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History of the Jews in France

The history of the Jews in France deals with Jews and Jewish communities in France since at least the Early Middle Ages. France was a centre of Jewish learning in the Middle Ages, but persecution increased over time, including multiple expulsions and returns. During the French Revolution in the late 18th century, on the other hand, France was the first European country to emancipate its Jewish population. Antisemitism still occurred in cycles and reached a high in the 1890s, as shown during the Dreyfus affair, and in the 1940s, under Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime.

French Jews
  • Juifs français (French)
  • יהדות צרפת (Hebrew)
  • פֿראַנצויזישע יידן (Yiddish)
Total population
Core Jewish population:
480,000–550,000[1][2][3][4][5]
Enlarged Jewish population
(includes non-Jewish relatives of Jews):
600,000[6][7]
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Traditional Jewish languages
Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, and other Jewish languages (most endangered and some now extinct)
Liturgical languages
Hebrew and Aramaic
Predominant spoken languages
French, Hebrew, Judeo-Arabic, Yiddish, and Russian
Religion
Judaism or no religion
Related ethnic groups
Sephardi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, Ashkenazi Jews, other ethnic divisions

Before 1919, most French Jews lived in Paris, with many being very proud to be fully assimilated into French culture, and they comprised an upscale subgroup. A more traditional Judaism was based in Alsace-Lorraine, which was taken by Germany in 1871 and recovered by France in 1918 following World War I. In addition, numerous Jewish refugees and immigrants came from Russia and eastern and central Europe in the early 20th century, changing the character of French Judaism in the 1920s and 1930s. These new arrivals were much less interested in assimilation into French culture. Some supported such new causes as Zionism, the Popular Front and communism, the latter two being popular among the French political left.

During World War II, the Vichy government collaborated with Nazi occupiers to deport a large number of both French Jews and foreign Jewish refugees to concentration camps.[8] By the war's end, 25% of the Jewish population of France had been murdered in the Holocaust, though this was a lower proportion than in most other countries under Nazi occupation.[9][10]

In the 21st century, France has the largest Jewish population in Europe and the third-largest Jewish population in the world (after Israel and the United States). The Jewish community in France is estimated to number 480,000–550,000, depending in part on the definition being used. French Jewish communities are concentrated in the metropolitan areas of Paris, which has the largest Jewish population (277,000),[11] Marseille, with a population of 70,000, Lyon, Nice, Strasbourg and Toulouse.[12]

The majority of French Jews in the 21st century are Sephardi and Mizrahi North African Jews, many of whom (or their parents) emigrated from former French colonies of North Africa after those countries gained independence in the 1950s and 1960s. They span a range of religious affiliations, from the ultra-Orthodox Haredi communities to the large segment of Jews who are entirely secular and who often marry outside the Jewish community.[13]

Approximately 200,000 French Jews live in Israel. Since 2010 or so, more have been making aliyah in response to rising antisemitism in France.[14]

Roman and Merovingian periods edit

According to the Jewish Encyclopedia (1906), "The first settlements of Jews in Europe are obscure. From 163 BCE there is evidence of Jews in Rome [...]. In the year 6 C.E. there were Jews at Vienne and Gallia Celtica; in the year 39 at Lugdunum (i.e. Lyon)".[15]

An early account praised Hilary of Poitiers (died 366) for having fled from the Jewish society. The emperors Theodosius II and Valentinian III sent a decree to Amatius, prefect of Gaul (9 July 425), that prohibited Jews and pagans from practising law or holding public offices (militandi). This was to prevent Christians from being subject to them and possibly incited to change their faith. At the funeral of Hilary, Bishop of Arles, in 449, Jews and Christians mingled in crowds and wept; the former were said to have sung psalms in Hebrew.[15]

In the sixth century, Jews were documented in Marseilles, Arles, Uzès, Narbonne, Clermont-Ferrand, Orléans, Paris, and Bordeaux. These cities had generally been centers of ancient Roman administration and were located on the great commercial routes. The Jews built synagogues in these cities. In harmony with the Theodosian code, and according to an edict of 331 by the emperor Constantine, the Jews were organized for religious purposes as they were in the Roman empire. They appear to have had priests (rabbis or ḥazzanim), archisynagogues, patersynagogues, and other synagogue officials. The Jews worked principally as merchants, as they were prohibited from owning land; they also served as tax collectors, sailors, and physicians.[15]

 
Funerary stele from Narbonne at the 7th-century beginning of the reign of Egica. The text begins with the Latin phrase requiescunt in pace and includes the Hebrew phrase שלום על שראל, 'peace be upon Israel'. In various sources it is described as a Jewish inscription dated with the local calendar—the regnal year of Egica—rather than the Hebrew calendar,[16] an "inscription relating to the Jews of France",[15] or as a "Christian inscription".[17]

They probably remained under Roman law until the triumph of Christianity, with the status established by Caracalla, on a footing of equality with their fellow citizens. Their association with fellow citizens was generally amicable, even after the establishment of Christianity in Gaul. The Christian clergy participated in some Jewish feasts; intermarriage between Jews and Christians sometimes occurred; and the Jews made proselytes. Worried about Christians adopting Jewish religious customs, the third Council of Orléans (539) warned the faithful against Jewish "superstitions", and ordered them to abstain from traveling on Sunday and from adorning their persons or dwellings on that day. In the 6th century, a Jewish community thrived in Paris.[18] They built a synagogue on the Île de la Cité, but it was later torn down by Christians, who erected a church on the site.[18]

In 629, King Dagobert proposed the expulsion of all Jews who would not accept Christianity. No mention of the Jews was found from his reign to that of Pepin the Short. The Jews on the other hand continued to dwell and to prosper in what is now Southern France, then known as Septimania and a dependency of the Visigothic kings of Spain. From this epoch (689) dates the earliest known inscription relating to the Jews of France, the "Funerary Stele of Justus, Matrona and Dulciorella" of Narbonne, written in Latin and Hebrew.[15][16][17] The Jews of Narbonne, chiefly merchants, were popular among the people, who often rebelled against the Visigothic kings.[19]

Carolingian period edit

The presence of Jews in France under Charlemagne is documented, with their position being regulated by law. Exchanges with the Orient strongly declined with the presence of Arabs in the Mediterranean sea. Trading and importing of oriental products such as gold, silk, black pepper or papyrus almost disappeared under the Carolingians. The Radhanite Jewish traders were nearly the only group to maintain trade between the Occident and the Orient.[20]

Charlemagne fixed a formula for the Jewish oath to the state. He allowed Jews to enter into lawsuits with Christians. They were not allowed to require Christians to work on Sundays. Jews were not allowed to trade in currency, wine, or grain. Legally, Jews belonged to the emperor and could be tried only by him. But the numerous provincial councils which met during Charlemagne's reign were not concerned with the Jewish communities.

Louis the Pious (ruled 814–840), faithful to the principles of his father Charlemagne, granted strict protection to Jews, whom he respected as merchants. Like his father, Louis believed that 'the Jewish question' could be solved with the gradual conversion of Jews; according to medievalist scholar J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, some people believed this tolerance threatened the Christian unity of the Empire, which led to the strengthening of the Bishops at the expense of the Emperor. Saint Agobard of Lyon (779–841) had many run-ins with the Jews of France. He wrote about how rich and powerful they were becoming. Scholars such as Jeremy Cohen[21] suggest that Saint Agobard's belief in Jewish power contributed to his involvement in violent revolutions attempting to dethrone Louis the Pious in the early 830s.[22] Lothar and Agobard's entreaties to Pope Gregory IV gained them papal support for the overthrow of Emperor Louis. Upon Louis the Pious' return to power in 834, he deposed Saint Agobard from his see, to the consternation of Rome. There were unsubstantiated rumors in this period that Louis' second wife Judith was a converted Jew, as she would not accept the ordinatio for their first child.

Jews were engaged in export trade, particularly traveling to Palestine under Charlemagne. When the Normans disembarked on the coast of Narbonnese Gaul, they were taken for Jewish merchants. One authority said the Jewish traders boasted about buying whatever they pleased from bishops and abbots. Isaac the Jew, who was sent by Charlemagne in 797 with two ambassadors to Harun al-Rashid, the fifth Abbasid Caliph, was probably one of these merchants. He was said to have asked the Baghdad caliph for a rabbi to instruct the Jews whom he had allowed to settle at Narbonne (see History of the Jews in Babylonia).

Capetians edit

Persecutions (987–1137) edit

 
Costumes of medieval French Jews, as reimagined in a 1906 encyclopedia

There were widespread persecutions of Jews in France beginning in 1007 or 1009.[23] These persecutions, instigated by Robert II (972–1031), King of France (987–1031), called "the Pious", are described in a Hebrew pamphlet,[24][25] which also states that the King of France conspired with his vassals to destroy all the Jews on their lands who would not accept baptism, and many were put to death or killed themselves. Robert is credited with advocating forced conversions of local Jewry, as well as mob violence against Jews who refused.[26] Among the dead was the learned Rabbi Senior. Robert the Pious is well known for his lack of religious tolerance and for the hatred which he bore toward heretics; it was Robert who reinstated the Roman imperial custom of burning heretics at the stake.[27] In Normandy under Richard II, Duke of Normandy, Rouen Jewry suffered from persecutions that were so terrible that many women, in order to escape the fury of the mob, jumped into the river and drowned. A notable of the town, Jacob b. Jekuthiel, a Talmudic scholar, sought to intercede with Pope John XVIII to stop the persecution in Lorraine (1007).[28] Jacob undertook the journey to Rome, but was imprisoned with his wife and four sons by Duke Richard, and escaped death only by allegedly miraculous means.[29] He left his eldest son, Judah, as a hostage with Richard while he and his wife and three remaining sons went to Rome. He bribed the pope with seven gold marks and two hundred pounds, who thereupon sent a special envoy to King Robert ordering him to stop the persecutions.[25][30]

If Adhémar of Chabannes, who wrote in 1030, is to be believed (he had a reputation as a fabricator), the anti-Jewish feelings arose in 1010 after Western Jews addressed a letter to their Eastern coreligionists warning them of a military movement against the Saracens. According to Adémar, Christians urged by Pope Sergius IV[31] were shocked by the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem by the Muslims in 1009. After the destruction, European reaction to the rumor of the letter was of shock and dismay, Cluniac monk Rodulfus Glaber blamed the Jews for the destruction. In that year Alduin, Bishop of Limoges (bishop 990–1012), offered the Jews of his diocese the choice between baptism and exile. For a month theologians held disputations with the Jews, but without much success, for only three or four of Jews abjured their faith; others killed themselves; and the rest either fled or were expelled from Limoges.[32][33] Similar expulsions took place in other French towns.[33] By 1030, Rodulfus Glaber knew more concerning this story.[34] According to his 1030 explanation, Jews of Orléans had sent to the East through a beggar a letter that provoked the order for the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Glaber adds that, on the discovery of the crime, the expulsion of the Jews was everywhere decreed. Some were driven out of the cities, others were put to death, while some killed themselves; only a few remained in the "Roman world". Count Paul Riant (1836–1888) says that this whole story of the relations between the Jews and the Mohammedans is only one of those popular legends with which the chronicles of the time abound.[35]

Another violent commotion arose at about 1065. At this date Pope Alexander II wrote to Béranger, Viscount of Narbonne and to Guifred, bishop of the city, praising them for having prevented the massacre of the Jews in their district, and reminding them that God does not approve of the shedding of blood. In 1065 also, Alexander admonished Landulf VI of Benevento "that the conversion of Jews is not to be obtained by force."[36] Also in the same year, Alexander called for a crusade against the Moors in Spain.[37]

Franco-Jewish literature edit

During this period, which continued until the First Crusade, Jewish culture flourished in the South and North of France. The initial interest included poetry, which was at times purely liturgical, but which more often was a simple scholastic exercise without aspiration, destined rather to amuse and instruct than to move. Following this came Biblical exegesis, the simple interpretation of the text, with neither daring nor depth, reflecting a complete faith in traditional interpretation, and based by preference on the Midrashim, despite their fantastic character. Finally, and above all, their attention was occupied with the Talmud and its commentaries. The text of this work, together with that of the writings of the Geonim, particularly their responsa, was first revised and copied; then these writings were treated as a corpus juris, and were commented upon and studied both as a pious exercise in dialectics and from the practical point of view. While most of the focus of Jewish authors was religious, they did discuss other subjects, like the papal presence in their communities.[38]

Rashi edit

 
Woodcut of Rashi (1539)

The great Jewish figure who dominated the second half of the 11th century, as well as the whole rabbinical history of France, was Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki) of Troyes (1040–1105). He personified the genius of northern French Judaism: its devoted attachment to tradition; its untroubled faith; its piety, ardent but free from mysticism. His works are distinguished by their clarity, directness, and are written in a simple, concise, unaffected style, suited to his subject.[39] His commentary on the Talmud, which was the product of colossal labor, and which eclipsed the similar works of all his predecessors, by its clarity and soundness made the study of that vast compilation easy, and soon became its indispensable complement. Every edition of the Talmud that was ever published has this commentary printed on the same page of the Talmud itself. His commentary on the Bible (particularly on the Pentateuch), a sort of repertory of the Midrash, served for edification, but also advanced the taste for seeking the plain and true meaning of the bible. The school which he founded at Troyes, his birthplace, after having followed the teachings of those of Worms and Mainz, immediately became famous. Around his chair were gathered Simḥah b. Samuel, R. Shamuel b. Meïr (Rashbam), and Shemaya, his grandsons; likewise Shemaria, Judah b. Nathan, and Isaac Levi b. Asher, all of whom continued his work. The school's Talmudic commentaries and interpretations are the basis and starting point for the Ashkenazic tradition of how to interpret and understand the Talmud's explanation of Biblical laws. In many cases, these interpretations differ substantially from those of the Sephardim, which results in differences between how Ashkenazim and Sephardim hold what constitutes the practical application of the law. In his Biblical commentaries, he availed himself of the works of his contemporaries. Among them must be cited Moses ha-Darshan, chief of the school of Narbonne, who was perhaps the founder of exegetical studies in France, and Menachem b. Ḥelbo. Thus the 11th century was a period of fruitful activity in literature. Thenceforth French Judaism became one of the poles within Judaism.[39]

The Crusades edit

The Jews of France suffered during the First Crusade (1096),[40] when the crusaders are stated, for example, to have shut up the Jews of Rouen in a church and to have murdered them without distinction of age or sex, sparing only those who accepted baptism.[41] According to a Hebrew document, the Jews throughout France were at that time in great fear and wrote to their brothers in the Rhine countries making known to them their terror and asking them to fast and pray.[41] In the Rhineland, thousands of Jews were killed by the crusaders (see German Crusade, 1096).[42]

Jews did not have an active role in the Crusades, like Muslims and Christians did. Instead, Jews feared for their lives, as expulsions and anti-Jewish sentiment was on the rise in Western Europe. In 1256, around 3000 Jews were murdered in the French cities of Bretagne, Anjou, and Poitou. The violence and hatred spread by the pope encouraging violence led to the persecution of Jews in France. Many Jews fled to Narbonne, a city on the southwest coast of the country, which had long been a safe haven and center for Jewish life. The southern coast was more tolerant of Jewish life than the northern half of the country.[43]

Expulsions and Returns edit

Expulsion from France, 1182 edit

 
A miniature from Grandes Chroniques de France depicting the expulsion

The First Crusade led to nearly a century of accusations (blood libel) against the Jews, many of whom were burned or attacked in France. Immediately after the coronation of Philip Augustus on 14 March 1181, the King ordered the Jews arrested on a Saturday, in all their synagogues, and despoiled of their money and their investments. In the following April 1182, he published an edict of expulsion, but according to the Jews a delay of three months for the sale of their personal property. Immovable property, however, such as houses, fields, vines, barns, and wine presses, he confiscated. The Jews attempted to win over the nobles to their side but in vain. In July they were compelled to leave the royal domains of France (and not the whole kingdom); their synagogues were converted into churches. These successive measures were simply expedients to fill the royal coffers. The goods confiscated by the king were at once converted into cash.

During the century which terminated so disastrously for the Jews, their condition was not altogether bad, especially if compared with that of their brethren in Germany. Thus may be explained the remarkable intellectual activity which existed among them, the attraction that it exercised over the Jews of other countries, and the numerous works produced in those days. The impulse given by Rashi to study did not cease with his death; his successors—the members of his family first among them—continued his work. Research moved within the same limits as in the preceding century, and dealt mainly with the Talmud, rabbinical jurisprudence, and Biblical exegesis.[39]

Recalled by Philip Augustus, 1198 edit

This century, which opened with the return of the Jews to France proper (then reduced almost to the Île de France), closed with their complete exile from the country in a larger sense. In July 1198, Philip Augustus, "contrary to the general expectation and despite his own edict, recalled the Jews to Paris and made the churches of God suffer great persecutions" (Rigord). The king adopted this measure from no good will toward the Jews, for he had shown his true sentiments a short time before in the Bray affair. But since then he had learned that the Jews could be an excellent source of income from a fiscal point of view, especially as money-lenders. Not only did he recall them to his estates, but he gave state sanction by his ordinances to their operations in banking and pawnbroking. He placed their business under control, determined the legal rate of interest, and obliged them to have seals affixed to all their deeds. Naturally, this trade was taxed, and the affixing of the royal seal was paid for by the Jews. Henceforward there was in the treasury a special account called "Produit des Juifs", and the receipts from this source increased continually. At the same time, it was in the interest of the treasury to secure possession of the Jews, considered a fiscal resource. The Jews were therefore made serfs of the king in the royal domain, just at a time when the charters, becoming wider and wider, tended to bring about the disappearance of serfdom. In certain respects their position became even harder than that of serfs, for the latter could in certain cases appeal to custom and were often protected by the Church; but there was no custom to which the Jews might appeal, and the Church laid them under its ban. The kings and the lords said "my Jews" just as they said "my lands", and they disposed in like manner of the one and of the other. The lords imitated the king: "they endeavored to have the Jews considered an inalienable dependence of their fiefs, and to establish the usage that if a Jew domiciled in one barony passed into another, the lord of his former domicil should have the right to seize his possessions." This agreement was made in 1198 between the king and the Count of Champagne in a treaty, the terms of which provided that neither should retain in his domains the Jews of the other without the latter's consent and furthermore that the Jews should not make loans or receive pledges without the express permission of the king and the count. Other lords made similar conventions with the king. Thenceforth they too had a revenue known as the Produit des Juifs, comprising the taille, or annual quit-rent, the legal fees for the writs necessitated by the Jews' law trials, and the seal duty. A thoroughly characteristic feature of this fiscal policy is that the bishops (according to the agreement of 1204 regulating the spheres of ecclesiastical and seigniorial jurisdiction) continued to prohibit the clergy from excommunicating those who sold goods to the Jews or who bought from them.[44]

The practice of "retention treaties" spread throughout France after 1198. Lords intending to impose a heavy tax (captio, literally "capture") on Jews living in their lordship (dominium) signed treaties with their neighbours, whereby the latter refused to permit the former's Jews entry into his domains, thus "retaining" them for the lord to tax. This practice arose in response to the common flight of Jews in the face of a captio to a different dominium, where they purchased the right to settle unmolested by gifts (bribes) to their new lord. In May 1210 the crown negotiated a series of treaties with the neighbours of the royal demesne and successfully "captured" its Jews with a large tax levy. From 1223 on, however the Count Palatine of Champagne refused to sign any such treaties, and in that year even refused to affirm the crown's asserted right to force non-retention policies on its barons. Such treaties became obsolete after Louis IX's ordinance of Melun (1230), when it became illegal for a Jew to migrate between lordships. This ordinance—the first piece of public legislation in France since Carolingian times—also declared it treason to refuse non-retention.[45]

Under Louis VIII edit

 
A gathering of thirteenth-century French Rabbis (from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris).

Louis VIII of France (1223–26), in his Etablissement sur les Juifs of 1223, while more inspired with the doctrines of the Church than his father, Philip Augustus, knew also how to look after the interests of his treasury. Although he declared that from 8 November 1223, the interest on Jews' debts should no longer hold good, he at the same time ordered that the capital should be repaid to the Jews in three years and that the debts due the Jews should be inscribed and placed under the control of their lords. The lords then collected the debts for the Jews, doubtless receiving a commission. Louis furthermore ordered that the special seal for Jewish deeds should be abolished and replaced by the ordinary one.

Twenty-six barons accepted Louis VIII's new measures, but Theobald IV (1201–53), the powerful Count of Champagne, did not, since he had an agreement with the Jews that guaranteed their safety in return for extra income through taxation. Champagne's capital at Troyes was where Rashi had lived a century before, and Champagne continued to have a prosperous Jewish population. Theobald IV would become a major opposition force to Capetian dominance, and his hostility was manifest during the reign of Louis VIII. For example, during the siege of Avignon, he performed only the minimum service of 40 days and left for home amid charges of treachery.

 
A group of medieval Jewish moneylenders conducting business.

Under Louis IX edit

In spite of all these restrictions designed to restrain, if not to suppress moneylending, Louis IX of France (1226–70) (also known as Saint Louis), with his ardent piety and his submission to the Catholic Church, unreservedly condemned loans at interest. He was less amenable than Philip Augustus to fiscal considerations. Despite former conventions, in an assembly held at Melun in December 1230, he compelled several lords to sign an agreement not to authorize Jews to make any loan. No one in the whole Kingdom of France was allowed to detain a Jew belonging to another, and each lord might recover a Jew who belonged to him, just as he might his own serf (tanquam proprium servum), wherever he might find him and however long a period had elapsed since the Jew had settled elsewhere. At the same time, the ordinance of 1223 was enacted afresh, which only proves that it had not been carried into effect. Both king and lords were forbidden to borrow from Jews.

In 1234, Louis freed his subjects from a third of their registered debts to Jews (including those who had already paid their debts), but debtors had to pay the remaining two-thirds within a specified time. It was also forbidden to imprison Christians or to sell their real estate to recover debts owed to Jews. The king wished in this way to strike a deadly blow at usury.

In 1243, Louis ordered, at the urging of Pope Gregory IX, the burning in Paris of some 12,000 manuscript copies of the Talmud and other Jewish works.

In order to finance his first Crusade, Louis ordered the expulsion of all Jews engaged in usury and the confiscation of their property, for use in his crusade, but the order for the expulsion was only partly enforced if at all. Louis left for the Seventh Crusade in 1248.

However, he did not cancel the debts owed by Christians. Later, Louis became conscience-stricken, and, overcome by scruples, he feared lest the treasury, by retaining some part of the interest paid by the borrowers, might be enriched with the product of usury. As a result, one-third of the debts was forgiven, but the other two-thirds were to be remitted to the royal treasury.

In 1251, while Louis was in captivity on the Crusade, a popular movement rose up with the intention of traveling to the east to rescue him; although they never made it out of northern France, Jews were subject to their attacks as they wandered throughout the country (see Shepherds' Crusade).

In 1257 or 1258 ("Ordonnances", i. 85), wishing, as he says, to provide for his safety of soul and peace of conscience, Louis issued a mandate for the restitution in his name of the amount of usurious interest which had been collected on the confiscated property, the restitution to be made either to those who had paid it or to their heirs.

Later, after having discussed the subject with his son-in-law, King Theobald II of Navarre and Count of Champagne, Louis decided on 13 September 1268 to arrest Jews and seize their property. But an order which followed close upon this last (1269) shows that on this occasion also Louis reconsidered the matter. Nevertheless, at the request of Paul Christian (Pablo Christiani), he compelled the Jews, under penalty of a fine, to wear at all times the rouelle or badge decreed by the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215. This consisted of a piece of red felt or cloth cut in the form of a wheel, four fingers in circumference, which had to be attached to the outer garment at the chest and back.

The Medieval Inquisition edit

 
Miniature from the North French Hebrew Miscellany of Noah's Ark landing on the Mountains of Ararat (fol. 521a, c. 1278–98)

The Inquisition, which had been instituted in order to suppress Catharism, finally occupied itself with the Jews of Southern France who converted to Christianity. The popes complained that not only were baptized Jews returning to their former faith but that Christians also were being converted to Judaism. In March 1273, Pope Gregory X formulated the following rules: relapsed Jews, as well as Christians who abjured their faith in favor of "the Jewish superstition", were to be treated by the Inquisitors as heretics. The instigators of such apostasies, as those who received or defended the guilty ones, were to be punished in the same way as the delinquents.

In accordance with these rules, the Jews of Toulouse, who had buried a Christian convert in their cemetery, were brought before the Inquisition in 1278 for trial, with their rabbi, Isaac Males, being condemned to the stake. Philip IV at first ordered his seneschals not to imprison any Jews at the instance of the Inquisitors, but in 1299 he rescinded this order.

The Great Exile of 1306 edit

Toward the middle of 1306 the treasury was nearly empty, and the king, as he was about to do the following year in the case of the Templars, condemned the Jews to banishment, and took forcible possession of their property, real and personal. Their houses, lands, and movable goods were sold at auction; and for the king were reserved any treasures found buried in the dwellings that had belonged to the Jews. That Philip the Fair intended merely to fill the gap in his treasury, and was not at all concerned about the well-being of his subjects, is shown by the fact that he put himself in the place of the Jewish moneylenders and exacted from their Christian debtors the payment of their debts, which they themselves had to declare. Furthermore, three months before the sale of the property of the Jews the king took measures to ensure that this event should be coincident with the prohibition of clipped money, in order that those who purchased the goods should have to pay in undebased coin. Finally, fearing that the Jews might have hidden some of their treasures, he declared that one-fifth of any amount found should be paid to the discoverer. It was on 22 July, the day after Tisha B'Av, a Jewish fast day, that the Jews were arrested. In prison they received notice that they had been sentenced to exile; that, abandoning their goods and debts, and taking only the clothes which they had on their backs and the sum of 12 sous tournois each, they would have to quit the kingdom within one month. Speaking of this exile, a French historian has said,

In striking at the Jews, Philip the Fair at the same time dried up one of the most fruitful sources of the financial, commercial, and industrial prosperity of his kingdom.[46]

To a large extent, the history of the Jews of France ceased. The span of control of the King of France had increased considerably in extent. Outside the Île de France, it now comprised Champagne, the Vermandois, Normandy, Perche, Maine, Anjou, Touraine, Poitou, the Marche, Lyonnais, Auvergne, and Languedoc, reaching from the Rhône to the Pyrénées. The exiles could not take refuge anywhere except in Lorraine, the county of Burgundy, Savoy, Dauphiné, Roussillon, and a part of Provence—all regions located in Empire. It is not possible to estimate the number of fugitives; that given by Grätz, 100,000, has no foundation in fact.[47]

Return of the Jews to France, 1315 edit

 
A bronze Hanukkah lamp dating from before the expulsion of 1394 Museum of Jewish Art and History

Nine years had hardly passed since the expulsion of 1306 when Louis X of France (1314–16) recalled the Jews. In an edict dated 28 July 1315, he permitted them to return for a period of twelve years, authorizing them to establish themselves in the cities in which they had lived before their banishment. He issued this edict in answer to the demands of the people. Geoffrey of Paris, the popular poet of the time, says in fact that the Jews were gentle in comparison with the Christians who had taken their place, and who had flayed their debtors alive; if the Jews had remained, the country would have been happier; for there were no longer any moneylenders at all.[48] The king probably had the interests of his treasury also in view. The profits of the former confiscations had gone into the treasury, and by recalling the Jews for only twelve years he would have an opportunity for ransoming them at the end of this period. It appears that they gave the sum of 122,500 livres for the privilege of returning. It is also probable, as Adolphe Vuitry states, that a large number of the debts owing to the Jews had not been recovered, and that the holders of the notes had preserved them; the decree of return specified that two-thirds of the old debts recovered by the Jews should go into the treasury. The conditions under which they were allowed to settle in the land are set forth in a number of articles; some of the guaranties which were accorded the Jews had probably been demanded by them and been paid for.[49]

They were to live by the work of their hands or to sell merchandise of good quality; they were to wear the circular badge, and not discuss religion with laymen. They were not to be molested, either with regard to the chattels they had carried away at the time of their banishment, or with regard to the loans which they had made since then, or in general with regard to anything which had happened in the past. Their synagogues and their cemeteries were to be restored to them on condition that they would refund their value; or, if these could not be restored, the king would give them the necessary sites at a reasonable price. The books of the Law that had not yet been returned to them were also to be restored, with the exception of the Talmud. After the period of twelve years granted to them, the king might not expel the Jews again without giving them a year's time in which to dispose of their property and carry away their goods. They were not to lend on usury, and no one was to be forced by the king or his officers to repay to them usurious loans.

If they engaged in pawnbroking, they were not to take more than two deniers in the pound a week; they were to lend only on pledges. Two men with the title "auditors of the Jews" were entrusted with the execution of this ordinance and were to take cognizance of all claims that might arise in connection with goods belonging to the Jews that had been sold before the expulsion for less than half of what was regarded as a fair price. The king finally declared that he took the Jews under his special protection and that he desired to have their persons and property protected from all violence, injury, and oppression.

Expulsion of 1394 edit

On 17 September 1394, Charles VI suddenly published an ordinance in which he declared, in substance, that for a long time he had been taking note of the many complaints provoked by the excesses and misdemeanors which the Jews committed against Christians; and that the prosecutors, having made several investigations, had discovered many violations by the Jews of the agreement they had made with him. Therefore, he decreed as an irrevocable law and statute that thenceforth no Jew should dwell in his domains ("Ordonnances", vii. 675). According to the Religieux de St. Denis, the king signed this decree at the insistence of the queen ("Chron. de Charles VI." ii. 119).[50] The decree was not immediately enforced, a respite being granted to the Jews in order that they might sell their property and pay their debts. Those indebted to them were enjoined to redeem their obligations within a set time; otherwise, their pledges held in pawns were to be sold by the Jews. The provost was to escort the Jews to the frontier of the kingdom. Subsequently, the king released the Christians from their debts.[51]

Provence edit

Archaeological evidence has been discovered of a Jewish presence in Provence since at least the 1st century. The earliest documentary evidence for the presence of Jews dates from the middle of the 5th century in Arles. The Jewish presence reached a peak in 1348 when it probably numbered about 15,000.[52]

Provence was not incorporated into France until 1481, and the expulsion edict of 1394 did not apply there. The privileges of the Jews of Provence were confirmed in 1482. However, from 1484, anti-Jewish disturbances broke out, with looting and violence perpetrated by laborers from outside the region hired for the harvest season. In some places, Jews were protected by the town officials, and they were declared to be under royal protection. However, a voluntary exodus began and was accelerated when similar disorders were repeated in 1485.[52] According to Isidore Loeb, in a special study of the subject in the Revue des Études Juives (xiv. 162–183), about 3,000 Jews came to Provence after the Alhambra Decree expelled Jews from Spain in 1492.

From 1484, one town after another had called for expulsion, but the calls were rejected by Charles VIII. However, Louis XII, in one of his first acts as king in 1498, issued a general expulsion order for the Jews of Provence. Though not enforced at the time, the order was renewed in 1500 and again in 1501. On this occasion, it was definitively implemented. The Jews of Provence were given the option of conversion to Christianity and a number chose that option. However, after a short while—if only to compensate partially for the loss of revenues caused by the departure of the Jews—the king imposed a special tax, referred to as "the tax of the neophytes." These converts and their descendants soon became the objects of social discrimination and slander.[52]

During the second half of the 17th century, a number of Jews attempted to reestablish themselves in Provence. Before the French Revolution abolished the administrative entity of Provence, the first community outside the southwest, Alsace-Lorraine and Comtat Venaissin, was re-formed in Marseilles.[52]

Early modern period edit

17th century edit

 
Old Jewish Quarter of Troyes

At the beginning of the 17th century Jews began again to re-enter France. This resulted in a new edict of 23 April 1615[53] which forbade Christians, under the penalty of death and confiscation, to shelter Jews or to converse with them.

Alsace was home to a significant number of Jews. In annexing the region in 1648, the French government was at first inclined toward the banishment of Jews living in those provinces but thought better of it in view of the benefit he could derive from them. On 25 September 1675, Louis XIV granted these Jews letters patent, taking them under his special protection. This, however, did not prevent them from being subjected to every kind of extortion, and their position remained the same as it had been under the Austrian government.

In 1683, Louis XIV expelled Jews from the newly acquired colony of Martinique.[citation needed] The Regency was no less severe.[clarification needed][citation needed]

Beginnings of emancipation edit

In the course of the 18th century, the attitude of the authorities toward Jews became more tolerant and corrected previous legislation. The authorities often overlooked infractions of the edict of banishment; a colony of Portuguese and German Jews was tolerated in Paris. The voices of enlightened Christians who demanded justice for the proscribed people began to be heard.

By the 1780s there were about 40,000 to 50,000 Jews in France, chiefly centered in Bordeaux, Metz, and a few other cities. They had very limited rights and opportunities, apart from the money-lending business, but their status was not illegal.[54] An Alsatian Jew named Cerfbeer, who had rendered great service to the French government as purveyor to the army, was the representantive of the Jews before Louis XVI. The humane minister, Malesherbes, summoned a commission of Jewish notables to make suggestions for the amelioration of the condition of their coreligionists. The direct result of the efforts of these men was the abolition, in 1785, of the degrading poll-tax and the permission to settle in all parts of France. Shortly afterward the Jewish question was raised by two men of genius, who subsequently became prominent in the French Revolution—Count Mirabeau and the Abbé Grégoire—the former of whom, while on a diplomatic mission in Prussia, had made the acquaintance of Moses Mendelssohn and his school (see Haskalah), who were then working toward the intellectual emancipation of the Jews. In a pamphlet, "Sur Moses Mendelssohn, sur la Réforme Politique des Juifs" (London, 1787), Mirabeau refuted the arguments of the German antisemites like Michaelis and claimed for the Jews the full rights of citizenship. This pamphlet naturally provoked many writings for and against the Jews, and the French public became interested in the question. On the proposition of Roederer the Royal Society of Science and Arts of Metz offered a prize for the best essay in answer to the question: "What are the best means to make the Jews happier and more useful in France?" Nine essays, of which only two were unfavorable to the Jews, were submitted to the judgment of the learned assembly. Of the challenge, there were three winners: Abbé Gregoire, Claude-Antoine Thiery, and Zalkind Hourwitz.

The Revolution and Napoleon edit

 
Loi relative aux Juifs, the 1791 decree giving the Jews full citizenship Museum of Jewish Art and History

The Sephardi Jews in Bordeaux and Bayonne, who were willing to trade in their communal rights in exchange for full citizenship, participated in 1789 in the election of the Estates-General but those in Alsace, Lorraine, and in Paris, many of them Ashkenazi reluctant to yield to the state their intra-communal privileges, were denied this right. Herz Cerfbeer, a French-Jewish financier, then asked to Jacques Necker and obtained the right for Jews from eastern France to elect their own delegates.[55] Among them were the son of Cerfbeer, Theodore, and Joseph David Sinzheim. The Cahier written by the Jewish community from eastern France asked for the end of the discriminatory status and taxes targeting Jews.

The fall of the Bastille was the signal for disorders everywhere in France. In certain districts of Alsace the peasants attacked the dwellings of the Jews, who took refuge in Basel. A gloomy picture of the outrages upon them was sketched before the National Assembly (3 August) by the abbé Henri Grégoire, who demanded their complete emancipation. The National Assembly shared the indignation of the prelate, but left the question of emancipation undecided; it was intimidated by the deputies of Alsace, especially by Jean-François Rewbell.[55]

On 22 December 1789, the Jewish question came again before the Assembly in debating the issue of admitting to public service all citizens without distinction of creed. Mirabeau, the abbé Grégoire, Robespierre, Duport, Barnave and the comte de Clermont-Tonnerre exerted all the power of their eloquence to bring about the desired emancipation; but the repeated disturbances in Alsace and the strong opposition of the deputies of that province and of the clericals, like La Fare, Bishop of Nancy, the abbé Maury, and others, caused the decision to be again postponed. Only the Portuguese and the Avignonese Jews, who had hitherto enjoyed all civil rights as naturalized Frenchmen, were declared full citizens by a majority of 150 on 28 January 1790. This partial victory infused new hope into the Jews of the German districts, who made still greater efforts in the struggle for freedom. They won over the eloquent advocate Godard, whose influence in revolutionary circles was considerable. Through his exertions the National Guards and the diverse sections pronounced themselves in favor of the Jews, and the abbé Malot was sent by the General Assembly of the Commune to plead their cause before the National Assembly. The grave affairs which absorbed the Assembly, the prolonged agitations in Alsace, and the passions of the clerical party kept in check the advocates of Jewish emancipation. A few days before the dissolution of the National Assembly (27 September 1791) a member of the Jacobin Club, formerly a parliamentary councilor, Duport, unexpectedly ascended the tribune and said,

I believe that freedom of worship does not permit any distinction in the political rights of citizens on account of their creed. The question of the political existence of the Jews has been postponed. Still the Muslems and the men of all sects are admitted to enjoy political rights in France. I demand that the motion for postponement be withdrawn, and a decree passed that the Jews in France enjoy the privileges of full citizens.

This proposition was accepted amid loud applause. Rewbell endeavored, indeed, to oppose the motion, but he was interrupted by Regnault de Saint-Jean, president of the Assembly, who suggested "that every one who spoke against this motion should be called to order, because he would be opposing the constitution itself".

During the Reign of Terror edit

Judaism in France thus became, as the Alsatian deputy Schwendt wrote to his constituents, "nothing more than the name of a distinct religion". However, in Alsace, especially in the Bas-Rhin the reactionaries did not cease their agitations and Jews were victims of discriminations.[55] During the Reign of Terror, at Bordeaux, Jewish bankers, compromised in the cause of the Girondins, had to pay important fines or to run away to save their lives while some Jewish bankers (49 according to the Jewish Encyclopedia) were imprisoned at Paris as suspects and nine of them were executed.[56] The decree of the convention by which the Catholic faith was annulled and replaced by the worship of Reason was applied by the provincial clubs, especially by those of the German districts, to the Jewish religion as well. Some synagogues were pillaged and the mayors of a few eastern towns (Strasbourg, Troyes, etc.) forbade the celebration of Sabbath (to apply the week of ten days).[56]

Meanwhile, the French Jews gave proofs of their patriotism and of their gratitude to the land that had emancipated them. Many of them died in battle as part of the Army of the Republic while fighting the forces of Europe in coalition. To contribute to the war fund, candelabra of synagogues were sold, and wealthier Jews deprived themselves of their jewels to make similar contributions.

Attitude of Napoleon edit

 
Joseph David Sinzheim was the president of the Grand Sanhedrin, an imperial Jewish high court sanctioned by Napoleon.
 
Sermon in an israelite oratory Museum of Jewish Art and History

Though the Revolution had begun the process of Jewish emancipation in France, Napoleon also spread the concept in the lands he conquered across Europe, liberating Jews from their ghettos and establishing relative equality for them. The net effect of his policies significantly changed the position of the Jews in Europe. Starting in 1806, Napoleon passed a number of measures supporting the position of the Jews in the French Empire, including assembling a representative group elected by the Jewish community, the Grand Sanhedrin. In conquered countries, he abolished laws restricting Jews to ghettos. In 1807, he added Judaism as an official religion of France, with previously sanctioned Roman Catholicism, and Lutheran and Calvinist Protestantism. Despite the positive effects, it is unclear however, whether Napoleon himself was disposed favorably towards the Jews, or merely saw them as a political or financial tool. On 17 March 1808, Napoleon rolled back some reforms by the so-called décret infâme, declaring all debts with Jews reduced, postponed, or annulled; this caused the Jewish community to nearly collapse. The decree also restricted where Jews could live, especially for those in the eastern French Empire, with all its annexations in the Rhineland and beyond (as of 1810), in hopes of assimilating them into society. Many of these restrictions were eased again in 1811 and finally abolished in 1818.

After the Restoration edit

The restoration of Louis XVIII did not materially change the political condition of the Jews. Enemies of the Jews cherished the hope that the Bourbons would hasten to undo the work of the Revolution with regard to Jewish emancipation, but were soon disappointed. The emancipation the French Jews had made enough progress that the clerical monarch could not find pretexts for curtailing their rights as citizens. They were no longer treated as poor, downtrodden peddlers[citation needed] or money-lenders with whom every petty official could do as he liked. Many of them already occupied high positions in the army and the magistracy, as well as in the arts and sciences.

State recognition edit

Of the faiths recognized by the state, only Judaism had to support its ministers, while those of the Catholic and Protestant churches were supported by the government. This legal inferiority was removed in 1831, thanks to the intervention of the Duke of Orléans, lieutenant-general of the kingdom, and to the campaign led in Parliament by the deputies comte de Rambuteau and Jean Viennet. Encouraged by these prominent men, the minister of education, on 13 November 1830, offered a motion to place Judaism upon an equal footing with Catholicism and Protestantism as regards support for the synagogues and for the rabbis from the public treasury. The motion was accompanied by flattering compliments to the French Jews, "who", said the minister, "since the removal of their disabilities by the Revolution, have shown themselves worthy of the privileges granted to them". After a short discussion the motion was adopted by a large majority. In January 1831, it passed in the Chamber of Peers by 89 votes to 57, and on 8 February it was ratified by King Louis Philippe, who from the beginning had shown himself favorable to placing Judaism on an equal footing with the other faiths. Shortly afterward the rabbinical college, which had been founded at Metz in 1829, was recognized as a state institution, and was granted a subsidy. The government likewise liquidated the debts contracted by various Jewish communities before the Revolution.

Full equality edit

Full equality did not occur until 1831. By the fourth decade of the nineteenth century, France provided an environment in which Jews took active and many times leading roles. The Napoleonic policy of carrières aux talents, or 'careers for the gifted', permitted French Jews to enter previously forbidden fields such as the arts, finance, trade, and government. For this they were never forgiven by primarily Royalist and Catholic antisemites.

Assimilation edit

 
Adolphe Crémieux, founder of the Alliance Israélite Universelle. Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme

While the Jews had become in other respects the equals of their Christian fellow citizens, the More Judaico oath continued to be administered to them, in spite of the repeated protestations of the rabbis and the consistory. It was only in 1846, owing to a brilliant defense speech by the Jewish lawyer Adolphe Crémieux before the Court of Nîmes in defense of a rabbi who had refused to take this oath, and to a valuable essay on the subject by Martin, a prominent Christian advocate of Strasburg, that the Court of Cassation removed this last remnant of the legislation of the Middle Ages. With this act of justice the history of the Jews of France merges into the general history of the French people. The rapidity with which many of them won affluence and distinction in the nineteenth century is without parallel. In spite of the deep-rooted prejudices which prevailed in certain classes of French society, many of them occupied high positions in literature, art, science, jurisprudence, the army—indeed, in every walk of life. In 1860, the Alliance Israelite Universelle was formed "to work everywhere for the emancipation and moral progress of the Jews; to offer effective assistance to Jews suffering from antisemitism; and to encourage all publications calculated to promote this aim."[57]

In 1870, the Crémieux decrees granted automatic French citizenship to the approximately 40,000 Jews of Algeria, at that time a French département, contrary to their Muslim neighbors.[58]

People of Jewish faith in France were becoming assimilated into their lives. After their Emancipation in 1791, Jews in France had new freedoms. For example, Jews were allowed to attend schools that were once delegated for just non-Jews. They were also allowed to pray in their own synagogues. Lastly, many Jews found themselves moving from the rural areas of France and into the big cities. In these big cities, Jews had new job opportunities and many were advancing up the economic ladder.

 
1893 edition of Edouard Drumont's antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole.

Although life was looking brighter for these Western Jews, some Jews who lived in Eastern Europe believed that the Emancipation in Western countries were causing the Jews to lose their traditional beliefs and culture. As more and more Jews were becoming assimilated into their new lives, these Jews were breaking away from rabbinical law and rabbinical authority decreased. For example, Jews were marrying outside of their religion and their children were growing up in homes where they were not being introduced to traditional beliefs and losing connection with their roots. Also, in these new urbanized Jewish homes, less and less Jews were following the strict rules of Kosher laws. Many Jews were so preoccupied with assimilating and prospering in their new lives that they formed a new type of Judaism that would fit with the times. The Reform Movement came about to let Jews stay connected to their roots while also living their lives without so many restrictions.

Antisemitism edit

Alphonse Toussenel (1803–1885) was a political writer and zoologist who introduced antisemitism into French mainstream thinking. A utopian socialist and a disciple of Charles Fourier, he criticized the economic liberalism of the July Monarchy and denounced the ills of civilization: individualism, egoism, and class conflict. He was hostile to the Jews and also to the British. Toussenel's Les juifs rois de l'époque, histoire de la féodalité financière (1845) argued that French finance and commerce was controlled by an alien Jewish presence, typified in the malign influence of the Rothschild banking family of France. Toussenel's antisemitism was rooted in a revolutionary-nationalist interpretation reading of French history. He was innovative and using zoology as a vehicle for social criticism, and his natural history books, as much as his political writings, were infused with antisemitic and anti-English sentiments. For Toussenel, the English and the Jews represented external and internal threats to French national identity.[59]

Antisemitism based on racism emerged in the 1880s led by Edouard Drumont, who founded the Antisemitic League of France in 1889, and was the founder and editor of the newspaper La Libre Parole. After spending years of research, he synthesized three major strands of antisemitism. The first strand was traditional Catholic attitudes toward the "Christ killers" augmented by vehement antipathy toward the French Revolution. The second strand was hostility to capitalism, of the sort promoted by the Socialist movement. The third strand was scientific racism, based on the argument that races have fixed characteristics, and the Jews have highly negative characteristics.[60][61]

Dreyfus affair edit

 
Newspaper front page with Émile Zola's letter, J'Accuse...! (I Accuse), addressing the President of the Republic, and accusing the government with antisemitism in the Dreyfus affair.

The Dreyfus affair was a major political scandal that convulsed France from 1894 until its resolution in 1906, and which had reverberations for decades more. The affair is often seen as a modern and universal symbol of injustice for reasons of state[62] and remains one of the most striking examples of a complex miscarriage of justice where the press and public opinion played a central role. The issue was blatant antisemitism as practiced by the Army and defended by traditionalists (especially Catholics) against secular and republican forces, including most Jews. In the end, the latter triumphed, albeit at a very high personal cost to Dreyfus himself.[63][64]

The affair began in November 1894 with the conviction for treason of Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a young French artillery officer of Alsatian Jewish descent. He was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for allegedly having communicated French military secrets to the German Embassy in Paris. Dreyfus was sent to the penal colony at Devil's Island in French Guiana, where he spent almost five years.

Two years later, in 1896, evidence came to light identifying a French Army major named Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy as the real spy. After high-ranking military officials suppressed the new evidence a military court unanimously acquitted Esterhazy after the second day of his trial. The Army accused Dreyfus of additional charges based on false documents. Word of the military court's framing of Dreyfus and of an attendant cover-up began to spread, chiefly owing to J'Accuse...!, a vehement open letter published in a Paris newspaper in January 1898 by the notable writer Émile Zola. Activists put pressure on the government to reopen the case.

In 1899, Dreyfus was returned to France for another trial. The intense political and judicial scandal that ensued divided French society between those who supported Dreyfus (now called "Dreyfusards"), such as Anatole France, Henri Poincaré and Georges Clemenceau, and those who condemned him (the anti-Dreyfusards), such as Édouard Drumont, the director and publisher of the antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole. The new trial resulted in another conviction and a 10-year sentence but Dreyfus was given a pardon and set free. Eventually, all the accusations against Alfred Dreyfus were demonstrated to be baseless. In 1906 Dreyfus was exonerated and reinstated as a major in the French Army.

The Affair from 1894 to 1906 divided France deeply and lastingly into two opposing camps: the pro-Army, mostly Catholic "anti-Dreyfusards" who generally lost the initiative to the anticlerical, pro-republican Dreyfusards. It embittered French politics and allowed the radicals to come to power.[65][66]

20th century edit

The relatively small Jewish community was based in Paris, and very well established in the city's business, financial, and intellectual elite. A third of Parisian bankers were Jewish, led by the Rothschild family, which also played a dominant role in the well organized Jewish community. Many of the most influential French intellectuals were nominally Jewish, including Henri Bergson, Lucien Lévy-Bruhl and Emile Durkheim. The Dreyfus affair to some degree rekindled their sense of being Jewish.[67] Jews were prominent in art and culture, holding special prominence in the École de Paris art movement, typified by such artists as Modigliani, Pascin, Frenel Soutine, and Chagall.[68][69] The Jews considered themselves fully assimilated into French culture, for them Judaism was entirely a matter of religious belief, with minimal ethnic or cultural dimensions.[70]

By the time Dreyfus was fully exonerated in 1906, antisemitism declined sharply and it declined again during the First World War, as a nation was aware that many Jews died fighting for France. The antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole closed in 1924, and the former anti-Dreyfusard Maurice Barrès included Jews among France's "spiritual families".[71][72]

After 1900, a wave of Jewish immigrants arrived, mostly fleeing the pogroms of Eastern Europe. The flow temporarily halted during World War I but resumed afterwards. The long-established, heavily assimilated Jewish population by 1920 was now only a third of the French Jewish population. It was overwhelmed by new immigrants and the restoration of Alsace-Lorraine. About 200,000 immigrants arrived, 1900 to 1939, mostly Yiddish-speakers from Russia and Poland as well as German-speaking Jews who fled the Nazi regime after 1933. The historic base of traditional Judaism was in Alsace-Lorraine, which was recovered by France in 1918.

The new arrivals got along poorly with the established elite Jewish community. They did not want to assimilate, and they vigorously supported such new causes, especially Zionism and communism.[73] The Yiddish influx and the Jewishness of the Popular Front's leader Léon Blum contributed to a revival of antisemitism in the 1930s. Conservative writers such as Paul Morand, Pierre Gaxotte, Marcel Jouhandeau, and the leader of Action française Charles Maurras denounced Jews. Perhaps the most violent antisemitic writer was Louis-Ferdinand Céline, who wrote, "I feel myself very friendly to Hitler, and to all Germans, whom I feel to be my brothers.... Our real enemies are Jews and Masons", and "Yids are like bedbugs". By 1937, even mainstream French conservatives and socialists, not previously associated with antisemitism, denounced the alleged Jewish influence pushing the country into a "Jewish war" against Nazi Germany. The new intensity of antisemitism facilitated the extremism of the Vichy regime after 1940.[72]

World War II and the Holocaust edit

 
Antisemitic Exposition during Nazi occupation of France (1942).

When France came under occupation by Nazi Germany in June 1940, about 330,000 Jews lived in France (and another 370,000 in never occupied French North Africa). Of the 330,000, fewer than half held French citizenship and the others were foreigners, mostly exiles from Germany and Central Europe who had immigrated to France during the 1930s.[8] Another 110,000 French Jews were living in the colony of French Algeria.[74]

About 200,000 Jews, and the large majority of foreign Jews, resided in the Paris area. Among the 150,000 French Jews, about 30,000, generally native to Central Europe, had recently obtained French citizenship after immigrating to France during the 1930s. Following the 1940 armistice after Germany invaded France, the Nazis incorporated the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine into Germany. The remainder of northern and western France was placed under German military control. Unoccupied southern metropolitan France and the French empire were placed under the control of the Vichy Regime, a new collaborationist French government. Some Jews managed to escape the invading German forces. Some found refuge in the countryside. Spain allowed 25,600 Jews to use its territory as an escape route.

German occupation forces published their first anti-Jewish measure on 27 September 1940 as the "First Ordinance." The measure was a census of Jews, and defined "who is a Jew." The Second Ordinance was published on 18 October 1940, proscribing various business activities for Jews. On 31 August 1941 German forces confiscated all radios belonging to Jews, followed by their telephones, their bicycles, and disconnecting all phones to Jews. They were forbidden to use public telephones. Jews were forbidden to change their address, and next were forbidden to leave their homes between 8 pm and 5 am. All public places, parks, theatres and certain shops were soon closed to Jews. German forces issued new restrictions, prohibitions and decrees by the week. Jews were barred from public swimming pools, restaurants, cafes, cinemas, concerts, music halls, etc. On the metro, they were allowed to ride only in the last carriage. Antisemitic articles were frequently published in newspapers since the Occupation. The Germans organized antisemitic exhibitions to spread their propaganda. The music of Jewish composers was banned, as were works of art by Jewish artists. On 2 October 1941, seven synagogues were bombed. Still, the vast majority of synagogues remained opened during the whole war in the Zone libre. The Vichy government even protected them after attacks as a way to deny persecution.[75]

The first roundup of Jews took place on 14 May 1941, and 4,000 foreign Jews were taken captive. Another roundup took place on 20 August 1941, collecting both French and foreign Jews, who were sent to the Drancy internment camp and other concentration camps in France. Roundups continued, collecting French nationals, including lawyers and other professionals. On 12 December 1941, the most distinguished members of the Paris Jewish community, including doctors, academics, scientists and writers, were rounded up. On 29 May 1942, the Eighth Ordinance was published, which ordered Jews to wear the yellow star. The most notorious roundup was the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup, which required detailed planning and the use of the full resources of French police forces. This roundup took place on 16 and 17 July 1942; it collected nearly 13,000 Jews, 7,000 of whom, including more than 4,000 children, were interned and locked into the Vélodrome d'Hiver, without adequate food or sanitation.

In the meantime, the Germans began deportations of Jews from France to the death camps in eastern Europe. The first trains left on 27 March 1942. Deportations continued until 17 August 1944, by which time nearly 76,000 Jews (including those from Vichy France) were deported, of whom only 2,500 survived. (see Timeline of deportations of French Jews to death camps.) The majority of Jews deported were non-French Jews.[8] One quarter of the pre-war Jewish population of France was killed in that process.

Antisemitism was particularly virulent in Vichy France, which controlled a third of France from 1940 to 1942, at which point the Germans took over that southern area. Vichy's Jewish policy was a mixture of 1930s antiforeigner legislation with the virulent antisemitism of the Action Française movement.[76] The Vichy government openly collaborated with the Nazi occupiers to identify Jews for deportation and transportation to the death camps. As early as October 1940, without any request from the Germans, the Vichy government passed anti-Jewish measures (the Vichy laws on the status of Jews), prohibiting them from moving, and limiting their access to public places and most professional activities, especially the practice of medicine. The Vichy government also implemented those anti-Jewish laws in the colonies of Vichy North Africa. In 1941, the Vichy government established the Commissariat-General for Jewish Affairs, which in 1942 worked with the Gestapo to round-up Jews. They participated in the Vel' d'Hiv roundup on 16 and 17 July 1942.

On the other hand, France is recognised as the nation with the third highest number of Righteous Among the Nations (according to the Yad Vashem museum, 2006). This award is given to "non-Jews who acted according to the most noble principles of humanity by risking their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust."

In 1995 French President Jacques Chirac formally apologized to the Jewish community for the complicit role that French policemen and civil servants played in the roundups. He said:

"These black hours will stain our history for ever and are an injury to our past and our traditions. Yes, the criminal madness of the occupant was assisted ('secondée') by the French, by the French state. Fifty-three years ago, on 16 July 1942, 450 policemen and gendarmes, French, under the authority of their leaders, obeyed the demands of the Nazis. That day, in the capital and the Paris region, nearly 10,000 Jewish men, women and children were arrested at home, in the early hours of the morning, and assembled at police stations... France, home of the Enlightenment and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, land of welcome and asylum, France committed that day the irreparable. Breaking its word, it delivered those it protected to their executioners."[77]

Chirac also identified those who were responsible: "450 policemen and gendarmes, French, under the authority of their leaders [who] obeyed the demands of the Nazis."

In July 2017, while at a ceremony at the site of the Vélodrome d'Hiver, France's President Emmanuel Macron denounced the country's role in the Holocaust and the historical revisionism that denied France's responsibility for 1942 roundup and subsequent deportation of 13,000 Jews (or the eventual deportation of 76,000 Jews). He refuted claims that the Vichy government, in power during WW II, did not represent the State.[78] "It was indeed France that organised this", French police collaborating with the Nazis. "Not a single German" was directly involved, he added.

Neither Chirac nor François Hollande had specifically stated that the Vichy government, in power during World War II, actually represented the French State.[79] Macron on the other hand, made it clear that the government during the War was indeed that of France. "It is convenient to see the Vichy regime as born of nothingness, returned to nothingness. Yes, it's convenient, but it is false. We cannot build pride upon a lie."[80][81]

Macron made a subtle reference to Chirac's 1995 apology when he added, "I say it again here. It was indeed France that organized the roundup, the deportation, and thus, for almost all, death."[82][83]

Post-World War II: Anti-discriminatory laws and migration edit

In the wake of the Holocaust, around 180,000 Jews remained in France, many of whom were refugees from Eastern Europe who either could not or would not return to their former home countries. To prevent the types of abuses that took place under the German Occupation and Vichy Regime, the legislature passed laws to suppress antisemitic harassment and actions, and established educational programs.

Jewish exodus from France's colonies in North Africa edit

The surviving French Jews were joined in the late 1940s, 1950s and 1960s by large numbers of Jews from France's predominantly Muslim North African colonies (along with millions of other French nationals) as part of the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries. They fled to France because of the decline of the French Empire and a surge in Muslim Antisemitism following the founding of Israel and Israel's victories in the Six-Day War and other Arab-Israeli wars.[47]

By 1951, France's Jewish population totalled around 250,000.[18] Between 1956 and 1967, about 235,000 Sephardi Jews from Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt immigrated to France.

By 1968, Sephardi Jews from the former French possessions in North Africa constituted the majority of the Jews of France. Before World War II and the Holocaust, French Jews were predominately from the Ashkenazi tradition and culture. The Sephardim, who follow nusach sepharad (Judaism as per the Sephardic ritual, according to Dan Michman's definition of such Jews), have since had a significant influence on the nature of French Jewish culture. These Jews from French North Africa have generally enjoyed a successful social and economic integration and helped reinvigorate the country's Jewish community. Kosher restaurants and Jewish schools have multiplied, in particular since the 1980s. In part in response to internal and international events, many of the younger generations have committed to religious renewal.[citation needed]

In the 1980 Paris synagogue bombing, France's Jewish population suffered its first deadly terrorist attack since actions of the German occupation in the Second World War. The attack followed an increase in antisemitic incidents in the late 1970s by Neo Nazis.

France–Israel relations edit

Since World War II, France's government has varied in supporting and opposing the Israeli government. It was initially a very strong supporter of Israel, voting for its formation at the United Nations. It was Israel's main ally and primary supplier of military hardware for nearly two decades between 1948 and 1967.[84]

After the military alliance between France and Israel during the 1956 Suez Crisis, relations between Israel and France remained strong. It is widely believed that, as a result of the Protocol of Sèvres agreement, the French government secretly transported parts of its own atomic technology to Israel in the late 1950s which the Israeli government used to create nuclear weapons.[85]

But, after the end of the Algerian War in 1962, in which Algeria gained independence, France began to shift toward a more pro-Arab view. This change accelerated rapidly after the Six-Day War in 1967, in which the relations became strained. Following the war, the United States became Israel's main supplier of weapons and military technology.[84] After the 1972 Munich massacre at the Olympics, the French government refused to extradite Abu Daoud, one of the planners of the attack.[86] Both France and Israel participated in the 15-year-long Lebanese Civil War.

21st century edit

 
Haïm Korsia, the current Chief Rabbi of France.

France has the largest Jewish population in Europe and the third largest Jewish population in the world (after Israel and the United States). The Jewish community in France is estimated from a core population of 480,000–500,000[1][2][3][4] to an enlarged population of 600,000.[6][7]

In 2009, France's highest court, the council of state issued a ruling recognising the state's responsibility in the deportation of tens of thousands of Jews during World War II. The report cited "mistakes" in the Vichy regime that had not been forced by the occupiers, stating that the state "allowed or facilitated the deportation from France of victims of anti-Semitism".[87][88]

Antisemitism and Jewish emigration edit

In the early 2000s, rising levels of antisemitism among French Muslims and antisemitic acts were publicized around the world,[89][90][91] including the desecration of Jewish graves and tensions between the children of North African Muslim immigrants and North African Jewish children.[92] One of the worst crimes happened when Ilan Halimi was mutilated and tortured to death by the so-called "Barbarians gang", led by Youssouf Fofana. This murder was motivated by money and fueled by antisemitic prejudices (the perpetrators said they believed Jews to be rich).[93][94] In March 2012, a gunman, who had previously killed three soldiers, opened fire at a Jewish school in Toulouse in an antisemitic attack, killing four people, including three children. President Nicolas Sarkozy said, "I want to say to all the leaders of the Jewish community, how close we feel to them. All of France is by their side."[95]

However, Jewish philanthropist Baron Eric de Rothschild suggested that the extent of antisemitism in France has been exaggerated and that "France was not an antisemitic country".[96] The Newspaper Le Monde Diplomatique had earlier said the same thing.[97] According to a 2005 poll made by the Pew Research Center, there is no evidence of any specific antisemitism in France, which, according to this poll, appears to be one of the least antisemitic countries in Europe,[98] though France has the world's third largest Jewish population.[1] France is the country that had the most favourable views of Jews in Europe (82%), next to the Netherlands, and the country with the third-fewest unfavourable views (16%) next to the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

Rises in antisemitism in modern France have been linked to the intensifying Israeli–Palestinian conflict.[99][100][101] Between the start of the Israeli offensive in Gaza in late December 2008 and its end in January 2009, an estimated hundred antisemitic acts were recorded in France. This compares with a total of 250 antisemitic acts in the whole of 2007.[99][102] In 2009, 832 acts of antisemitism were recorded in France (with, in the first half of 2009, an estimated 631 acts, more than the whole of 2008, 474), in 2010, 466 and, in 2011, 389.[103] In 2011, there were 260 threats (100 graffitis, 46 flyers or mails, 114 insults) and 129 crimes (57 assaults, 7 arsons or attempted arsons, 65 deteriorations and acts of vandalism but no murder, attempted murder or terrorist attack) recorded.[103]

Between 2000 and 2009, 13,315 French Jews moved to Israel, or made aliyah, an increase compared to the previous decade (1990–1999 : 10,443) that was in the continuity of a similar increase since the 1970s.[104] A peak was reached during this period, in 2005 (2005: 2,951 Olim) but a significant proportion (between 20 and 30%) eventually came back to France.[105] Some immigrants cited antisemitism and the growing Arab population as reasons for leaving.[91] One couple who moved to Israel claimed that rising antisemitism by French Muslims and the anti-Israel bias of the French government was making life for Jews increasingly uncomfortable for them.[106] At a welcoming ceremony for French Jews in the summer of 2004, then Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon caused controversy when he advised all French Jews to "move immediately" to Israel and escape what he coined "the wildest anti-semitism" in France.[106][107][108][109] In August 2007, some 2,800 olim were due to arrive in Israel from France, as opposed to the 3,000 initially forecast.[110][better source needed] 1,129 French Jews made aliyah to Israel in 2009 and 1,286 in 2010.[104]

However, in the long term, France is not one of the top countries of Jewish emigration toward Israel.[111] Many French Jews feel a strong attachment to France.[112] In November 2012, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a joint press conference with François Hollande advised the French Jewish community by saying "In my role as Prime Minister of Israel, I always say to Jews, wherever they may be, I say to them: Come to Israel and make Israel your home." alluding to former Israel Prime Minister's Ariel Sharon's similar 2004 advisement towards the French Jewish community to move to Israel.[113] In 2013, 3,120 French Jews immigrated to Israel, marking a 63% increase over the previous year.[114]

During the first few months of 2014, The Jewish Agency of Israel continued to encourage French aliyah through aliyah fairs, Hebrew-language courses, sessions that assist potential olim to find jobs in Israel, and immigrant absorption in Israel.[115] A May 2014 survey revealed that 74 percent of French Jews considered leaving France for Israel where of the 74 percent, 29.9 percent cited anti-Semitism. Another 24.4 cited their desire to "preserve their Judaism," while 12.4 percent said they were attracted by other countries. "Economic considerations" was cited by 7.5 percent of the respondents.[116] By June 2014, it was estimated by the end of 2014 a full 1 percent of the French Jewish community would have made aliyah to Israel, the largest in a single year. Many Jewish leaders stated that emigration is being driven by a combination of factors, including the cultural gravitation towards Israel and France's economic woes, especially for the younger generation drawn by the possibility of other socioeconomic opportunities in the more vibrant Israeli economy. Others point out that in 2014, many dramatic incidents of antisemitism took place, especially during Operation Protective Edge, and that France took an unusual pro-Palestine stance by recognizing the State of Palestine in Parliament and by undertaking to adopt a resolution in the United Nations Security Council which would unilaterally impose an end of the Israel-Arab conflict on Israel.[117][118][119] At the end of 2014, a record 7,000 French Jews are reported to have made Aliyah.[117] Some wealthy French Jewish families are choosing to immigrate to the United States instead, with "less red tape" for business than Israel.[120]

In January 2015, events such as the Charlie Hebdo shooting and Porte de Vincennes hostage crisis created a shock wave of fear across the French Jewish community. As a result of these events, the Jewish Agency planned an aliyah plan for 120,000 French Jews who wish to make aliyah.[121][122] In addition, with Europe's stagnant economy as of early 2015, many affluent French Jewish skilled professionals, business moguls and investors have sought Israel as a start-up haven for international investments, as well as job and new business opportunities.[123] Dov Maimon, a French Jewish émigré who studies migration as a senior fellow at the Jewish People Policy Institute, predicted as many as 250,000 French Jews to make aliyah by the year 2030.[123]

Hours after the 2015 Saint-Quentin-Fallavier attack on a gas factory near Lyon on 26 June 2015, in which the severed head of a local (non-Jewish) businessman was pinned to the gates and an ISIS flag was raised, Immigration and Absorption Minister Ze'ev Elkin strongly urged the French Jewish community to move to Israel and made it a national priority for Israel to welcome the French Jewish community with open arms.[124][125] Immigration from France is on the rise: in the first half of 2015, approximately 5,100 French Jews made aliyah to Israel marking 25% more than in the same period during the previous year.[126]

Following the November 2015 Paris attacks, committed by suspected ISIS affiliates reputedly in retaliation for Opération Chammal, more than 80 percent of French Jews considered making aliyah.[127][128][129] The largest attack on the evening of 13 November killed 90 people, leaving 200 wounded at a rock concert in the Bataclan Theatre in Paris. Although its long time Jewish owners (who regularly set Jewish events there, including some in support of Israel) had sold the theatre shortly before the massacre, speculation arose about an antisemitic motive behind the attack, but this was not a popular theory in the French media. However, to some, this possible antisemitic motive was concealed by the general media, raising questions about the media's motives to do this, an issue reflected in the French Jewish community press.

According to the Jewish Agency, nearly 6500 French Jews had made aliyah as of mid-November 2015 and it was estimated that 8000 French Jews would settle down in Israel by the end of 2015.[130][131][132]

In January 2016, a 35-year-old teacher in Marseille was attacked with a machete by a Kurdish teenager.[133] Some Jewish groups debated recommending that Jews not wear the kippah in public.[134][135] A 73 year old Jewish municipal councillor in Créteil was murdered in his apartment the same month.[136][137]

On 4 April 2017, the horrific murder of a 65-year-old French Jewish woman, Sarah Halimi, in her popular neighborhood home of Belleville in Paris, around the corner from a mosque reputed for its radicalism, and as police standing in the staircase heard the murderer yelling "Allahu akbar" repeatedly for minutes, and did not intervene in spite of the screams and the beating, has raised questions again. As it took several months for the French justice to qualify this murder as an antisemitic act, concern about an institutional covering of antisemitism increased. It was further feared as Roger Pinto was mugged with his family during a burglary at his Livry-Gargan home on 8 September 2017. Pinto soon witnessed that, as for Ilan Halimi's murder, he was told, "You are Jewish so you must have money;" this attack has neither been qualified as an anti-semitic act.[138]

On 23 March 2018, an 85-year-old French Jewish woman and Holocaust survivor, Mireille Knoll, was found dead in her apartment in the east of the French capital, where she lived alone.[139] She had been murdered by two Muslim suspects, one of which she had known since he was a child. The chief rabbi of Paris, Haïm Korsia, wrote on Twitter that he was "horrified" by the killing.

See also edit

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Other references edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "France". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
  • History of the Jews in France at the website of Jewish Virtual Library

Further reading edit

  • Adler, Jacques. "The Jews and Vichy: reflections on French historiography." Historical Journal 44.4 (2001): 1065–1082.
  • Arkin, Kimberly A. Rhinestones, Religion, and the Republic: Fashioning Jewishness in France (Stanford University Press, 2014) online
  • Benbassa, Esther. The Jews of France: A History from Antiquity to the Present (2001) excerpt and text search; online
  • Birnbaum, Pierre, and Jane Todd. The Jews of the Republic: A Political History of State Jews in France from Gambetta to Vichy (1996).
  • Debré, Simon. "The Jews of France." Jewish Quarterly Review 3.3 (1891): 367–435. long scholarly description. online free
  • Doron, Daniella. Jewish Youth and Identity in Postwar France: Rebuilding Family and Nation (Indiana UP, 2015).
  • Graetz, Michael, and Jane Todd. The Jews in Nineteenth-Century France: From the French Revolution to the Alliance Israelite Universelle (1996)
  • Graizbord, David. "Becoming Jewish in Early Modern France: Documents on Jewish Community-Building in Seventeenth-Century Bayonne and Peyrehorade." journal of social history (2006): 147–180.
  • Haus, Jeffrey. "Liberte, Egalite, Utilite: Jewish Education and State in Nineteenth-Century France." Modern Judaism 22.1 (2002): 1–27. online
  • Hyman, Paula E. The Jews of Modern France (1998) excerpt and text search
  • Hyman, Paula. From Dreyfus to Vichy: The Remaking of French Jewry, 1906–1939 (Columbia UP, 1979). online free to borrow
  • Safran, William (May 2004). "Ethnoreligious Politics in France: Jews and Muslims". West European Politics. 27 (3): 423–451. doi:10.1080/0140238042000228086. S2CID 145166232.
  • Schechter, Ronald. Obstinate Hebrews: Representations of Jews in France, 1715–1815 (Univ of California Press, 2003)
  • Schoolcraft, Ralph. "In Lieu of Memory: Contemporary Jewish Writing in France," Shofar (2008) 26#4 online
  • Taitz, Emily. The Jews of Medieval France: The Community of Champagne (1994) online
  • Weinberg, Henry H. The myth of the Jew in France, 1967–1982 (Mosaic Press 1987)

Antisemitism edit

  • Anderson, Thomas P. "Edouard Drumont and the Origins of Modern Anti-Semitism." Catholic Historical Review (1967): 28–42. in JSTOR
  • Bell, Dorian. Globalizing Race: Antisemitism and Empire in French and European Culture (Northwestern UP, 2018). online
  • Birnbaum, Pierre; Kochan, Miriam. Anti-Semitism in France: A Political History from Léon Blum to the Present (1992) 317p.
  • Busi, Frederick. The pope of antisemitism: the career and legacy of Edouard-Adolphe Drumont (University Press of America, 1986)
  • Byrnes, Robert F. Antisemitism in modern France (1969).
  • Byrnes, R. F. "Edouard Drumont and La France Juive." Jewish Social Studies (1948): 165–184. in JSTOR
  • Cahm, Eric. The Dreyfus affair in French society and politics (Routledge, 2014).
  • Caron, Vicki. "The'Jewish Question'from Dreyfus to Vichy." in Martin Alexander, ed., French History since Napoleon (1999): 172–202, a guide to the historiography.
  • Caron, Vicki. "The Antisemitic revival in France in the 1930s: the socioeconomic dimension reconsidered." Journal of Modern History 70.1 (1998): 24–73. online
  • Cole, Joshua. "Constantine before the riots of August 1934: civil status, anti-Semitism, and the politics of assimilation in interwar French Algeria." Journal of North African Studies 17.5 (2012): 839–861.
  • Fitch, Nancy. "Mass Culture, Mass Parliamentary Politics, and Modern Anti-Semitism: The Dreyfus Affair in Rural France." American Historical Review 97#1 (1992): 55–95. online
  • Goldberg, Chad Alan. "The Jews, the Revolution, and the Old Regime in French Anti-Semitism and Durkheim's Sociology." Sociological Theory 29.4 (2011): 248–271.
  • Isser, Natalie. Antisemitism during the French Second Empire (1991) online
  • Judaken, Jonathan. Jean-Paul Sartre and the Jewish question: anti-antisemitism and the politics of the French intellectual (U of Nebraska Press, 2006)
  • Kalman, Samuel. The extreme right in interwar France: the Faisceau and the Croix de Feu (Routledge, 2016).
  • Kennedy, Sean. Reconciling France Against Democracy: The Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Fran ais, 1927–1945 (McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2014).
  • Lindemann, Albert S. The Jew Accused: Three Anti-Semitic Affairs (Dreyfus, Beilis, Frank) 1894–1915 (1991)
  • Mandel, Maud S. Muslims and Jews in France: History of a Conflict (Princeton University Press, 2014)
  • Marrus, Michael R. and Robert 0. Paxton. Vichy France and the Jews (1981) online
  • Read, Piers Paul. The Dreyfus Affair (2012)
  • Shields, James G. "Antisemitism in France: The spectre of Vichy." Patterns of Prejudice 24#2–4 (1990): 5–17.
  • Zuccotti, Susan. The Holocaust, the French, and the Jews (1999)

External links edit

history, jews, france, history, jews, france, deals, with, jews, jewish, communities, france, since, least, early, middle, ages, france, centre, jewish, learning, middle, ages, persecution, increased, over, time, including, multiple, expulsions, returns, durin. The history of the Jews in France deals with Jews and Jewish communities in France since at least the Early Middle Ages France was a centre of Jewish learning in the Middle Ages but persecution increased over time including multiple expulsions and returns During the French Revolution in the late 18th century on the other hand France was the first European country to emancipate its Jewish population Antisemitism still occurred in cycles and reached a high in the 1890s as shown during the Dreyfus affair and in the 1940s under Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime French JewsJuifs francais French יהדות צרפת Hebrew פ רא נצויזישע יידן Yiddish Total populationCore Jewish population 480 000 550 000 1 2 3 4 5 Enlarged Jewish population includes non Jewish relatives of Jews 600 000 6 7 Regions with significant populationsLanguagesTraditional Jewish languagesHebrew Yiddish Ladino and other Jewish languages most endangered and some now extinct Liturgical languagesHebrew and AramaicPredominant spoken languagesFrench Hebrew Judeo Arabic Yiddish and RussianReligionJudaism or no religionRelated ethnic groupsSephardi Jews Mizrahi Jews Ashkenazi Jews other ethnic divisionsBefore 1919 most French Jews lived in Paris with many being very proud to be fully assimilated into French culture and they comprised an upscale subgroup A more traditional Judaism was based in Alsace Lorraine which was taken by Germany in 1871 and recovered by France in 1918 following World War I In addition numerous Jewish refugees and immigrants came from Russia and eastern and central Europe in the early 20th century changing the character of French Judaism in the 1920s and 1930s These new arrivals were much less interested in assimilation into French culture Some supported such new causes as Zionism the Popular Front and communism the latter two being popular among the French political left During World War II the Vichy government collaborated with Nazi occupiers to deport a large number of both French Jews and foreign Jewish refugees to concentration camps 8 By the war s end 25 of the Jewish population of France had been murdered in the Holocaust though this was a lower proportion than in most other countries under Nazi occupation 9 10 In the 21st century France has the largest Jewish population in Europe and the third largest Jewish population in the world after Israel and the United States The Jewish community in France is estimated to number 480 000 550 000 depending in part on the definition being used French Jewish communities are concentrated in the metropolitan areas of Paris which has the largest Jewish population 277 000 11 Marseille with a population of 70 000 Lyon Nice Strasbourg and Toulouse 12 The majority of French Jews in the 21st century are Sephardi and Mizrahi North African Jews many of whom or their parents emigrated from former French colonies of North Africa after those countries gained independence in the 1950s and 1960s They span a range of religious affiliations from the ultra Orthodox Haredi communities to the large segment of Jews who are entirely secular and who often marry outside the Jewish community 13 Approximately 200 000 French Jews live in Israel Since 2010 or so more have been making aliyah in response to rising antisemitism in France 14 Contents 1 Roman and Merovingian periods 2 Carolingian period 3 Capetians 3 1 Persecutions 987 1137 3 1 1 Franco Jewish literature 3 1 2 Rashi 3 2 The Crusades 3 3 Expulsions and Returns 3 3 1 Expulsion from France 1182 3 3 2 Recalled by Philip Augustus 1198 3 3 3 Under Louis VIII 3 3 4 Under Louis IX 3 3 5 The Medieval Inquisition 3 3 6 The Great Exile of 1306 3 3 7 Return of the Jews to France 1315 3 3 8 Expulsion of 1394 4 Provence 5 Early modern period 5 1 17th century 5 2 Beginnings of emancipation 6 The Revolution and Napoleon 6 1 During the Reign of Terror 6 2 Attitude of Napoleon 7 After the Restoration 7 1 State recognition 7 2 Full equality 7 3 Assimilation 7 4 Antisemitism 8 Dreyfus affair 9 20th century 9 1 World War II and the Holocaust 9 2 Post World War II Anti discriminatory laws and migration 9 2 1 Jewish exodus from France s colonies in North Africa 9 2 2 France Israel relations 10 21st century 10 1 Antisemitism and Jewish emigration 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Other references 13 Further reading 13 1 Antisemitism 14 External linksRoman and Merovingian periods editAccording to the Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 The first settlements of Jews in Europe are obscure From 163 BCE there is evidence of Jews in Rome In the year 6 C E there were Jews at Vienne and Gallia Celtica in the year 39 at Lugdunum i e Lyon 15 An early account praised Hilary of Poitiers died 366 for having fled from the Jewish society The emperors Theodosius II and Valentinian III sent a decree to Amatius prefect of Gaul 9 July 425 that prohibited Jews and pagans from practising law or holding public offices militandi This was to prevent Christians from being subject to them and possibly incited to change their faith At the funeral of Hilary Bishop of Arles in 449 Jews and Christians mingled in crowds and wept the former were said to have sung psalms in Hebrew 15 In the sixth century Jews were documented in Marseilles Arles Uzes Narbonne Clermont Ferrand Orleans Paris and Bordeaux These cities had generally been centers of ancient Roman administration and were located on the great commercial routes The Jews built synagogues in these cities In harmony with the Theodosian code and according to an edict of 331 by the emperor Constantine the Jews were organized for religious purposes as they were in the Roman empire They appear to have had priests rabbis or ḥazzanim archisynagogues patersynagogues and other synagogue officials The Jews worked principally as merchants as they were prohibited from owning land they also served as tax collectors sailors and physicians 15 nbsp Funerary stele from Narbonne at the 7th century beginning of the reign of Egica The text begins with the Latin phrase requiescunt in pace and includes the Hebrew phrase שלום על שראל peace be upon Israel In various sources it is described as a Jewish inscription dated with the local calendar the regnal year of Egica rather than the Hebrew calendar 16 an inscription relating to the Jews of France 15 or as a Christian inscription 17 They probably remained under Roman law until the triumph of Christianity with the status established by Caracalla on a footing of equality with their fellow citizens Their association with fellow citizens was generally amicable even after the establishment of Christianity in Gaul The Christian clergy participated in some Jewish feasts intermarriage between Jews and Christians sometimes occurred and the Jews made proselytes Worried about Christians adopting Jewish religious customs the third Council of Orleans 539 warned the faithful against Jewish superstitions and ordered them to abstain from traveling on Sunday and from adorning their persons or dwellings on that day In the 6th century a Jewish community thrived in Paris 18 They built a synagogue on the Ile de la Cite but it was later torn down by Christians who erected a church on the site 18 In 629 King Dagobert proposed the expulsion of all Jews who would not accept Christianity No mention of the Jews was found from his reign to that of Pepin the Short The Jews on the other hand continued to dwell and to prosper in what is now Southern France then known as Septimania and a dependency of the Visigothic kings of Spain From this epoch 689 dates the earliest known inscription relating to the Jews of France the Funerary Stele of Justus Matrona and Dulciorella of Narbonne written in Latin and Hebrew 15 16 17 The Jews of Narbonne chiefly merchants were popular among the people who often rebelled against the Visigothic kings 19 Carolingian period editThe presence of Jews in France under Charlemagne is documented with their position being regulated by law Exchanges with the Orient strongly declined with the presence of Arabs in the Mediterranean sea Trading and importing of oriental products such as gold silk black pepper or papyrus almost disappeared under the Carolingians The Radhanite Jewish traders were nearly the only group to maintain trade between the Occident and the Orient 20 Charlemagne fixed a formula for the Jewish oath to the state He allowed Jews to enter into lawsuits with Christians They were not allowed to require Christians to work on Sundays Jews were not allowed to trade in currency wine or grain Legally Jews belonged to the emperor and could be tried only by him But the numerous provincial councils which met during Charlemagne s reign were not concerned with the Jewish communities Louis the Pious ruled 814 840 faithful to the principles of his father Charlemagne granted strict protection to Jews whom he respected as merchants Like his father Louis believed that the Jewish question could be solved with the gradual conversion of Jews according to medievalist scholar J M Wallace Hadrill some people believed this tolerance threatened the Christian unity of the Empire which led to the strengthening of the Bishops at the expense of the Emperor Saint Agobard of Lyon 779 841 had many run ins with the Jews of France He wrote about how rich and powerful they were becoming Scholars such as Jeremy Cohen 21 suggest that Saint Agobard s belief in Jewish power contributed to his involvement in violent revolutions attempting to dethrone Louis the Pious in the early 830s 22 Lothar and Agobard s entreaties to Pope Gregory IV gained them papal support for the overthrow of Emperor Louis Upon Louis the Pious return to power in 834 he deposed Saint Agobard from his see to the consternation of Rome There were unsubstantiated rumors in this period that Louis second wife Judith was a converted Jew as she would not accept the ordinatio for their first child Jews were engaged in export trade particularly traveling to Palestine under Charlemagne When the Normans disembarked on the coast of Narbonnese Gaul they were taken for Jewish merchants One authority said the Jewish traders boasted about buying whatever they pleased from bishops and abbots Isaac the Jew who was sent by Charlemagne in 797 with two ambassadors to Harun al Rashid the fifth Abbasid Caliph was probably one of these merchants He was said to have asked the Baghdad caliph for a rabbi to instruct the Jews whom he had allowed to settle at Narbonne see History of the Jews in Babylonia Capetians editPersecutions 987 1137 edit nbsp Costumes of medieval French Jews as reimagined in a 1906 encyclopediaThere were widespread persecutions of Jews in France beginning in 1007 or 1009 23 These persecutions instigated by Robert II 972 1031 King of France 987 1031 called the Pious are described in a Hebrew pamphlet 24 25 which also states that the King of France conspired with his vassals to destroy all the Jews on their lands who would not accept baptism and many were put to death or killed themselves Robert is credited with advocating forced conversions of local Jewry as well as mob violence against Jews who refused 26 Among the dead was the learned Rabbi Senior Robert the Pious is well known for his lack of religious tolerance and for the hatred which he bore toward heretics it was Robert who reinstated the Roman imperial custom of burning heretics at the stake 27 In Normandy under Richard II Duke of Normandy Rouen Jewry suffered from persecutions that were so terrible that many women in order to escape the fury of the mob jumped into the river and drowned A notable of the town Jacob b Jekuthiel a Talmudic scholar sought to intercede with Pope John XVIII to stop the persecution in Lorraine 1007 28 Jacob undertook the journey to Rome but was imprisoned with his wife and four sons by Duke Richard and escaped death only by allegedly miraculous means 29 He left his eldest son Judah as a hostage with Richard while he and his wife and three remaining sons went to Rome He bribed the pope with seven gold marks and two hundred pounds who thereupon sent a special envoy to King Robert ordering him to stop the persecutions 25 30 If Adhemar of Chabannes who wrote in 1030 is to be believed he had a reputation as a fabricator the anti Jewish feelings arose in 1010 after Western Jews addressed a letter to their Eastern coreligionists warning them of a military movement against the Saracens According to Ademar Christians urged by Pope Sergius IV 31 were shocked by the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem by the Muslims in 1009 After the destruction European reaction to the rumor of the letter was of shock and dismay Cluniac monk Rodulfus Glaber blamed the Jews for the destruction In that year Alduin Bishop of Limoges bishop 990 1012 offered the Jews of his diocese the choice between baptism and exile For a month theologians held disputations with the Jews but without much success for only three or four of Jews abjured their faith others killed themselves and the rest either fled or were expelled from Limoges 32 33 Similar expulsions took place in other French towns 33 By 1030 Rodulfus Glaber knew more concerning this story 34 According to his 1030 explanation Jews of Orleans had sent to the East through a beggar a letter that provoked the order for the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher Glaber adds that on the discovery of the crime the expulsion of the Jews was everywhere decreed Some were driven out of the cities others were put to death while some killed themselves only a few remained in the Roman world Count Paul Riant 1836 1888 says that this whole story of the relations between the Jews and the Mohammedans is only one of those popular legends with which the chronicles of the time abound 35 Another violent commotion arose at about 1065 At this date Pope Alexander II wrote to Beranger Viscount of Narbonne and to Guifred bishop of the city praising them for having prevented the massacre of the Jews in their district and reminding them that God does not approve of the shedding of blood In 1065 also Alexander admonished Landulf VI of Benevento that the conversion of Jews is not to be obtained by force 36 Also in the same year Alexander called for a crusade against the Moors in Spain 37 Franco Jewish literature edit During this period which continued until the First Crusade Jewish culture flourished in the South and North of France The initial interest included poetry which was at times purely liturgical but which more often was a simple scholastic exercise without aspiration destined rather to amuse and instruct than to move Following this came Biblical exegesis the simple interpretation of the text with neither daring nor depth reflecting a complete faith in traditional interpretation and based by preference on the Midrashim despite their fantastic character Finally and above all their attention was occupied with the Talmud and its commentaries The text of this work together with that of the writings of the Geonim particularly their responsa was first revised and copied then these writings were treated as a corpus juris and were commented upon and studied both as a pious exercise in dialectics and from the practical point of view While most of the focus of Jewish authors was religious they did discuss other subjects like the papal presence in their communities 38 Rashi edit Main article Rashi nbsp Woodcut of Rashi 1539 The great Jewish figure who dominated the second half of the 11th century as well as the whole rabbinical history of France was Rashi Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki of Troyes 1040 1105 He personified the genius of northern French Judaism its devoted attachment to tradition its untroubled faith its piety ardent but free from mysticism His works are distinguished by their clarity directness and are written in a simple concise unaffected style suited to his subject 39 His commentary on the Talmud which was the product of colossal labor and which eclipsed the similar works of all his predecessors by its clarity and soundness made the study of that vast compilation easy and soon became its indispensable complement Every edition of the Talmud that was ever published has this commentary printed on the same page of the Talmud itself His commentary on the Bible particularly on the Pentateuch a sort of repertory of the Midrash served for edification but also advanced the taste for seeking the plain and true meaning of the bible The school which he founded at Troyes his birthplace after having followed the teachings of those of Worms and Mainz immediately became famous Around his chair were gathered Simḥah b Samuel R Shamuel b Meir Rashbam and Shemaya his grandsons likewise Shemaria Judah b Nathan and Isaac Levi b Asher all of whom continued his work The school s Talmudic commentaries and interpretations are the basis and starting point for the Ashkenazic tradition of how to interpret and understand the Talmud s explanation of Biblical laws In many cases these interpretations differ substantially from those of the Sephardim which results in differences between how Ashkenazim and Sephardim hold what constitutes the practical application of the law In his Biblical commentaries he availed himself of the works of his contemporaries Among them must be cited Moses ha Darshan chief of the school of Narbonne who was perhaps the founder of exegetical studies in France and Menachem b Ḥelbo Thus the 11th century was a period of fruitful activity in literature Thenceforth French Judaism became one of the poles within Judaism 39 The Crusades edit Further information Crusades The Jews of France suffered during the First Crusade 1096 40 when the crusaders are stated for example to have shut up the Jews of Rouen in a church and to have murdered them without distinction of age or sex sparing only those who accepted baptism 41 According to a Hebrew document the Jews throughout France were at that time in great fear and wrote to their brothers in the Rhine countries making known to them their terror and asking them to fast and pray 41 In the Rhineland thousands of Jews were killed by the crusaders see German Crusade 1096 42 Jews did not have an active role in the Crusades like Muslims and Christians did Instead Jews feared for their lives as expulsions and anti Jewish sentiment was on the rise in Western Europe In 1256 around 3000 Jews were murdered in the French cities of Bretagne Anjou and Poitou The violence and hatred spread by the pope encouraging violence led to the persecution of Jews in France Many Jews fled to Narbonne a city on the southwest coast of the country which had long been a safe haven and center for Jewish life The southern coast was more tolerant of Jewish life than the northern half of the country 43 Expulsions and Returns edit Expulsion from France 1182 edit nbsp A miniature from Grandes Chroniques de France depicting the expulsionThe First Crusade led to nearly a century of accusations blood libel against the Jews many of whom were burned or attacked in France Immediately after the coronation of Philip Augustus on 14 March 1181 the King ordered the Jews arrested on a Saturday in all their synagogues and despoiled of their money and their investments In the following April 1182 he published an edict of expulsion but according to the Jews a delay of three months for the sale of their personal property Immovable property however such as houses fields vines barns and wine presses he confiscated The Jews attempted to win over the nobles to their side but in vain In July they were compelled to leave the royal domains of France and not the whole kingdom their synagogues were converted into churches These successive measures were simply expedients to fill the royal coffers The goods confiscated by the king were at once converted into cash During the century which terminated so disastrously for the Jews their condition was not altogether bad especially if compared with that of their brethren in Germany Thus may be explained the remarkable intellectual activity which existed among them the attraction that it exercised over the Jews of other countries and the numerous works produced in those days The impulse given by Rashi to study did not cease with his death his successors the members of his family first among them continued his work Research moved within the same limits as in the preceding century and dealt mainly with the Talmud rabbinical jurisprudence and Biblical exegesis 39 Recalled by Philip Augustus 1198 edit This century which opened with the return of the Jews to France proper then reduced almost to the Ile de France closed with their complete exile from the country in a larger sense In July 1198 Philip Augustus contrary to the general expectation and despite his own edict recalled the Jews to Paris and made the churches of God suffer great persecutions Rigord The king adopted this measure from no good will toward the Jews for he had shown his true sentiments a short time before in the Bray affair But since then he had learned that the Jews could be an excellent source of income from a fiscal point of view especially as money lenders Not only did he recall them to his estates but he gave state sanction by his ordinances to their operations in banking and pawnbroking He placed their business under control determined the legal rate of interest and obliged them to have seals affixed to all their deeds Naturally this trade was taxed and the affixing of the royal seal was paid for by the Jews Henceforward there was in the treasury a special account called Produit des Juifs and the receipts from this source increased continually At the same time it was in the interest of the treasury to secure possession of the Jews considered a fiscal resource The Jews were therefore made serfs of the king in the royal domain just at a time when the charters becoming wider and wider tended to bring about the disappearance of serfdom In certain respects their position became even harder than that of serfs for the latter could in certain cases appeal to custom and were often protected by the Church but there was no custom to which the Jews might appeal and the Church laid them under its ban The kings and the lords said my Jews just as they said my lands and they disposed in like manner of the one and of the other The lords imitated the king they endeavored to have the Jews considered an inalienable dependence of their fiefs and to establish the usage that if a Jew domiciled in one barony passed into another the lord of his former domicil should have the right to seize his possessions This agreement was made in 1198 between the king and the Count of Champagne in a treaty the terms of which provided that neither should retain in his domains the Jews of the other without the latter s consent and furthermore that the Jews should not make loans or receive pledges without the express permission of the king and the count Other lords made similar conventions with the king Thenceforth they too had a revenue known as the Produit des Juifs comprising the taille or annual quit rent the legal fees for the writs necessitated by the Jews law trials and the seal duty A thoroughly characteristic feature of this fiscal policy is that the bishops according to the agreement of 1204 regulating the spheres of ecclesiastical and seigniorial jurisdiction continued to prohibit the clergy from excommunicating those who sold goods to the Jews or who bought from them 44 The practice of retention treaties spread throughout France after 1198 Lords intending to impose a heavy tax captio literally capture on Jews living in their lordship dominium signed treaties with their neighbours whereby the latter refused to permit the former s Jews entry into his domains thus retaining them for the lord to tax This practice arose in response to the common flight of Jews in the face of a captio to a different dominium where they purchased the right to settle unmolested by gifts bribes to their new lord In May 1210 the crown negotiated a series of treaties with the neighbours of the royal demesne and successfully captured its Jews with a large tax levy From 1223 on however the Count Palatine of Champagne refused to sign any such treaties and in that year even refused to affirm the crown s asserted right to force non retention policies on its barons Such treaties became obsolete after Louis IX s ordinance of Melun 1230 when it became illegal for a Jew to migrate between lordships This ordinance the first piece of public legislation in France since Carolingian times also declared it treason to refuse non retention 45 Under Louis VIII edit nbsp A gathering of thirteenth century French Rabbis from the Bibliotheque Nationale Paris Louis VIII of France 1223 26 in his Etablissement sur les Juifs of 1223 while more inspired with the doctrines of the Church than his father Philip Augustus knew also how to look after the interests of his treasury Although he declared that from 8 November 1223 the interest on Jews debts should no longer hold good he at the same time ordered that the capital should be repaid to the Jews in three years and that the debts due the Jews should be inscribed and placed under the control of their lords The lords then collected the debts for the Jews doubtless receiving a commission Louis furthermore ordered that the special seal for Jewish deeds should be abolished and replaced by the ordinary one Twenty six barons accepted Louis VIII s new measures but Theobald IV 1201 53 the powerful Count of Champagne did not since he had an agreement with the Jews that guaranteed their safety in return for extra income through taxation Champagne s capital at Troyes was where Rashi had lived a century before and Champagne continued to have a prosperous Jewish population Theobald IV would become a major opposition force to Capetian dominance and his hostility was manifest during the reign of Louis VIII For example during the siege of Avignon he performed only the minimum service of 40 days and left for home amid charges of treachery nbsp A group of medieval Jewish moneylenders conducting business Under Louis IX edit In spite of all these restrictions designed to restrain if not to suppress moneylending Louis IX of France 1226 70 also known as Saint Louis with his ardent piety and his submission to the Catholic Church unreservedly condemned loans at interest He was less amenable than Philip Augustus to fiscal considerations Despite former conventions in an assembly held at Melun in December 1230 he compelled several lords to sign an agreement not to authorize Jews to make any loan No one in the whole Kingdom of France was allowed to detain a Jew belonging to another and each lord might recover a Jew who belonged to him just as he might his own serf tanquam proprium servum wherever he might find him and however long a period had elapsed since the Jew had settled elsewhere At the same time the ordinance of 1223 was enacted afresh which only proves that it had not been carried into effect Both king and lords were forbidden to borrow from Jews In 1234 Louis freed his subjects from a third of their registered debts to Jews including those who had already paid their debts but debtors had to pay the remaining two thirds within a specified time It was also forbidden to imprison Christians or to sell their real estate to recover debts owed to Jews The king wished in this way to strike a deadly blow at usury In 1243 Louis ordered at the urging of Pope Gregory IX the burning in Paris of some 12 000 manuscript copies of the Talmud and other Jewish works In order to finance his first Crusade Louis ordered the expulsion of all Jews engaged in usury and the confiscation of their property for use in his crusade but the order for the expulsion was only partly enforced if at all Louis left for the Seventh Crusade in 1248 However he did not cancel the debts owed by Christians Later Louis became conscience stricken and overcome by scruples he feared lest the treasury by retaining some part of the interest paid by the borrowers might be enriched with the product of usury As a result one third of the debts was forgiven but the other two thirds were to be remitted to the royal treasury In 1251 while Louis was in captivity on the Crusade a popular movement rose up with the intention of traveling to the east to rescue him although they never made it out of northern France Jews were subject to their attacks as they wandered throughout the country see Shepherds Crusade In 1257 or 1258 Ordonnances i 85 wishing as he says to provide for his safety of soul and peace of conscience Louis issued a mandate for the restitution in his name of the amount of usurious interest which had been collected on the confiscated property the restitution to be made either to those who had paid it or to their heirs Later after having discussed the subject with his son in law King Theobald II of Navarre and Count of Champagne Louis decided on 13 September 1268 to arrest Jews and seize their property But an order which followed close upon this last 1269 shows that on this occasion also Louis reconsidered the matter Nevertheless at the request of Paul Christian Pablo Christiani he compelled the Jews under penalty of a fine to wear at all times the rouelle or badge decreed by the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215 This consisted of a piece of red felt or cloth cut in the form of a wheel four fingers in circumference which had to be attached to the outer garment at the chest and back The Medieval Inquisition edit nbsp Miniature from the North French Hebrew Miscellany of Noah s Ark landing on the Mountains of Ararat fol 521a c 1278 98 The Inquisition which had been instituted in order to suppress Catharism finally occupied itself with the Jews of Southern France who converted to Christianity The popes complained that not only were baptized Jews returning to their former faith but that Christians also were being converted to Judaism In March 1273 Pope Gregory X formulated the following rules relapsed Jews as well as Christians who abjured their faith in favor of the Jewish superstition were to be treated by the Inquisitors as heretics The instigators of such apostasies as those who received or defended the guilty ones were to be punished in the same way as the delinquents In accordance with these rules the Jews of Toulouse who had buried a Christian convert in their cemetery were brought before the Inquisition in 1278 for trial with their rabbi Isaac Males being condemned to the stake Philip IV at first ordered his seneschals not to imprison any Jews at the instance of the Inquisitors but in 1299 he rescinded this order The Great Exile of 1306 editToward the middle of 1306 the treasury was nearly empty and the king as he was about to do the following year in the case of the Templars condemned the Jews to banishment and took forcible possession of their property real and personal Their houses lands and movable goods were sold at auction and for the king were reserved any treasures found buried in the dwellings that had belonged to the Jews That Philip the Fair intended merely to fill the gap in his treasury and was not at all concerned about the well being of his subjects is shown by the fact that he put himself in the place of the Jewish moneylenders and exacted from their Christian debtors the payment of their debts which they themselves had to declare Furthermore three months before the sale of the property of the Jews the king took measures to ensure that this event should be coincident with the prohibition of clipped money in order that those who purchased the goods should have to pay in undebased coin Finally fearing that the Jews might have hidden some of their treasures he declared that one fifth of any amount found should be paid to the discoverer It was on 22 July the day after Tisha B Av a Jewish fast day that the Jews were arrested In prison they received notice that they had been sentenced to exile that abandoning their goods and debts and taking only the clothes which they had on their backs and the sum of 12 sous tournois each they would have to quit the kingdom within one month Speaking of this exile a French historian has said In striking at the Jews Philip the Fair at the same time dried up one of the most fruitful sources of the financial commercial and industrial prosperity of his kingdom 46 To a large extent the history of the Jews of France ceased The span of control of the King of France had increased considerably in extent Outside the Ile de France it now comprised Champagne the Vermandois Normandy Perche Maine Anjou Touraine Poitou the Marche Lyonnais Auvergne and Languedoc reaching from the Rhone to the Pyrenees The exiles could not take refuge anywhere except in Lorraine the county of Burgundy Savoy Dauphine Roussillon and a part of Provence all regions located in Empire It is not possible to estimate the number of fugitives that given by Gratz 100 000 has no foundation in fact 47 Return of the Jews to France 1315 edit nbsp A bronze Hanukkah lamp dating from before the expulsion of 1394 Museum of Jewish Art and HistoryNine years had hardly passed since the expulsion of 1306 when Louis X of France 1314 16 recalled the Jews In an edict dated 28 July 1315 he permitted them to return for a period of twelve years authorizing them to establish themselves in the cities in which they had lived before their banishment He issued this edict in answer to the demands of the people Geoffrey of Paris the popular poet of the time says in fact that the Jews were gentle in comparison with the Christians who had taken their place and who had flayed their debtors alive if the Jews had remained the country would have been happier for there were no longer any moneylenders at all 48 The king probably had the interests of his treasury also in view The profits of the former confiscations had gone into the treasury and by recalling the Jews for only twelve years he would have an opportunity for ransoming them at the end of this period It appears that they gave the sum of 122 500 livres for the privilege of returning It is also probable as Adolphe Vuitry states that a large number of the debts owing to the Jews had not been recovered and that the holders of the notes had preserved them the decree of return specified that two thirds of the old debts recovered by the Jews should go into the treasury The conditions under which they were allowed to settle in the land are set forth in a number of articles some of the guaranties which were accorded the Jews had probably been demanded by them and been paid for 49 They were to live by the work of their hands or to sell merchandise of good quality they were to wear the circular badge and not discuss religion with laymen They were not to be molested either with regard to the chattels they had carried away at the time of their banishment or with regard to the loans which they had made since then or in general with regard to anything which had happened in the past Their synagogues and their cemeteries were to be restored to them on condition that they would refund their value or if these could not be restored the king would give them the necessary sites at a reasonable price The books of the Law that had not yet been returned to them were also to be restored with the exception of the Talmud After the period of twelve years granted to them the king might not expel the Jews again without giving them a year s time in which to dispose of their property and carry away their goods They were not to lend on usury and no one was to be forced by the king or his officers to repay to them usurious loans If they engaged in pawnbroking they were not to take more than two deniers in the pound a week they were to lend only on pledges Two men with the title auditors of the Jews were entrusted with the execution of this ordinance and were to take cognizance of all claims that might arise in connection with goods belonging to the Jews that had been sold before the expulsion for less than half of what was regarded as a fair price The king finally declared that he took the Jews under his special protection and that he desired to have their persons and property protected from all violence injury and oppression Expulsion of 1394 edit On 17 September 1394 Charles VI suddenly published an ordinance in which he declared in substance that for a long time he had been taking note of the many complaints provoked by the excesses and misdemeanors which the Jews committed against Christians and that the prosecutors having made several investigations had discovered many violations by the Jews of the agreement they had made with him Therefore he decreed as an irrevocable law and statute that thenceforth no Jew should dwell in his domains Ordonnances vii 675 According to the Religieux de St Denis the king signed this decree at the insistence of the queen Chron de Charles VI ii 119 50 The decree was not immediately enforced a respite being granted to the Jews in order that they might sell their property and pay their debts Those indebted to them were enjoined to redeem their obligations within a set time otherwise their pledges held in pawns were to be sold by the Jews The provost was to escort the Jews to the frontier of the kingdom Subsequently the king released the Christians from their debts 51 Provence editMain article History of the Jews in Arles Archaeological evidence has been discovered of a Jewish presence in Provence since at least the 1st century The earliest documentary evidence for the presence of Jews dates from the middle of the 5th century in Arles The Jewish presence reached a peak in 1348 when it probably numbered about 15 000 52 Provence was not incorporated into France until 1481 and the expulsion edict of 1394 did not apply there The privileges of the Jews of Provence were confirmed in 1482 However from 1484 anti Jewish disturbances broke out with looting and violence perpetrated by laborers from outside the region hired for the harvest season In some places Jews were protected by the town officials and they were declared to be under royal protection However a voluntary exodus began and was accelerated when similar disorders were repeated in 1485 52 According to Isidore Loeb in a special study of the subject in the Revue des Etudes Juives xiv 162 183 about 3 000 Jews came to Provence after the Alhambra Decree expelled Jews from Spain in 1492 From 1484 one town after another had called for expulsion but the calls were rejected by Charles VIII However Louis XII in one of his first acts as king in 1498 issued a general expulsion order for the Jews of Provence Though not enforced at the time the order was renewed in 1500 and again in 1501 On this occasion it was definitively implemented The Jews of Provence were given the option of conversion to Christianity and a number chose that option However after a short while if only to compensate partially for the loss of revenues caused by the departure of the Jews the king imposed a special tax referred to as the tax of the neophytes These converts and their descendants soon became the objects of social discrimination and slander 52 During the second half of the 17th century a number of Jews attempted to reestablish themselves in Provence Before the French Revolution abolished the administrative entity of Provence the first community outside the southwest Alsace Lorraine and Comtat Venaissin was re formed in Marseilles 52 Early modern period edit17th century edit nbsp Old Jewish Quarter of TroyesAt the beginning of the 17th century Jews began again to re enter France This resulted in a new edict of 23 April 1615 53 which forbade Christians under the penalty of death and confiscation to shelter Jews or to converse with them Alsace was home to a significant number of Jews In annexing the region in 1648 the French government was at first inclined toward the banishment of Jews living in those provinces but thought better of it in view of the benefit he could derive from them On 25 September 1675 Louis XIV granted these Jews letters patent taking them under his special protection This however did not prevent them from being subjected to every kind of extortion and their position remained the same as it had been under the Austrian government In 1683 Louis XIV expelled Jews from the newly acquired colony of Martinique citation needed The Regency was no less severe clarification needed citation needed Beginnings of emancipation edit In the course of the 18th century the attitude of the authorities toward Jews became more tolerant and corrected previous legislation The authorities often overlooked infractions of the edict of banishment a colony of Portuguese and German Jews was tolerated in Paris The voices of enlightened Christians who demanded justice for the proscribed people began to be heard By the 1780s there were about 40 000 to 50 000 Jews in France chiefly centered in Bordeaux Metz and a few other cities They had very limited rights and opportunities apart from the money lending business but their status was not illegal 54 An Alsatian Jew named Cerfbeer who had rendered great service to the French government as purveyor to the army was the representantive of the Jews before Louis XVI The humane minister Malesherbes summoned a commission of Jewish notables to make suggestions for the amelioration of the condition of their coreligionists The direct result of the efforts of these men was the abolition in 1785 of the degrading poll tax and the permission to settle in all parts of France Shortly afterward the Jewish question was raised by two men of genius who subsequently became prominent in the French Revolution Count Mirabeau and the Abbe Gregoire the former of whom while on a diplomatic mission in Prussia had made the acquaintance of Moses Mendelssohn and his school see Haskalah who were then working toward the intellectual emancipation of the Jews In a pamphlet Sur Moses Mendelssohn sur la Reforme Politique des Juifs London 1787 Mirabeau refuted the arguments of the German antisemites like Michaelis and claimed for the Jews the full rights of citizenship This pamphlet naturally provoked many writings for and against the Jews and the French public became interested in the question On the proposition of Roederer the Royal Society of Science and Arts of Metz offered a prize for the best essay in answer to the question What are the best means to make the Jews happier and more useful in France Nine essays of which only two were unfavorable to the Jews were submitted to the judgment of the learned assembly Of the challenge there were three winners Abbe Gregoire Claude Antoine Thiery and Zalkind Hourwitz The Revolution and Napoleon edit nbsp Loi relative aux Juifs the 1791 decree giving the Jews full citizenship Museum of Jewish Art and HistoryThe Sephardi Jews in Bordeaux and Bayonne who were willing to trade in their communal rights in exchange for full citizenship participated in 1789 in the election of the Estates General but those in Alsace Lorraine and in Paris many of them Ashkenazi reluctant to yield to the state their intra communal privileges were denied this right Herz Cerfbeer a French Jewish financier then asked to Jacques Necker and obtained the right for Jews from eastern France to elect their own delegates 55 Among them were the son of Cerfbeer Theodore and Joseph David Sinzheim The Cahier written by the Jewish community from eastern France asked for the end of the discriminatory status and taxes targeting Jews The fall of the Bastille was the signal for disorders everywhere in France In certain districts of Alsace the peasants attacked the dwellings of the Jews who took refuge in Basel A gloomy picture of the outrages upon them was sketched before the National Assembly 3 August by the abbe Henri Gregoire who demanded their complete emancipation The National Assembly shared the indignation of the prelate but left the question of emancipation undecided it was intimidated by the deputies of Alsace especially by Jean Francois Rewbell 55 On 22 December 1789 the Jewish question came again before the Assembly in debating the issue of admitting to public service all citizens without distinction of creed Mirabeau the abbe Gregoire Robespierre Duport Barnave and the comte de Clermont Tonnerre exerted all the power of their eloquence to bring about the desired emancipation but the repeated disturbances in Alsace and the strong opposition of the deputies of that province and of the clericals like La Fare Bishop of Nancy the abbe Maury and others caused the decision to be again postponed Only the Portuguese and the Avignonese Jews who had hitherto enjoyed all civil rights as naturalized Frenchmen were declared full citizens by a majority of 150 on 28 January 1790 This partial victory infused new hope into the Jews of the German districts who made still greater efforts in the struggle for freedom They won over the eloquent advocate Godard whose influence in revolutionary circles was considerable Through his exertions the National Guards and the diverse sections pronounced themselves in favor of the Jews and the abbe Malot was sent by the General Assembly of the Commune to plead their cause before the National Assembly The grave affairs which absorbed the Assembly the prolonged agitations in Alsace and the passions of the clerical party kept in check the advocates of Jewish emancipation A few days before the dissolution of the National Assembly 27 September 1791 a member of the Jacobin Club formerly a parliamentary councilor Duport unexpectedly ascended the tribune and said I believe that freedom of worship does not permit any distinction in the political rights of citizens on account of their creed The question of the political existence of the Jews has been postponed Still the Muslems and the men of all sects are admitted to enjoy political rights in France I demand that the motion for postponement be withdrawn and a decree passed that the Jews in France enjoy the privileges of full citizens This proposition was accepted amid loud applause Rewbell endeavored indeed to oppose the motion but he was interrupted by Regnault de Saint Jean president of the Assembly who suggested that every one who spoke against this motion should be called to order because he would be opposing the constitution itself During the Reign of Terror edit Judaism in France thus became as the Alsatian deputy Schwendt wrote to his constituents nothing more than the name of a distinct religion However in Alsace especially in the Bas Rhin the reactionaries did not cease their agitations and Jews were victims of discriminations 55 During the Reign of Terror at Bordeaux Jewish bankers compromised in the cause of the Girondins had to pay important fines or to run away to save their lives while some Jewish bankers 49 according to the Jewish Encyclopedia were imprisoned at Paris as suspects and nine of them were executed 56 The decree of the convention by which the Catholic faith was annulled and replaced by the worship of Reason was applied by the provincial clubs especially by those of the German districts to the Jewish religion as well Some synagogues were pillaged and the mayors of a few eastern towns Strasbourg Troyes etc forbade the celebration of Sabbath to apply the week of ten days 56 Meanwhile the French Jews gave proofs of their patriotism and of their gratitude to the land that had emancipated them Many of them died in battle as part of the Army of the Republic while fighting the forces of Europe in coalition To contribute to the war fund candelabra of synagogues were sold and wealthier Jews deprived themselves of their jewels to make similar contributions Attitude of Napoleon edit Main article Napoleon and the Jews nbsp Joseph David Sinzheim was the president of the Grand Sanhedrin an imperial Jewish high court sanctioned by Napoleon nbsp Sermon in an israelite oratory Museum of Jewish Art and HistoryThough the Revolution had begun the process of Jewish emancipation in France Napoleon also spread the concept in the lands he conquered across Europe liberating Jews from their ghettos and establishing relative equality for them The net effect of his policies significantly changed the position of the Jews in Europe Starting in 1806 Napoleon passed a number of measures supporting the position of the Jews in the French Empire including assembling a representative group elected by the Jewish community the Grand Sanhedrin In conquered countries he abolished laws restricting Jews to ghettos In 1807 he added Judaism as an official religion of France with previously sanctioned Roman Catholicism and Lutheran and Calvinist Protestantism Despite the positive effects it is unclear however whether Napoleon himself was disposed favorably towards the Jews or merely saw them as a political or financial tool On 17 March 1808 Napoleon rolled back some reforms by the so called decret infame declaring all debts with Jews reduced postponed or annulled this caused the Jewish community to nearly collapse The decree also restricted where Jews could live especially for those in the eastern French Empire with all its annexations in the Rhineland and beyond as of 1810 in hopes of assimilating them into society Many of these restrictions were eased again in 1811 and finally abolished in 1818 After the Restoration editThe restoration of Louis XVIII did not materially change the political condition of the Jews Enemies of the Jews cherished the hope that the Bourbons would hasten to undo the work of the Revolution with regard to Jewish emancipation but were soon disappointed The emancipation the French Jews had made enough progress that the clerical monarch could not find pretexts for curtailing their rights as citizens They were no longer treated as poor downtrodden peddlers citation needed or money lenders with whom every petty official could do as he liked Many of them already occupied high positions in the army and the magistracy as well as in the arts and sciences State recognition edit Of the faiths recognized by the state only Judaism had to support its ministers while those of the Catholic and Protestant churches were supported by the government This legal inferiority was removed in 1831 thanks to the intervention of the Duke of Orleans lieutenant general of the kingdom and to the campaign led in Parliament by the deputies comte de Rambuteau and Jean Viennet Encouraged by these prominent men the minister of education on 13 November 1830 offered a motion to place Judaism upon an equal footing with Catholicism and Protestantism as regards support for the synagogues and for the rabbis from the public treasury The motion was accompanied by flattering compliments to the French Jews who said the minister since the removal of their disabilities by the Revolution have shown themselves worthy of the privileges granted to them After a short discussion the motion was adopted by a large majority In January 1831 it passed in the Chamber of Peers by 89 votes to 57 and on 8 February it was ratified by King Louis Philippe who from the beginning had shown himself favorable to placing Judaism on an equal footing with the other faiths Shortly afterward the rabbinical college which had been founded at Metz in 1829 was recognized as a state institution and was granted a subsidy The government likewise liquidated the debts contracted by various Jewish communities before the Revolution Full equality edit Full equality did not occur until 1831 By the fourth decade of the nineteenth century France provided an environment in which Jews took active and many times leading roles The Napoleonic policy of carrieres aux talents or careers for the gifted permitted French Jews to enter previously forbidden fields such as the arts finance trade and government For this they were never forgiven by primarily Royalist and Catholic antisemites Assimilation edit nbsp Adolphe Cremieux founder of the Alliance Israelite Universelle Musee d Art et d Histoire du JudaismeWhile the Jews had become in other respects the equals of their Christian fellow citizens the More Judaico oath continued to be administered to them in spite of the repeated protestations of the rabbis and the consistory It was only in 1846 owing to a brilliant defense speech by the Jewish lawyer Adolphe Cremieux before the Court of Nimes in defense of a rabbi who had refused to take this oath and to a valuable essay on the subject by Martin a prominent Christian advocate of Strasburg that the Court of Cassation removed this last remnant of the legislation of the Middle Ages With this act of justice the history of the Jews of France merges into the general history of the French people The rapidity with which many of them won affluence and distinction in the nineteenth century is without parallel In spite of the deep rooted prejudices which prevailed in certain classes of French society many of them occupied high positions in literature art science jurisprudence the army indeed in every walk of life In 1860 the Alliance Israelite Universelle was formed to work everywhere for the emancipation and moral progress of the Jews to offer effective assistance to Jews suffering from antisemitism and to encourage all publications calculated to promote this aim 57 In 1870 the Cremieux decrees granted automatic French citizenship to the approximately 40 000 Jews of Algeria at that time a French departement contrary to their Muslim neighbors 58 People of Jewish faith in France were becoming assimilated into their lives After their Emancipation in 1791 Jews in France had new freedoms For example Jews were allowed to attend schools that were once delegated for just non Jews They were also allowed to pray in their own synagogues Lastly many Jews found themselves moving from the rural areas of France and into the big cities In these big cities Jews had new job opportunities and many were advancing up the economic ladder nbsp 1893 edition of Edouard Drumont s antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole Although life was looking brighter for these Western Jews some Jews who lived in Eastern Europe believed that the Emancipation in Western countries were causing the Jews to lose their traditional beliefs and culture As more and more Jews were becoming assimilated into their new lives these Jews were breaking away from rabbinical law and rabbinical authority decreased For example Jews were marrying outside of their religion and their children were growing up in homes where they were not being introduced to traditional beliefs and losing connection with their roots Also in these new urbanized Jewish homes less and less Jews were following the strict rules of Kosher laws Many Jews were so preoccupied with assimilating and prospering in their new lives that they formed a new type of Judaism that would fit with the times The Reform Movement came about to let Jews stay connected to their roots while also living their lives without so many restrictions Antisemitism edit Alphonse Toussenel 1803 1885 was a political writer and zoologist who introduced antisemitism into French mainstream thinking A utopian socialist and a disciple of Charles Fourier he criticized the economic liberalism of the July Monarchy and denounced the ills of civilization individualism egoism and class conflict He was hostile to the Jews and also to the British Toussenel s Les juifs rois de l epoque histoire de la feodalite financiere 1845 argued that French finance and commerce was controlled by an alien Jewish presence typified in the malign influence of the Rothschild banking family of France Toussenel s antisemitism was rooted in a revolutionary nationalist interpretation reading of French history He was innovative and using zoology as a vehicle for social criticism and his natural history books as much as his political writings were infused with antisemitic and anti English sentiments For Toussenel the English and the Jews represented external and internal threats to French national identity 59 Antisemitism based on racism emerged in the 1880s led by Edouard Drumont who founded the Antisemitic League of France in 1889 and was the founder and editor of the newspaper La Libre Parole After spending years of research he synthesized three major strands of antisemitism The first strand was traditional Catholic attitudes toward the Christ killers augmented by vehement antipathy toward the French Revolution The second strand was hostility to capitalism of the sort promoted by the Socialist movement The third strand was scientific racism based on the argument that races have fixed characteristics and the Jews have highly negative characteristics 60 61 Dreyfus affair edit nbsp Newspaper front page with Emile Zola s letter J Accuse I Accuse addressing the President of the Republic and accusing the government with antisemitism in the Dreyfus affair Main article Dreyfus affair The Dreyfus affair was a major political scandal that convulsed France from 1894 until its resolution in 1906 and which had reverberations for decades more The affair is often seen as a modern and universal symbol of injustice for reasons of state 62 and remains one of the most striking examples of a complex miscarriage of justice where the press and public opinion played a central role The issue was blatant antisemitism as practiced by the Army and defended by traditionalists especially Catholics against secular and republican forces including most Jews In the end the latter triumphed albeit at a very high personal cost to Dreyfus himself 63 64 The affair began in November 1894 with the conviction for treason of Captain Alfred Dreyfus a young French artillery officer of Alsatian Jewish descent He was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for allegedly having communicated French military secrets to the German Embassy in Paris Dreyfus was sent to the penal colony at Devil s Island in French Guiana where he spent almost five years Two years later in 1896 evidence came to light identifying a French Army major named Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy as the real spy After high ranking military officials suppressed the new evidence a military court unanimously acquitted Esterhazy after the second day of his trial The Army accused Dreyfus of additional charges based on false documents Word of the military court s framing of Dreyfus and of an attendant cover up began to spread chiefly owing to J Accuse a vehement open letter published in a Paris newspaper in January 1898 by the notable writer Emile Zola Activists put pressure on the government to reopen the case In 1899 Dreyfus was returned to France for another trial The intense political and judicial scandal that ensued divided French society between those who supported Dreyfus now called Dreyfusards such as Anatole France Henri Poincare and Georges Clemenceau and those who condemned him the anti Dreyfusards such as Edouard Drumont the director and publisher of the antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole The new trial resulted in another conviction and a 10 year sentence but Dreyfus was given a pardon and set free Eventually all the accusations against Alfred Dreyfus were demonstrated to be baseless In 1906 Dreyfus was exonerated and reinstated as a major in the French Army The Affair from 1894 to 1906 divided France deeply and lastingly into two opposing camps the pro Army mostly Catholic anti Dreyfusards who generally lost the initiative to the anticlerical pro republican Dreyfusards It embittered French politics and allowed the radicals to come to power 65 66 20th century editThe relatively small Jewish community was based in Paris and very well established in the city s business financial and intellectual elite A third of Parisian bankers were Jewish led by the Rothschild family which also played a dominant role in the well organized Jewish community Many of the most influential French intellectuals were nominally Jewish including Henri Bergson Lucien Levy Bruhl and Emile Durkheim The Dreyfus affair to some degree rekindled their sense of being Jewish 67 Jews were prominent in art and culture holding special prominence in the Ecole de Paris art movement typified by such artists as Modigliani Pascin Frenel Soutine and Chagall 68 69 The Jews considered themselves fully assimilated into French culture for them Judaism was entirely a matter of religious belief with minimal ethnic or cultural dimensions 70 By the time Dreyfus was fully exonerated in 1906 antisemitism declined sharply and it declined again during the First World War as a nation was aware that many Jews died fighting for France The antisemitic newspaper La Libre Parole closed in 1924 and the former anti Dreyfusard Maurice Barres included Jews among France s spiritual families 71 72 After 1900 a wave of Jewish immigrants arrived mostly fleeing the pogroms of Eastern Europe The flow temporarily halted during World War I but resumed afterwards The long established heavily assimilated Jewish population by 1920 was now only a third of the French Jewish population It was overwhelmed by new immigrants and the restoration of Alsace Lorraine About 200 000 immigrants arrived 1900 to 1939 mostly Yiddish speakers from Russia and Poland as well as German speaking Jews who fled the Nazi regime after 1933 The historic base of traditional Judaism was in Alsace Lorraine which was recovered by France in 1918 The new arrivals got along poorly with the established elite Jewish community They did not want to assimilate and they vigorously supported such new causes especially Zionism and communism 73 The Yiddish influx and the Jewishness of the Popular Front s leader Leon Blum contributed to a revival of antisemitism in the 1930s Conservative writers such as Paul Morand Pierre Gaxotte Marcel Jouhandeau and the leader of Action francaise Charles Maurras denounced Jews Perhaps the most violent antisemitic writer was Louis Ferdinand Celine who wrote I feel myself very friendly to Hitler and to all Germans whom I feel to be my brothers Our real enemies are Jews and Masons and Yids are like bedbugs By 1937 even mainstream French conservatives and socialists not previously associated with antisemitism denounced the alleged Jewish influence pushing the country into a Jewish war against Nazi Germany The new intensity of antisemitism facilitated the extremism of the Vichy regime after 1940 72 World War II and the Holocaust edit Main article The Holocaust in France nbsp Antisemitic Exposition during Nazi occupation of France 1942 When France came under occupation by Nazi Germany in June 1940 about 330 000 Jews lived in France and another 370 000 in never occupied French North Africa Of the 330 000 fewer than half held French citizenship and the others were foreigners mostly exiles from Germany and Central Europe who had immigrated to France during the 1930s 8 Another 110 000 French Jews were living in the colony of French Algeria 74 About 200 000 Jews and the large majority of foreign Jews resided in the Paris area Among the 150 000 French Jews about 30 000 generally native to Central Europe had recently obtained French citizenship after immigrating to France during the 1930s Following the 1940 armistice after Germany invaded France the Nazis incorporated the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine into Germany The remainder of northern and western France was placed under German military control Unoccupied southern metropolitan France and the French empire were placed under the control of the Vichy Regime a new collaborationist French government Some Jews managed to escape the invading German forces Some found refuge in the countryside Spain allowed 25 600 Jews to use its territory as an escape route German occupation forces published their first anti Jewish measure on 27 September 1940 as the First Ordinance The measure was a census of Jews and defined who is a Jew The Second Ordinance was published on 18 October 1940 proscribing various business activities for Jews On 31 August 1941 German forces confiscated all radios belonging to Jews followed by their telephones their bicycles and disconnecting all phones to Jews They were forbidden to use public telephones Jews were forbidden to change their address and next were forbidden to leave their homes between 8 pm and 5 am All public places parks theatres and certain shops were soon closed to Jews German forces issued new restrictions prohibitions and decrees by the week Jews were barred from public swimming pools restaurants cafes cinemas concerts music halls etc On the metro they were allowed to ride only in the last carriage Antisemitic articles were frequently published in newspapers since the Occupation The Germans organized antisemitic exhibitions to spread their propaganda The music of Jewish composers was banned as were works of art by Jewish artists On 2 October 1941 seven synagogues were bombed Still the vast majority of synagogues remained opened during the whole war in the Zone libre The Vichy government even protected them after attacks as a way to deny persecution 75 The first roundup of Jews took place on 14 May 1941 and 4 000 foreign Jews were taken captive Another roundup took place on 20 August 1941 collecting both French and foreign Jews who were sent to the Drancy internment camp and other concentration camps in France Roundups continued collecting French nationals including lawyers and other professionals On 12 December 1941 the most distinguished members of the Paris Jewish community including doctors academics scientists and writers were rounded up On 29 May 1942 the Eighth Ordinance was published which ordered Jews to wear the yellow star The most notorious roundup was the Vel d Hiv Roundup which required detailed planning and the use of the full resources of French police forces This roundup took place on 16 and 17 July 1942 it collected nearly 13 000 Jews 7 000 of whom including more than 4 000 children were interned and locked into the Velodrome d Hiver without adequate food or sanitation In the meantime the Germans began deportations of Jews from France to the death camps in eastern Europe The first trains left on 27 March 1942 Deportations continued until 17 August 1944 by which time nearly 76 000 Jews including those from Vichy France were deported of whom only 2 500 survived see Timeline of deportations of French Jews to death camps The majority of Jews deported were non French Jews 8 One quarter of the pre war Jewish population of France was killed in that process Antisemitism was particularly virulent in Vichy France which controlled a third of France from 1940 to 1942 at which point the Germans took over that southern area Vichy s Jewish policy was a mixture of 1930s antiforeigner legislation with the virulent antisemitism of the Action Francaise movement 76 The Vichy government openly collaborated with the Nazi occupiers to identify Jews for deportation and transportation to the death camps As early as October 1940 without any request from the Germans the Vichy government passed anti Jewish measures the Vichy laws on the status of Jews prohibiting them from moving and limiting their access to public places and most professional activities especially the practice of medicine The Vichy government also implemented those anti Jewish laws in the colonies of Vichy North Africa In 1941 the Vichy government established the Commissariat General for Jewish Affairs which in 1942 worked with the Gestapo to round up Jews They participated in the Vel d Hiv roundup on 16 and 17 July 1942 On the other hand France is recognised as the nation with the third highest number of Righteous Among the Nations according to the Yad Vashem museum 2006 This award is given to non Jews who acted according to the most noble principles of humanity by risking their lives to save Jews during the Holocaust In 1995 French President Jacques Chirac formally apologized to the Jewish community for the complicit role that French policemen and civil servants played in the roundups He said These black hours will stain our history for ever and are an injury to our past and our traditions Yes the criminal madness of the occupant was assisted secondee by the French by the French state Fifty three years ago on 16 July 1942 450 policemen and gendarmes French under the authority of their leaders obeyed the demands of the Nazis That day in the capital and the Paris region nearly 10 000 Jewish men women and children were arrested at home in the early hours of the morning and assembled at police stations France home of the Enlightenment and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen land of welcome and asylum France committed that day the irreparable Breaking its word it delivered those it protected to their executioners 77 Chirac also identified those who were responsible 450 policemen and gendarmes French under the authority of their leaders who obeyed the demands of the Nazis In July 2017 while at a ceremony at the site of the Velodrome d Hiver France s President Emmanuel Macron denounced the country s role in the Holocaust and the historical revisionism that denied France s responsibility for 1942 roundup and subsequent deportation of 13 000 Jews or the eventual deportation of 76 000 Jews He refuted claims that the Vichy government in power during WW II did not represent the State 78 It was indeed France that organised this French police collaborating with the Nazis Not a single German was directly involved he added Neither Chirac nor Francois Hollande had specifically stated that the Vichy government in power during World War II actually represented the French State 79 Macron on the other hand made it clear that the government during the War was indeed that of France It is convenient to see the Vichy regime as born of nothingness returned to nothingness Yes it s convenient but it is false We cannot build pride upon a lie 80 81 Macron made a subtle reference to Chirac s 1995 apology when he added I say it again here It was indeed France that organized the roundup the deportation and thus for almost all death 82 83 Post World War II Anti discriminatory laws and migration edit In the wake of the Holocaust around 180 000 Jews remained in France many of whom were refugees from Eastern Europe who either could not or would not return to their former home countries To prevent the types of abuses that took place under the German Occupation and Vichy Regime the legislature passed laws to suppress antisemitic harassment and actions and established educational programs Jewish exodus from France s colonies in North Africa edit The surviving French Jews were joined in the late 1940s 1950s and 1960s by large numbers of Jews from France s predominantly Muslim North African colonies along with millions of other French nationals as part of the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries They fled to France because of the decline of the French Empire and a surge in Muslim Antisemitism following the founding of Israel and Israel s victories in the Six Day War and other Arab Israeli wars 47 By 1951 France s Jewish population totalled around 250 000 18 Between 1956 and 1967 about 235 000 Sephardi Jews from Algeria Tunisia Morocco and Egypt immigrated to France By 1968 Sephardi Jews from the former French possessions in North Africa constituted the majority of the Jews of France Before World War II and the Holocaust French Jews were predominately from the Ashkenazi tradition and culture The Sephardim who follow nusach sepharad Judaism as per the Sephardic ritual according to Dan Michman s definition of such Jews have since had a significant influence on the nature of French Jewish culture These Jews from French North Africa have generally enjoyed a successful social and economic integration and helped reinvigorate the country s Jewish community Kosher restaurants and Jewish schools have multiplied in particular since the 1980s In part in response to internal and international events many of the younger generations have committed to religious renewal citation needed In the 1980 Paris synagogue bombing France s Jewish population suffered its first deadly terrorist attack since actions of the German occupation in the Second World War The attack followed an increase in antisemitic incidents in the late 1970s by Neo Nazis France Israel relations edit Main article France Israel relations Since World War II France s government has varied in supporting and opposing the Israeli government It was initially a very strong supporter of Israel voting for its formation at the United Nations It was Israel s main ally and primary supplier of military hardware for nearly two decades between 1948 and 1967 84 After the military alliance between France and Israel during the 1956 Suez Crisis relations between Israel and France remained strong It is widely believed that as a result of the Protocol of Sevres agreement the French government secretly transported parts of its own atomic technology to Israel in the late 1950s which the Israeli government used to create nuclear weapons 85 But after the end of the Algerian War in 1962 in which Algeria gained independence France began to shift toward a more pro Arab view This change accelerated rapidly after the Six Day War in 1967 in which the relations became strained Following the war the United States became Israel s main supplier of weapons and military technology 84 After the 1972 Munich massacre at the Olympics the French government refused to extradite Abu Daoud one of the planners of the attack 86 Both France and Israel participated in the 15 year long Lebanese Civil War 21st century editMain articles Demographics of France Religion in France and Jewish population by country nbsp Haim Korsia the current Chief Rabbi of France France has the largest Jewish population in Europe and the third largest Jewish population in the world after Israel and the United States The Jewish community in France is estimated from a core population of 480 000 500 000 1 2 3 4 to an enlarged population of 600 000 6 7 In 2009 France s highest court the council of state issued a ruling recognising the state s responsibility in the deportation of tens of thousands of Jews during World War II The report cited mistakes in the Vichy regime that had not been forced by the occupiers stating that the state allowed or facilitated the deportation from France of victims of anti Semitism 87 88 Antisemitism and Jewish emigration edit See also Antisemitism in 21st century France and French Jews in Israel In the early 2000s rising levels of antisemitism among French Muslims and antisemitic acts were publicized around the world 89 90 91 including the desecration of Jewish graves and tensions between the children of North African Muslim immigrants and North African Jewish children 92 One of the worst crimes happened when Ilan Halimi was mutilated and tortured to death by the so called Barbarians gang led by Youssouf Fofana This murder was motivated by money and fueled by antisemitic prejudices the perpetrators said they believed Jews to be rich 93 94 In March 2012 a gunman who had previously killed three soldiers opened fire at a Jewish school in Toulouse in an antisemitic attack killing four people including three children President Nicolas Sarkozy said I want to say to all the leaders of the Jewish community how close we feel to them All of France is by their side 95 However Jewish philanthropist Baron Eric de Rothschild suggested that the extent of antisemitism in France has been exaggerated and that France was not an antisemitic country 96 The Newspaper Le Monde Diplomatique had earlier said the same thing 97 According to a 2005 poll made by the Pew Research Center there is no evidence of any specific antisemitism in France which according to this poll appears to be one of the least antisemitic countries in Europe 98 though France has the world s third largest Jewish population 1 France is the country that had the most favourable views of Jews in Europe 82 next to the Netherlands and the country with the third fewest unfavourable views 16 next to the United Kingdom and the Netherlands Rises in antisemitism in modern France have been linked to the intensifying Israeli Palestinian conflict 99 100 101 Between the start of the Israeli offensive in Gaza in late December 2008 and its end in January 2009 an estimated hundred antisemitic acts were recorded in France This compares with a total of 250 antisemitic acts in the whole of 2007 99 102 In 2009 832 acts of antisemitism were recorded in France with in the first half of 2009 an estimated 631 acts more than the whole of 2008 474 in 2010 466 and in 2011 389 103 In 2011 there were 260 threats 100 graffitis 46 flyers or mails 114 insults and 129 crimes 57 assaults 7 arsons or attempted arsons 65 deteriorations and acts of vandalism but no murder attempted murder or terrorist attack recorded 103 Between 2000 and 2009 13 315 French Jews moved to Israel or made aliyah an increase compared to the previous decade 1990 1999 10 443 that was in the continuity of a similar increase since the 1970s 104 A peak was reached during this period in 2005 2005 2 951 Olim but a significant proportion between 20 and 30 eventually came back to France 105 Some immigrants cited antisemitism and the growing Arab population as reasons for leaving 91 One couple who moved to Israel claimed that rising antisemitism by French Muslims and the anti Israel bias of the French government was making life for Jews increasingly uncomfortable for them 106 At a welcoming ceremony for French Jews in the summer of 2004 then Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon caused controversy when he advised all French Jews to move immediately to Israel and escape what he coined the wildest anti semitism in France 106 107 108 109 In August 2007 some 2 800 olim were due to arrive in Israel from France as opposed to the 3 000 initially forecast 110 better source needed 1 129 French Jews made aliyah to Israel in 2009 and 1 286 in 2010 104 However in the long term France is not one of the top countries of Jewish emigration toward Israel 111 Many French Jews feel a strong attachment to France 112 In November 2012 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a joint press conference with Francois Hollande advised the French Jewish community by saying In my role as Prime Minister of Israel I always say to Jews wherever they may be I say to them Come to Israel and make Israel your home alluding to former Israel Prime Minister s Ariel Sharon s similar 2004 advisement towards the French Jewish community to move to Israel 113 In 2013 3 120 French Jews immigrated to Israel marking a 63 increase over the previous year 114 During the first few months of 2014 The Jewish Agency of Israel continued to encourage French aliyah through aliyah fairs Hebrew language courses sessions that assist potential olim to find jobs in Israel and immigrant absorption in Israel 115 A May 2014 survey revealed that 74 percent of French Jews considered leaving France for Israel where of the 74 percent 29 9 percent cited anti Semitism Another 24 4 cited their desire to preserve their Judaism while 12 4 percent said they were attracted by other countries Economic considerations was cited by 7 5 percent of the respondents 116 By June 2014 it was estimated by the end of 2014 a full 1 percent of the French Jewish community would have made aliyah to Israel the largest in a single year Many Jewish leaders stated that emigration is being driven by a combination of factors including the cultural gravitation towards Israel and France s economic woes especially for the younger generation drawn by the possibility of other socioeconomic opportunities in the more vibrant Israeli economy Others point out that in 2014 many dramatic incidents of antisemitism took place especially during Operation Protective Edge and that France took an unusual pro Palestine stance by recognizing the State of Palestine in Parliament and by undertaking to adopt a resolution in the United Nations Security Council which would unilaterally impose an end of the Israel Arab conflict on Israel 117 118 119 At the end of 2014 a record 7 000 French Jews are reported to have made Aliyah 117 Some wealthy French Jewish families are choosing to immigrate to the United States instead with less red tape for business than Israel 120 In January 2015 events such as the Charlie Hebdo shooting and Porte de Vincennes hostage crisis created a shock wave of fear across the French Jewish community As a result of these events the Jewish Agency planned an aliyah plan for 120 000 French Jews who wish to make aliyah 121 122 In addition with Europe s stagnant economy as of early 2015 many affluent French Jewish skilled professionals business moguls and investors have sought Israel as a start up haven for international investments as well as job and new business opportunities 123 Dov Maimon a French Jewish emigre who studies migration as a senior fellow at the Jewish People Policy Institute predicted as many as 250 000 French Jews to make aliyah by the year 2030 123 Hours after the 2015 Saint Quentin Fallavier attack on a gas factory near Lyon on 26 June 2015 in which the severed head of a local non Jewish businessman was pinned to the gates and an ISIS flag was raised Immigration and Absorption Minister Ze ev Elkin strongly urged the French Jewish community to move to Israel and made it a national priority for Israel to welcome the French Jewish community with open arms 124 125 Immigration from France is on the rise in the first half of 2015 approximately 5 100 French Jews made aliyah to Israel marking 25 more than in the same period during the previous year 126 Following the November 2015 Paris attacks committed by suspected ISIS affiliates reputedly in retaliation for Operation Chammal more than 80 percent of French Jews considered making aliyah 127 128 129 The largest attack on the evening of 13 November killed 90 people leaving 200 wounded at a rock concert in the Bataclan Theatre in Paris Although its long time Jewish owners who regularly set Jewish events there including some in support of Israel had sold the theatre shortly before the massacre speculation arose about an antisemitic motive behind the attack but this was not a popular theory in the French media However to some this possible antisemitic motive was concealed by the general media raising questions about the media s motives to do this an issue reflected in the French Jewish community press According to the Jewish Agency nearly 6500 French Jews had made aliyah as of mid November 2015 and it was estimated that 8000 French Jews would settle down in Israel by the end of 2015 130 131 132 In January 2016 a 35 year old teacher in Marseille was attacked with a machete by a Kurdish teenager 133 Some Jewish groups debated recommending that Jews not wear the kippah in public 134 135 A 73 year old Jewish municipal councillor in Creteil was murdered in his apartment the same month 136 137 On 4 April 2017 the horrific murder of a 65 year old French Jewish woman Sarah Halimi in her popular neighborhood home of Belleville in Paris around the corner from a mosque reputed for its radicalism and as police standing in the staircase heard the murderer yelling Allahu akbar repeatedly for minutes and did not intervene in spite of the screams and the beating has raised questions again As it took several months for the French justice to qualify this murder as an antisemitic act concern about an institutional covering of antisemitism increased It was further feared as Roger Pinto was mugged with his family during a burglary at his Livry Gargan home on 8 September 2017 Pinto soon witnessed that as for Ilan Halimi s murder he was told You are Jewish so you must have money this attack has neither been qualified as an anti semitic act 138 On 23 March 2018 an 85 year old French Jewish woman and Holocaust survivor Mireille Knoll was found dead in her apartment in the east of the French capital where she lived alone 139 She had been murdered by two Muslim suspects one of which she had known since he was a child The chief rabbi of Paris Haim Korsia wrote on Twitter that he was horrified by the killing See also editAbraham of Aragon D Estienne du Bourguet Family Paris s Museum of Jewish Art and History History of the Jews in Alsace in Arles in Besancon French Jews in Israel List of French Jews List of Holocaust memorials and museums in France List of West European Jews France Israel relations Memorial de la Shoah TFJReferences edit a b c Jewish Population of the World Jewish Virtual Library 2012 Retrieved 29 January 2014 a b Serge Attal 14 January 2013 French Jews fear anti Semitism will destroy community Times of Israel Retrieved 5 February 2020 a b Joe Berkofsky 25 March 2012 More Than One Quarter of Jews in France Want To Leave Poll Finds Jewish Federations Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2013 a b Gil Yaron 22 March 2012 Fears of Anti Semitism More and More French Jews Emigrating to Israel Der Spiegel Spiegel Retrieved 5 February 2013 France info 19 March 2012 La communaute juive de France compte 550 000 personnes dont 25 000 a Toulouse in French Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b John Irish and Guillaume Serries March 2012 Gunman attacks Jewish school in France four killed Reuters Retrieved 5 February 2013 a b Jim Maceda 19 March 2012 Four shot dead at Jewish school in France gun used in earlier attacks NBC News Retrieved 5 February 2013 a b c France Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Le Bilan de la Shoah en France Le regime de Vichy bseditions fr Yad Vashem 1 Archived 11 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Jewish world population 2016 PDF France World Jewish Congress Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 France Un portrait de la population juive Religioscope Jews are leaving France in record numbers amid rising antisemitism and fears of more Isis inspired terror attacks The Independent 25 January 2016 a b c d e Broyde Isaac Luria et al 1906 France In Funk Isaac Kaufmann Singer Isidore Vizetelly Frank Horace eds The Jewish Encyclopedia Vol V New York and London Funk and Wagnalls Company hdl 2027 mdp 39015064245445 OCLC 61956716 a b Fellous Sonia in French 3 May 2018 Les noms des juifs a Paris XIIe XIVe siecle In Nadiras Sebastien ed Noms de lieux noms de personnes la question des sources in French doi 10 4000 books pan 951 ISBN 9791036512308 OCLC 1193020908 Archived from the original on 29 May 2020 Retrieved 26 September 2020 Mais la date du deces est calculee en fonction du calendrier local ici celui du regne du roi Egica et non en fonction du calendrier juif comme au bas Moyen Age a b Clauss Manfred in German Slaby Wolfgang A Kolb Anne in German Woitas Barbara EDCS 28300234 Epigraphik Datenbank Clauss Slaby de in German Catholic University of Eichstatt Ingolstadt OCLC 435767433 EDCS 28300234 Retrieved 26 September 2020 Click on search link and enter above EDCS ID a b c The Virtual Jewish History Tour France Jewish Virtual Library Hosang F J Elizabeth Boddens 2018 Jews in 6th and 7th century legal texts from Spain and Gaul A few observations Religion Compass 12 12 e12290 doi 10 1111 rec3 12290 ISSN 1749 8171 S2CID 239611324 Henri Pirenne 2001 Mahomet et Charlemagne reprint of 1937 classic in French Dover Publications pp 123 128 ISBN 0 486 42011 6 Cohen Jeremy 1999 Living Letters of the Law Ideas of the Jew in Medieval Christianity Berkeley Calif University of California Press pp 139 141 ISBN 978 0 520 92291 4 OCLC 48139723 Internet History Sourcebooks Project Fordham Homepage 26 January 1996 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Golb Norman 1998 The Jews in medieval Normandy a social and intellectual history New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58032 8 OCLC 36461619 Published in Berliner s Magazin iii 46 48 Hebrew part reproducing Parma De Rossi MS No 563 23 see also Jew Encyc v 447 s v France a b Jacob Ben Jekuthiel JewishEncyclopedia com Toni L Kamins 2001 The Complete Jewish Guide to France St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 0312244491 MacCulloch Diarmaid 2009 A history of Christianity the first three thousand years London Penguin p 396 ISBN 978 0 14 195795 1 OCLC 712795767 Berliner s Magazin iii Oẓar Ṭob pp 46 48 Jekuthiel ben Judah Ha Kohen Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 9 December 2022 Rouen encyclopedia com Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores iv 137 Chronicles of Adhemar of Chabannes ed Bouquet x 152 Chronicles of William Godellus ib 262 according to whom the event occurred in 1007 or 1008 a b Bokenkotter Thomas S 2004 A concise history of the Catholic Church Rev and expanded ed New York Doubleday pp 155 ISBN 0385505841 OCLC 50242976 Chronicles of Adhemar of Chabannes ed Bouquet x 34 Inventaire Critique des Lettres Historiques des Croisades 786 1100 by Paul Edouard Didier Riant Paris 1880 p 38 ASIN B0017H91JQ Simonsohn pp 35 37 Hoinacki Lee 1996 El Camino Walking to Santiago de Compostela University Park Pennsylvania State University Press pp 101 ISBN 0271016124 OCLC 33665024 Rist Rebecca 2013 Through Jewish Eyes Polemical Literature and the Medieval Papacy History 98 5 333 639 662 doi 10 1111 1468 229X 12019 ISSN 0018 2648 JSTOR 24429768 a b c Grossman Avraham 2012 Rashi London Liverpool University Press Eban Abba Solomon 1984 Heritage Civilization and the Jews Simon and Schuster p 156 ISBN 978 0 671 44103 6 a b Singer Isidore Adler Cyrus 1903 The Jewish Encyclopedia A Descriptive Record of the History Religion Literature and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Funk amp Wagnalls Company p 448 Madigan Kevin 2015 Medieval Christianity A New History Yale University Press p 345 ISBN 978 0 300 15872 4 Golb Norman 1966 New Light on the Persecution of French Jews at the Time of the First Crusade Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research 34 1 63 doi 10 2307 3622388 ISSN 0065 6798 JSTOR 3622388 Taitz Emily 1994 The Jews of Medieval France The Community of Champagne Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 031329318X OCLC 29952366 Jordan William Chester 1998 Jews Regalian Rights and the Constitution in Medieval France AJS Review 23 1 5 7 doi 10 1017 S0364009400010011 ISSN 0364 0094 JSTOR 1486732 S2CID 159553765 Luce Simeon 1881 Catalogue des Documents du Tresor des Chartes relatifs aux Juifs sous le regne de Philippe le Bel Catalog of Documents of the Charters Treasury relating to the Jews under the reign of Philip the Fair Revue des etudes juives in French 2 16 Retrieved 27 December 2020 Aussi Philippe le Bel ne put les frapper sans tarir du meme coup l une des sources les plus fecondes de la prosperite commerciale industrielle et financiere de son royaume a b Benbassa Esther 1999 1st pub in French Histoire des Juifs de France Editions du Seuil 1997 The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present Translated by DeBevoise M B Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 1 4008 2314 5 OCLC 51580058 Bouquet xxii 118 Schwarzfuchs Simon R 1967 The Expulsion of the Jews from France 1306 The Jewish Quarterly Review 57 482 489 doi 10 2307 1453511 ISSN 0021 6682 JSTOR 1453511 History of the reign of Charles VI titled Chronique de Religieux de Saint Denys contenant le regne de Charles VI de 1380 a 1422 encompasses the king s full reign in six volumes Originally written in Latin the work was translated to French in six volumes by L Bellaguet between 1839 and 1852 Barkey Karen Katznelson Ira 2011 States regimes and decisions why Jews were expelled from Medieval England and France PDF Theory and Society 40 5 475 503 doi 10 1007 s11186 011 9150 8 ISSN 0304 2421 S2CID 143634044 dead link a b c d Provence www jewishvirtuallibrary org See Article 1 of The Code Noir of 6 May 1687 Archived 7 August 2004 at the Wayback Machine Nigel Aston Religion and Revolution in France 1780 1804 2000 pp 72 89 a b c Philippe Beatrice 1979 La Revolution et l Empire Etre juif dans la societe francaise du Moyen Age a nos jours in French Paris Editions Montalba ISBN 2 85870 017 6 OCLC 6303565 a b Fournier Francois Dominique Chapitre XIV La Revolution francaise et l emancipation des Juifs 1789 1806 Histoire des Juifs Histoire antique des pays et des hommes de la Mediterrannee Retrieved 5 March 2012 Alliance Israelite Universelle Jewish Virtual Library 8 April 2019 Retrieved 9 August 2019 L affaire de la consonnance israelite du nom de famille Journal d un avocat in French 18 August 2007 Crossley Ceri 2004 Anglophobia and anti Semitism The case of Alphonse Toussenel 1803 1885 Modern amp Contemporary France 12 4 459 472 doi 10 1080 0963948042000284722 ISSN 0963 9489 S2CID 145321754 Antisemitism a historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution Levy Richard S Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2005 ISBN 1851094393 OCLC 58830958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Isser Natalie 1991 Antisemitism during the French Second Empire New York Bern Frankfurt am Main Paris Lang ISBN 978 0820414546 OCLC 243444805 Guy Canivet first President of the Supreme Court Justice from the Dreyfus Affair p 15 Piers Paul Read The Dreyfus Affair 2012 Wilson Stephen 1976 Antisemitism and Jewish Response in France during the Dreyfus Affair European Studies Review 6 2 225 248 doi 10 1177 026569147600600203 ISSN 0014 3111 S2CID 144943082 Cahm Eric 2014 The Dreyfus Affair in French Society and Politics Oxfordshire England ISBN 978 1315842639 OCLC 889266445 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Burns Michael 1999 France and the Dreyfus Affair A Documentary History Boston Bedford St Martins ISBN 0312111673 OCLC 40593627 Birnbaum Pierre 1995 French Jewish Sociologists Between Reason and Faith The Impact of the Dreyfus Affair Jewish Social Studies 2 1 1 35 ISSN 0021 6704 JSTOR 4467459 The Jewish painters of l Ecole de Paris from the Holocaust to today Jews Europe the XXIst century 25 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2023 Jewish Artists of the School of Paris 1905 1939 Nadine Nieszawer and Deborah Princ Fondation pour la Memoire de la Shoah Retrieved 11 November 2023 Hyman From Dreyfus to Vichy the remaking of French Jewry 1906 1939 pp 18 49 Hyman From Dreyfus to Vichy the remaking of French Jewry 1906 1939 pp 54 57 199 202 a b Julian Jackson 2003 France The Dark Years 1940 1944 OUP Oxford pp 105 107 ISBN 9780191622885 Hyman From Dreyfus to Vichy The Remaking of French Jewry 1906 1939 1979 pp 63 88 Blumenkranz Bernhard 1972 Histoire des Juifs en France Toulouse Privat p 376 Aubry Antoine 7 August 2016 Que sont devenues les synagogues francaises pendant l Occupation Slate fr in French Retrieved 16 January 2022 Adler Jacques 2001 The Jews and Vichy Reflections on French Historiography The Historical Journal 44 4 1065 1082 doi 10 1017 S0018246X01002175 JSTOR 3133551 S2CID 159850802 Address by Mr Jacques Chirac President of the Republic Delivered During Ceremonies Commemorating the Great Roundup of 16 and 17 July 1942 Paris www jacqueschirac asso fr in French Presidence de la Republique 16 July 1995 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Marine Le Pen France not responsible for deporting Jews during Holocaust Washington Post Peter Carrier 2006 Holocaust Monuments and National Memory Cultures in France and Germany Since 1989 The Origins and Political Function of the Vel D Hiv in Paris and the Holocaust Monument in Berlin Berghahn Books p 53 ISBN 978 1 84545 295 7 France organised this Macron denounces state role in Holocaust atrocity The Guardian Associated Press 17 July 2017 via www theguardian com Goldman Russell 17 July 2017 Macron Denounces Anti Zionism as Reinvented Form of Anti Semitism The New York Times Macron hosts Netanyahu condemns anti Zionism as anti Semitism Washington Post Israel PM mourns France s deported Jews BBC News 16 July 2017 a b When Did the U S and Israel Become Allies Hint Trick Question History News Network Retrieved 9 March 2012 Israel Nuclear Profile NTI Retrieved 9 August 2019 Mastermind behind the Munich Olympics attacks dies France24 3 July 2010 Davies Lizzy 18 February 2009 France faces its guilt for deporting Jews in war The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 3 July 2014 Retrieved 17 February 2009 Lizzy Davies in Paris 17 February 2009 France responsible for sending Jews to concentration camps says court The Guardian London Chirac Vows to Fight Race Attacks 9 July 2004 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Anti Semitism On Rise in Europe BBC 31 March 2004 a b Ford Peter 22 June 2004 Anti Semitism rising Jews in France ponder leaving The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 27 November 2009 Smith Craig S 26 March 2006 Jews in France Feel Sting as Anti Semitism Surges Among Children of Immigrants The New York Times Retrieved 4 May 2010 Suspects in death of French Jew face trial Ynetnews 29 April 2009 Gang of Barbarians 14 Defendants Will Be Retried on Appeal in French 13 July 2009 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Toulouse shooting Same gun and motorbike used in Jewish and soldier attacks The Telegraph 19 March 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Krieger Leila Hilary Rothschild France not anti Semitic Archived 5 June 2008 at archive today The Jerusalem Post 15 June 2006 24 November 2010 Vidal Dominique December 2002 Are the French really antisemitic Le Monde Diplomatique Retrieved 5 March 2012 Islamic Extremism Common Concern for Muslim and Western Publics Pew Research Center s Global Attitudes Project 14 July 2005 Retrieved 9 August 2019 a b French Jews ask Sarkozy to help curb attacks Reuters in French 30 January 2009 Branovsky Yael 25 January 2009 Report Gaza war reverses drop in anti Semitism Ynet Eberstadt Fernanda 29 February 2004 A Frenchman Or a Jew The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 August 2019 L antisemitisme est de retour selon le president du Crif Liberation 3 March 2009 Archived from the original on 30 September 2012 Retrieved 3 March 2009 In January 2009 an estimated 352 acts of antisemitism took place in comparison with 460 separate incidents in the whole of 2008 This phenomenon has been linked to the war between Israel and Gaza a b The 2011 annual report on antisemitism in France The Coordination Forum for Countering Anti Semitism Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 13 March 2012 a b Immigrants by Period of Immigration Country of Birth and Last Country of Residence Statistical Abstract of Israel in English and Hebrew Israel Central Bureau of Statistics 26 September 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Le chiffre de l alya des Juifs de France ne decolle pas in French Magazine Terre d Israel Archived from the original on 5 May 2012 Retrieved 10 March 2012 a b Stone Andrea 22 November 2004 As attacks rise in France Jews flock to Israel USA Today Retrieved 4 May 2010 French Jews leave with no regrets BBC 23 January 2003 French Jews must move to Israel BBC 18 July 2004 Gentleman Amelia 20 July 2004 French Jews caught up in a war of words The Guardian London Retrieved 4 May 2010 Sarkozy effect on French Jewish immigration to Israel European Jewish Press 16 August 2007 Archived from the original on 5 April 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Top countries of origin for Jewish immigrants to Israel Faith on the move Pew Research Center Archived from the original on 5 August 2013 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Sitbon Shirli Stay or go French Jews face a growing and emotional dilemma Archived 3 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Journal 21 January 2015 21 January 2015 Yossi Lempkowicz 5 November 2012 Netanyahu to French Jews Come to Israel and make Israel your home European Jewish Press Archived from the original on 28 August 2017 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Immigration to Israel Rises by 7 Led by French Forward 29 December 2013 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Josh Hasten 7 April 2014 French anti Semitism and French aliyah skyrocket on parallel tracks Retrieved 7 April 2014 74 of French Jews Consider Leaving Country Forward 19 May 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2014 a b Judy Maltz 31 December 2014 Immigration figures reach 10 year high in 2014 with large boost from French Jews Haaretz Retrieved 3 January 2015 Moshe Cohen 22 June 2014 Jewish Agency Dramatic Rise in French Ukraine Aliyah Arutz Sheva Retrieved 3 July 2014 DAN BILEFSKY 20 June 2014 Number of French Jews Emigrating to Israel Rises The New York Times Retrieved 3 July 2014 Mosendz Polly 5 September 2014 Wealthy French Jews Are Fleeing Anti Semitism and Bringing Their Money New York Observer Retrieved 6 September 2014 Jewish Agency Affiliated Think Tank Composes Aliyah Plan for 120 000 French Jews Jewish Telegraphic Agency 25 January 2015 Retrieved 9 August 2019 Aliyah plan prepares for 120 000 French Jews JWeekly 29 January 2015 Retrieved 13 February 2015 a b Israel Gains With Influx of French Jewish Entrepreneurs Bloomberg com Bloomberg 22 January 2015 Retrieved 13 February 2015 Raziye Akkoc and Henry Samuel 26 June 2015 Grenoble attack Man found beheaded and Islamist flag raised above factory in France The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2015 Come home Israeli minister urges French Jews amid terror wave Times of Israel 26 June 2015 Retrieved 28 June 2015 Israel s Absorption Ministry Plans for Influx of French Jews Algemeiner 21 June 2015 Retrieved 28 June 2015 Cohen Shimon 16 November 2015 80 of French Jews considering aliyah Arutz Sheva Retrieved 17 November 2015 Amanda Borschel Dan 15 November 2015 French now realizing they and not just Jews are targets Times of Israel Retrieved 17 November 2015 Shitbon Shirli 14 November 2015 For French Jews a New Reality Under Attack for Being French Not Jewish Haaretz Retrieved 17 November 2015 Bassist Rina 17 November 2015 Steady increase in number of French Jews making aliya Jerusalem Post Retrieved 17 November 2015 French Jews head to Israel in the wake of Paris terror attacks IB Business Times 17 November 2015 Retrieved 17 November 2015 Dozens of French Jews immigrate to Israel after Paris attacks Times of Israel 17 November 2015 Retrieved 17 November 2015 Teenager Attacks Jewish Teacher in Marseille With a Machete The New York Times 12 January 2016 France debates Jewish skullcap after knife attack Yahoo News 13 January 2016 Marseille teacher attack Jewish leaders agonise over skullcap BBC News 12 January 2016 French Jewish Politician Found Dead With Stab Wounds in His Apartment Haaretz com French Jewish Politician Alain Ghozland Found Murdered In Home Anti Semitism To Blame Headlines amp Global News 13 January 2016 In France murder of a Jewish woman ignites debate over the word terrorism Washington Post 23 July 2017 Retrieved 20 September 2017 Paris Two charged with anti Semitic murder of 85 year old Holocaust survivor 27 March 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2018 Other references edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 France The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls History of the Jews in France at the website of Jewish Virtual LibraryFurther reading editAdler Jacques The Jews and Vichy reflections on French historiography Historical Journal 44 4 2001 1065 1082 Arkin Kimberly A Rhinestones Religion and the Republic Fashioning Jewishness in France Stanford University Press 2014 online Benbassa Esther The Jews of France A History from Antiquity to the Present 2001 excerpt and text search online Birnbaum Pierre and Jane Todd The Jews of the Republic A Political History of State Jews in France from Gambetta to Vichy 1996 Debre Simon The Jews of France Jewish Quarterly Review 3 3 1891 367 435 long scholarly description online free Doron Daniella Jewish Youth and Identity in Postwar France Rebuilding Family and Nation Indiana UP 2015 Graetz Michael and Jane Todd The Jews in Nineteenth Century France From the French Revolution to the Alliance Israelite Universelle 1996 Graizbord David Becoming Jewish in Early Modern France Documents on Jewish Community Building in Seventeenth Century Bayonne and Peyrehorade journal of social history 2006 147 180 Haus Jeffrey Liberte Egalite Utilite Jewish Education and State in Nineteenth Century France Modern Judaism 22 1 2002 1 27 online Hyman Paula E The Jews of Modern France 1998 excerpt and text search Hyman Paula From Dreyfus to Vichy The Remaking of French Jewry 1906 1939 Columbia UP 1979 online free to borrow Safran William May 2004 Ethnoreligious Politics in France Jews and Muslims West European Politics 27 3 423 451 doi 10 1080 0140238042000228086 S2CID 145166232 Schechter Ronald Obstinate Hebrews Representations of Jews in France 1715 1815 Univ of California Press 2003 Schoolcraft Ralph In Lieu of Memory Contemporary Jewish Writing in France Shofar 2008 26 4 online Taitz Emily The Jews of Medieval France The Community of Champagne 1994 online Weinberg Henry H The myth of the Jew in France 1967 1982 Mosaic Press 1987 Antisemitism edit Anderson Thomas P Edouard Drumont and the Origins of Modern Anti Semitism Catholic Historical Review 1967 28 42 in JSTOR Bell Dorian Globalizing Race Antisemitism and Empire in French and European Culture Northwestern UP 2018 online Birnbaum Pierre Kochan Miriam Anti Semitism in France A Political History from Leon Blum to the Present 1992 317p Busi Frederick The pope of antisemitism the career and legacy of Edouard Adolphe Drumont University Press of America 1986 Byrnes Robert F Antisemitism in modern France 1969 Byrnes R F Edouard Drumont and La France Juive Jewish Social Studies 1948 165 184 in JSTOR Cahm Eric The Dreyfus affair in French society and politics Routledge 2014 Caron Vicki The Jewish Question from Dreyfus to Vichy in Martin Alexander ed French History since Napoleon 1999 172 202 a guide to the historiography Caron Vicki The Antisemitic revival in France in the 1930s the socioeconomic dimension reconsidered Journal of Modern History 70 1 1998 24 73 online Cole Joshua Constantine before the riots of August 1934 civil status anti Semitism and the politics of assimilation in interwar French Algeria Journal of North African Studies 17 5 2012 839 861 Fitch Nancy Mass Culture Mass Parliamentary Politics and Modern Anti Semitism The Dreyfus Affair in Rural France American Historical Review 97 1 1992 55 95 online Goldberg Chad Alan The Jews the Revolution and the Old Regime in French Anti Semitism and Durkheim s Sociology Sociological Theory 29 4 2011 248 271 Isser Natalie Antisemitism during the French Second Empire 1991 online Judaken Jonathan Jean Paul Sartre and the Jewish question anti antisemitism and the politics of the French intellectual U of Nebraska Press 2006 Kalman Samuel The extreme right in interwar France the Faisceau and the Croix de Feu Routledge 2016 Kennedy Sean Reconciling France Against Democracy The Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Fran ais 1927 1945 McGill Queen s Press MQUP 2014 Lindemann Albert S The Jew Accused Three Anti Semitic Affairs Dreyfus Beilis Frank 1894 1915 1991 Mandel Maud S Muslims and Jews in France History of a Conflict Princeton University Press 2014 Marrus Michael R and Robert 0 Paxton Vichy France and the Jews 1981 online Read Piers Paul The Dreyfus Affair 2012 Shields James G Antisemitism in France The spectre of Vichy Patterns of Prejudice 24 2 4 1990 5 17 Zuccotti Susan The Holocaust the French and the Jews 1999 External links editJean Marc Dreyfus Institut d Etudes Politiques Paris Jonathan Laurence Center for European Studies Harvard University Anti semitism in France The Holocaust in France Archived 22 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine Yad Vashem website The Jews of France Archived 13 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Portals nbsp France nbsp Judaism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in France amp oldid 1197858649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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