Jewish History, Jewish Religion
The Weight of Three Thousand
Years
by Professor:
Israel Shahak
CHAPTER
4
The Weight of History
A GREAT DEAL
of nonsense has been written in the attempt to provide a social
or mystical interpretation of Jewry or Judaism 'as a whole'. This
cannot be done, for the social structure of the Jewish people
and the ideological structure of Judaism have changed profoundly
through the ages. Four major phases can be distinguished:
(1) The phase of the ancient kingdoms of
Israel and Judah, until the destruction the first Temple (587
BC) and the Babylonian exile. (Much of the Old Testament is concerned
with this period, although most major books of the Old Testament,
including the Pentateuch as we know it, were actually composed
after that date.) Socially, these ancient Jewish kingdoms were
quite similar to the neighboring kingdoms of Palestine and Syria;
and - as a careful reading of the Prophets reveals - the similarity
extended to the religious cults practiced by the great majority
of the people.1 The ideas that were to become typical of later
Judaism - including in particular ethnic segregationism and monotheistic
exclusivism - were at this stage confined to small circles of
priests and prophets, whose social influence depended on royal
support.
(2) The phase of the dual centers, Palestine
and Mesopotamia, from the first 'Return from Babylon' (537 BC)
until about AD 500. It is characterized by the existence of these
two autonomous Jewish societies, both based primarily on agriculture,
on which the 'Jewish religion', as previously elaborated in priestly
and scribal circles, was imposed by the force and authority of
the Persian empire. The Old Testament Book of Ezra contains an
account of the activities of Ezra the priest, 'a ready scribe
in the law of Moses', who was empowered by King Artaxerxes I of
Persia to 'set magistrates and judges' over the Jews of Palestine,
so that 'whosoever will not do the law of thy God, and the law
of the king, let judgment be executed speedily upon him, whether
it be unto death, or to banishment, or to confiscation of goods,
or to imprisonment:2 And in the Book of Neherniali - cupbearer
to King Artaxerxes who was appointed Persian governor of Judea,
with even greater powers - we see to what extent foreign (nowadays
one would say 'imperialist') coercion was instrumental in imposing
the Jewish religion, with lasting results.
In both centers, Jewish autonomy persisted during
most of this period and deviations from religious orthodoxy were
repressed. Exceptions to this rule occurred when the religious
aristocracy itself got 'infected' with Hellenistic ideas (from
300 to 166 BC and again under Herod the Great and his successors,
from 50 BC to AD 70), or when it was split in reaction to new
developments (for example, the division between the two great
parties, the Pharisees and the Sadduceans, which emerged in about
140 BC). However, the moment any one party triumphed, it used
the coercive machinery of the Jewish autonomy (or, for a short
period, independence) to impose its own religious views on all
the Jews in both centers.
During most of this time, especially after the collapse
of the Persian empire and until about AD 200, the Jews outside
the two centers were free from Jewish religious coercion. Among
the papyri preserved in Elephantine (in Upper Egypt) there is
a letter dating from 419 BC containing the text of an edict by
King Darius II of Persia which instructs the Jews of Egypt as
to the details of the observance of Passover.3 But the Hellenistic
kingdoms, the Roman Republic and early Roman Empire did not bother
with such things. The freedom that Hellenistic Jews enjoyed outside
Palestine allowed the creation of a Jewish literature written
in Greek, which was subsequently rejected in toto by Judaism and
whose remains were preserved by Christianity.4 The very rise of
Christianity was possible because of this relative freedom of
the Jewish communities outside the two centers. The experience
of the Apostle Paul is significant: in Corinth, when the local
Jewish community accused Paul of heresy, the Roman governor Galho
dismissed the case at once, refusing to be a 'judge of such matters';5
but in Judea the governor Festus felt obliged to take legal cognizance
of a purely religious internal Jewish dispute.6
This tolerance came to an end in about AD 200, when
the Jewish religion, as meanwhile elaborated and evolved in Palestine,
was imposed by the Roman authorities upon all the Jews of the
Empire.7
(3) The phase which we have defined as classical
Judaism and which will be discussed below.
(4) The modern phase, characterized by the
breakdown of the totalitarian Jewish community and its power,
and by attempts to reimpose it, of which Zionism is the most important.
This phase begins in Holland in the 17th century, in France and
Austria (excluding Hungary) in the late 18th century, in most
other European countries in the middle of the 19th century, and
in some Islamic countries in the 20th century. (The Jews of Yemen
were still living in the medieval 'classical' phase in 1948).
Something concerning these developments will be said later on.
Between the second phase and the third, that of
classical Judaism, there is a gap of several centuries in which
our present knowledge of Jews and Jewish society is very slight,
and the scant information we do have is all derived from external
(non-Jewish) sources. In the countries of Latin Christendom we
have absolutely no Jewish literary records until the middle of
the 10th century; internal Jewish information, mostly from religious
literature, becomes more abundant only in the 11th and particularly
the 12th century. Before that, we are wholly dependent first on
Roman and then on Christian evidence. In the Islamic countries
the information gap is not quite so big; still, very little is
known about Jewish society before AD 800 and about the changes
it must have undergone during the three preceding centuries.
Major Features of Classical
Judaism:
Let us therefore ignore those 'dark ages', and for
the sake of convenience begin with the two centuries 1000-1200,
for which abundant information is available from both internal
and external sources on all the important Jewish centers, east
and west. Classical Judaism, which is clearly discernible in this
period, has undergone very few changes since then, and (in the
guise of Orthodox Judaism) is still a powerful force today.
How can that classical Judaism be characterized,
and what are the social differences distinguishing it from earlier
phases of Judaism? I believe that there are three such major features.
(1) Classical Jewish society has no peasants,
and in this it differs profoundly from earlier Jewish societies
in the two centers, Palestine and Mesopotamia. It is difficult
for us, in modern times, to understand what this means. We have
to make an effort to imagine what serfdom was like; the enormous
difference in literacy, let alone education, between village and
town throughout this period; the incomparably greater freedom
enjoyed by all the small minority who were not peasants - in order
to realize that during the whole of the classical period the Jews,
in spite of all the persecutions to which they were subjected,
formed an integral part of the privileged classes. Jewish historiography,
especially in English, is misleading on this point inasmuch as
it tends to focus on Jewish poverty and anti-Jewish discrimination.
Both were real enough at times; but the poorest Jewish craftsman,
peddler, land-lord's steward or petty cleric was immeasurably
better off than a serf. This was particularly true in those European
countries where serfdom persisted into the 19th century, whether
in a partial or extreme form: Prussia, Austria (including Hungary),
Poland and the Polish lands taken by Russia. And it is not without
significance that, prior to the beginning of the great Jewish
migration of modern times (around 1880), a large majority of all
Jews were living in those areas and that their most important
social function there was to mediate the oppression of the peasants
on behalf of the nobility and the Crown.
Everywhere, classical Judaism developed hatred and
contempt for agriculture as an occupation and for peasants as
a class, even more than for other Gentiles - a hatred of which
I know no parallel in other societies. This is immediately apparent
to anyone who is familiar with the Yiddish or Hebrew literature
of the 19th and 20th centuries.9
Most east-European Jewish socialists (that is, members
of exclusively or predominantly Jewish parties and factions) are
guilty of never pointing out this fact; indeed, many were themselves
tainted with a ferocious anti-peasant attitude inherited from
classical Judaism. Of course, Zionist 'socialists' were the worst
in this respect, but others, such as the Bund, were not much better.
A typical example is their opposition to the formation of peasant
co-operatives promoted by the Catholic clergy, on the ground that
this was 'an act of antisemitism'. This attitude is by no means
dead even now; it could be seen very clearly in the racist views
held by many Jewish 'dissidents' in the USSR regarding the Russian
people, and also in the lack of discussion of this background
by so many Jewish socialists, such as Isaac Deutscher. The whole
racist propaganda on the theme of the supposed superiority of
Jewish morality and intellect (in which many Jewish socialists
were prominent) is bound up with a lack of sensitivity for the
suffering of that major part of humanity who were especially oppressed
during the last thousand years - the peasants.
(2) Classical Jewish society was particularly
dependent on kings or on nobles with royal powers. In the next
chapter we discuss various Jewish laws directed against Gentiles,
and in particular laws which command Jews to revile Gentiles and
refrain from praising them or their customs. These laws allow
one and only one exception: a Gentile king, or a locally powerful
magnate (in Hebrew paritz, in Yiddish pooretz). A king is praised
and prayed for, and he is obeyed not only in most civil matters
but also in some religious ones. As we shall see Jewish doctors,
who are in general forbidden to save the lives of ordinary Gentiles
on the Sabbath, are commanded to do their utmost in healing magnates
and rulers; this partly explains why kings and noblemen, popes
and bishops often employed Jewish physicians. But not only physicians.
Jewish tax and customs collectors, or (in eastern Europe) bailiffs
of manors could be depended upon to do their utmost for the king
or baron, in a way that a Christian could not always be.
The legal status of a Jewish community in the period
of classical Judaism was normally based on a 'privilege' - a charter
granted by a king or prince (or, in Poland after the 16th century,
by a powerful nobleman) to the Jewish community and conferring
on it the rights of autonomy - that is, investing the rabbis with
the power to dictate to the other Jews. An important part of such
privileges, going as far back as the late Roman Empire, is the
creation of a Jewish clerical estate which, exactly like the Christian
clergy in medieval times, is exempt from paying taxes to the sovereign
and is allowed to impose taxes on the people under its control
- the Jews - for its own benefit. It is interesting to note that
this deal between the late Roman Empire and the rabbis antedates
by at least one hundred years the very similar privileges granted
by Constantine the Great and his successors to the Christian clergy.
From about AD 200 until the early 5th century, the
legal position of Jewry in the Roman Empire was as follows. A
hereditary Jewish Patriarch (residing in Tiberias in Palestine)
was recognized both as a high dignitary in the official hierarchy
of the Empire and as supreme chief of all the Jews in the Empire.10
As a Roman official, the Patriarch was vir illustris, of the same
high official class which included the consuls, the top military
commanders of the Empire and the chief ministers around the throne
(the Sacred Consistory), and was out-ranked only by the imperial
family. In fact, the Illustrious Patriarch (as he is invariably
styled in imperial decrees) out-ranked the provincial governor
of Palestine. Emperor Theodosius I, the Great, a pious and orthodox
Christian, executed his governor of Palestine for insulting the
Patriarch.
At the same time, all the rabbis - who had to be
designated by the Patriarch - were freed from the most oppressive
Roman taxes and received many official privileges, such as exemption
from serving on town councils (which was also one of the first
privileges later granted to the Christian clergy). In addition,
the Patriarch was empowered to tax the Jews and to discipline
them by imposing fines, flogging and other punishments. He used
this power in order to suppress Jewish heresies and (as we know
from the Talmud) to persecute Jewish preachers who accused him
of taxing the Jewish poor for his personal benefit.
We know from Jewish sources that the tax-exempt
rabbis used excommunication and other means within their power
to enhance the religious hegemony of the Patriarch. We also hear,
mostly indirectly, of the hate and scorn that many of the Jewish
peasants and urban poor in Palestine had for the rabbis, as well
as of the contempt of the rabbis for the Jewish poor (usually
expressed as contempt for the 'ignorant'). Nevertheless, this
typical colonial arrangement continued, as it was backed by the
might of the Roman Empire.
Similar arrangements existed, within each country,
during the whole period of classical Judaism. Their social effects
on the Jewish communities differed, however, according to the
size of each community. Where there were few Jews, there was normally
little social differentiation within the community, which tended
to be composed of rich and middle~lass Jews, most of whom had
considerable rabbinical-talmudic education. But in countries where
the number of Jews increased and a big class of Jewish poor appeared,
the same cleavage as the one described above manifested itself,
and we observe the rabbinical class, in alliance with the Jewish
rich, oppressing the Jewish poor in its own interest as well as
in the interest of the state - that is, of the Crown and the nobility.
This was, in particular, the situation in pre-1795
Poland. The specific circumstances of Polish Jewry will be outlined
below. Here I only want to point out that because of the formation
of a large Jewish community in that country, a deep cleavage between
the Jewish upper class (the rabbis and the rich) and the Jewish
masses developed there from the 18th century and continued throughout
the 19th century. So long as the Jewish community had power over
its members, the incipient revolts of the poor, who had to bear
the main brunt of taxation, were suppressed by the combined force
of the naked coercion of Jewish 'self-rule' and religious sanction.
Because of all this, throughout the classical period
(as well as in modern times) the rabbis were the most loyal, not
to say Zealous, supporters of the powers that be; and the more
reactionary the regime, the more rabbinical support it had.
(3) The society of classical Judaism is in
total opposition to the surrounding non-Jewish society, except
the king (or the nobles, when they take over the state). This
is amply illustrated in Chapter 5.
The consequences of these three social features,
taken together, go a long way towards explaining the history of
classical Jewish communities both in Christian and in Muslim countries.
The position of the Jews is particularly favorable
under strong regimes which have retained a feudal character, and
in which national consciousness, even at a rudimentary level,
has not yet begun to develop. It is even more favorable in countries
such as pre-1795 Poland or in the Iberian kingdoms before the
latter half of the 15th century, where the formation of a nationally
based powerful feudal monarchy was temporarily or permanently
arrested. In fact, classical Judaism flourishes best under strong
regimes which are dissociated from most classes in society, and
in such regimes the Jews fulfill one of the functions of a middle
class - but in a permanently dependent form. For this reason they
are opposed not only by the peasantry (whose opposition is then
unimportant, except for the occasional and rare popular revolt)
but more importantly by the non-Jewish middle class (which was
on the rise in Europe), and by the plebeian part of the clergy;
and they are protected by the upper clergy and the nobility. But
in those countries where, feudal anarchy having been curbed, the
nobility enters into partnership with the king (and with at least
part of the bourgeoisie) to rule the state, which assumes a national
or protonational form, the position of the Jews deteriorates.
This general scheme, valid for Muslim and Christian
countries alike, will now be illustrated briefly by a few examples.
England, France and Italy
Since the first period of Jewish residence in England
was so brief, and coincided with the development of the English
national feudal monarchy, this country can serve as the best illustration
of the above scheme. Jews were brought over to England by William
the Conqueror, as part of the French-speaking Norman ruling class,
with the primary duty of granting loans to those lords, spiritual
and temporal, who were otherwise unable to pay their feudal dues
(which were particularly heavy in England and more rigorously
exacted in that period than in any other European monarchy). Their
greatest royal patron was Henry II, and the Magna Carta marked
the beginning of their decline, which continued during the conflict
of the barons with Henry III. The temporary resolution of this
conflict by Edward I, with the formation of Parliament and of
'ordinary' and fixed taxation, was accompanied by the expulsion
of the Jews.
Similarly, in France the Jews flourished during
the formation of the strong feudal principalities in the 11th
and 12th centuries, including the Royal Domain; and their best
protector among the Capetian kings was Louis VII (1137-80). notwithstanding
his deep and sincere Christian piety. At that time the Jews of
France counted themselves as knights (in Hebrew, parashim) and
the leading Jewish authority in France, Rabbenu Tam, warns them
never to accept an invitation by a feudal lord to settle on his
domain, unless they are accorded privileges similar to those of
other knights. The decline in their position beings with Philip
II Augustus, originator of the political and military alliance
of the Crown with the rising urban commune movement, and plummets
under Philip IV the Handsome, who convoked the first Estates General
for the whole of France in order to gain support against the pope.
The final expulsion of Jews from the whole of France is closely
bound up with the firm establishment of the Crown's rights of
taxation and the national character of the monarchy.
Similar examples can be given from other European
countries where Jews were living during that period. Reserving
Christian Spain and Poland for a more detailed discussion, we
remark that in Italy, where many city states had a republican
form of power, the same regularity is discernible. Jews flourished
especially in the Papal States, in the twin feudal kingdoms of
Sicily and Naples (until their expulsion, on Spanish orders, circa
1500) and in the feudal enclaves of Piedmont. But in the great
commercial and independent cities such as Florence their number
was small and their social role unimportant.
The Muslim World
The same general scheme applies to Jewish communities
during the classical period in Muslim countries as well, except
for the important fact that expulsion of Jews, being contrary
to Islamic law, was virtually unknown there. (Medieval Catholic
canon law, on the other hand, neither commands nor forbids such
expulsion.)
Jewish communities flourished in the famous, but
socially misinterpreted, Jewish Golden Age in Muslim countries
under regimes which were particularly dissociated from the great
majority of the people they ruled, and whose power rested on nothing
but naked force and a mercenary army. The best example is Muslim
Spain, where the very real Jewish Golden Age (of Hebrew poetry,
grammar, philosophy etc) begins precisely with the fall of the
Spanish Umayyad caliphate after the death of the de facto ruler,
al-Mansur, in 1002, and the establishment of the numerous ta'ifa
(faction) kingdoms, all based on naked force. The rise of the
famous Jewish commander-in-chief and prime minister of the kingdom
of Granada, Samuel the Chief (Shmu'el Hannagid, died 1056), who
was also one of the greatest Hebrew poets of all ages, was based
primarily on the fact that the kingdom which he served was a tyranny
of a rather small Berber military force over the Arabic-speaking
inhabitants. A similar situation obtained in the other ta'ifa
Arab-Spanish kingdoms. The position of the Jews declined somewhat
with the establishment of the Almoravid regime (in 1O86-9O) and
became quite precarious under the strong and popular Almohad regime
(after 1147) when, as a result of persecutions, the Jews migrated
to the Christian Spanish kingdoms, where the power of the kings
was still very slight.
Similar observations can be made regarding the states
of the Muslim East. The first state in which the Jewish community
reached a position of important political influence was the Fatimid
empire, especially after the conquest of Egypt in 969, because
it was based on the rule of an Isma'ili-shi'ite religious minority.
The same phenomenon can be observed in the Seljuk states - based
on feudal-type armies, mercenaries and, increasingly, on slave
troops (mamluks) - and in their successor states. The favor of
Saladin to the Jewish communities, first in Egypt, then in other
parts of this expanding empire, was based not only on his real
personal qualities of tolerance, charity and deep political wisdom,
but equally on his rise to power as a rebellious commander of
mercenaries freshly arrived in Egypt and then as usurper of the
power of the dynasty which he and his father and uncle before
him had served.
But perhaps the best Islamic example is the state
where the Jews' position was better than anywhere else in the
East since the fall of the ancient Persian empire - the Ottoman
empire, particularly during its heyday in the 16th century.11
As is well known, the Ottoman regime was based initially on the
almost complete exclusion of the Turks themselves (not to mention
other Muslims by birth) from positions of political power and
from the most important part of the army, the Janissary corps,
both of which were manned by the sultan's Christian-born slaves,
abducted in childhood and educated in special schools. Until the
end of the 16th century no free-born Turk could become a Janissary
or hold any important government office. In such a regime, the
role of the Jews in their sphere was quite analogous to that of
the Janissaries in theirs. Thus the position of the Jews was best
under a regime which was politically most dissociated from the
peoples it ruled. With the admission of the Turks themselves (as
well as some other Muslim peoples, such as the Albanians) to the
ruling class of the Ottoman empire, the position of the Jews declines.
However, this decline was not very sharp, because of the continuing
arbitrariness and non- national character of the Ottoman regime.
This point is very important, in my opinion, because
the relatively good situation of Jews under Islam in general,
and under certain Islamic regimes in particular, is used by many
Palestinian and other Arab propagandists in a very ignorant, albeit
perhaps well-meaning, way. First, they generalize and reduce serious
questions of politics and history to mere slogans. Granted that
the position of Jews was, on average, much better under Islam
than under Christianity - the important question to ask is, under
what regimes was it better or worse? We have seen where such an
analysis leads.
But, secondly and more importantly: in a pre-modern
state, a 'better' position of the Jewish community normally entailed
a greater degree of tyranny exercised within this community by
the rabbis against other Jews. To give one example: certainly,
the figure of Saladin is one which, considering his period, inspires
profound respect. But to~gether with this respect, I for one cannot
forget that the enhanced privileges he granted to the Jewish community
in Egypt and his appointment of Maimonides as their Chief (Nagid)
immediately unleashed severe religious persecution of Jewish 'sinners'
by the rabbis. For instance, Jewish 'priests' (supposed descendants
of the ancient priests who had served in the Temple) are forbidden
to marry not only prostitutes12 but also divorcees. This latter
prohibition, which has always caused difficulties, was infringed
during the anarchy under the last Fatimid rulers (circa 113080)
by such 'priests' who, contrary to Jewish religious law, were
married to Jewish divorcees in Islamic courts (which are nominally
empowered to marry non-Muslims). The greater tolerance towards
'the Jews' instituted by Saladin upon his accession to power enabled
Maimonides to issue orders to the rabbinical courts in Egypt to
seize all Jews who had gone through such forbidden marriages and
have them flogged until they 'agreed' to divorce their wives.13
Similarly, in the Ottoman empire the powers of the rabbinical
courts were very great and consequently most pernicious. Therefore
the position of Jews in Muslim countries in the past should never
be used as a political argument in contemporary (or future) contexts.
Christian Spain
I have left to the last a discussion of the two
countries where the position of the Jewish community and the internal
development of classical Judaism were most important - Christian
Spain14 (or rather the Iberian peninsula, including Portugal)
and pre-1795 Poland.
Politically, the position of Jews in the Christian
Spanish kingdoms was the highest ever attained by Jews in any
country (except some of the ta'ifas and under the Fatimids) before
the 19th century. Many Jews served officially as Treasurers General
to the kings of Castile, regional and general tax collectors,
diplomats (representing their king in foreign courts, both Muslim
and Christian, even outside Spain), courtiers and advisers to
rulers and great noblemen. And in no other country except Poland
did the Jewish community wield such great legal powers over the
Jews or used them so widely and publicly, including the power
to inflict capital punishment. From the 11th century the persecution
of Karaites (a heretical Jewish sect) by flogging them to death
if unrepentant was common in Castile. Jewish women who cohabited
with Gentiles had their noses cut off by rabbis who explained
that 'in this way she will lose her beauty and her non-Jewish
lover will come to hate her'. Jews who had the effrontery to attack
a rabbinical judge had their hands cut off. Adulterers were imprisoned,
after being made to run the gauntlet through the Jewish quarter.
In religious disputes, those thought to be heretics had their
tongues cut out.
Historically, all this was associated with feudal
anarchy and with the attempt of a few 'strong' kings to rule through
sheer force, disregarding the parliamentary institutions, the
Cortes, which had already come into existence. In this struggle,
not only the political and financial power of the Jews but also
their military power (at least in the most important kingdom,
Castile) was very significant. One example will suffice: both
feudal mis- government and Jewish political influence in Castile
reached their peak under Pedro I, justly nick-named the Cruel.
The Jewish communities of Toledo, Burgos and many other cities
served practically as his garrisons in the long civil war between
him and his half-brother, Henry of Trastamara, who after his victory
became Henry II (1369~79).15 The same Pedro I gave the Jews of
Castile the right to establish a country-wide inquisition against
Jewish religious deviants - more than one hundred years before
the establishment of the more famous Catholic Holy Inquisition.
As in other western European countries, the gradual
emergence of national consciousness around the monarchy, which
began under the house of Trastamara and after ups and downs reached
a culmination under the Catholic Kings Ferdinand and Isabella,
was accompanied first by a decline in the position of the Jews,
then by popular movements and pressures against them and finally
by their expulsion. On the whole the Jews were defended by the
nobility and upper clergy. It was the more plebeian sections of
the church, particularly the mendicant orders, involved in the
life of the lower classes, which were hostile to them. The great
enemies of the Jews, Torquemada and Cardinal Ximenes, were also
great reformers of the Spanish church, making it much less corrupt
and much more dependent on the monarchy instead of being the preserve
of the feudal aristocracy.
Poland
The old pre-1795 Poland - a feudal republic with
an elective king- is a converse example; it illustrates how before
the advent of the modern state the position of the Jews was socially
most important, and their internal autonomy greatest, under a
regime which was completely retarded to the point of utter degeneracy.
Due to many causes, medieval Poland lagged in its
development behind countries like England and France; a strong
feudal-type monarchy - yet without any parliamentary institutions
- was formed there only in the 14th century, especially under
Casimir the Great (1333-70). Immediately after his death, changes
of dynasty and other factors led to a very rapid development of
the power of the noble magnates, then also of the petty nobility,
so that by 1572 the process of reduction of the king to a figure
head and exclusion of all other non-noble estates from political
power was virtually complete. In the following two hundred years,
the lack of government turned into an acknowledged anarchy, to
the point where a court decision in a case affecting a nobleman
was only a legal license to wage a private war to enforce the
verdict (for there was no other way to enforce it) and where feuds
between great noble houses in the 18th century involved private
armies numbering tens of thousands, much larger than the derisory
forces of the official army of the Republic.
This process was accompanied by a debasement in
the position of the Polish peasants (who had been free in the
early Middle Ages) to the point of utter serfdom, hardly distinguishable
from outright slavery and certainly the worst in Europe. The desire
of noblemen in neighboring countries to enjoy the power of the
Polish pan over his peasants (including the power of life and
death without any right of appeal) was instrumental in the territorial
expansion of Poland. The situation in the 'eastern' lands of Poland
(Byelorussia and the Ukraine) - colonized and settled by newly
enserfed peasants - was worst of all.16
A small number of Jews (albeit in important positions)
had apparently been living in Poland since the creation of the
Polish state. A significant Jewish immigration into that country
began in the 13th century and increased under Casimir the Great,
with the decline in the Jewish position in western and then in
central Europe. Not very much is known about Polish Jewry in that
period. But with the decline of the monarchy in the 16th century
- particularly under Sigismund I the Old (150645) and his son
Sigismund II Augustus (154872) - Polish Jewry burst into social
and political prominence accompanied, as usual, with a much greater
degree of autonomy. It was at this time that Poland's Jews were
granted their greatest privileges, culminating in the establishment
of the famous Committee of Four Lands, a very effective autonomous
Jewish organ of rule and jurisdiction over all the Jews in Poland's
four divisions. One of its many important functions was to collect
all the taxes from Jews all over the country, deducting part of
the yield for its own use and for the use of local Jewish communities,
and passing the rest on to the state treasury.
What was the social role of Polish Jewry from the
beginning of the 16th century until 1795? With the decline of
royal power, the king's usual role in relation to the Jews was
rapidly taken over by the nobility - with lasting and tragic results
both for the Jews themselves and for the common people of the
Polish republic. All over Poland the nobles used Jews as their
agents to undermine the commercial power of the Royal Towns, which
were weak in any case. Alone among the countries of western Christendom,
in Poland a nobleman's property inside a Royal Town was exempt
from the town's laws and guild regulations. In most cases the
nobles settled their Jewish clients in such properties, thus giving
rise to a lasting conflict. The Jews were usually 'victorious',
in the sense that the towns could neither subjugate nor drive
them off; but in the frequent popular riots Jewish lives (and,
even more, Jewish property) were lost. The nobles still got the
profits. Similar or worse consequences followed from the frequent
use of Jews as commercial agents of noblemen: they won exemption
from most Polish tolls and tariffs, to the loss of the native
bourgeoisie.
But the most lasting and tragic results occurred
in the eastern provinces of Poland - roughly, the area east of
the present border, including almost the whole of the present
Ukraine and reaching up to the Great-Russian language frontier.
(Until 1667 the Polish border was far east of the Dnieper, so
that Poltava, for example, was inside Poland.) In those wide territories
there were hardly any Royal Towns. The towns were established
by nobles and belonged to them - and they were settled almost
exclusively by Jews. Until 1939, the population of many Polish
towns east of the river Bug was at least 90 per cent Jewish, and
this demographic phenomenon was even more pronounced in that area
of Tsarist Russia annexed from Poland and Icnown as the Jewish
Pale. Outside the towns very many Jews throughout Poland, but
especially in the east, were employed as the direct supervisors
and oppressors of the enserfed peasantry - as bailiffs of whole
manors (invested with the landlord's full coercive powers) or
as lessees of particular feudal monopolies such as the corn mill,
the liquor still and public house (with the right of armed search
of peasant houses for illicit stills) or the bakery, and as collectors
of customary feudal dues of all kinds. In short, in eastern Poland,
under the rule of the nobles (and of the feudalized church, formed
exclusively from the nobility) the Jews were both the immediate
exploiters of the peasantry and virtually the only town-dwellers.
No doubt, most of the profit they extracted from
the peasants was passed on to the landlords, in one way or another.
No doubt, the oppression and subjugation of the Jews by the nobles
were severe, and the historical record tells many a harrowing
tale of the hardship and humiliation inflicted by noblemen on
'their' Jews. But, as we have remarked, the peasants suffered
worse oppression at the hands of both landlords and Jews; and
one may assume that, except in times of peasant uprisings, the
full weight of the Jewish religious laws against Gentiles fell
upon the peasants. As will be seen in the next chapter, these
laws are suspended or mitigated in cases where it is feared that
they might arouse dangerous hostility towards Jews; but the hostility
of the peasants could be disregarded as ineffectual so long as
the Jewish bailiff could shelter under the 'peace' of a great
lord.
The situation stagnated until the advent of the
modern state, by which time Poland had been dismembered. Therefore
Poland was the only big country in western Christendom from which
the Jews were never expelled. A new middle class could not arise
out of the utterly enslaved peasantry; and the old bourgeoisie
was geographically limited and commercially weak, and therefore
powerless. Overall, matters got steadily worse, but without any
substantial change.
Internal conditions within the Jewish community
moved in a similar course. In the period 1500-1795, one of the
most superstition-ridden in the history of Judaism, Polish Jewry
was the most superstitious and fanatic of all Jewish communities.
The considerable power of the Jewish autonomy was used increasingly
to stifle all original or innovative thought, to promote the most
shameless exploitation of the Jewish poor by the Jewish rich in
alliance with the rabbis, and to justify~ the Jews' role in the
oppression of the peasants in the service of the nobles. Here,
too, there was no way out except by liberation from the outside.
Pre-1795 Poland, where the social role of the Jews was more important
than in any other classical diaspora, illustrates better than
any other country the bankruptcy of classical Judaism.
Anti-Jewish Persecutions
During the whole period of classical Judaism, Jews
were often subjected to persecutions17 - and this fact now serves
as the main 'argument' of the apologists of the Jewish religion
with its anti-Gentile laws and especially of Zionism. Of course,
the Nazi extermination of five to six million European Jews is
supposed to be the crowning argument in that line. We must therefore
consider this phenomenon and its contemporary aspect. This is
particularly important in view of the fact that the descendants
of the Jews of pre-1795 Poland (often called east-European Jews'
- as opposed to Jews from the German cultural domain of the early
19th century, including the present Austria, Bohemia and Moravia)
now wield predominant political power in Israel as well as in
the Jewish communities in the USA and other English-speaking countries;
and, because of their particular past history, this mode. of thinking
is especially entrenched among them, much more than among other
Jews.
We must, first, draw a sharp distinction between
the persecutions of' Jews during the classical period on the one
hand, and the Nazi extermination on the other. The former were
popular movements, coming from below; whereas the latter was inspired,
organized and carried out from above: indeed, by state officials.
Such acts as the Nazi state- organized extermination are relatively
rare in human history, although other cases do exist (the extermination
of the Tasmanians and several other colonial peoples, for example).
Moreover, the Nazis intended to wipe out other peoples besides
the Jews: Gypsies were exterminated like Jews, and the extermination
of Slavs was well under way, with the systematic massacre of millions
of civilians and prisoners of war. However, it is the recurrent
persecution of Jews in so many countries during the classical
period which is the model (and the excuse) for the zionist politicians
in their persecution of the Palestinians, as well as the argument
used by apologists of Judaism in general; and it is this phenomenon
which we consider now.
It must be pointed out that in all the worst anti-Jewish
persecutions, that is, where Jews were killed, the ruling elite
- the emperor and the pope, the kings, the higher aristocracy
and the upper clergy, as well as the rich bourgeoisie in the autonomous
cities - were always on the side of the Jews. The latter's enemies
belonged to the more oppressed and exploited classes and those
close to them in daily life and interests, such as the friars
of the mendicant orders.18 It is true that in most (but I think
not in all) cases members of the elite defended the Jews neither
out of considerations of humanity nor because of sympathy to the
Jews as such, but for the type of reason used generally by rulers
in justification of their interests - the fact that the Jews were
useful and profitable (to them), defense of 'law and order', hatred
of the lower classes and fear that anti-Jewish riots might develop
into general popular rebellion. Still, the fact remains that they
did defend the Jews. For this reason all the massacres of Jews
during the classical period were part of a peasant rebellion or
other popular movements at times when the government was for some
reason especially weak. This is true even in the partly exceptional
case of Tsarist Russia. The Tsarist government, acting surreptitiously
through its secret police, did promote pogroms; but it did so
only when it was particularly weak (after the assassination of
Alexander II in 1881, and in the period immediately before and
after the 1905 revolution) and even then took care to contain
the break~down of 'law and order'. During the time of its greatest
strength - for example, under Nicholas I or in the latter part
of the reign of Alexander III, when the opposition had been smashed
- pogroms were not tolerated by the Tsarist regime, although legal
discrimination against Jews was intensified.
The general rule can be observed in all the major
massacres of Jews in Christian Europe. During the first crusade,
it was not the proper armies of the knights, commanded by famous
dukes and counts, which molested the Jews, but the spontaneous
popular hosts composed almost exclusively of peasants and paupers
in the wake of Peter the Hermit. In each city the bishop or the
emperor's representative opposed them and tried, often in vain,
to protect the Jews.19 The anti-Jewish riots in England which
accompanied the third crusade were part of a popular movement
directed also against royal officials, and some rioters were punished
by Richard I. The massacres of Jews during the outbreaks of the
Black Death occurred against the strict orders of the pope, the
emperor, the bishops and the German princes. In the free towns,
for example in Strasbourg, they were usually preceded by a local
revolution in which the oligarchic town council, which protected
the Jews, was overthrown and replaced by a more popular one. The
great 1391 massacres of Jews in Spain took place under a feeble
regency government and at a time when the papacy, weakened by
the Great Schism between competing popes, was unable to control
the mendicant friars.
Perhaps the most outstanding example is the great
massacre of Jews during the Chmielnicki revolt in the Ukraine
(1648), which started as a mutiny of Cossack officers but soon
turned into a widespread popular movement of the oppressed serfs:
'The unprivileged, the subjects, the Ukrainians, the Orthodox
[persecuted by the Polish Catholic church] were rising against
their Catholic Polish masters, particularly against their masters'
bailiffs, clergy and Jews.20 This typical peasant uprising against
extreme oppression, an uprising accompanied not only by massacres
committed by the rebels but also by even more horrible atrocities
and 'counter-terror' of the Polish magnates' private armies,21
has remained emblazoned in the consciousness of east-European
Jews to this very day - not, however, as a peasant uprising, a
revolt of the oppressed, of the real wretched of the earth, nor
even as a vengeance visited upon all the servants of the Polish
nobility, but as an act of gratuitous antisemitism directed against
Jews as such. In fact, the voting of the Ukrainian delegation
at the UN and, more generally, Soviet policies on the Middle East,
are often 'explained' in the Israeli press as 'a heritage of Chmielnicki'
or of his 'descendants'.
Modem Antisemitism
The character of anti-Jewish persecutions underwent
a radical change in modern times. With the advent of the modern
state, the abolition of serfdom and the achievement of minimal
individual rights, the special socio-economic function of the
Jews necessarily disappears. Along with it disappear also the
powers of the Jewish community over its members; individual Jews
in growing numbers win the freedom to enter the general society
of their countries. Naturally, this transition aroused a violent
reaction both on the part of Jews (especially their rabbis) and
of those elements in European society who opposed the open society
and for whom the whole process of liberation of the individual
was anathema.
Modern antisemitism appears first in France and
Germany, then in Russia, after about 1870. Contrary to the prevalent
opinion among Jewish socialists, I do not believe that its beginnings
or its subsequent development until the present day can be ascribed
to 'capitalism'. On the contrary, in my opinion the successful
capitalists in all countries were on the whole remarkably free
from antisemitism, and the countries in which capitalism was established
first and in its most extensive form - such as England and Belgium
- were also those where antisemitism was far less widespread than
elsewhere.22
Early modern antisemitism (1880-1900) was a reaction
of bewildered men, who deeply hated modern society in all its
aspects, both good and bad, and who were ardent believers in the
conspiracy theory of history. The Jews were cast in the role of
scapegoat for the breakup of the old society (which anti-semitic
nostalgia imagined as even more closed and ordered than it had
ever been in reality) and for all that was disturbing in modern
times. But right at the start the antisemites were faced with
what was, for them, a difficult problem: how to define this scapegoat,
particularly in popular terms? What is to be the supposed common
denominator of the Jewish musician, banker, craftsman and beggar
- especially after the common religious features had largely dissolved,
at least externally? The 'theory' of the Jewish race was the modern
antisemitic answer to this problem.
In contrast, the old Christian, and even more so
Muslim opposition to classical Judaism was remarkably free from
racism. No doubt this was to some extent a consequence of the
universal character of Christianity and Islam, as well as of their
original connection with Judaism (St Thomas More repeatedly rebuked
a woman who objected when he told her that the Virgin Mary was
Jewish). But in my opinion a far more important reason was the
social role of the Jews as an integral part of the upper classes.
In many countries Jews were treated as potential nobles and, upon
conversion, were able immediately to intermarry with the highest
nobility. The nobility of 15th century Castile and Aragon or the
aristocracy of 18th century Poland - to take the two cases where
intermarriage with converted Jews was widespread - would hardly
be likely to marry Spanish peasants or Polish serfs, no matter
how much praise the Gospel has for the poor.
It is the modern myth of the Jewish 'race' - of
outwardly hidden but supposedly dominant characteristics of 'the
Jews', independent of history, of social role, of anything - which
is the formal and most important distinguishing mark of modern
antisemitism. This was in fact perceived by some Church leaders
when modern antisemitism first appeared as a movement of some
strength. Some French Catholic leaders, for example, opposed the
new racist doctrine expounded by E. Drumont, the first popular
modern French antisemite and author of the notorious book La France
Jui"e (1886), which achieved wide circulation.23 Early modern
German antisemites encountered similar opposition.
It must be pointed out that some important groups
of European conservatives were quite prepared to play along with
modern antisemitism and use it for their own ends, and the antisemites
were equally ready to use the conservatives when the occasion
offered itself, although at bottom there was little similarity
between the two parties. 'The victims who were most harshly treated
[by the pen of the above-mentioned Drumont] were not the Rothschilds
but the great nobles who courted them. Drumont did not spare the
Royal Family ... or the bishops, or for that matter the Pope.24
Nevertheless, many of the French great nobles, bishops and conservatives
generally were quite happy to use Drumont and antisemitism during
the crisis of the Dreyfus affair in an attempt to bring down the
republican regime.
This type of opportunistic alliance reappeared many
times in various European countries until the defeat of Nazism.
The conservatives' hatred of radicalism and especially of all
forms of socialism blinded many of them to the nature of their
political bedfellows. In many cases they were literally prepared
to ally themselves with the devil, forgetting the old saying that
one needs a very long spoon to sup with him.
The effectiveness of modern antisemitism, and of
its alliance with conservatism, depended on several factors.
First, the older tradition of Christian religious
opposition to Jews, which existed in many (though by no means
all) European countries, could, if supported or at least unopposed
by the clergy, be harnessed to the antisemitic bandwagon. The
actual response of the clergy in each country was largely determined
by specific local historical and social circumstances. In the
Catholic Church, the tendency for an opportunistic alliance with
antisemitism was strong in France but not in Italy; in Poland
and Slovakin but not in Bohemia. The Greek Orthodox Church had
notorious antisemitic tendencies in Romania but took the opposite
line in Bulgaria. Among the Protestant Churches, the German was
deeply divided on this issue, others (such as the Latvian and
Estonian) tended to be antisemitic, but many (for example the
Dutch, Swiss and Scandinavian) were among the earliest to condemn
antisemitism.
Secondly, antisemitism was largely a generic expression
of xenophobia, a desire for a 'pure' homogeneous society. But
in many European countries around 1900 (and in fact until quite
recently) the Jew was virtually the only 'stranger'. This was
particularly true of Germany. In principle, the German racists
of the early 20th century hated and despised Blacks just as much
as Jews; but there were no Blacks in Germany then. Hate is of
course much more easily focused on the present than on the absent,
especially under the conditions of the time, when mass travel
and tourism did not exist and most Europeans never left their
own country in peacetime.
Thirdly, the successes of the tentative alliance
between conservatism and antisemitism were inversely proportional
to the power and capabilities of its opponents. And the consistent
and effective opponents of antisemitism in Europe are the political
forces of liberalism and socialism - historically the same forces
that continue in various ways the tradition symbolized by the
War of Dutch Independence (1568-1648), the English Revolution
and the Great French Revolution. On the European continent the
main shibboleth is the attitude towards the Great French Revolution
- roughly speaking. those who are for it are against antisemitism;
those who accept it with regret would be at least prone to an
alliance with the antisemites; those who hate it and would like
to undo its achievements are the milieu from which antisemitism
develops.
Nevertheless, a sharp distinction must be made between
conservatives and even reactionaries on the one hand and actual
racists and antisemites on the other. Modern racism (of which
antisemitism is part) although caused by specific social conditions,
becomes, when it gains strength, a force that in my opinion can
only be described as demonic. After coming to power, and for its
duration, I believe it defies analysis by any presently understood
social theory or set of merely social observations - and in particular
by any known theory invoking interests, be they class or state
interests, or other than purely psychological 'interests' of any
entity that can be defined in the present state of human knowledge.
But this I do not mean that such forces are unknowable in principle;
on the contrary, one must hope that with the growth of human knowledge
they will come to be understood. But at present they are neither
understood nor capable of being rationally predicted - and this
applies to all racism in all societies.25 As a matter of fact,
no political figure or group of any political color in any country
had predicted even vaguely the horrors of Nazism. Only artists
and poets such as Heine were able to glimpse some of what the
future had in store. We do not know how they did it; and besides,
many of their other hunches were wrong.
The Zionist Response
Historically, zionism is both a reaction to antisemitism
and a conservative alliance with it - although the Zionists, like
other European conservatives, did not fully realize with whom
they were allying themselves.
Until the rise of modern antisemitism, the mood
of European Jewry was optimistic, indeed excessively so. This
was manifested not only in the very large number of Jews, particularly
in western countries, who simply opted out of classical Judaism,
apparently without any great regret, in the first or second generation
after this became possible, but also in the formation of a strong
cultural movement, the Jewish Enlightenment (Hashalah), which
began in Germany and Austria around 1780, was then carried into
eastern Europe and by 185O-70 was making itself felt as a considerable
social force. I cannot enter here into a discussion of the movement's
cultural achievements, such as the revival of Hebrew literature
and the creation of a wonderful literature in Yiddish. However,
it is important to note that despite many internal differences,
the movement as a whole was characterized by two common beliefs:
a belief in the need for a fundamental critique of Jewish society
and particularly of the social role of the Jewish religion in
its classical form, and the almost messianic hope for the victory
of the 'forces of good' in European societies. The latter forces
were naturally defined by the sole criterion of their support
for Jewish emancipation.
The growth of antisemitism as a popular movement,
and the many alliances of the conservative forces with it, dealt
a severe blow to the Jewish Enlightenment. The blow was especially
devastating because in actual fact the rise of antisemitism occurred
just after the Jews were emancipated in some European countries,
and even before they were freed in others. The Jews of the Austrian
empire received fully equal rights only in 1867. In Germany, some
independent states emancipated their Jews quite early, but others
did not; notably, Prussia was grudging and tardy in this matter,
and final emancipation of the Jews in the German empire as a whole
was only granted by Bismarck in 1871. In the Ottoman empire the
Jews were subject to official discrimination until 1909, and in
Russia (as well as Romania) until 1917. Thus modern antisemitism
began within a decade of the emancipation of the Jews in central
Europe and long before the emancipation of the biggest Jewish
community at that time, that of the Tsarist empire.
It is therefore easy for the Zionists to ignore
half of the relevant facts, revert to the segregationist stance
of classical Judaism, and claim that since all Gentiles always
hate and persecute all Jews, the only solution would be to remove
all the Jews bodily and concentrate them in Palestine or Uganda
or wherever.26 Some early Jewish critics of zionism were quick
to point out that if one assumes a permanent and ahistorical incompatibility
between Jews and Gentiles an assumption shared by both zionists
and antisemites! - then to concentrate the Jews in one place would
simply bring upon them the hatred of the Gentiles in that part
of the world (as indeed was to happen, though for very different
reasons). But as far as I know this logical argument did not make
any impression, just as all the logical and factual arguments
against the myth of the 'Jewish race' made not the slightest difference
to the antisemites.
In fact, close relations have always existed between
Zionists and antisemites: exactly like some of the European conservatives,
the Zionists thought they could ignore the 'demonic' character
of antisemitism and use the antisemites for their own purposes.
Many examples of such alliances are well known. Herzl allied himself
with the notorious Count von Plehve, the antisemitic minister
of Tsar Nicholas II;27 Jabotinsky made a pact with Petlyura, the
reactionary Ukrainian leader whose forces massacred some 100,000
Jews in 1918-21; Ben-Gurion's allies among the French extreme
right during the Algerian war included some notorious antisemites
who were, however, careful to explain that they were only against
the Jews in France, not in Israel.
Perhaps the most shocking example of this type is
the delight with which some Zionist leaders in Germany welcomed
Hitler's rise to power, because they shared his belief in the
primacy of 'race' and his hostility to the assimilation of Jews
among 'Aryans'. They congratulated Hitler on his triumph over
the common enemy - the forces of liberalism. Dr Joachim Prinz,
a Zionist rabbi who subsequently emigrated to the USA, where he
rose to be vice-chairman of the World Jewish Congress and a leading
light in the World Zionist Organization (as well as a great friend
of Golda Meir), published in 1934 a special book, Wir Juden (We,
Jews), to celebrate Hitler's so- called German Revolution and
the defeat of liberalism:
The meaning of the German Revolution for the German nation
will eventually be clear to those who have created it and formed
its image. Its meaning for us must be set forth here: the fortunes
of liberalism are lost. The only form of political life which
has helped Jewish assimilation is sunk.28
The victory of Nazism rules out assimilation and mixed marriages
as an option for Jews. 'We are not unhappy about this,' said
Dr Prinz. In the fact that Jews are being forced to identify
them- selves as Jews, he sees 'the fulfillment of our desires'.
And further:
We want assimilation to be replaced by a new law:
the declaration of belonging to the Jewish nation and Jewish
race. A state built upon the principle of the purity of nation
and race can only honored and respected by a Jew who declares
his belonging to his own kind. Having so declared himself, he
will never be capable of faulty loyalty towards a state. The
state cannot want other Jews but such as declare themselves
as belonging to their nation. It will not want Jewish flatterers
and crawlers. It must demand of us faith and loyalty to our
own interest. For only he who honors his own breed and his own
blood can have an attitude of honor towards the national will
of other nations.29
The whole book is full of similar crude flatteries of Nazi
ideology, glee at the defeat of liberalism and particularly
of the ideas of the French Revolution~a and great expectations
that, in the congenial atmosphere of the myth of the Aryan
race, Zionism and the myth of the Jewish race will also
thrive.
Of course, Dr Prinz, like many other early sympathizers
and allies of Nazism, did not realize where that movement (and
modern antisemitism generally) was leading. Equally, many people
at present do not realize where zionism - the movement in which
Dr Prinz was an honored figure - is tending: to a combination
of all the old hates of classical Judaism towards Gentiles and
to the indiscriminate and ahistorical use of all the persecutions
of Jews throughout history in order to justify the zionist persecution
of the Palestinians.
For, insane as it sounds, it is nevertheless plain
upon close examination of the real motives of the zionists,
that one of the most deep-seated ideological sources of the
Zionist establishment's persistent hostility towards the Palestinians
is the fact that they are identified in the minds of many east-European
Jews with the rebellious east-European peasants who participated
in the Chmielnicki uprising and in similar revolts - and the
latter are in turn identified ahistorically with modern antisemitism
and Nazism.
Confronting the Past
All Jews who really want to extricate themselves
from the tyranny of the totalitarian Jewish past must face the
question of their attitude towards the popular anti-Jewish manifestations
of the past, particularly those connected with the rebellions
of enserfed peasants. On the other side, all the apologists
of the Jewish religion and of Jewish segregationism and chauvinism
also take their stand - both ultimately and in current debates
- on the same question. The undoubted fact that the peasant
revolutionaries committed shocking atrocities against Jews (as
well as against their other oppressors) is used as an 'argument'
by those apologists, in exactly the same way that the Palestinian
terror is used to justify the denial of justice to the Palestinians.
Our own answer must be a universal one, applicable
in principle to all comparable cases. And, for a Jew who truly
seeks liberation from Jewish particularism and racism and from
the dead hand of the Jewish religion, such an answer is not
very difficult.
After all, revolts of oppressed peasants against
their masters and their masters' bailiffs are common in human
history. A generation after the Chmielnicki uprising of the
Ukrainian peasants, the Russian peasants rose under the leadership
of Stenka Ryazin, and again. one hundred years later, in the
Pugachev rebellion. In Germany there was the Peasant War of
1525, in France the Jacquerie of 1357-8 and many other popular
revolts, not to mention the many slave uprisings in all parts
of the world. All of them - and I have intentionally chosen
to mention examples in which Jews were not targets - were attended
by horrifying massacres, just as the Great French Revolution
was accompanied by appalling acts of terror. What is the position
of true progressives - and, by now, of most ordinary decent
educated people be they Russian, German or French - on these
rebellions? Do decent English historians, even when noting the
massacres of Englishmen by rebellious Irish peasants rising
against their enslavement, condemn the latter as 'anti-English
racists'? What is the attitude of progressive French historians
towards the great slave revolution in Santo Domingo, where many
French women and children were butchered? To ask the question
is to answer it. But to ask a similar question of many 'progressive'
or even socialist' Jewish circles is to receive a very different
answer; here an enslaved peasant is transformed into a racist
monster, if Jews profited from his state of slavery and exploitation.
The maxim that those who do not learn from history
are condemned to repeat it applies to those Jews who refuse
to come to terms with the Jewish past: they have become its
slaves and are repeating it in Zionist and Israeli policies.
The State of Israel now fulfills towards the oppressed peasants
of many countries - not only in the Middle East but also far
beyond it - a role not unlike that of the Jews in pre-1795 Poland:
that of a bailiff to the imperial oppressor. It is characteristic
and instructive that Israel's major role in arming the forces
of the Somoza regime in Nicaragua, and those of Guatemala, El
Salvador, Chile and the rest has not given rise to any wide
public debate in Israel or among organized Jewish communities
in the diaspora. Even the narrower question of expediency -
whether the selling of weapons to a dictatorial butcher of freedom
fighters and peasants is in the long term interest of Jews -
is seldom asked. Even more significant is the large part taken
in this business by religious Jews, and the total silence of
their rabbis (who are very vocal in inciting hatred against
Arabs). It seems that Israel and Zionism are a throw-back to
the role of classical Judaism - writ large, on a global scale,
and under more dangerous circumstances.
The only possible answer to all this, first of
all by Jews, must be that given by all true advocates of freedom
and humanity in all countries, all peoples and all great philosophies-
limited though they sometimes are, as the human condition itself
is limited. We must confront the Jewish past and those aspects
of the present which are based simultaneously on lying about
that past and worshiping it. The prerequisites for this are,
first, total honesty about the facts and, secondly, the belief
(leading to action, whenever possible) in universalist human
principles of ethics and politics.
The ancient Chinese sage Mencius (4th century
BC), much admired by Voltaire, once wrote:
This is why I say that all men have a sense of
commiseration: here is a man who suddenly notices a child about
to falI into a well. Invariably he will feel a sense of alarm
and compassion. And this is not for the purpose of gaining the
favor of the child's parents or of seeking the approbation of
his neighbors and friends, or for fear of blame should he fail
to rescue it. Thus we see that no man is without a sense of
compassion or a sense of shame or a sense of courtesy or a sense
of right and wrong. The sense of compassion is the beginning
of humanity, the sense of shame is the beginning of righteousness,
and sense of courtesy is the beginning of decorum, the sense
of right and wrong is the beginning of wisdom. Every man has
within himself these four beginnings, just as he has four limbs.
Since everyone has these four beginnings within him, the man
who considers himself incapable of exercising them is destroying
himself.
We have seen above, and will show in greater detail in the next
chapter how far removed from this are the precepts with which
the Jewish religion in its classical and talmudic form is poisoning
minds and hearts.
The road to a genuine revolution in Judaism -
to making it humane, allowing Jews to understand their own past,
thereby re-educating themselves out of its tyranny - lies through
an unrelenting critique of the Jewish religion. Without fear
or favor, we must speak out against what belongs to our own
past as Voltaire did against his:
Écrasez l'infâme!
COPYRIGHT NOTICE:
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First
published 1994 by Pluto Press
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7 6 5 4 3
Chapters 2, 3, 4 and 5 first appeared in the journal Khamsin
and
are reproduced with permission
Foreword copyright © 1994 Gore Vidal
Copyright © 1994 Israel Shahak
The right of Israel Shahak to be identified as the author of this
work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the
British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Shahak, Israel.
Jewish history, Jewish religion: the weight of three
thousand
years/Israel Shahak
ll8pp. 22cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-7453-0818-X
1. Israel - Politics and government. 2. Orthodox Judaism
- Israel - Controversial literature. 3. Zionism -
Controversial literature. 4. Palestinian Arabs - Israel.
I. Title. II. Series.
D5102.95.S52 1994
956.94-dc20 94-1596
CIP
ISBN 0 7453 0818 X hardback
Designed, typeset and produced for Pluto Press by
Chase Production Services, Chipping Norton, 0X7 5QR
Printed in Finland by WSOY