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Jewish emancipation

Jewish emancipation was the process in various nations in Europe of eliminating Jewish disabilities, e.g. Jewish quotas, to which European Jews were then subject, and the recognition of Jews as entitled to equality and citizenship rights.[1] It included efforts within the community to integrate into their societies as citizens. It occurred gradually between the late 18th century and the early 20th century.

An 1806 French print depicts Napoleon Bonaparte emancipating the Jews

Jewish emancipation followed after the Age of Enlightenment and the concurrent Haskalah, or Jewish Enlightenment.[2] Various nations repealed or superseded previous discriminatory laws applied specifically against Jews where they resided. Before the emancipation, most Jews were isolated in residential areas from the rest of the society; emancipation was a major goal of European Jews of that time, who worked within their communities to achieve integration in the majority societies and broader education. Many became active politically and culturally within wider European civil society as Jews gained full citizenship. They emigrated to countries offering better social and economic opportunities, such as the United Kingdom and the Americas. Some European Jews turned to socialism,[3] Zionism[4] or both.[5]

Background edit

 
The 1791 law proclaiming the Emancipation of the Jews – Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme

Jews were subject to a wide range of restrictions throughout most of European history. Since the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215, Christian Europeans required Jews and Muslims to wear special clothing, such as the Judenhut and the yellow badge for Jews, to distinguish them from Christians. The practice of their religions was often restricted, and they had to swear special oaths. Jews were not allowed to vote, where voting existed, and some countries formally prohibited their entry, such as Norway, Sweden and Spain after the expulsion in the late 15th century.

Jewish involvement in gentile society began during the Age of Enlightenment. Haskalah, the Jewish movement supporting the adoption of enlightenment values, advocated an expansion of Jewish rights within European society. Haskalah followers advocated "coming out of the ghetto", not just physically but also mentally and spiritually.

In 1790, in the United States, President George Washington wrote a letter establishing that Jews in America would share full equal rights, including the right to practice their religion, with all other Americans.[6] However, Jewish commentators observed that exclusion of Jewish citizens from political office occurred in a number of areas still in 1845.[7] In fact, American Jewish citizens organized for political rights in the 1800s, and then for further civil rights in the 1900s.[8]

On September 28, 1791, revolutionary France emancipated its Jewish population. The 40,000 Jews living in France at the time were the first to confront the opportunities and challenges offered by emancipation. The civic equality that the French Jews attained became a model for other European Jews.[9] Newfound opportunities began to be provided to the Jewish people, and they slowly pushed toward equality in other parts of the world. In 1796 and 1834, the Netherlands granted the Jews equal rights with non-Jews.[10][11] Napoleon freed the Jews in areas he conquered in Europe outside France (see Napoleon and the Jews). Greece granted equal rights to Jews in 1830. But, it was not until the revolutions of the mid-19th century that Jewish political movements would begin to persuade governments in Great Britain and Central and Eastern Europe to grant equal rights to Jews.[12]

In English law and some successor legal systems there was a convention known as benefit of clergy (Law Latin: privilegium clericale) by which an individual convicted of a crime, through claiming to be a Christian clergyman (usually as a pretext; in most cases the defendant claiming benefit of clergy was a layperson) could escape punishment or receive a reduced punishment. In the opinions of many contemporary legal scholars, this meant that a Jew who had not renounced Judaism could not claim benefit of clergy.[13] In England itself the practice of granting benefit of clergy was ended in 1827 but it continued further in other jurisdictions.

Emancipation movements edit

The early stages of Jewish emancipation movements were part of the general progressive efforts to achieve freedom and rights for minorities. While this was a movement, it was also a pursuit for equal rights.[14] Thus, the emancipation movement would be a long process. The question of equal rights for Jews was tied to demands for constitutions and civil rights in various nations. Jewish statesmen and intellectuals, such as Heinrich Heine, Johann Jacoby, Gabriel Riesser, Berr Isaac Berr, and Lionel Nathan Rothschild, worked with the general movement toward liberty and political freedom, rather than for Jews specifically.[15]

In 1781, the Prussian civil servant Christian Wilhelm Dohm published the famous script Über die bürgerliche Emanzipation der Juden. Dohm disproves the antisemitic stereotypes and pleads for equal rights for Jews. To this day, it is called the Bible of Jewish emancipation.[16]

In the face of persistent anti-Jewish incidents and blood libels, such as the Damascus affair of 1840, and the failure of many states to emancipate the Jews, Jewish organizations formed to push for the emancipation and protection of their people. The Board of Deputies of British Jews under Moses Montefiore, the Central Consistory in Paris, and the Alliance Israelite Universelle all began working to assure the freedom of Jews.

Jewish emancipation, implemented under Napoleonic rule in French occupied and annexed states, suffered a setback in many member states of the German Confederation following the decisions of the Congress of Vienna. In the final revision of the Congress on the rights of the Jews, the emissary of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, Johann Smidt – unauthorised and unconsented to by the other parties – altered the text from "The confessors of Jewish faith are preserved the rights already conceded to them in the confederal states", by replacing a single word, which entailed serious consequences, into: "The confessors of Jewish faith are preserved the rights already conceded to them by the confederal states."[17] A number of German states used the altered text version as legal grounds to reverse the Napoleonic emancipation of Jewish citizens. The Prussian emissary Wilhelm von Humboldt and the Austrian Klemens von Metternich promoted the preservation of Jewish emancipation, as maintained by their own countries, but were not successful in others.[15]

During the Revolutions of 1848, Jewish emancipation was granted by the Basic Rights of the Frankfurt Parliament (Paragraph 13), which said that civil rights were not to be conditional on religious faith. But only some German states introduced the Frankfurt parliamentary decision as state law, such as Hamburg; other states were reluctant. Important German states, such as Prussia (1812), Württemberg (1828), Electorate of Hesse (1833), and Hanover (1842), had already emancipated their Jews as citizens. By doing so, they hoped to educate the gentiles, and terminate laws that sought to oppress the Jews.[18] Although the movement was mostly successful; some early emancipated Jewish communities continued to suffer persisting or new de facto, though not legal, discrimination against those Jews trying to achieve careers in public service and education. Those few states that had refrained from Jewish emancipation were forced to do so by an act of the North German Federation on 3 July 1869, or when they acceded to the newly united Germany in 1871. The emancipation of all Jewish Germans was reversed by Nazi Germany from 1933 until the end of World War II.[12]

Dates of emancipation edit

In some countries, emancipation came with a single act. In others, limited rights were granted first in the hope of "changing" the Jews "for the better."[19]

Years when legal equality was granted to Jews
Year Country
1264 Poland
1791 France[20][9]
1796 Batavian Republic – Netherlands
1808 Grand Duchy of Hesse
1808 Westphalia[21]
1811 Grand Duchy of Frankfurt[22]
1812 Mecklenburg-Schwerin[23]
1812 Prussia[24]
1813 Kingdom of Bavaria[25]
1826 Maryland (the Jew Bill revised Maryland law to permit a Jew to hold office if he professed belief in "a future state of rewards and punishments".)
1828 Württemberg
1830 Belgium
1830 Greece
1831 Jamaica[26]
1832 Canada (Lower Canada (Quebec))[27]
1833 Electorate of Hesse
1834 United Netherlands
1839 Ottoman Empire[28]
1842 Kingdom of Hanover
1848 Nassau[29]
1849 Hungarian Revolutionary Parliament declared and enacted the emancipation of Jews, the law was repealed by the Habsburgs after the joint Austrian-Russian victory over Hungary[30]
1849 Denmark[31]
1849 Hamburg[32]
1856 Switzerland
1858 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
1861 Italy (Italy had not existed as a unified nation prior to 1861 and had previously been divided amongst several foreign entities)
1862 Baden
1863 Holstein[33]
1864 Free City of Frankfurt
1865 Mexico
1867 Austrian Empire
1867 Restoration of the law of emancipation in Kingdom of Hungary after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise
1869 North German Confederation
1870 Sweden-Norway (1851 in Norway)
1871 Germany[34]
1877 New Hampshire (last US state to lift restrictions limiting public office to Protestants)
1878 Bulgaria
1878 Serbia
1890 Brazil[35]
1911 Portugal
1917 Russia
1918 Finland
1923 Romania
1945–1949 West Germany[36]
1978 Spain[37]

Consequences edit

Emancipation, integration, and assimilation edit

The newfound freedom of Jews in places such as France, Italy, and Germany, at least during the Empire, permitted many Jews to leave the ghettos, benefitting from and contributing to wider society for the first time.[38] Thus, with emancipation, many Jews' relationships with Jewish belief, practice, and culture evolved to accommodate a degree of integration with secular society. Where Halacha (Jewish law) was at odds with local law of the land, or where Halacha did not address some aspect of contemporary secular life, compromise was often sought in the balancing of religious and secular law, ethics, and obligations. Consequently, while some remained firm in their established Jewish practice, the prevalence of emancipated Jewry prompted gradual evolution and adaptation of the religion, and the emergence of new denominations of Judaism including Reform during the 19th century, and the widely practiced Modern Orthodoxy, both of which continue to be practiced by strong Jewish communities today.[39][40][41]

Critics of the Haskalah lament the emergence of inter-religious marriage in secular society, as well as the dilution of Halacha and Jewish tradition, citing waning religiosity, dwindling population numbers, or poor observance as contributors to the potential disappearance of Jewish culture and dispersion of communities.[42][43] In contrast, others cite antisemitic events such as the Holocaust as more detrimental to the continuity and longevity of Judaism than the Haskalah.[44] Emancipation offered Jewish people civil rights and opportunities for upward mobility, and assisted in dousing the flames of widespread Jew-hatred (though never completely, and only temporarily). This enabled Jews to live multifaceted lives, breaking cycles of poverty, enjoying the spoils of Enlightened society, while also maintaining strong Jewish faith and community.[45][46] While this element of emancipation gave rise to antisemitic canards relating to dual loyalties, and the successful upward mobility of educated and entrepreneurial Jews saw pushback in antisemitic tropes relating to control, domination, and greed, the integration of Jews into wider society led to a diverse tapestry of contribution to art, science, philosophy, and both secular and religious culture.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Barnavi, Eli. "Jewish Emancipation in Western Europe". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  2. ^ Ettinger, Shmuel. "Jewish Emancipation and Enlightenment". Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Socialism". Jewish Virtual Library. American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  4. ^ Beauchamp, Zack (14 May 2018). "What is Zionism?". Vox.com. Vox Media, Inc. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  5. ^ "YIVO | Fareynikte". yivoencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-11-29. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
  7. ^ Leeser, I. "Jewish Emancipation," 1845, The Occident and American Jewish Advocate, vol III, no 3, http://www.jewish-history.com/Occident/volume3/jun1845/emancipation.html
  8. ^ Sorkin, David, Jewish Emancipation, Princeton University Press, 2019
  9. ^ a b Paula E. Hyman, The Jews of Modern France (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), pp. 17–18.
  10. ^ Vlessing, Odette. "The Jewish community in transition; from acceptance to emancipation." Studia Rosenthaliana 30.1 (1996): 195-212.
  11. ^ Ramakers, J. J. M. "Parallel processes? The emancipation of Jews and Catholics in the Netherlands 1795/96-1848." Studia Rosenthaliana 30.1 (1996): 33-40.
  12. ^ a b "Emancipation". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  13. ^ Henriques, Henry Straus Quixano (October 1905). "The Civil Rights of English Jews". The Jewish Quarterly Review. The Jews and the English Law. 18 (1). Oxford: Horace Hart, Printer to the University: 40–83. doi:10.2307/1450822. hdl:2027/mdp.39015039624393. ISSN 0021-6682. JSTOR 1450822. OCLC 5792006336. A Jew was, unless he had previously renounced his religion, incapable of becoming a clergyman; and therefore Jews who had committed crimes and been convicted of them could not, according to the opinion of many great legal writers, avail themselves of the benefit of clergy which other malefactors, on a first conviction for felony were at liberty to plead in mitigation of punishment.
  14. ^ Nicholas, de Lange; Freud-Kandel, Miri; C. Dubin, Lois (2005). Modern Judaism. Oxford University Press. pp. 30–40. ISBN 978-0-19-926287-8.
  15. ^ a b Sharfman, Glenn R., "Jewish Emancipation", in Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions
  16. ^ Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger: Europa im Jahrhundert der Aufklärung. Stuttgart: Reclam, 2006 (2nd edition), 268.
  17. ^ In the German original: "Es werden den Bekennern des jüdischen Glaubens die denselben in [von, respectively] den einzelnen Bundesstaaten bereits eingeräumten Rechte erhalten." Cf. Heinrich Graetz, Geschichte der Juden von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart: 11 vols., Leipzig: Leiner, 1900, vol. 11: 'Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit (1750) bis in die neueste Zeit (1848)', p. 317. Emphasis not in the original. Reprint of the edition revised by the author: Berlin: Arani, 1998, ISBN 3-7605-8673-2.
  18. ^ C. Dubin, Lois. Modern Judaism. Oxford University Press. pp. 32–33.
  19. ^ . Friends-partners.org. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2015-02-17.
  20. ^ "Admission of Jews to Rights of Citizenship," 27 September 1791, 1791-09-27, retrieved 2021-12-04
  21. ^ However, reversed by the Westphalian successor states in 1815. Cf. for introduction and reversion Heinrich Graetz, Geschichte der Juden von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart: 11 vols., Leipzig: Leiner, 1900, vol. 11: 'Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit (1750) bis in die neueste Zeit (1848)', p. 287. Reprint of the edition of last hand: Berlin: arani, 1998, ISBN 3-7605-8673-2.
  22. ^ Reversed at the dissolution of the grand duchy in 1815.
  23. ^ On February 22, cf. Heinrich Graetz, Geschichte der Juden von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart: 11 vols., Leipzig: Leiner, 1900, vol. 11: 'Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit (1750) bis in die neueste Zeit (1848)', p. 297. Reprint of the edition of last hand: Berlin: arani, 1998, ISBN 3-7605-8673-2.
  24. ^ On March 11, cf. Heinrich Graetz, Geschichte der Juden von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart: 11 vols., Leipzig: Leiner, 1900, vol. 11: 'Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit (1750) bis in die neueste Zeit (1848)', pp. 297seq. Reprint of the edition of last hand: Berlin: arani, 1998, ISBN 3-7605-8673-2.
  25. ^ Deutsch-jüdische Geschichte in der Neuzeit. Michael A. Meyer, Michael Brenner, Mordechai Breuer, Leo Baeck Institute. München: C.H. Beck. 1996–2000. ISBN 3-406-39705-0. OCLC 34707114.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ Finding Your Roots, PBS, September 23, 2014
  27. ^ Bélanger, Claude. "An Act to Grant Equal Rights and Privileges to Persons of the Jewish Religion (1832)". Quebec History. Marianopolis College. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  28. ^ By order of the Sultan, equal rights were granted to non-Muslims, including Jews, in 1839 as part of the Tanzimat reforms.
  29. ^ Introduced on December 12, 1848.
  30. ^ The Hungarian Diet declared the full emancipation of the Jews by law in the realm on July 28, 1849. However, this would soon be rolled back by the Hungarians' defeat at the hands of the Russian Army barely two weeks later on August 13, which marked the failure of the Hungarian Revolution as the Austrian Empire tried to abolish Hungary's constitution and territorial integrity. The emancipation of the Hungarian Jews would not be restored until the Compromise of 1867.
  31. ^ By the Constitution of Denmark of June 5, 1849.
  32. ^ By introduction of the basic freedoms as decided by the National Assembly, adopted for Hamburg's law on February 21, 1849.
  33. ^ By law on the Affairs of the Jews in the Duchy of Holstein on July 14, 1863.
  34. ^ For the status of Jews in the states, which united in 1871 to constitute Germany see the respective regulations of the principalities and states that preceded the 1871 unification of Germany.
  35. ^ Since 1810 Jews already had partial freedom of religion, that was completely guaranteed in 1890 after the proclamation of the Republic
  36. ^ After the fall of the Nazis, the Jews recovered their civil rights.
  37. ^ Oliva, Javier García (20 Aug 2008). "Religious Freedom in Transition: Spain". Religion, State and Society. 36 (3): 269–281. doi:10.1080/09637490802260336. ISSN 0963-7494.
  38. ^ "The Haskalah". Jewish Virtual Library.
  39. ^ Samet, Moshe (1988). "The Beginnings of Orthodoxy". Modern Judaism. 8 (3): 249–269. doi:10.1093/mj/8.3.249. JSTOR 1396068.
  40. ^ Zalkin, M. (2019). " The Relations between the Haskalah and Traditional Jewish Communities". In The History of Jews in Lithuania. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill | Schöningh. doi: https://doi.org/10.30965/9783657705757_011
  41. ^ Book: Haskalah and Beyond: The Reception of the Hebrew Enlightenment and the Emergence of Haskalah Judaism, Moshe Pelli, University Press of America, 2010
  42. ^ Grobgeld, David; Bursell, Moa (2021). "Resisting assimilation – ethnic boundary maintenance among Jews in Sweden". Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory. 22 (2): 171–191. doi:10.1080/1600910X.2021.1885460. S2CID 149297225.
  43. ^ Lemberger, Tirza (2012). "Haskalah and Beyond: The Reception of the Hebrew Enlightenment and the Emergence of Haskalah Judaism (Review)". Hebrew Studies. 53: 420–422. doi:10.1353/hbr.2012.0013. S2CID 170774270.
  44. ^ "If Not for the Holocaust, There Could Have Been 32 Million Jews in the World Today, Expert Says".
  45. ^ "Antisemitism from the Enlightenment to World War I".
  46. ^ Richarz, M. (1975). "Jewish Social Mobility in Germany during the Time of Emancipation (1790–1871)." The Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook, 20(1), 69–77. doi:10.1093/leobaeck/20.1.69

Bibliography edit

  • Battenberg, Friedrich (2017), Jewish Emancipation in the 18th and 19th Centuries, EGO - European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, retrieved: March 17, 2021 (pdf).
  • Christian Wilhelm von Dohm. Über die bürgerliche Verbesserung der Juden (Berlin /Stettin 1781). Kritische und kommentierte Studienausgabe. Hrsg. von Wolf Christoph Seifert. Wallstein, Göttingen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8353-1699-7.
  • David Feuerwerker. L'Émancipation des Juifs en France. De l'Ancien Régime à la fin du Second Empire. Paris: Albin Michel, 1976 ISBN 2-226-00316-9
  • Heinrich Graetz, Geschichte der Juden von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart: 11 vols., Leipzig: Leiner, 1900, vol. 11: Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit (1750) bis in die neueste Zeit (1848), reprint of the edition of last hand; Berlin: arani, 1998, ISBN 3-7605-8673-2
  • Hyman, Paula E. The Jews of Modern France. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998.
  • Sorkin, David (2019). Jewish Emancipation: A History Across Five Centuries. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16494-6.

External links edit

  • History of Frankfurt (German Wikipedia)
  • , Ohio State University
  • Emancipation, Mendelssohn, and the Rise of Reform Thinktorah.org, Rabbi Menachem Levine
  • Des Juifs contre l'émancipation. De Babylone à Benny Lévy 2009-02-15 at the Wayback Machine [Jews Against Emancipation: From Babylon to Benny Lévy], Labyrinthe. Atelier interdisciplinaire (in French), 2007 (Special issue)
  • 'Emancipation,' A Story Of European Jews' Liberation, NPR books
  • Jewish Emancipation In The East
  • Jewish Emancipation on The Museum of Family History

jewish, emancipation, process, various, nations, europe, eliminating, jewish, disabilities, jewish, quotas, which, european, jews, were, then, subject, recognition, jews, entitled, equality, citizenship, rights, included, efforts, within, community, integrate,. Jewish emancipation was the process in various nations in Europe of eliminating Jewish disabilities e g Jewish quotas to which European Jews were then subject and the recognition of Jews as entitled to equality and citizenship rights 1 It included efforts within the community to integrate into their societies as citizens It occurred gradually between the late 18th century and the early 20th century An 1806 French print depicts Napoleon Bonaparte emancipating the Jews Jewish emancipation followed after the Age of Enlightenment and the concurrent Haskalah or Jewish Enlightenment 2 Various nations repealed or superseded previous discriminatory laws applied specifically against Jews where they resided Before the emancipation most Jews were isolated in residential areas from the rest of the society emancipation was a major goal of European Jews of that time who worked within their communities to achieve integration in the majority societies and broader education Many became active politically and culturally within wider European civil society as Jews gained full citizenship They emigrated to countries offering better social and economic opportunities such as the United Kingdom and the Americas Some European Jews turned to socialism 3 Zionism 4 or both 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Emancipation movements 3 Dates of emancipation 4 Consequences 4 1 Emancipation integration and assimilation 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp The 1791 law proclaiming the Emancipation of the Jews Musee d Art et d Histoire du Judaisme Jews were subject to a wide range of restrictions throughout most of European history Since the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215 Christian Europeans required Jews and Muslims to wear special clothing such as the Judenhut and the yellow badge for Jews to distinguish them from Christians The practice of their religions was often restricted and they had to swear special oaths Jews were not allowed to vote where voting existed and some countries formally prohibited their entry such as Norway Sweden and Spain after the expulsion in the late 15th century Jewish involvement in gentile society began during the Age of Enlightenment Haskalah the Jewish movement supporting the adoption of enlightenment values advocated an expansion of Jewish rights within European society Haskalah followers advocated coming out of the ghetto not just physically but also mentally and spiritually In 1790 in the United States President George Washington wrote a letter establishing that Jews in America would share full equal rights including the right to practice their religion with all other Americans 6 However Jewish commentators observed that exclusion of Jewish citizens from political office occurred in a number of areas still in 1845 7 In fact American Jewish citizens organized for political rights in the 1800s and then for further civil rights in the 1900s 8 On September 28 1791 revolutionary France emancipated its Jewish population The 40 000 Jews living in France at the time were the first to confront the opportunities and challenges offered by emancipation The civic equality that the French Jews attained became a model for other European Jews 9 Newfound opportunities began to be provided to the Jewish people and they slowly pushed toward equality in other parts of the world In 1796 and 1834 the Netherlands granted the Jews equal rights with non Jews 10 11 Napoleon freed the Jews in areas he conquered in Europe outside France see Napoleon and the Jews Greece granted equal rights to Jews in 1830 But it was not until the revolutions of the mid 19th century that Jewish political movements would begin to persuade governments in Great Britain and Central and Eastern Europe to grant equal rights to Jews 12 In English law and some successor legal systems there was a convention known as benefit of clergy Law Latin privilegium clericale by which an individual convicted of a crime through claiming to be a Christian clergyman usually as a pretext in most cases the defendant claiming benefit of clergy was a layperson could escape punishment or receive a reduced punishment In the opinions of many contemporary legal scholars this meant that a Jew who had not renounced Judaism could not claim benefit of clergy 13 In England itself the practice of granting benefit of clergy was ended in 1827 but it continued further in other jurisdictions Emancipation movements editThe early stages of Jewish emancipation movements were part of the general progressive efforts to achieve freedom and rights for minorities While this was a movement it was also a pursuit for equal rights 14 Thus the emancipation movement would be a long process The question of equal rights for Jews was tied to demands for constitutions and civil rights in various nations Jewish statesmen and intellectuals such as Heinrich Heine Johann Jacoby Gabriel Riesser Berr Isaac Berr and Lionel Nathan Rothschild worked with the general movement toward liberty and political freedom rather than for Jews specifically 15 In 1781 the Prussian civil servant Christian Wilhelm Dohm published the famous script Uber die burgerliche Emanzipation der Juden Dohm disproves the antisemitic stereotypes and pleads for equal rights for Jews To this day it is called the Bible of Jewish emancipation 16 In the face of persistent anti Jewish incidents and blood libels such as the Damascus affair of 1840 and the failure of many states to emancipate the Jews Jewish organizations formed to push for the emancipation and protection of their people The Board of Deputies of British Jews under Moses Montefiore the Central Consistory in Paris and the Alliance Israelite Universelle all began working to assure the freedom of Jews Jewish emancipation implemented under Napoleonic rule in French occupied and annexed states suffered a setback in many member states of the German Confederation following the decisions of the Congress of Vienna In the final revision of the Congress on the rights of the Jews the emissary of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen Johann Smidt unauthorised and unconsented to by the other parties altered the text from The confessors of Jewish faith are preserved the rights already conceded to them in the confederal states by replacing a single word which entailed serious consequences into The confessors of Jewish faith are preserved the rights already conceded to them by the confederal states 17 A number of German states used the altered text version as legal grounds to reverse the Napoleonic emancipation of Jewish citizens The Prussian emissary Wilhelm von Humboldt and the Austrian Klemens von Metternich promoted the preservation of Jewish emancipation as maintained by their own countries but were not successful in others 15 During the Revolutions of 1848 Jewish emancipation was granted by the Basic Rights of the Frankfurt Parliament Paragraph 13 which said that civil rights were not to be conditional on religious faith But only some German states introduced the Frankfurt parliamentary decision as state law such as Hamburg other states were reluctant Important German states such as Prussia 1812 Wurttemberg 1828 Electorate of Hesse 1833 and Hanover 1842 had already emancipated their Jews as citizens By doing so they hoped to educate the gentiles and terminate laws that sought to oppress the Jews 18 Although the movement was mostly successful some early emancipated Jewish communities continued to suffer persisting or new de facto though not legal discrimination against those Jews trying to achieve careers in public service and education Those few states that had refrained from Jewish emancipation were forced to do so by an act of the North German Federation on 3 July 1869 or when they acceded to the newly united Germany in 1871 The emancipation of all Jewish Germans was reversed by Nazi Germany from 1933 until the end of World War II 12 Dates of emancipation editIn some countries emancipation came with a single act In others limited rights were granted first in the hope of changing the Jews for the better 19 Years when legal equality was granted to Jews Year Country 1264 Poland 1791 France 20 9 1796 Batavian Republic Netherlands 1808 Grand Duchy of Hesse 1808 Westphalia 21 1811 Grand Duchy of Frankfurt 22 1812 Mecklenburg Schwerin 23 1812 Prussia 24 1813 Kingdom of Bavaria 25 1826 Maryland the Jew Bill revised Maryland law to permit a Jew to hold office if he professed belief in a future state of rewards and punishments 1828 Wurttemberg 1830 Belgium 1830 Greece 1831 Jamaica 26 1832 Canada Lower Canada Quebec 27 1833 Electorate of Hesse 1834 United Netherlands 1839 Ottoman Empire 28 1842 Kingdom of Hanover 1848 Nassau 29 1849 Hungarian Revolutionary Parliament declared and enacted the emancipation of Jews the law was repealed by the Habsburgs after the joint Austrian Russian victory over Hungary 30 1849 Denmark 31 1849 Hamburg 32 1856 Switzerland 1858 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1861 Italy Italy had not existed as a unified nation prior to 1861 and had previously been divided amongst several foreign entities 1862 Baden 1863 Holstein 33 1864 Free City of Frankfurt 1865 Mexico 1867 Austrian Empire 1867 Restoration of the law of emancipation in Kingdom of Hungary after the Austro Hungarian Compromise 1869 North German Confederation 1870 Sweden Norway 1851 in Norway 1871 Germany 34 1877 New Hampshire last US state to lift restrictions limiting public office to Protestants 1878 Bulgaria 1878 Serbia 1890 Brazil 35 1911 Portugal 1917 Russia 1918 Finland 1923 Romania 1945 1949 West Germany 36 1978 Spain 37 Consequences editEmancipation integration and assimilation edit The newfound freedom of Jews in places such as France Italy and Germany at least during the Empire permitted many Jews to leave the ghettos benefitting from and contributing to wider society for the first time 38 Thus with emancipation many Jews relationships with Jewish belief practice and culture evolved to accommodate a degree of integration with secular society Where Halacha Jewish law was at odds with local law of the land or where Halacha did not address some aspect of contemporary secular life compromise was often sought in the balancing of religious and secular law ethics and obligations Consequently while some remained firm in their established Jewish practice the prevalence of emancipated Jewry prompted gradual evolution and adaptation of the religion and the emergence of new denominations of Judaism including Reform during the 19th century and the widely practiced Modern Orthodoxy both of which continue to be practiced by strong Jewish communities today 39 40 41 Critics of the Haskalah lament the emergence of inter religious marriage in secular society as well as the dilution of Halacha and Jewish tradition citing waning religiosity dwindling population numbers or poor observance as contributors to the potential disappearance of Jewish culture and dispersion of communities 42 43 In contrast others cite antisemitic events such as the Holocaust as more detrimental to the continuity and longevity of Judaism than the Haskalah 44 Emancipation offered Jewish people civil rights and opportunities for upward mobility and assisted in dousing the flames of widespread Jew hatred though never completely and only temporarily This enabled Jews to live multifaceted lives breaking cycles of poverty enjoying the spoils of Enlightened society while also maintaining strong Jewish faith and community 45 46 While this element of emancipation gave rise to antisemitic canards relating to dual loyalties and the successful upward mobility of educated and entrepreneurial Jews saw pushback in antisemitic tropes relating to control domination and greed the integration of Jews into wider society led to a diverse tapestry of contribution to art science philosophy and both secular and religious culture See also editEmancipation of the Jews in the United Kingdom Jewish Enlightenment Jewish question Napoleon and the JewsReferences edit Barnavi Eli Jewish Emancipation in Western Europe My Jewish Learning Retrieved 25 September 2013 Ettinger Shmuel Jewish Emancipation and Enlightenment Retrieved 19 December 2023 Socialism Jewish Virtual Library American Israeli Cooperative Enterprise Retrieved 24 January 2019 Beauchamp Zack 14 May 2018 What is Zionism Vox com Vox Media Inc Retrieved 24 January 2019 YIVO Fareynikte yivoencyclopedia org Retrieved 2023 03 09 Washington Letter Archived from the original on 2020 11 29 Retrieved 2019 12 07 Leeser I Jewish Emancipation 1845 The Occident and American Jewish Advocate vol III no 3 http www jewish history com Occident volume3 jun1845 emancipation html Sorkin David Jewish Emancipation Princeton University Press 2019 a b Paula E Hyman The Jews of Modern France Berkeley University of California Press 1998 pp 17 18 Vlessing Odette The Jewish community in transition from acceptance to emancipation Studia Rosenthaliana 30 1 1996 195 212 Ramakers J J M Parallel processes The emancipation of Jews and Catholics in the Netherlands 1795 96 1848 Studia Rosenthaliana 30 1 1996 33 40 a b Emancipation Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 25 September 2013 Henriques Henry Straus Quixano October 1905 The Civil Rights of English Jews The Jewish Quarterly Review The Jews and the English Law 18 1 Oxford Horace Hart Printer to the University 40 83 doi 10 2307 1450822 hdl 2027 mdp 39015039624393 ISSN 0021 6682 JSTOR 1450822 OCLC 5792006336 A Jew was unless he had previously renounced his religion incapable of becoming a clergyman and therefore Jews who had committed crimes and been convicted of them could not according to the opinion of many great legal writers avail themselves of the benefit of clergy which other malefactors on a first conviction for felony were at liberty to plead in mitigation of punishment Nicholas de Lange Freud Kandel Miri C Dubin Lois 2005 Modern Judaism Oxford University Press pp 30 40 ISBN 978 0 19 926287 8 a b Sharfman Glenn R Jewish Emancipation in Encyclopedia of 1848 Revolutions Barbara Stollberg Rilinger Europa im Jahrhundert der Aufklarung Stuttgart Reclam 2006 2nd edition 268 In the German original Es werden den Bekennern des judischen Glaubens die denselben in von respectively den einzelnen Bundesstaaten bereits eingeraumten Rechte erhalten Cf Heinrich Graetz Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart 11 vols Leipzig Leiner 1900 vol 11 Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit 1750 bis in die neueste Zeit 1848 p 317 Emphasis not in the original Reprint of the edition revised by the author Berlin Arani 1998 ISBN 3 7605 8673 2 C Dubin Lois Modern Judaism Oxford University Press pp 32 33 THE DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN ANTI SEMITISM images pg 21 Friends partners org Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 02 17 Admission of Jews to Rights of Citizenship 27 September 1791 1791 09 27 retrieved 2021 12 04 However reversed by the Westphalian successor states in 1815 Cf for introduction and reversion Heinrich Graetz Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart 11 vols Leipzig Leiner 1900 vol 11 Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit 1750 bis in die neueste Zeit 1848 p 287 Reprint of the edition of last hand Berlin arani 1998 ISBN 3 7605 8673 2 Reversed at the dissolution of the grand duchy in 1815 On February 22 cf Heinrich Graetz Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart 11 vols Leipzig Leiner 1900 vol 11 Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit 1750 bis in die neueste Zeit 1848 p 297 Reprint of the edition of last hand Berlin arani 1998 ISBN 3 7605 8673 2 On March 11 cf Heinrich Graetz Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart 11 vols Leipzig Leiner 1900 vol 11 Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit 1750 bis in die neueste Zeit 1848 pp 297seq Reprint of the edition of last hand Berlin arani 1998 ISBN 3 7605 8673 2 Deutsch judische Geschichte in der Neuzeit Michael A Meyer Michael Brenner Mordechai Breuer Leo Baeck Institute Munchen C H Beck 1996 2000 ISBN 3 406 39705 0 OCLC 34707114 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Finding Your Roots PBS September 23 2014 Belanger Claude An Act to Grant Equal Rights and Privileges to Persons of the Jewish Religion 1832 Quebec History Marianopolis College Retrieved 31 December 2020 By order of the Sultan equal rights were granted to non Muslims including Jews in 1839 as part of the Tanzimat reforms Introduced on December 12 1848 The Hungarian Diet declared the full emancipation of the Jews by law in the realm on July 28 1849 However this would soon be rolled back by the Hungarians defeat at the hands of the Russian Army barely two weeks later on August 13 which marked the failure of the Hungarian Revolution as the Austrian Empire tried to abolish Hungary s constitution and territorial integrity The emancipation of the Hungarian Jews would not be restored until the Compromise of 1867 By the Constitution of Denmark of June 5 1849 By introduction of the basic freedoms as decided by the National Assembly adopted for Hamburg s law on February 21 1849 By law on the Affairs of the Jews in the Duchy of Holstein on July 14 1863 For the status of Jews in the states which united in 1871 to constitute Germany see the respective regulations of the principalities and states that preceded the 1871 unification of Germany Since 1810 Jews already had partial freedom of religion that was completely guaranteed in 1890 after the proclamation of the Republic After the fall of the Nazis the Jews recovered their civil rights Oliva Javier Garcia 20 Aug 2008 Religious Freedom in Transition Spain Religion State and Society 36 3 269 281 doi 10 1080 09637490802260336 ISSN 0963 7494 The Haskalah Jewish Virtual Library Samet Moshe 1988 The Beginnings of Orthodoxy Modern Judaism 8 3 249 269 doi 10 1093 mj 8 3 249 JSTOR 1396068 Zalkin M 2019 The Relations between the Haskalah and Traditional Jewish Communities In The History of Jews in Lithuania Leiden The Netherlands Brill Schoningh doi https doi org 10 30965 9783657705757 011 Book Haskalah and Beyond The Reception of the Hebrew Enlightenment and the Emergence of Haskalah Judaism Moshe Pelli University Press of America 2010 Grobgeld David Bursell Moa 2021 Resisting assimilation ethnic boundary maintenance among Jews in Sweden Distinktion Journal of Social Theory 22 2 171 191 doi 10 1080 1600910X 2021 1885460 S2CID 149297225 Lemberger Tirza 2012 Haskalah and Beyond The Reception of the Hebrew Enlightenment and the Emergence of Haskalah Judaism Review Hebrew Studies 53 420 422 doi 10 1353 hbr 2012 0013 S2CID 170774270 If Not for the Holocaust There Could Have Been 32 Million Jews in the World Today Expert Says Antisemitism from the Enlightenment to World War I Richarz M 1975 Jewish Social Mobility in Germany during the Time of Emancipation 1790 1871 The Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook 20 1 69 77 doi 10 1093 leobaeck 20 1 69Bibliography editBattenberg Friedrich 2017 Jewish Emancipation in the 18th and 19th Centuries EGO European History Online Mainz Institute of European History retrieved March 17 2021 pdf Christian Wilhelm von Dohm Uber die burgerliche Verbesserung der Juden Berlin Stettin 1781 Kritische und kommentierte Studienausgabe Hrsg von Wolf Christoph Seifert Wallstein Gottingen 2015 ISBN 978 3 8353 1699 7 David Feuerwerker L Emancipation des Juifs en France De l Ancien Regime a la fin du Second Empire Paris Albin Michel 1976 ISBN 2 226 00316 9 Heinrich Graetz Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart 11 vols Leipzig Leiner 1900 vol 11 Geschichte der Juden vom Beginn der Mendelssohnschen Zeit 1750 bis in die neueste Zeit 1848 reprint of the edition of last hand Berlin arani 1998 ISBN 3 7605 8673 2 Hyman Paula E The Jews of Modern France Berkeley University of California Press 1998 Sorkin David 2019 Jewish Emancipation A History Across Five Centuries Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16494 6 External links editHistory of Frankfurt German Wikipedia Jewish Emancipation Ohio State University Emancipation Mendelssohn and the Rise of Reform Thinktorah org Rabbi Menachem Levine Des Juifs contre l emancipation De Babylone a Benny Levy Archived 2009 02 15 at the Wayback Machine Jews Against Emancipation From Babylon to Benny Levy Labyrinthe Atelier interdisciplinaire in French 2007 Special issue Emancipation A Story Of European Jews Liberation NPR books Jewish Emancipation In The East Jewish Emancipation on The Museum of Family History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish emancipation amp oldid 1224576709, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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