations, war, secularism, socialism, Communism, movements for racial equality, social welfare policies, etc.) are believed to be caused by the machinations of a conspiratorial people whose full loyalties are not to the national group. Traditionalists anguished at the supposedly decadent or defective nature of the modern world have sometimes been inclined to embrace such views. Some are of the opinion that many of the conservative members of the
WASP establishment of the
United States as well as other comparable Western elites (e.g. the
British Foreign Office) have harbored such attitudes, and in the aftermath of the
Russian Revolution, some anti-Semites have imagined world
Communism to be a Jewish conspiracy.
[Thernstrom, Stephan, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, Belknap Press, 1980, p. 590. ISBN 0674375122]The modern form of anti-Semitism is identified in the
1911 edition of the
Encyclopædia Britannica as a conspiracy theory serving the self-understanding of the European
aristocracy, whose social power waned with the rise of bourgeois society. The Jews of Europe, then recently emancipated, were relatively literate, entrepreneurial and unentangled in aristocratic patronage systems, and were therefore disproportionately represented in the ascendant
bourgeois class. As the
aristocracy (and its hangers-on) lost out to this new center of power in society, they found their scapegoat - exemplified in the work of
Arthur de Gobineau. That the Jews were singled out to embody the 'problem' was, by this theory, no more than a symptom of the
nobility's own prejudices concerning the importance of breeding (on which its own
legitimacy was founded).
Dreyfus affair
|
The treason conviction of Alfred Dreyfus demonstrated French anti-semitism. |
The
Dreyfus affair was a political scandal which divided
France for many years during the late 19th century. It centered on the 1894 treason conviction of
Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish officer in the French army. Dreyfus was, in fact, innocent: the conviction rested on false documents, and when high-ranking officers realized this they attempted to cover up the mistakes. The writer
Émile Zola exposed the affair to the general public in the literary newspaper
L'Aurore (The Dawn) in a famous open letter to the
Président de la République Félix Faure, titled
J'accuse ! (I Accuse!) on January 13, 1898.
The Dreyfus Affair split France between the
Dreyfusards (those supporting Alfred Dreyfus) and the
Antidreyfusards (those against him). The quarrel was especially violent since it involved many issues then highly
controversial in a heated political climate.
Dreyfus was pardoned in 1899, readmitted into the army, and made a knight in the
Legion of Honour. An Austrian Jewish journalist named
Theodor Herzl was assigned to report on the trial and its aftermath. The injustice of the trial and the anti-Semitic passions it aroused in France and elsewhere turned him into a determined and leading
Zionist; ultimately turning the movement into an international one.
Pogroms
Pogroms were a form of race riots, most commonly Russia and Eastern Europe, aimed specifically at Jews and often government sponsored. Pogroms became endemic during a large-scale wave of anti-Jewish riots that swept southern
Russia in 1881, after Jews were wrongly blamed for the assassination of Tsar
Alexander II. In the 1881 outbreak, thousands of Jewish homes were destroyed, many families reduced to extremes of poverty; women sexually assaulted, and large numbers of men, women, and children killed or injured in 166 Russian towns. The new tzar,
Alexander III, blamed the Jews for the riots and issued a
series of harsh restrictions on Jews. Large numbers of pogroms continued until 1884, with at least tacit inactivity by the authorities. An even bloodier wave of pogroms broke out in 1903-1906, leaving an estimated 2,000 Jews dead, and many more wounded. A wave of 887 pogroms in Russia and Ukraine occurred during the
Russian Civil War, in which between 70,000 to 250,000 civilian Jews were killed by riots led by various sides. About 40% by the forces led by
Simon Petlyura fighting for the
Ukrainian People's Republic; 25% by the
Green Army and various nationalist and anarchist gangs; 17% by the
White Army, especially forces of
Anton Denikin; 8.5% by the
Red Army.
[Solzhenitsyn 200 Years Together. Note: in the source the numbers don't add up to full 100%]During the early to mid-1900s, pogroms also occurred in Poland, Argentina, and throughout the Arab world. Extremely deadly pogroms also occurred during
World War II, including the Romanian
IaĹźi pogrom in which 14,000 Jews were killed, and the
Jedwabne massacre in Poland which killed between 380 and 1,600 Jews. The last mass pogrom in Europe was the post-war
Kielce pogrom of 1946.
Anti-Jewish legislation
 |
The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 used a pseudo-scientific basis for racial discrimination against Jews. People with four German grandparents (white circles) were of "German blood," while people were classified as Jews if they descended from three or more Jewish grandparents (black circles in top row right). One or two Jewish grandparents made someone "mixed blood." Since the racial differences between Jews and Germans are small, the Nazis used the religious observance of a person's grandparents to determine their "race." (1935 Chart from Nazi Germany used to explain the Nuremberg Laws) |
Anti-semitism was officially adopted by the German Conservative Party at the
Tivoli Congress in 1892, on the instigation of Dr. Klasing but in the teeth of opposition led by the moderate Werner
von Blumenthal.
Official
anti-Semitic legislation was enacted in various countries, especially in Imperial Russia in the 19th century and in
Nazi Germany and its Central European allies in the 1930s. These laws were passed against Jews as a group, regardless of their religious affiliation - in some cases, such as Nazi Germany, having a Jewish grandparent was enough to qualify someone as Jewish.
In Germany, for example, the
Nuremberg Laws of 1935 prevented marriage between any Jew and non-Jew, and made it that all Jews, even quarter- and half-Jews, were no longer citizens of their own country (their official title became "
subject of the state"). This meant that they had no basic citizens' rights, e.g., to vote. In 1936, Jews were banned from all professional jobs, effectively preventing them having any influence in education, politics, higher education and industry. On 15 November of 1938, Jewish children were banned from going to normal schools. By April 1939, nearly all Jewish companies had either collapsed under financial pressure and declining profits, or had been persuaded to sell out to the Nazi government. This further reduced their rights as human beings; they were in many ways officially separated from the German populace. Similar laws existed in
Hungary,
Romania, and
Austria.
Even when anti-Semitism was not an official state policy, governments in the early to middle parts of the 20th century often adopted more subtle measures aimed at Jews. For example, the
Evian Conference of 1938 delegates from thirty-two countries neither condemned Hitler's treatment of the Jews nor allowed more Jewish refugees to flee to the West.
The Holocaust and Holocaust denial
Racial anti-Semitism reached its most horrific manifestation in the
Holocaust during
World War II, in which about 6 million
European
Jews, 1.5 million of them children, were systematically murdered.
Holocaust deniers often claim that "the Jews" or "
Zionist conspiracy" are responsible for the exaggeration or wholesale fabrication of the events of the Holocaust. Critics of such revisionism point to an overwhelming amount of physical and historical evidence that supports the mainstream historical view of the Holocaust. Almost all academics agree that there is no evidence for any such conspiracy.
Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories
|
2005 Syrian edition of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion includes a "historical and contemporary investigative study" that repeats the blood libel and other anti-Semitic accusations, and argues that the Torah and Talmud encourage Jews "to commit treason and to conspire, dominate, be arrogant and exploit other countries". |
The rise of views of the Jews as a malevolent "race" generated anti-Semitic
conspiracy theories that the Jews, as a group, were plotting to control or otherwise influence the world. From the early infamous Russian literary
hoax,
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, published by the Tsar's secret police, a key element of anti-Semitic thought has been that Jews influence or control the world.
In a recent incarnation, extremist groups, such as
Neo-Nazi parties and
Islamist groups, claim that the aim of
Zionism is
global domination; they call this the
Zionist conspiracy and use it to support anti-Semitism. This position is associated with
fascism and
Nazism, though it is becoming a tendency within parts of the
left as well, and termed
New anti-Semitism.
In recent years some scholars of history, psychology, religion, and representatives of Jewish groups, have noted what they describe as the
new anti-Semitism, which is associated with the Left, rather than the Right, and which uses the language of anti-Zionism and criticism of Israel to attack the Jews more broadly.
Anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism
Anti-Zionism is a term that has been used to describe several very different political and religious points of view (both historically and in current debates) all expressing some form of opposition to
Zionism. A large variety of commentatorsâ€"politicians, journalists, academics and othersâ€"believe that criticisms of Israel and Zionism are often disproportionate in degree and unique in kind, and attribute this to anti-Semitism. In turn, critics of this view believe that associating anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism is intended to stifle debate, deflect attention from valid criticism, and taint anyone opposed to Israeli actions and policies.
Civil Rights Leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr strongly condemned anti Zionism stating
". . . You declare, my friend, that you do not hate the Jews, you are merely 'anti-Zionist.' And I say, let the truth ring forth from the high mountain tops, let it echo through the valleys of God's green earth: When people criticize Zionism, they mean Jews--this is God's own truth.
"Antisemitism, the hatred of the Jewish people, has been and remains a blot on the soul of mankind. In this we are in full agreement. So know also this: anti-Zionist is inherently antisemitic, and ever will be so.
"Why is this? You know that Zionism is nothing less than the dream and ideal of the Jewish people returning to live in their own land. The Jewish people, the Scriptures tell us, once enjoyed a flourishing Commonwealth in the Holy Land. From this they were expelled by the Roman tyrant, the same Romans who cruelly murdered Our Lord. Driven from their homeland, their nation in ashes, forced to wander the globe, the Jewish people time and again suffered the lash of whichever tyrant happened to rule over them.
"The Negro people, my friend, know what it is to suffer the torment of tyranny under rulers not of our choosing. Our brothers in Africa have begged, pleaded, requested--DEMANDED the recognition and realization of our inborn right to live in peace under our own sovereignty in our own country.
"How easy it should be, for anyone who holds dear this inalienable right of all mankind, to understand and support the right of the Jewish People to live in their ancient Land of Israel. All men of good will exult in the fulfilment of God's promise, that his People should return in joy to rebuild their plundered land.
This is Zionism, nothing more, nothing less. [
1]
European Commission definition
The European Commission on Racism and Intolerance has proposed a
Working Definition of Antisemitism outlining some of the ways in which anti-Zionism may cross the line into anti-Semitism. "Examples of the ways in which anti-Semitism manifests itself with regard to the State of Israel taking into account the overall context could include:
* denying the Jewish people right to
self-determination, e.g. by claiming that the existence of a state of Israel is a racist endeavor;
* applying double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation;
* using the symbols and images associated with classic anti-Semitism (e.g. claims of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to characterize Israel or Israelis; and
* holding Jews collectively responsible for the actions of the State of Israel."
Anti-Semitism within Islam is discussed in the article on Islam and anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism in the Arab World is discussed in the article on Arabs and anti-Semitism The
Qur'an,
Islam's holy book, accuses the
Jews of corrupting the
Hebrew Bible. Muslims refer to Jews and
Christians as a "
People of the book"; Islamic law demands that when under Muslim rule they should be treated as
dhimmis - from the Arab term
ahl adh-dhimma. The writer
Bat Ye'or introduced the modern word
Dhimmitude as a generic indication of this Islamic attitude. Dhimmis were granted protection of life (including against other Muslim states), the right to residence in designated areas, worship, and work or trade, and were exempted from military service, and Muslim religious duties, personal law and tax on certain conditions such as paying the poll (
jizyah) and land taxes as set by Muslim authorities. They were also subject to various other restrictions in relation to Muslims and Islam (for example, Muslim men could marry Jewish women and own Jewish slaves, but the opposite was not true), the Qur'an or
Muhammad (such as desecrating scriptures or defaming the Prophet), and
proselytizing. At times Jews were subjected to a number of other restrictions on dress, riding horses or camels, carrying arms, holding public office, building or repairing places of worship, mourning loudly, wearing shoes outside a Jewish ghetto, etc.
In the
Muslim world traditional Islamic judeophobia eventually merged with modern European anti-Semitism. Antagonism and violence increased in the
twentieth century, as anti-Semitic motives and
blood libels were imported from
Europe and as resentment against
Zionist efforts in
British Mandate of Palestine spread. While anti-Semitism has certainly been heightened by the
Arab-Israeli conflict, there were an increasing number of
pogroms against Jews prior to the foundation of
Israel, including
Nazi-inspired pogroms in
Algeria in the 1930s, and massive attacks on the Jews in
Iraq and
Libya in the 1940s (see
Farhud). George Gruen attributes the increased animosity towards Jews in the
Arab world to several factors including: The breakdown of the
Ottoman Empire and traditional
Islamic society; domination by Western
colonial powers under which Jews gained a disproportionatly larger role in the commercial, professional, and administrative life of the region; the rise of
Arab nationalism, whose proponents sought the wealth and positions of local Jews through government channels; resentment over Jewish
nationalism and the Zionist movement; and the readiness of unpopular
regimes to
scapegoat local Jews for political purposes.
[Gruen, George E. "The Other Refugees: Jews of the Arab World", The Jerusalem Letter, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, June 1, 1988.]Anti-Zionist propaganda in the
Middle East frequently adopts the terminology and symbols of
the Holocaust to
demonize Israel and its leaders. At the same time,
Holocaust denial and Holocaust minimization efforts have found increasingly overt acceptance as sanctioned historical discourse in a number of Middle Eastern countries. Arabic- and Turkish-edition of Hitler's Mein Kampf and the Protocols of Zion have found an audience in the region with limited critical response by local intellectuals and media. The Protocols have even inspired TV series (in Lebanon and Iran) showing rabbis ritually slaughtering (throat cutting) Christian children.
United States
 |
The KKK: Nazi salute and Holocaust denial |
Jews were often condemned by
populist politicians alternately for their left-wing politics, or their perceived wealth, at the turn of the century. Anti-semitism grew in the years leading up to America's entry into World War II, Father
Charles Coughlin, a radio preacher, as well as many other prominent public figures, condemned "the Jews," and
Henry Ford reprinted
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion in his newspaper.
In 1939 a
Roper poll found that only thirty-nine percent of Americans felt that Jews should be treated like other people. Fifty-three percent believed that "Jews are different and should be restricted" and ten percent believed that Jews should be deported.
[Smitha, Frank E. "Roosevelt and Approaching War: The Economy, Politics and Questions of War, 1937-38", accessed March 12 2006.] Several surveys taken from 1940 to 1946 Jews were seen as a greater threat to the welfare of the United States then any other national, religious, or racial group. [
2]It has been estimated that 190,000 - 200,000 Jews could have been saved during the
Second World War had it not been for bureaucratic obstacles to immigration deliberately created by
Breckinridge Long and others.
["Breckinridge Long (1881-1958)", Public Broadcasting System (PBS), accessed March 12 2006.]In a speech at an
America First rally on
September 11 1941 in
Des Moines, Iowa entitled "Who Are the War Agitators?",
Charles Lindbergh claimed that three groups had been "pressing this country toward war": the Roosevelt Administration, the
British, and the Jews - and complained about what he insisted was the Jews' "large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government."
Unofficial anti-Semitism was also widespread in the first half of the century. For example, to limit the growing number of Jewish students between 1919-1950s a number of private liberal arts universities and medical and dental schools employed
Numerus clausus. These included
Harvard University,
Columbia University,
Cornell University, and
Boston University. In 1925
Yale University, which already had such admissions preferences as "character", "solidity", and "physical characteristics" added a program of
legacy preference admission spots for children of Yale alumni, in an explicit attempt to put the brakes on the rising percentage of Jews in the student body. This was soon copied by other Ivy League and other schools, and admissions of Jews were kept down to 10% through the 1950s. Such policies were for the most part discarded during the early 1960s.
Some extreme
cults also support conspiracy theories regarding Jews as dominating and taking over the world. These cults are often vitriolic and severely anti-semititic. For instance, the
Necedah Shrine Cult from the 1950s on to the mid 1980's, has
Mary Ann Van Hoof receiving anti-semitic "visions" from the
Virgin Mary telling her that the Rothschilds, a prominent Jewish banking family, are "mongrel yids(Jews)" bent on dominating the entire world economy through international banking. Most of the worlds problems, from poverty to world wars, are the cause of International Banking jews and their "satanic secret society," according to Van Hoof.[
3]
American anti-Semitism underwent a modest revival in the late twentieth century. The
Nation of Islam under
Louis Farrakhan claimed that Jews were responsible for slavery, economic exploitation of black labor, selling alcohol and drugs in their communities, and unfair domination of the economy. Jesse Jackson issued his infamous "Hymietown" remarks during the 1984 Presidential primary campaign.
According to ADL surveys begun in 1964, African-Americans are "significantly more likely" than white Americans to hold anti-Semitic beliefs, although there is a strong correlation between education level and the rejection of anti-Semitic stereotypes.
[ "Anti-Semitism and Prejudice in America: Highlights from an ADL Survey - November 1998", Anti-Defamation League, accessed March 12 2006.]Actor and director
Mel Gibson has been accused of anti-semitism based upon the remarks of his father,
Hutton Gibson, the release of his controversial film
The Passion of the Christ and remarks allegedly made upon his arrest for drunken driving.
[http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-me-gibson30jul30,1,422264.story?track=rss&ctrack=1&cset=truehttp://www.tmz.com/2006/08/01/bulletin-gibson-im-not-an-anti-semite/http://www.tmz.com/2006/07/28/gibsons-anti-semitic-tirade-alleged-cover-up/http://cdn.digitalcity.com/tmz_documents/gibson_wm_docs_072806.pdfhttp://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/07/29/gibson.statement/index.htmlhttp://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/009243.php]Europe
The summary of a 2004 poll by the "Pew Global Attitudes Project" noted, "Despite concerns about rising anti-Semitism in Europe, there are no indications that anti-Jewish sentiment has increased over the past decade. Favorable ratings of Jews are actually higher now in France, Germany and Russia than they were in 1991. Nonetheless, Jews are better liked in the U.S. than in Germany and Russia."
["A Year After Iraq War: Mistrust of America in Europe Even Higher, Muslim Anger Persists", Pew Global Attitudes Project, accessed March 12, 2006.]However, according to 2005 survey results by the ADL,
["ADL Survey in 12 European Countries Finds Anti-Semitic Attitudes Still Strongly Held", Anti-Defamation League, 2005, accessed March 12, 2006.] anti-Semitic attitudes remain common in Europe. Over 30% of those surveyed indicated that Jews have too much power in business, with responses ranging from lows of 11% in Denmark and 14% in England to highs of 66% in Hungary, and over 40% in Poland and Spain. The results of religious anti-Semitism also linger and over 20% of European respondents agreed that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus, with France having the lowest percentage at 13% and Poland having the highest number of those agreeing, at 39%.
[Flash Map of Attitudes Toward Jews in 12 European Countries (2005), Philo. Sophistry, accessed March 12, 2006.]The Vienna-based European Union Monitoring Centre (EUMC), for 2002 and 2003, identified France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and The Netherlands as EU member countries with notable increases in incidents. As these nations keep reliable and comprehensive statistics on anti-Semitic acts, and are engaged in combating anti-Semitism, their data was readily available to the EUMC. Governments and leading public figures condemned the violence, passed new legislation, and mounted positive law enforcement and educational efforts.
In Western Europe, traditional far-right groups still account for a significant proportion of the attacks against Jews and Jewish properties; disadvantaged and disaffected Muslim youths increasingly were responsible for most of the other incidents. In Eastern Europe, with a much smaller Muslim population, skinheads and others members of the radical political fringe were responsible for most anti-Semitic incidents. Anti-Semitism remained a serious problem in Russia and Belarus, and elsewhere in the former Soviet Union, with most incidents carried out by ultra-nationalist and other far-right elements. The stereotype of Jews as manipulators of the global economy continues to provide fertile ground for anti-Semitic aggression.
Denmark
In
1813, Denmark had gone bankrupt and people were looking for a scapegoat. A German anti-Semitic book, translated into Danish, provoked a flood of polemical articles both for and against the Jews.
In
1819 a series of anti-Jewish riots in Germany spread to several neighboring countries including Denmark, resulting in mob attacks on Jews in Copenhagen and many provincial towns. These riots were known as
Hep! Hep! Riots, from the derogatory rallying cry against the Jews in Germany. Riots lasted for five months during which time shop windows were smashed, stores looted, homes attacked, and Jews physically abused.
However, during World War II, Denmark was very uncooperative with the Nazi occupation on Jewish matters. Danish officials repeatedly insisted to the German occupation authorities that there was no "Jewish problem" in Denmark. As a result, even ideologically committed Nazis such as Reich Commissioner
Werner Best followed a strategy of avoiding and deferring discussion of Denmark's Jews. When Denmark's German occupiers began planning the deportation of the 8,000 or so Jews in Denmark to
Nazi concentration camps, many Danes and Swedes took part in a collective effort to evacuate the roughly 8,000 Jews of Denmark by sea to nearby Sweden (see also
Rescue of the Danish Jews).
France
 |
Defacement of a Jewish cemetery in France, 2004. |
Antisemitism was particularly virulent in
Vichy France during
WWII. The Vichy government openly collaborated with the Nazi occupiers to identify Jews for deportation and transportation to the death camps.
Today, despite a steady trend of decreasing antisemitism among the indigenous population,
["L'antisémitisme en France", Association Française des Amis de l'Université de Tel Aviv, accessed March 12, 2006.] acts of antisemitism are a serious cause for concern,
[Thiolay, Boris. "Juif, et alors?", L'Express, June 6, 2005.] as is tension between the Jewish and Muslim populations of France, both the largest in Europe. However, according to a poll by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, 71% of French Muslims had positive views of Jews, the highest percentage in the world [
4]). According to the National Advisory Committee on Human Rights, antisemitic acts account for a majority of racist acts in France.
["Communiqués Officiels: Les actes antisémites", Ministère de l'Intérieur et de l'Aménagement du territoire, accessed March 12, 2006.]In July, 2005 the Pew Global Attitudes Project found that 82% of French people questioned had favorable attitudes towards Jews, the second highest percentage of the countries questioned. The Netherlands was highest at 85%.
Holocaust denial and anti-Semitic speech are prohibited under the 1990
Gayssot Act.
Norway
Jews were prohibited from living or entering Norway by paragraph 2 of the
Constitution, which originally read,
"The evangelical-Lutheran religion remains the public religion of the State. Those inhabitants, who confess thereto, are bound to raise their children to the same. Jesuits and monkish orders are not permitted. Jews are still prohibited from entry to the Realm." In 1851 the last sentence was struck, and in 1897, the next to last sentence was removed.
Poland
In 1264, Duke
Boleslaus the Pious from
Greater Poland legislated a
charter for Jewish residence and protection, hoping that Jewish settlement would contribute to the development of the Polish economy. This charter, which encouraged money-lending, was a slight variation of the 1244 charter granted by the King of
Austria to the Jews. By the sixteenth century, Poland had become the center of European Jewry and the most tolerant of all European countries regarding the matters of faith, although there were still occasionally violent anti-Semitic incidents.
At the onset of the seventeenth century, however, the tolerance began to give way to increased anti-Semitism. Elected to the Polish throne King
Sigismund III of the Swedish
House of Vasa, a strong supporter of the
counter-reformation, began to undermine the principles of the
Warsaw Confederation and the religious tolerance in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, revoking and limiting privileges of all non-Catholic faiths. In 1628 he banned publication of
Hebrew books, including the
Talmud.
[Jones, Derek. "Censorship in Poland: From the Beginnings to the Enlightenment", Censorship: A World Encyclopedia, Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 2000.] Acclaimed twentieth century historian
Simon Dubnow, in his
magnum opus History of the Jews in Poland and Russia, detailed:
"At the end of the 16th century and thereafter, not one year passed without a blood libel trial against Jews in Poland, trials which always ended with the execution of Jewish victims in a heinous manner..." (ibid., volume 6, chapter 4).
In the 1650s the Swedish invasion of the Commonwealth (
The Deluge) and the
Chmielnicki Uprising of the
Cossacks resulted in vast depopulation of the Commonwealth, as over 30% of the ~10 million population has perished or emigrated. In the related 1648-55 pogroms led by the Ukrainian uprising against Polish nobility (
szlachta), during which approximately 100,000 Jews were slaughtered, Polish and
Ruthenian peasants often participated in killing Jews (
The Jews in Poland, Ken Spiro, 2001). The besieged szlachta, who were also decimated in the territories where the uprising happened, typically abandoned the loyal peasantry, townsfolk, and the Jews renting their land, in violation of "rental" contracts.
In the aftermath of the Deluge and Chmielnicki Uprising, many Jews fled to the less turbulent
Netherlands, which had granted the Jews a protective charter in 1619. From then until the
Nazi deportations in 1942, the Netherlands remained a remarkably tolerant haven for Jews in Europe, excedeeing the tolerance extant in all other European countries at the time, and becoming one of the few Jewish havens until nineteenth century social and political reforms throughout much of Europe. Many Jews also fled to England, open to Jews since the mid-seventeenth century, in which Jews were fundamentally ignored and not typically persecuted.Historian Berel Wein notes:
"In a reversal of roles that is common in Jewish history, the victorious Poles now vented their wrath upon the hapless Jews of the area, accusing them of collaborating with the Cossack invader!... The Jews, reeling from almost five years of constant hell, abandoned their Polish communities and institutions..." (
Triumph of Survival, 1990).
Throughout the sixteenth to eighteenth century, many of the szlachta mistreated peasantry, townsfolk and Jews. Threat of mob violence was a specter over the Jewish communities in
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth at the time. On one occasion in 1696, a mob threatened to massacre the Jewish community of Posin,
Vitebsk. The mob accused the Jews of murdering a Pole. At the last moment, a peasant woman emerged with the victim's clothes and confessed to the murder. One notable example of actualized riots against Polish Jews is the rioting of 1716, during which many Jews lost their lives. Later, in 1723, the Bishop of
Gdańsk instigated the massacre of hundreds of Jews.
The legendary
Walentyn Potocki, a Polish nobleman who converted to Judaism, is said to have been burned by
auto da fe on May 24, 1749. In 1757, at the instigation of
Jacob Frank and his followers, the Bishop of
Kamianets-Podilskyi forced the Jewish rabbis to participate in a religious dispute with the quasi-Christian Frankists. Among the other charges, the Frankists claimed that the
Talmud was full of heresy against Catholicism. The
Catholic judges determined that the Frankists had won the debate, whereupon the Bishop levied heavy fines against the Jewish community and confiscated and burned all Jewish Talmuds. Polish anti-Semitism during the seventeenth and eighteenth century was summed up by Issac de Pinto as follows:
"Polish Jews... who are deprived of all the privileges of society... who are despised and reviled on all sides, who are often persecuted, always insulted.... That contempt which is heaped on them chokes up all the seeds of virtue and honour...." (
Issac de Pinto, philosopher and economist, in a 1762 letter to
Voltaire).
On the other hand, it should be noted that despite the mentioned incidents, the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was a relative haven for Jews when compared to the period of the
partitions of Poland and the PLC's destruction in 1795 (see
Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, below).
Anti-Jewish sentiments continued to be present in Poland, even after the country regained its independence. One notable manifestation of these attitudes includes
numerus clausus rules imposed, by almost all Polish universities in the 1930's.
William W. Hagen in his
Before the "Final Solution": Toward a Comparative Analysis of Political Anti-Semitism in Interwar Germany and Poland article in
Journal of Modern History (July, 1996): 1-31, details:
"In Poland, the semidictatorial government of Piłsudski and his successors, pressured by an increasingly vocal opposition on the radical and fascist right, implemented many anti-Semitic policies tending in a similar direction, while still others were on the official and semiofficial agenda when war descended in 1939.... In the 1930s the realm of official and semiofficial discrimination expanded to encompass limits on Jewish export firms... and, increasingly, on university admission itself. In 1921-22 some 25 percent of Polish university students were Jewish, but in 1938-39 their proportion had fallen to 8 percent."
While there are many examples of Polish support and help for the Jews during World War II and the Holocaust, there are also numerous examples of anti-Semitic incidents, and the Jewish population was certain of the indifference towards their fate from the Christian Poles. The Polish Institute for National Memory identified twenty-four
pogroms against Jews during World War II, the most notable occurring at the village of
Jedwabne in 1941 (see
massacre in Jedwabne).
After the end of World War II the remaining anti-Jewish sentiments were skillfully used at certain moments by Communist party or individual politicians in order to achieve their assumed political goals, which pinnacled in the
March 1968 events. These sentiments started to diminish only with the collapse of the
communist rule in Poland in 1989, which has resulted in a re-examination of events between Jewish and Christian Poles, with a number of incidents, like the massacre at Jedwabne, being discussed openly for the first time. Violent anti-semitism in Poland in 21st century is marginal
["Major Violent Incidents in 2004: Breakdown by Country", The Steven Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism, Tel Aviv University, accessed March 12, 2006.] compared to elsewhere, but there are very few Jews remaining in Poland. Still, according to recent (June 7, 2005) results of research by
B'nai Briths
Anti-Defamation League, Poland remains among the European countries (with others being Italy, Spain and Germany) with the largest percentages of people holding anti-Semitic views.
Poland is actively trying to address concerns about anti-semitism. In 2004, the Polish government approved a National Action Program against racism, including anti-semitism. Additionally the Polish Catholic Church has widely distributed materials promoting the need for respect and cooperation with Judaism.
Germany
|
Der StĂĽrmer: "Satan". The caption reads: "The Jews are our misfortune." |
From the early Middle Ages to the 18th century, the Jews in Germany were subject to many persecutions as well as brief times of tolerance. Though the 19th century began with a series of riots and pogroms against the Jews,
emancipation followed in 1848, so that, by the early 20th century, the Jews of Germany were the most integrated in Europe. The situation changed in the early 1930's with the rise of the
Nazis and their explicitly anti-Semitic program.
Hate speech which referred to
Jewish citizens as "dirty Jews" became common in anti-Semitic pamphlets and
newspapers such as the
Völkischer Beobachter and
Der StĂĽrmer. Additionally, blame was laid on German Jews for having caused Germany's defeat in
World War I (see
Dolchstosslegende).
Anti-Jewish propaganda expanded rapidly. Nazi cartoons depicting "dirty Jews" frequently portrayed a dirty, physically unattractive and badly dressed "talmudic" Jew in traditional religious garments similar to those worn by
Hasidic Jews. Articles attacking Jewish Germans, while concentrating on commercial and political activities of prominent Jewish individuals, also frequently attacked them based on religious dogmas, such as
blood libel.
The Nazi anti-Semitic program quickly expanded beyond mere speech. Starting in 1933, repressive laws were passed against Jews, culminating in the
Nuremberg Laws which removed most of the rights of citizenship from Jews, using a racial definition based on descent, rather than any religious definition of who was a Jew. Sporadic violence against the Jews became widespread with the
Kristallnacht riots, which targeted Jewish homes, businesses and places of worship, killing hundreds across Germany and Austria.
The anti-Semitic agenda culminated in the
genocide of the Jews of Europe, known as the
Holocaust.
Russia and the Soviet Union
|
"Judaism Without Embellishments" by Trofim Kichko, published by the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR in 1963: "It is in the teachings of Judaism, in the Old Testament, and in the Talmud, that the Israeli militarists find inspiration for their inhuman deeds, racist theories, and expansionist designs..." |
The
Pale of Settlement was the Western region of
Imperial Russia to which Jews were restricted by the Tsarist
Ukase of 1792. It consisted of the territories of former
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, annexed with the existing numerous Jewish population, and the
Crimea (which was later cut out from the Pale).
During 1881-1884, 1903-1906 and 1914-1921, waves of anti-Semitic
pogroms swept Russian Jewish communities. At least some pogroms are believed to have been organized or supported by the Russian
okhranka. Although there is no hard evidence for this, the Russian police and army generally displayed indifference to the pogroms, for instance during the three-day
First Kishinev pogrom of 1903.
During this period the
May Laws policy was also put into effect, banning Jews from rural areas and towns, and placing strict quotas on the number of Jews allowed into higher education and many professions. The combination of the repressive legislation and pogroms propelled mass Jewish emigration, and by 1920 more than two million Russian Jews had emigrated, most to the
United States while some made
aliya to the
Land of Israel.
One of the most infamous anti-Semitic tractates was the Russian okhranka literary
hoax,
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, created in order to blame the Jews for Russia's problems during the period of revolutionary activity.
Even though many
Old Bolsheviks were ethnically Jewish, they sought to uproot Judaism and Zionism and established the
Yevsektsiya to achieve this goal. By the end of the 1940s the Communist leadership of the former USSR had liquidated almost all Jewish organizations, including Yevsektsiya.
Stalin's anti-Semitic campaign of 1948-1953 against so-called "
rootless cosmopolitans," destruction of the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee, the fabrication of the "
Doctors' plot," the rise of "
Zionology" and subsequent activities of official organizations such as the
Anti-Zionist committee of the Soviet public were officially carried out under the banner of "anti-Zionism," but the use of this term could not obscure the anti-Semitic content of these campaigns, and by the mid-1950s the state persecution of Soviet Jews emerged as a major human rights issue in the West and domestically. See also:
Jackson-Vanik amendment,
Refusenik,
Pamyat.
Today, anti-Semitic pronouncements, speeches and articles are common in Russia, and there are a large number of anti-Semitic neo-Nazi groups in the republics of the former Soviet Union, leading
Pravda to declare in 2002 that "Anti-semitism is booming in Russia."
[Litvinovich, Dmitri. "Explosion of anti-Semitism in Russia", Pravda July 30, 2002.] Over the past few years there have also been bombs attached to anti-Semitic signs, apparently aimed at Jews, and other violent incidents, including stabbings, have been recorded.
Though the government of
Vladimir Putin takes an official stand against anti-semitism, some political parties and groups are explicitly anti-Semitic, in spite of a Russian law (Art. 282) against fomenting racial, ethnic or religious hatred. In 2005, a group of 15
Duma members demanded that Judaism and Jewish organizations be banned from Russia. In June, 500 prominent Russians, including some 20 members of the nationalist
Rodina party, demanded that the state prosecutor investigate ancient Jewish texts as "anti-Russian" and ban Judaism — the investigation was actually launched, but halted amid international outcry.
Sweden
With relatively few Jews and a large immigrant population, Swedish right-wing groups are traditionally xenophobic and antisemitic. In January 2001, two Israeli Jews were beaten by two Palestinians in Stockholm. One of them required medical attention. On 19 September a Jewish youth was assaulted by a skinhead in the Stockholm subway. The attacker was arrested. At least 16 telephone threats were received by the Göteborg Jewish community. A Göteborg rabbi was also the target of several bomb threats, forcing the police to evacuate his building, and in March a fake bomb in a suitcase was planted at the entrance of the Göteborg Jewish Community Center. Also in March, a rabbi and his son were harassed in Stockholm by two men who shouted antisemitic slurs. In June the wall of the old Jewish cemetery in Malmö was smeared with antisemitic graffiti.
Asia
Japan
Originally
Japan, with no Jewish population, had no anti-Semitism, however, Nazi ideology and propaganda left its influence on Japan during World War II, and the
Protocols of the Elders of Zion were subsequently translated into Japanese. Today, anti-Semitism and belief in Jewish manipulation of Japan and the world remains despite the small size of the Jewish community in Japan. Books about Jewish conspiracies are best sellers. According to a 1988 survey, 8% of Japanese had read one of these books.
 |
Cartoon from the Syrian Arab daily newspaper Tishreen (Apr 30, 2000). Negative zoomorphism is commonly used in anti-Semitic discourse. |
According to the 2005 U.S. State Department Report on Global Anti-Semitism, anti-Semitism in Europe has increased significantly in recent years (but see fn.31 below). Beginning in 2000, verbal attacks directed against Jews increased while incidents of vandalism (e.g. graffiti, fire bombings of Jewish schools, desecration of synagogues and cemeteries) surged. Physical assaults including beatings, stabbings and other violence against Jews in Europe increased markedly, in a number of cases resulting in serious injury and even death.
On
January 1,
2006, Britain's chief
rabbi, Sir
Jonathan Sacks, warned that what he called a "
tsunami of anti-Semitism" was spreading globally. In an interview with BBC's
Radio Four, Sacks said that anti-Semitism was on the rise in Europe, and that a number of his rabbinical colleagues had been assaulted, synagogues desecrated, and Jewish schools burned to the ground in France. He also said that: "People are attempting to silence and even ban Jewish societies on campuses on the grounds that Jews must support the state of Israel, therefore they should be banned, which is quite extraordinary because ... British Jews see themselves as British citizens. So it's that kind of feeling that you don't know what's going to happen next that's making ... some European Jewish communities uncomfortable."
[Gillan, Audrey. "Chief rabbi fears 'tsunami' of hatred", Guardian, January 2, 2006.]Much of the new European anti-Semitic violence can actually be seen as a spill over from the long running Israeli-Arab conflict since the majority of the perpetrators are from the large immigrant Arab communities in European cities. According to
The Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism, most of the current anti-Semitism comes from militant Islamist and Muslim groups, and most Jews tend to be assaulted in countries where groups of young Muslim immigrants reside.
["Annual Reports: General Analysis, 2004", The Steven Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism, Tel Aviv University, accessed March 12, 2006.] Similarly, in the Middle East, anti-Zionist propaganda frequently adopts the terminology and symbols of the Holocaust to demonize Israel and its leaders -- for instance, comparing Israel's treatment of the Palestinians to Nazi Germany's treatment of Jews. At the same time, Holocaust denial and Holocaust minimization efforts find increasingly overt acceptance as sanctioned historical discourse in a number of Middle Eastern countries.
On
April 3,
2006, the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights announced its finding that incidents of anti-Semitism are a "serious problem" on college campuses throughout the United States. The Commission recommended that the
U.S. Department of Education's
Office for Civil Rights protect college students from anti-Semitism through vigorous enforcement of
Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and further recommended that
Congress clarify that Title VI applies to discrimination against Jewish students.
[U.S. Commission on Civil Rights: Findings and Recommendations Regarding Campus Anti-Semitism . April 3, 2006]''
*
Jews and
Judaism**
Jewish history* Other articles on anti-Semitism:
**
History of anti-Semitism**
Christianity and anti-Semitism**
Christian opposition to anti-Semitism**
Anti-globalization and Anti-Semitism**
Arabs and anti-Semitism**
Islam and anti-Semitism**
New anti-Semitism**
Persecution of Jews* Related topics:
**
Allophilia**
Anti-Zionism**
Judeophobia**
Self-hating Jew**
Racism* Topics related to religious anti-Semitism:
**
Anti-Judaism**
Spanish Inquisition**
Blood libel***
Beilis trial in Russia
**
Host desecration**
Edgardo Mortara* Anti-semitic laws, policies, and government actions
**
Pogroms in Russia
**
May Laws in Russia
**
Polish 1968 political crisis**
Dreyfus Affair in France
**
Farhud in Iraq
**
General Order â„– 11 (1862) of
Ulysses S. Grant**
Historical revisionism (negationism)*
Nazi Germany and the
The Holocaust**
Racial policy of Nazi Germany **
Holocaust denial* Anti-semitic websites
**
Jew Watch**
Radio Islam**
Institute for Historical Review* Organizations working against anti-Semitism
**
Simon Wiesenthal Center**
Anti-Defamation League**
Jewish Defense League* Other concepts
**
Religious persecution**
Persecution of Christians**
Persecution of Muslims**
Persecution of Hindus**
Persecution of atheists
* Bodansky, Yossef.
Islamic Anti-Semitism as a Political Instrument, Freeman Center For Strategic Studies, 1999.
* Carr, Steven Alan.
Hollywood and anti-Semitism: A cultural history up to World War II, Cambridge University Press 2001.
* Chanes, Jerome A.
Antisemitism: A Reference Handbook, ABC-CLIO, 2004.
* Cohn, Norman.
Warrant for Genocide, Eyre & Spottiswoode 1967; Serif, 1996.
* Freudmann, Lillian C.
Antisemitism in the New Testament, University Press of America, 1994.
*
Hilberg, Raul.
The Destruction of the European Jews. Holmes & Meier, 1985. 3 volumes.
*
Lipstadt, Deborah.
Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory, Penguin, 1994.
* McKain, Mark.
Anti-Semitism: At Issue, Greenhaven Press, 2005.
* Prager, Dennis, Telushkin, Joseph.
Why the Jews? The Reason for Antisemitism. Touchstone (reprint), 1985.
* Selzer, Michael (ed).
"Kike!" : A Documentary History of Anti-Semitism in America, New York 1972.
*
Why the Jews? A perspective on causes of anti-Semitism*
Coordination Forum for Countering Antisemitism (with up to date calendar of anti-semitism today)
*
Annotated bibliography of anti-Semitism hosted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Center for the Study of Antisemitism (SICSA)
*
Anti-Semitism and responses*
The Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary anti-Semitism and Racism hosted by the Tel Aviv University - (includes an annual report)
*
Jews, the End of the Vertical Alliance, and Contemporary Antisemitism*
An Israeli point of view on antisemitism, by Steve Plaut*
The Anti-Semitic Disease - an analysis of Anti-Semitism by
Paul Johnson in
Commentary*
Council of Europe, ECRI Country-by-Country Reports*
State University of New York at Buffalo, The Jedwabne Tragedy*
Jews in Poland today*
Anti-Defamation League's report on International Anti-Semitism*
The Middle East Media Research Institute - documents antisemitism in Middle-Eastern media.
*
Judeophobia: A short course on the history of anti-Semitism at [
5] Zionism and Israel Information Center.
*
Arab and Muslim Anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism A mini study with extensive links and resources.
*
If Not Together, How?: Research by April Rosenblum to develop a working definition of antisemitism, and related teaching tools about antisemitism, for activists.
*
Vintage Postcards with an Anti-Jewish theme*
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Special Focus: Antisemitism*
Anti-Semitism in the Christian tradition