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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Jewish History
+
+Author: S. M. Dubnow
+
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7836]
+This file was first posted on May 21, 2003
+Last Updated: May 8, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JEWISH HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David King, Charles Franks, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+JEWISH HISTORY
+
+AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY
+OF HISTORY
+
+By S. M. Dubnow
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION
+
+
+The author of the present essay, S. M. Dubnow, occupies a well-nigh
+dominating position in Russian-Jewish literature as an historian and
+an acute critic. His investigations into the history of the
+Polish-Russian Jews, especially his achievements in the history of
+Chassidism, have been of fundamental importance in these departments.
+What raises Mr. Dubnow far above the status of the professional
+historian, and awakens the reader's lively interest in him, is not so
+much the matter of his books, as the manner of presentation. It is
+rare to meet with an historian in whom scientific objectivity and
+thoroughness are so harmoniously combined with an ardent temperament
+and plastic ability. Mr. Dubnow's scientific activity, first and last,
+is a striking refutation of the widespread opinion that identifies
+attractiveness of form in the work of a scholar with superficiality of
+content. Even his strictly scientific investigations, besides offering
+the scholar a wealth of new suggestions, form instructive and
+entertaining reading matter for the educated layman. In his critical
+essays, Mr. Dubnow shows himself to be possessed of keen psychologic
+insight. By virtue of this quality of delicate perception, he aims to
+assign to every historical fact its proper place in the line of
+development, and so establish the bond between it and the general
+history of mankind. This psychologic ability contributes vastly to the
+interest aroused by Mr. Dubnow's historical works outside of the
+limited circle of scholars. There is a passage in one of his books[1]
+in which, in his incisive manner, he expresses his views on the limits
+and tasks of historical writing. As the passage bears upon the methods
+employed in the present essay, and, at the same time, is a
+characteristic specimen of our author's style, I take the liberty of
+quoting:
+
+"The popularization of history is by no means to be pursued to the
+detriment of its severely scientific treatment. What is to be guarded
+against is the notion that tedium is inseparable from the scientific
+method. I have always been of the opinion that the dulness commonly
+looked upon as the prerogative of scholarly inquiries, is not an
+inherent attribute. In most cases it is conditioned, not by the nature
+of the subject under investigation, but by the temper of the
+investigator. Often, indeed, the tediousness of a learned disquisition
+is intentional: it is considered one of the polite conventions of the
+academic guild, and by many is identified with scientific thoroughness
+and profound learning.... If, in general, deadening, hide-bound caste
+methods, not seldom the cover for poverty of thought and lack of
+cleverness, are reprehensible, they are doubly reprehensible in
+history. The history of a people is not a mere mental discipline, like
+botany or mathematics, but a living science, a _magistra vitae_,
+leading straight to national self-knowledge, and acting to a certain
+degree upon the national character. History is a science _by_ the
+people, _for_ the people, and, therefore, its place is the open
+forum, not the scholar's musty closet. We relate the events of the
+past to the people, not merely to a handful of archaeologists and
+numismaticians. We work for national self-knowledge, not for our own
+intellectual diversion."
+
+ [1] In the introduction to his _Historische Mitteilungen,
+ Vorarbeiten zu einer Geschichte der pol-nischrussischen
+ Juden_.
+
+These are the principles that have guided Mr. Dubnow in all his works,
+and he has been true to them in the present essay, which exhibits in a
+remarkably striking way the author's art of making "all things seem
+fresh and new, important and attractive." New and important his essay
+undoubtedly is. The author attempts, for the first time, a psychologic
+characterization of Jewish history. He endeavors to demonstrate the
+inner connection between events, and develop the ideas that underlie
+them, or, to use his own expression, lay bare the soul of Jewish
+history, which clothes itself with external events as with a bodily
+envelope. Jewish history has never before been considered from this
+philosophic point of view, certainly not in German literature. The
+present work, therefore, cannot fail to prove stimulating. As for the
+poet's other requirement, attractiveness, it is fully met by the work
+here translated. The qualities of Mr. Dubnow's style, as described
+above, are present to a marked degree. The enthusiasm flaming up in
+every line, coupled with his plastic, figurative style, and his
+scintillating conceits, which lend vivacity to his presentation, is
+bound to charm the reader. Yet, in spite of the racy style, even the
+layman will have no difficulty in discovering that it is not a clever
+journalist, an artificer of well-turned phrases, who is speaking to
+him, but a scholar by profession, whose foremost concern is with
+historical truth, and whose every statement rests upon accurate,
+scientific knowledge; not a bookworm with pale, academic blood
+trickling through his veins, but a man who, with unsoured mien, with
+fresh, buoyant delight, offers the world the results laboriously
+reached in his study, after all evidences of toil and moil have been
+carefully removed; who derives inspiration from the noble and the
+sublime in whatever guise it may appear, and who knows how to
+communicate his inspiration to others.
+
+The translator lays this book of an accomplished and spirited
+historian before the German public. He does so in the hope that it
+will shed new light upon Jewish history even for professional
+scholars. He is confident that in many to whom our unexampled past of
+four thousand years' duration is now _terra incognita_, it will
+arouse enthusiastic interest, and even to those who, like the
+translator himself, differ from the author in religious views, it will
+furnish edifying and suggestive reading. J. F.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION
+
+
+The English translation of Mr. Dubnow's Essay is based upon the
+authorized German translation, which was made from the original
+Russian. It is published under the joint auspices of the Jewish
+Publication Society of America and the Jewish Historical Society of
+England. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+I
+
+THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Historical and Unhistorical Peoples
+ Three Groups of Nations
+ The "Most Historical" People
+ Extent of Jewish History
+
+II
+
+THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Two Periods of Jewish History
+ The Period of Independence
+ The Election of the Jewish People
+ Priests and Prophets
+ The Babylonian Exile and the Scribes
+ The Dispersion
+ Jewish History and Universal History
+ Jewish History Characterized
+
+III
+
+THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ The National Aspect of Jewish History
+ The Historical Consciousness
+ The National Idea and National Feeling
+ The Universal Aspect of Jewish History
+ An Historical Experiment
+ A Moral Discipline
+ Humanitarian Significance of Jewish History
+ Schleiden and George Eliot
+
+IV
+
+THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS
+ Three Primary Periods
+ Four Composite Periods
+
+V
+
+THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD
+ Cosmic Origin of the Jewish Religion
+ Tribal Organization
+ Egyptian Influence and Experiences
+ Moses
+ Mosaism a Religious and Moral as well as a Social and Political
+ System
+ National Deities
+ The Prophets and the two Kingdoms
+ Judaism a Universal Religion
+
+VI
+
+THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD
+ Growth of National Feeling
+ Ezra and Nehemiah
+ The Scribes
+ Hellenism
+ The Maccabees
+ Sadducees, Pharisees, and Essenes
+ Alexandrian Jews
+ Christianity
+
+VII
+
+THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS
+PERIOD
+ The Isolation of Jewry and Judaism
+ The Mishna
+ The Talmud
+ Intellectual Activity in Palestine and Babylonia
+ The Agada and the Midrash
+ Unification of Judaism
+
+VIII
+
+THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+ The Academies
+ Islam
+ Karaism
+ Beginning of Persecutions in Europe
+ Arabic Civilization in Europe
+
+IX
+
+THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH
+JEWS (980-1492)
+ The Spanish Jews
+ The Arabic-Jewish Renaissance
+ The Crusades and the Jews
+ Degradation of the Jews in Christian Europe
+ The Provence
+ The Lateran Council
+ The Kabbala
+ Expulsion from Spain
+
+X
+
+THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH
+JEWS (1492-1789)
+ The Humanists and the Reformation
+ Palestine an Asylum for Jews
+ Messianic Belief and Hopes
+ Holland a Jewish Centre
+ Poland and the Jews
+ The Rabbinical Authorities of Poland
+ Isolation of the Polish Jews
+ Mysticism and the Practical Kabbala
+ Chassidism
+ Persecutions and Morbid Piety
+
+XI
+
+THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY)
+ The French Revolution
+ The Jewish Middle Ages
+ Spiritual and Civil Emancipation
+ The Successors of Mendelssohn
+ Zunz and the Science of Judaism
+ The Modern Movements outside of Germany
+ The Jew in Russia
+ His Regeneration
+ Anti-Semitism and Judophobia
+
+XII
+
+THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Jewry a Spiritual Community
+ Jewry Indestructible
+ The Creative Principle of Jewry
+ The Task of the Future
+ The Jew and the Nations
+ The Ultimate Ideal
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+
+What is Jewish History? In the first place, what does it offer as to
+quantity and as to quality? What are its range and content, and what
+distinguishes it in these two respects from the history of other
+nations? Furthermore, what is the essential meaning, what the spirit,
+of Jewish History? Or, to put the question in another way, to what
+general results are we led by the aggregate of its facts, considered,
+not as a whole, but genetically, as a succession of evolutionary
+stages in the consciousness and education of the Jewish people?
+
+If we could find precise answers to these several questions, they
+would constitute a characterization of Jewish History as accurate as
+is attainable. To present such a characterization succinctly is the
+purpose of the following essay.
+
+
+
+
+JEWISH HISTORY
+
+AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+ Le peuple juif n'est pas seulement considérable par son
+ antiquité, mais il est encore singulier en sa durée, qui a
+ toujours continué depuis son origine jusqu'à maintenant ...
+ S'étendant depuis les premiers temps jusqu'aux derniers,
+ l'histoire des juifs enferme dans sa durée celle de toutes nos
+ histoires.--PASCAL, _Pensées_, II, 7.
+
+To make clear the range of Jewish history, it is necessary to set down
+a few general, elementary definitions by way of introduction.
+
+It has long been recognized that a fundamental difference exists
+between historical and unhistorical peoples, a difference growing out
+of the fact of the natural inequality between the various elements
+composing the human race. Unhistorical is the attribute applied to
+peoples that have not yet broken away, or have not departed very far,
+from the state of primitive savagery, as, for instance, the barbarous
+races of Asia and Africa who were the prehistoric ancestors of the
+Europeans, or the obscure, untutored tribes of the present, like the
+Tartars and the Kirghiz. Unhistorical peoples, then, are ethnic groups
+of all sorts that are bereft of a distinctive, spiritual
+individuality, and have failed to display normal, independent capacity
+for culture. The term historical, on the other hand, is applied to the
+nations that have had a conscious, purposeful history of appreciable
+duration; that have progressed, stage by stage, in their growth and in
+the improvement of their mode and their views of life; that have
+demonstrated mental productivity of some sort, and have elaborated
+principles of civilization and social life more or less rational;
+nations, in short, representing not only zoologic, but also spiritual
+types.[2]
+
+ [2] "The primitive peoples that change with their environment,
+ constantly adapting themselves to their habitat and to
+ external nature, have no history.... Only those nations and
+ states belong to history which display self-conscious action;
+ which evince an inner spiritual life by diversified
+ manifestations; and combine into an organic whole what they
+ receive from without, and what they themselves originate."
+ (Introduction to Weber's _Allgemeine Weltgeschichte_, i,
+ pp. 16-18.)
+
+Chronologically considered, these latter nations, of a higher type,
+are usually divided into three groups: 1, the most ancient civilized
+peoples of the Orient, such as the Chinese, the Hindoos, the
+Egyptians, the Chaldeans; 2, the ancient or classic peoples of the
+Occident, the Greeks and the Romans; and 3, the modern peoples, the
+civilized nations of Europe and America of the present day. The most
+ancient peoples of the Orient, standing "at the threshold of history,"
+were the first heralds of a religious consciousness and of moral
+principles. In hoary antiquity, when most of the representatives of
+the human kind were nothing more than a peculiar variety of the class
+mammalia, the peoples called the most ancient brought forth recognized
+forms of social life and a variety of theories of living of fairly
+far-reaching effect. All these culture-bearers of the Orient soon
+disappeared from the surface of history. Some (the Chaldeans,
+Phoenicians, and Egyptians) were washed away by the flood of time, and
+their remnants were absorbed by younger and more vigorous peoples.
+Others (the Hindoos and Persians) relapsed into a semi-barbarous
+state; and a third class (the Chinese) were arrested in their growth,
+and remained fixed in immobility. The best that the antique Orient had
+to bequeath in the way of spiritual possessions fell to the share of
+the classic nations of the West, the Greeks and the Romans. They
+greatly increased the heritage by their own spiritual achievements,
+and so produced a much more complex and diversified civilization,
+which has served as the substratum for the further development of the
+better part of mankind. Even the classic nations had to step aside as
+soon as their historical mission was fulfilled. They left the field
+free for the younger nations, with greater capability of living, which
+at that time had barely worked their way up to the beginnings of a
+civilization. One after the other, during the first two centuries of
+the Christian era, the members of this European family of nations
+appeared in the arena of history. They form the kernel of the
+civilized part of mankind at the present day.
+
+Now, if we examine this accepted classification with a view to finding
+the place belonging to the Jewish people in the chronological series,
+we meet with embarrassing difficulties, and finally arrive at the
+conclusion that its history cannot be accommodated within the compass
+of the classification. Into which of the three historical groups
+mentioned could the Jewish people be put? Are we to call it one of the
+most ancient, one of the ancient, or one of the modern nations? It is
+evident that it may lay claim to the first description, as well as to
+the second and the last. In company with the most ancient nations of
+the Orient, the Jewish people stood at the "threshold of history." It
+was the contemporary of the earliest civilized nations, the Egyptians
+and the Chaldeans. In those remote days it created and spread a
+religious world-idea underlying an exalted social and moral system
+surpassing everything produced in this sphere by its Oriental
+contemporaries. Again, with the classical Greeks and Romans, it forms
+the celebrated historical triad universally recognized as the source
+of all great systems of civilization. Finally, in fellowship with the
+nations of to-day, it leads an historical life, striding onward in the
+path of progress without stay or interruption. Deprived of political
+independence, it nevertheless continues to fill a place in the world
+of thought as a distinctly marked spiritual individuality, as one of
+the most active and intelligent forces. How, then, are we to
+denominate this omnipresent people, which, from the first moment of
+its historical existence up to our days, a period of thirty-five
+hundred years, has been developing continuously. In view of this
+Methuselah among the nations, whose life is co-extensive with the
+whole of history, how are we to dispose of the inevitable barriers
+between "the most ancient" and "the ancient," between "the ancient"
+and "the modern" nations--the fateful barriers which form the
+milestones on the path of the historical peoples, and which the Jewish
+people has more than once overstepped?
+
+A definition of the Jewish people must needs correspond to the
+aggregate of the concepts expressed by the three group-names, most
+ancient, ancient, and modern. The only description applicable to it is
+"the historical nation of all times," a description bringing into
+relief the contrast between it and all other nations of modern and
+ancient times, whose historical existence either came to an end in
+days long past, or began at a date comparatively recent. And granted
+that there are "historical" and "unhistorical" peoples, then it is
+beyond dispute that the Jewish people deserves to be called "the most
+historical" (_historicissimus_). If the history of the world be
+conceived as a circle, then Jewish history occupies the position of
+the diameter, the line passing through its centre, and the history of
+every other nation is represented by a chord marking off a smaller
+segment of the circle. The history of the Jewish people is like an
+axis crossing the history of mankind from one of its poles to the
+other. As an unbroken thread it runs through the ancient civilization
+of Egypt and Mesopotamia, down to the present-day culture of France
+and Germany. Its divisions are measured by thousands of years.
+
+Jewish history, then, in its range, or, better, in its duration,
+presents an unique phenomenon. It consists of the longest series of
+events ever recorded in the annals of a single people. To sum up its
+peculiarity briefly, it embraces a period of thirty-five hundred
+years, and in all this vast extent it suffers no interruption. At
+every point it is alive, full of sterling content. Presently we shall
+see that in respect to content, too, it is distinguished by
+exceptional characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+From the point of view of content, or qualitative structure, Jewish
+history, it is well known, falls into two parts. The dividing point
+between the two parts is the moment in which the Jewish state
+collapsed irretrievably under the blows of the Roman Empire (70 C.
+E.). The first half deals with the vicissitudes of a nation, which,
+though frequently at the mercy of stronger nations, still maintained
+possession of its territory and government, and was ruled by its own
+laws. In the second half, we encounter the history of a people without
+a government, more than that, without a land, a people stripped of all
+the tangible accompaniments of nationality, and nevertheless
+successful in preserving its spiritual unity, its originality,
+complete and undiminished.
+
+At first glance, Jewish history during the period of independence
+seems to be but slightly different from the history of other nations.
+Though not without individual coloring, there are yet the same wars
+and intestine disturbances, the same political revolutions and
+dynastic quarrels, the same conflicts between the classes of the
+people, the same warring between economical interests. This is only a
+surface view of Jewish history. If we pierce to its depths, and
+scrutinize the processes that take place in its penetralia, we
+perceive that even in the early period there were latent within it
+great powers of intellect, universal principles, which, visibly or
+invisibly, determined the course of events. We have before us not a
+simple political or racial entity, but, to an eminent degree, "a
+spiritual people." The national development is based upon an
+all-pervasive religious tradition, which lives in the soul of the
+people as the Sinaitic Revelation, the Law of Moses. With this holy
+tradition, embracing a luminous theory of life and an explicit code of
+morality and social converse, was associated the idea of the election
+of the Jewish people, of its peculiar spiritual mission. "And ye shall
+be unto me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation" is the figurative
+expression of this ideal calling. It conveys the thought that the
+Israelitish people as a whole, without distinction of rank and
+regardless of the social prominence of individuals, has been called to
+guide the other nations toward sublime moral and religious principles,
+and to officiate for them, the laity as it were, in the capacity of
+priests. This exalted ideal would never have been reached, if the
+development of the Jewish people had lain along hackneyed lines; if,
+like the Egyptians and the Chaldeans, it had had an inflexible caste
+of priests, who consider the guardianship of the spiritual treasures
+of the nation the exclusive privilege of their estate, and strive to
+keep the mass of the people in crass ignorance. For a time, something
+approaching this condition prevailed among the Jews. The priests
+descended from Aaron, with the Temple servants (the Levites), formed a
+priestly class, and played the part of authoritative bearers of the
+religious tradition. But early, in the very infancy of the nation,
+there arose by the side of this official, aristocratic hierarchy, a
+far mightier priesthood, a democratic fraternity, seeking to enlighten
+the whole nation, and inculcating convictions that make for a
+consciously held aim. The Prophets were the real and appointed
+executors of the holy command enjoining the "conversion" of all Jews
+into "a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." Their activity cannot
+be paralleled in the whole range of the world's history. They were not
+priests, but popular educators and popular teachers. They were
+animated by the desire to instil into every soul a deeply religious
+consciousness, to ennoble every heart by moral aspirations, to
+indoctrinate every individual with an unequivocal theory of life, to
+inspire every member of the nation with lofty ideals. Their work did
+not fail to leave its traces. Slowly but deeply idealism entered into
+the very pith and marrow of the national consciousness. This
+consciousness gained in strength and amplitude century by century,
+showing itself particularly in the latter part of the first period,
+after the crisis known as "the Babylonian Exile." Thanks to the
+exertions of the _Soferim_ (Scribes), directed toward the
+broadest popularization of the Holy Writings, and constituting the
+formal complement to the work of the Prophets, spiritual activity
+became an integral part of Jewish national life. In the closing
+centuries of its political existence, the Jewish people received its
+permanent form. There was imposed upon it the unmistakable hallmark of
+spirituality that has always identified it in the throng of the
+nations. Out of the bosom of Judaism went forth the religion that in a
+short time ran its triumphant course through the whole ancient world,
+transforming races of barbarians into civilized beings. It was the
+fulfilment of the Prophetical promise--that the nations would walk in
+the light of Israel.
+
+At the very moment when the strength and fertility of the Jewish mind
+reached the culminating point, occurred a political revolution--the
+period of homeless wandering began. It seemed as though, before
+scattering the Jewish people to all ends of the earth, the providence
+of history desired to teach it a final lesson, to take with it on its
+way. It seemed to say: "Now you may go forth. Your character has been
+sufficiently tempered; you can bear the bitterest of hardships. You
+are equipped with an inexhaustible store of energy, and you can live
+for centuries, yea, for thousands of years, under conditions that
+would prove the bane of other nations in less than a single century.
+State, territory, army, the external attributes of national power, are
+for you superfluous luxury. Go out into the world to prove that a
+people can continue to live without these attributes, solely and alone
+through strength of spirit welding its widely scattered particles into
+one firm organism!"--And the Jewish people went forth and proved it.
+
+This "proof" adduced by Jewry at the cost of eighteen centuries of
+privation and suffering, forms the characteristic feature of the
+second half of Jewish history, the period of homelessness and
+dispersion. Uprooted from its political soil, national life displayed
+itself on intellectual fields exclusively. "To think and to suffer"
+became the watchword of the Jewish people, not merely because forced
+upon it by external circumstances beyond its control, but chiefly
+because it was conditioned by the very disposition of the people, by
+its national inclinations. The extraordinary mental energy that had
+matured the Bible and the old writings in the first period, manifested
+itself in the second period in the encyclopedic productions of the
+Talmudists, in the religious philosophy of the middle ages, in
+Rabbinism, in the Kabbala, in mysticism, and in science. The spiritual
+discipline of the school came to mean for the Jew what military
+discipline is for other nations. His remarkable longevity is due, I am
+tempted to say, to the acrid spiritual brine in which he was cured. In
+its second half, the originality of Jewish history consists indeed, in
+the circumstance that it is the only history stripped of every active
+political element. There are no diplomatic artifices, no wars, no
+campaigns, no unwarranted encroachments backed by armed force upon the
+rights of other nations, nothing of all that constitutes the chief
+content--the monotonous and for the most part idea-less content--of
+many other chapters in the history of the world. Jewish history
+presents the chronicle of an ample spiritual life, a gallery of
+pictures representing national scenes. Before our eyes passes a long
+procession of facts from the fields of intellectual effort, of
+morality, religion, and social converse. Finally, the thrilling drama
+of Jewish martyrdom is unrolled to our astonished gaze. If the inner
+life and the social and intellectual development of a people form the
+kernel of history, and politics and occasional wars are but its
+husk,[3] then certainly the history of the Jewish diaspora is all
+kernel. In contrast with the history of other nations it describes,
+not the accidental deeds of princes and generals, not external pomp
+and physical prowess, but the life and development of a whole people.
+It gives heartrending expression to the spiritual strivings of a
+nation whose brow is resplendent with the thorny crown of martyrdom.
+It breathes heroism of mind that conquers bodily pain. In a word,
+Jewish history is history sublimated.[4]
+
+ [3] "History, without these (inner, spiritual elements), is a
+ shell without a kernel; and such is almost all the history
+ which is extant in the world." (Macaulay, on Mitford's History
+ of Greece, Collected Works, i, 198, ed. A. and C. Armstrong
+ and Son.)
+
+ [4] A Jewish historian makes the pregnant remark: "If ever the
+ time comes when the prophecies of the Jewish seers are
+ fulfilled, and nation no longer raises the sword against
+ nation; when the olive leaf instead of the laurel adorns the
+ brow of the great, and the achievements of noble minds are
+ familiar to the dwellers in cottages and palaces alike, then
+ the history of the world will have the same character as
+ Jewish history. On its pages will be inscribed, not the
+ warrior's prowess and his victories, nor diplomatic schemes
+ and triumphs, but the progress of culture and its practical
+ application in real life."
+
+In spite of the noteworthy features that raise Jewish history above
+the level of the ordinary, and assign it a peculiar place, it is
+nevertheless not isolated, not severed from the history of mankind.
+Rather is it most intimately interwoven with world-affairs at every
+point throughout its whole extent. As the diameter, Jewish history is
+again and again intersected by the chords of the historical circle.
+The fortunes of the pilgrim people scattered in all the countries of
+the civilized world are organically connected with the fortunes of the
+most representative nations and states, and with manifold tendencies
+of human thought. The bond uniting them is twofold: in the times when
+the powers of darkness and fanaticism held sway, the Jews were
+amenable to the "physical" influence exerted by their neighbors in the
+form of persecutions, infringements of the liberty of conscience,
+inquisitions, violence of every sort; and during the prevalence of
+enlightment and humanity, the Jews were acted upon by the intellectual
+and cultural stimulus proceeding from the peoples with whom they
+entered into close relations. Momentary aberrations and reactionary
+incidents are not taken into account here. On its side, Jewry made its
+personality felt among the nations by its independent, intellectual
+activity, its theory of life, its literature, by the very fact,
+indeed, of its ideal staunchness and tenacity, its peculiar historical
+physiognomy. From this reciprocal relation issued a great cycle of
+historical events and spiritual currents, making the past of the
+Jewish people an organic constituent of the past of all that portion
+of mankind which has contributed to the treasury of human thought.
+
+We see, then, that in reference to content Jewish history is unique in
+both its halves. In the first "national" period, it is the history of
+a people to which the epithet "peculiar" has been conceded, a people
+which has developed under the influence of exceptional circumstances,
+and finally attained to so high a degree of spiritual perfection and
+fertility that the creation of a new religious theory of life, which
+eventually gained universal supremacy, neither exhausted its resources
+nor ended its activity. Not only did it continue to live upon its vast
+store of spiritual energy, but day by day it increased the store. In
+the second "lackland" half, it is the instructive history of a
+scattered people, organically one, in spite of dispersion, by reason
+of its unshaken ideal traditions; a people accepting misery and
+hardship with stoic calm, combining the characteristics of the thinker
+with those of the sufferer, and eking out existence under conditions
+which no other nation has found adequate, or, indeed, can ever find
+adequate. The account of the people as teacher of religion--this is
+the content of the first half of Jewish history; the account of the
+people as thinker, stoic, and sufferer--this is the content of the
+second half of Jewish history.
+
+A summing up of all that has been said in this and the previous
+chapter proves true the statement with which we began, that Jewish
+history, in respect to its quantitative dimensions as well as its
+qualitative structure, is to the last degree distinctive and presents
+a phenomenon of undeniable uniqueness.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+We turn now to the question of the significance to be attached to
+Jewish history. In view of its peculiar qualities, what has it to
+offer to the present generation and to future generations as a subject
+of study and research?
+
+The significance of Jewish history is twofold. It is at once national
+and universal. At present the fulcrum of Jewish national being lies in
+the historical consciousness. In the days of antiquity, the Jews were
+welded into a single united nation by the triple agencies of state,
+race, and religion, the complete array of material and spiritual
+forces directed to one point. Later, in the period of homelessness and
+dispersion, it was chiefly religious consciousness that cemented Jewry
+into a whole, and replaced the severed political bond as well as the
+dulled racial instinct, which is bound to go on losing in keenness in
+proportion to the degree of removal from primitive conditions and
+native soil. In our days, when the liberal movements leavening the
+whole of mankind, if they have not completely shattered the religious
+consciousness, have at least, in an important section of Jewry,
+effected a change in its form; when abrupt differences of opinion with
+regard to questions of faith and cult are asserting their presence;
+and traditional Judaism developed in historical sequence is proving
+powerless to hold together the diverse factors of the national
+organism,--in these days the keystone of national unity seems to be
+the historical consciousness. Composed alike of physical,
+intellectual, and moral elements, of habits and views, of emotions and
+impressions nursed into being and perfection by the hereditary
+instinct active for thousands of years, this historical consciousness
+is a remarkably puzzling and complex psychic phenomenon. By our common
+memory of a great, stirring past and heroic deeds on the battle-fields
+of the spirit, by the exalted historical mission allotted to us, by
+our thorn-strewn pilgrim's path, our martyrdom assumed for the sake of
+our principles, by such moral ties, we Jews, whether consciously or
+unconsciously, are bound fast to one another. As Renan well says:
+"Common sorrow unites men more closely than common joy." A long chain
+of historical traditions is cast about us all like a strong ring. Our
+wonderful, unparalleled past attracts us with magnetic power. In the
+course of centuries, as generation followed generation, similarity of
+historical fortunes produced a mass of similar impressions which have
+crystallized, and have thrown off the deposit that may be called "the
+Jewish national soul." This is the soil in which, deep down, lies
+imbedded, as an unconscious element, the Jewish national _feeling_,
+and as a conscious element, the Jewish national _idea_.
+
+It follows that the Jewish national idea and the national feeling
+connected with it have their origin primarily in the historical
+consciousness, in a certain complex of ideas and psychic
+predispositions. These ideas and predispositions, the deposit left by
+the aggregate of historical impressions, are of necessity the common
+property of the whole nation, and they can be developed and quickened
+to a considerable degree by a renewal of the impressions through the
+study of history. Upon the knowledge of history, then, depends the
+strength of the national consciousness.[5]
+
+ [5] A different aspect of the same thought is presented with
+ logical clearness in another publication by our author. "The
+ national _idea_, and the national _feeling_," says
+ Mr. Dubnow, "must be kept strictly apart. Unfortunately the
+ difference between them is usually obliterated. National
+ feeling is spontaneous. To a greater or less degree it is
+ inborn in all the members of the nation as a feeling of
+ kinship. It has its flood-tide and its ebbtide in
+ correspondence to external conditions, either forcing the
+ nation to defend its nationality, or relieving it of the
+ necessity for self-defense. As this feeling is not merely a
+ blind impulse, but a complicated psychic phenomenon, it can be
+ subjected to a psychologic analysis. From the given historical
+ facts or the ideas that have become the common treasure of a
+ nation, thinking men, living life consciously, can, in one way
+ or another, derive the origin, development, and vital force of
+ its national feeling. The results of such an analysis,
+ arranged in some sort of system, form the content of the
+ national idea. The task of the national idea it is to clarify
+ the national feeling, and give it logical sanction for the
+ benefit of those who cannot rest satisfied with an unconscious
+ feeling.
+
+ "In what, to be specific, does the essence of our Jewish national
+ idea consist? Or, putting the question in another form, what
+ is the cement that unites us into a single compact organism?
+ Territory and government, the external ties usually binding a
+ nation together, we have long ago lost. Their place is filled
+ by abstract principles, by religion and race. Undeniably these
+ are factors of first importance, and yet we ask the question,
+ do they alone and exclusively maintain the national cohesion
+ of Jewry? No, we reply, for if we admitted this proposition,
+ we should by consequence have to accept the inference, that
+ the laxity of religious principle prevailing among
+ free-thinking Jews, and the obliteration of race peculiarities
+ in the 'civilized' strata of our people, bring in their train
+ a corresponding weakening, or, indeed, a complete breaking up,
+ of our national foundations--which in point of fact is not the
+ case. On the contrary, it is noticeable that the
+ latitudinarians, the _libres penseurs_, and the
+ indifferent on the subject of religion, stand in the forefront
+ of all our national movements. Seeing that to belong to it is
+ in most cases heroism, and in many martyrdom, what is it that
+ attracts these Jews so forcibly to their people? There must be
+ something common to us all, so comprehensive that in the face
+ of multifarious views and degrees of culture it acts as a
+ consolidating force. This 'something,' I am convinced, is the
+ community of historical fortunes of all the scattered parts of
+ the Jewish nation. We are welded together by our glorious
+ past. We are encircled by a mighty chain of similar historical
+ impressions suffered by our ancestors, century after century
+ pressing in upon the Jewish soul, and leaving behind a
+ substantial deposit. In short, the Jewish national idea is
+ based chiefly upon the historical consciousness." [Note of the
+ German trl.]
+
+But over and above its national significance, Jewish history, we
+repeat, possesses universal significance. Let us, in the first place,
+examine its value for science and philosophy. Inasmuch as it is
+pre-eminently a chronicle of ideas and spiritual movements, Jewish
+history affords the philosopher or psychologist material for
+observation of the most important and useful kind. The study of other,
+mostly dull chapters of universal history has led to the fixing of
+psychologic or sociologic theses, to the working out of comprehensive
+philosophic systems, to the determination of general laws. Surely it
+follows without far-fetched proof, that in some respects the chapter
+dealing with Jewish history must supply material of the most original
+character for such theses and philosophies. If it is true, as the last
+chapter set out to demonstrate, that Jewish history is distinguished
+by sharply marked and peculiar features, and refuses to accommodate
+itself to conventional forms, then its content must have an original
+contribution to make to philosophy. It does not admit of a doubt that
+the study of Jewish history would yield new propositions appertaining
+to the philosophy of history and the psychology of nations, hitherto
+overlooked by inquirers occupied with the other divisions of universal
+history. Inductive logic lays down a rule for ascertaining the law of
+a phenomenon produced by two or more contributory causes. By means of
+what might be called a laboratory experiment, the several causes must
+be disengaged from one another, and the effect of each observed by
+itself. Thus it becomes possible to arrive with mathematical precision
+at the share of each cause in the result achieved by several
+co-operating causes. This method of difference, as it is called, is
+available, however, only for a limited number of phenomena, only for
+phenomena in the department of the natural sciences. It is in the
+nature of the case that mental and spiritual phenomena, though they
+may be observed, cannot be artificially reproduced. Now, in one
+respect, Jewish history affords the advantages of an arranged
+experiment. The historical life of ordinary nations, such nations as
+are endowed with territory and are organized into a state, is a
+complete intermingling of the political with the spiritual element.
+Totally ignorant as we are of the development either would have
+assumed, had it been dissevered from the other, the laws governing
+each of the elements singly can be discovered only approximately.
+Jewish history, in which the two elements have for many centuries been
+completely disentangled from each other, presents a natural
+experiment, with the advantage of artificial exclusions, rendering
+possible the determination of the laws of spiritual phenomena with far
+greater scientific exactitude than the laws of phenomena that result
+from several similar causes.
+
+Besides this high value for the purposes of science, this fruitful
+suggestiveness for philosophic thought, Jewish history, as compared
+with the history of other nations, enjoys another distinction in its
+capacity to exercise an ennobling influence upon the heart. Nothing so
+exalts and refines human nature as the contemplation of moral
+steadfastness, the history of the trials of a martyr who has fought
+and suffered for his convictions. At bottom, the second half of Jewish
+history is nothing but this. The effective educational worth of the
+Biblical part of Jewish history is disputed by none. It is called
+"sacred" history, and he who acquires a knowledge of it is thought to
+advance the salvation of his soul. Only a very few, however, recognize
+the profound, moral content of the second half of Jewish history, the
+history of the diaspora. Yet, by reason of its exceptional qualities
+and intensely tragic circumstances, it is beyond all others calculated
+to yield edification to a notable degree. The Jewish people is
+deserving of attention not only in the time when it displayed its
+power and enjoyed its independence, but as well in the period of its
+weakness and oppression, during which it was compelled to purchase
+spiritual development by constant sacrifice of self. A thinker crowned
+with thorns demands no less veneration than a thinker with the laurel
+wreath upon his brow. The flame issuing from the funeral pile on which
+martyrs die an heroic death for their ideas is, in its way, as
+awe-inspiring as the flame from Sinai's height. With equal force,
+though by different methods, both touch the heart, and arouse the
+moral sentiment. Biblical Israel the celebrated--medieval Judah the
+despised--it is one and the same people, judged variously in the
+various phases of its historical life. If Israel bestowed upon mankind
+a religious theory of life, Judah gave it a thrilling example of
+tenacious vitality and power of resistance for the sake of conviction.
+This uninterrupted life of the spirit, this untiring aspiration for
+the higher and the better in the domain of religious thought,
+philosophy, and science, this moral intrepidity in night and storm and
+in despite of all the blows of fortune--is it not an imposing,
+soul-stirring spectacle? The inexpressible tragedy of the Jewish
+historical life is unfailing in its effect upon a susceptible
+heart.[6] The wonderful exhibition of spirit triumphant, subduing the
+pangs of the flesh, must move every heart, and exercise uplifting
+influence upon the non-Jew no less than upon the Jew.
+
+ [6] "If there are ranks in suffering, Israel takes precedence of
+ all the nations--if the duration of sorrows and the patience
+ with which they are borne ennoble, the Jews are among the
+ aristocracy of every land--if a literature is called rich in
+ the possession of a few classic tragedies, what shall we say
+ to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years, in
+ which the poets and the actors were also the heroes?" (Zunz,
+ _Die synagogale Poesie_. Translation by George Eliot in
+ "Daniel Deronda.")
+
+For non-Jews a knowledge of Jewish history may, under certain
+conditions, come to have another, an humanitarian significance. It is
+inconceivable that the Jewish people should be held in execration by
+those acquainted with the course of its history, with its tragic and
+heroic past.[7] Indeed, so far as Jew-haters by profession are
+concerned, it is running a risk to recommend the study of Jewish
+history to them, without adding a word of caution. Its effect upon
+them might be disastrous. They might find themselves cured of their
+modern disease, and in the possession of ideas that would render
+worthless their whole stock in trade. Verily, he must have fallen to
+the zero-point of anti-Semitic callousness who is not thrilled through
+and through by the lofty fortitude, the saint-like humility, the
+trustful resignation to the will of God, the stoic firmness, laid bare
+by the study of Jewish history. The tribute of respect cannot be
+readily withheld from him to whom the words of the poet[8] are
+applicable:
+
+ "To die was not his hope; he fain
+ Would live to think and suffer pain."
+
+ [7] As examples and a proof of the strong humanitarian influence
+ Jewish history exercises upon Christians, I would point to the
+ relation established between the Jews and two celebrities of
+ the nineteenth century, Schleiden and George Eliot. In his old
+ age, the great scientist and thinker accidentally, in the
+ course of his study of sources for the history of botany,
+ became acquainted with medieval Jewish history. It filled him
+ with ardent enthusiasm for the Jews, for their intellectual
+ strength, their patience under martyrdom. Dominated by this
+ feeling, he wrote the two admirable sketches: _Die Bedeutung
+ der Juden für Erhaltung und Wiederbelebung der Wissenschaften
+ im Mittelalter_ (1876) and _Die Romantik des Martyriums
+ bei den Juden im Mittelalter_ (1878). According to his own
+ confession, the impulse to write them was "the wish to take at
+ least the first step toward making partial amends for the
+ unspeakable wrong inflicted by Christians upon Jews." As for
+ George Eliot, it may not be generally known that it was her
+ reading of histories of the Jews that inspired her with the
+ profound veneration for the Jewish people to which she gave
+ glowing utterance in "Daniel Deronda." (She cites Zunz, was
+ personally acquainted with Emanuel Deutsch, and carried on a
+ correspondence with Professor Dr. David Kaufmann. See
+ _George Eliot's Life as related in her Letters and
+ Journals_. Arranged and edited by her husband, J. W. Cross,
+ Vol. iii, ed. Harper and Brothers.) Her enthusiasm prompted
+ her, in 1879, to indite her passionate apology for the Jews,
+ under the title, "The Modern Hep! Hep! Hep!"
+
+ [8] Pushkin.
+
+When, in days to come, the curtain rises upon the touching tragedy of
+Jewish history, revealing it to the astonished eye of a modern
+generation, then, perhaps, hearts will be attuned to tenderness, and
+on the ruins of national hostility will be enthroned mutual love,
+growing out of mutual understanding and mutual esteem. And who can
+tell--perhaps Jewish history will have a not inconsiderable share in
+the spiritual change that is to annihilate national intolerance, the
+modern substitute for the religious bigotry of the middle ages. In
+this case, the future task of Jewish history will prove as sublime as
+was the mission of the Jewish people in the past. The latter consisted
+in the spread of the dogma of the unity of creation; the former will
+contribute indirectly to the realization of the not yet accepted dogma
+of the unity of the human race.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS
+
+
+To define the scope of Jewish history, its content and its
+significance, or its place among scientific pursuits, disposes only of
+the formal part of the task we have set ourselves. The central problem
+is to unfold the meaning of Jewish history, to discover the principle
+toward which its diversified phenomena converge, to state the
+universal laws and philosophic inferences deducible from the peculiar
+course of its events. If we liken history to an organic being, then
+the skeleton of facts is its body, and the soul is the spiritual bond
+that unites the facts into a whole, that conveys the meaning, the
+psychologic essence, of the facts. It becomes our duty, then, to
+unbare the soul of Jewish history, or, in scientific parlance, to
+construct, on the basis of the facts, the synthesis of the whole of
+Jewish national life. To this end, we must pass in review, by periods
+and epochs, one after another, the most important groups of historical
+events, the most noteworthy currents in life and thought that tell of
+the stages in the development of Jewry and of Judaism. Exhaustive
+treatment of the philosophical synthesis of a history extending over
+three thousand years is possible only in a voluminous work. In an
+essay like the present it can merely be sketched in large outline, or
+painted in miniature. We cannot expect to do more than state a series
+of general principles substantiated by the most fundamental arguments.
+Complete demonstration of each of the principles must be sought in the
+annals that recount the events of Jewish history in detail.
+
+The historical synthesis reduces itself, then, to uncovering the
+psychologic processes of national development. The object before us to
+be studied is the national spirit undergoing continuous evolution
+during thousands of years. Our task is to arrive at the laws
+underlying this growth. We shall reach our goal by imitating the
+procedure of the geologist, who divides the mass of the earth into its
+several strata or formations. In Jewish history there may be
+distinguished three chief stratifications answering to its first three
+periods, the Biblical period, the period of the Second Temple, and the
+Talmudic period. The later periods are nothing more than these same
+formations combined in various ways, with now and then the addition of
+new strata. Of the composite periods there are four, which arrange
+themselves either according to hegemonies, the countries in which at
+given times lay the centre of gravity of the scattered Jewish people,
+or according to the intellectual currents there predominant.
+
+This, then, is our scheme:
+
+ I. The chief formations:
+ a) The primary or Biblical period.
+ b) The secondary or spiritual-political period
+ (the period of the Second Temple, 538
+ B. C. E. to 70 C.E.)
+ c) The tertiary or national-religious period
+ (the Talmudic period, 70-500).
+
+ II. The composite formations:
+ a) The Gaonic period, or the hegemony of
+ the Oriental Jews (500-980).
+ b) The Rabbinic-philosophical period, or the
+ hegemony of the Spanish Jews (980-1492).
+ c) The Rabbinic-mystical period, or the hegemony
+ of the German-Polish Jews
+ (1492-1789).
+ d) The modern period of enlightenment (the
+ nineteenth century).
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD
+
+
+In the daybreak of history, the hoary days when seeming and reality
+merge into each other, and the outlines of persons and things fade
+into the surrounding mist, the picture of a nomad people, moving from
+the deserts of Arabia in the direction of Mesopotamia and Western
+Asia, detaches itself clear and distinct from the dim background. The
+tiny tribe, a branch of the Semitic race, bears a peculiar stamp of
+its own. A shepherd people, always living in close touch with nature,
+it yet resists the potent influence of the natural phenomena, which,
+as a rule, entrap primitive man, and make him the bond-slave of the
+visible and material. Tent life has attuned these Semitic nomads to
+contemplativeness. In the endless variety of the phenomena of nature,
+they seek to discover a single guiding power. They entertain an
+obscure presentiment of the existence of an invisible, universal soul
+animating the visible, material universe. The intuition is personified
+in the Patriarch Abraham, who, according to Biblical tradition, held
+communion with God, when, on the open field, "he looked up toward
+heaven, and counted the stars," or when, "at the setting of the sun,
+he fell into benumbing sleep, and terror seized upon him by reason of
+the impenetrable darkness." Here we have a clear expression of the
+original, purely cosmical character of the Jewish religion.
+
+There was no lack of human influence acting from without. Chaldea,
+which the peculiar Semitic shepherds crossed in their pilgrimage,
+presented them with notions from its rich mythology and cosmogony. The
+natives of Syria and Canaan, among whom in the course of time the
+Abrahamites settled, imparted to them many of their religious views
+and customs. Nevertheless, the kernel of their pure original theory
+remained intact. The patriarchal mode of life, admirable in its
+simplicity, continued to hold its own within the circle of the
+firmly-knitted tribe. It was in Canaan, however, that the shepherd
+people hailing from Arabia showed the first signs of approaching
+disintegration. Various tribal groups, like Moab and Ammon,
+consolidated themselves. They took permanent foothold in the land, and
+submitted with more or less readiness to the influences exerted by the
+indigenous peoples. The guardianship of the sublime traditions of the
+tribe remained with one group alone, the "sons of Jacob" or the "sons
+of Israel," so named from the third Patriarch Jacob. To this group of
+the Israelites composed of smaller, closely united divisions, a
+special mission was allotted; its development was destined to lie
+along peculiar lines. The fortunes awaiting it were distinctive, and
+for thousands of years have filled thinking and believing mankind with
+wondering admiration.
+
+Great characters are formed under the influence of powerful
+impressions, of violent convulsions, and especially under the
+influence of suffering. The Israelites early passed through their
+school of suffering in Egypt. The removal of the sons of Jacob from
+the banks of the Jordan to those of the Nile was of decisive
+importance for the progress of their history. When the patriarchal
+Israelitish shepherds encountered the old, highly complex culture of
+the Egyptians, crystallized into fixed forms even at that early date,
+it was like the clash between two opposing electric currents. The pure
+conception of God, of _Elohim_, as of the spirit informing and
+supporting the universe, collided with the blurred system of heathen
+deities and crass idolatry. The simple cult of the shepherds,
+consisting of a few severely plain ceremonies, transmitted from
+generation to generation, was confronted with the insidious, coarsely
+sensual animal worship of the Egyptians. The patriarchal customs of
+the Israelites were brought into marked contrast with the vices of a
+corrupt civilization. Sound in body and soul, the son of nature
+suddenly found himself in unsavory surroundings fashioned by culture,
+in which he was as much despised as the inoffensive nomad is by
+"civilized" man of settled habit. The scorn had a practical result in
+the enslavement of the Israelites by the Pharaohs. Association with
+the Egyptians acted as a force at once of attraction and of repulsion.
+The manners and customs of the natives could not fail to leave an
+impression upon the simple aliens, and invite imitation on their part.
+On the other hand, the whole life of the Egyptians, their crude
+notions of religion, and their immoral ways, were calculated to
+inspire the more enlightened among the Israelites with disgust. The
+hostility of the Egyptians toward the "intruders," and the horrible
+persecutions in which it expressed itself, could not but bring out
+more aggressively the old spiritual opposition between the two races.
+The antagonism between them was the first influence to foster the germ
+of Israel's national consciousness, the consciousness of his peculiar
+character, his individuality. This early intimation of a national
+consciousness was weak. It manifested itself only in the chosen few.
+But it existed, and the time was appointed when, under more favorable
+conditions, it would develop, and display the extent of its power.
+
+This consciousness it was that inspired the activity of Moses,
+Israel's teacher and liberator. He was penetrated alike by national
+and religious feeling, and his desire was to impart both national and
+religious feeling to his brethren. The fact of national redemption he
+connected with the fact of religious revelation. "I am the Lord thy
+God who have brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt" was
+proclaimed from Sinai. The God-idea was nationalized. Thenceforth
+"Eternal" became the name peculiar to the God of Israel. He was,
+indeed, the same _Elohim_, the Creator of the world and its
+Guide, who had been dimly discerned by the spiritual vision of the
+Patriarchs. At the same time He was the special God of the Israelitish
+nation, the only nation that avouched Him with a full and undivided
+heart, the nation chosen by God Himself to carry out, alone, His
+sublime plans.[9] In his wanderings, Israel became acquainted with the
+chaotic religious systems of other nations. Seeing to what they paid
+the tribute of divine adoration, he could not but be dominated by the
+consciousness that he alone from of old had been the exponent of the
+religious idea in its purity. The resolution must have ripened within
+him to continue for all time to advocate and cherish this idea. From
+that moment Israel was possessed of a clear theory of life in religion
+and morality, and of a definite aim pursued with conscious intent.
+
+ [9] This is the true recondite meaning of the verses Exod. vi,
+ 2-3: "And God spake unto Moses, and said unto him, I am the
+ Eternal: and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto
+ Jacob, as _El-Shaddai_ (God Almighty), but by my name
+ Eternal I was not known unto them."
+
+Its originators designed that this Israelitish conception of life
+should serve not merely theoretically, as the basis of religious
+doctrine, but also practically, as the starting point of legislation.
+It was to be realized in the daily walks of the people, which at this
+very time attained to political independence. Sublime religious
+conceptions were not to be made the content of a visionary creed, the
+subject of dreamy contemplation, but, in the form of perspicuous
+guiding principles, were to control all spheres of individual and
+social life. Men must beware of looking upon religion as an ideal to
+be yearned for, it should be an ideal to be applied directly, day by
+day, to practical contingencies. In "Mosaism," so-called, the
+religious and the ethical are intimately interwoven with the social
+and the political. The chief dogmas of creed are stated as principles
+shaping practical life. For instance, the exalted idea of One God
+applied to social life produces the principle of the equality of all
+men before the One Supreme Power, a principle on which the whole of
+Biblical legislation is built. The commands concerning love of
+neighbor, the condemnation of slavery, the obligation to aid the poor,
+humane treatment of the stranger, sympathy and compassion with every
+living being--all these lofty injunctions ensue as inevitable
+consequences from the principle of equality. Biblical legislation is
+perhaps the only example of a political and social code based, not
+upon abstract reasoning alone, but also upon the requirements of the
+feelings, upon the finest impulses of the human soul. By the side of
+formal right and legality, it emphasizes, and, in a series of
+precepts, makes tangible, the principle of justice and humanity. The
+Mosaic law is a "propaganda by deed." Everywhere it demands active,
+more than passive, morality. Herein, in this elevated characteristic,
+this vital attribute, consists the chief source of the power of
+Mosaism. The same characteristic, to be sure, prevented it from at
+once gaining ground in the national life. It established itself only
+gradually, after many fluctuations and errors. In the course of the
+centuries, and keeping pace with the growth of the national
+consciousness, it was cultivated and perfected in detail.
+
+The conquest of Canaan wrought a radical transformation in the life of
+the Israelitish people. The acquiring of national territory supplied
+firm ground for the development and manifold application of the
+principles of Mosaism. At first, however, advance was out of the
+question. The mass of the people had not reached the degree of
+spiritual maturity requisite for the espousal of principles
+constituting an exalted theory of life. It could be understood and
+represented only by a thoughtful minority, which consisted chiefly of
+Aaronites and Levites, together forming a priestly estate, though not
+a hierarchy animated by the isolating spirit of caste that flourished
+among all the other peoples of the Orient. The populace discovered
+only the ceremonial side of the religion; its kernel was hidden from
+their sight. Defective spiritual culture made the people susceptible
+to alien influences, to notions more closely akin to its
+understanding. Residence in Canaan, among related Semitic tribes that
+had long before separated from the Israelites, and adopted altogether
+different views and customs, produced a far greater metamorphosis in
+the character of the Israelites than the sojourn in Egypt. After the
+first flush of victory, when the unity of the Israelitish people had
+been weakened by the particularistic efforts of several of the tribes,
+the spiritual bonds confining the nation began to relax. Political
+decay always brings religious defection in its train. Whenever Israel
+came under the dominion of the neighboring tribes, he also fell a
+victim to their cult. This phenomenon is throughout characteristic of
+the so-called era of the Judges. It is a natural phenomenon readily
+explained on psychologic grounds. The Mosaic national conception of
+the "Eternal" entered more and more deeply into the national
+consciousness, and, accommodating itself to the limited mental
+capacity of the majority, became narrower and narrower in compass--the
+lot of all great ideas! The "Eternal" was no longer thought of as the
+only One God of the whole universe, but as the tutelar deity of the
+Israelitish tribe. The idea of national tutelar deities was at that
+time deeply rooted in the consciousness of all the peoples of Western
+Asia. Each nation, as it had a king of its own, had a tribal god of
+its own. The Phoenicians had their Baal, the Moabites their Kemosh, the
+Ammonites their Milkom. Belief in the god peculiar to a nation by no
+means excluded belief in the existence of other national gods. A
+people worshiped its own god, because it regarded him as its master
+and protecting lord. In fact, according to the views then prevalent, a
+conflict between two nations was the conflict between two national
+deities. In the measure in which respect for the god of the defeated
+party waned, waxed the number of worshipers of the god of the
+victorious nation, and not merely among the conquerors, but also among
+the adherents of other religions.[10] These crude, coarsely
+materialistic conceptions of God gained entrance with the masses of
+the Israelitish people. If Moab had his Kemosh, and Ammon his Milkom,
+then Israel had his "Eternal," who, after the model of all other
+national gods, protected and abandoned his "clients" at pleasure, in
+the one case winning, in the other losing, the devotion of his
+partisans. In times of distress, in which the Israelites groaned under
+the yoke of the alien, the enslaved "forgot" their "conquered"
+"Eternal." As they paid the tribute due the strange king, and yielded
+themselves to his power, so they submitted to the strange god, and
+paid him his due tribute of devotion. It followed that liberation from
+the yoke of the stranger coincided with return to the God of Israel,
+the "Eternal." At such times the national spirit leaped into flaming
+life. This sums up the achievements of the hero-Judges. But the traces
+of repeated backsliding were deep and long visible, for, together with
+the religious ideas of the strange peoples, the Israelites accepted
+their customs, as a rule corrupt and noxious customs, in sharp
+contrast with the lofty principles of the Mosaic Law, designed to
+control social life and the life of the individual.
+
+ [10] "Ye have forsaken me," says God unto Israel, "and served
+ other gods; wherefore I will deliver you no more. Go and cry
+ unto the gods which ye have chosen: let them deliver you in
+ the time of your tribulations" (Judges X, 13-14). The same
+ idea is brought out still more forcibly in the arguments
+ adduced by Jephthah in his message to the king of Ammon (more
+ correctly, Moab), who had laid claim to Israelitish lands:
+ "Thou," says Jephthah, "mayest possess that which Kemosh thy
+ god giveth thee to possess, but what the Lord our God giveth
+ us to possess, that will we possess" (Judges xi, 24). Usually
+ these words are taken ironically; to me they seem to convey
+ literal truth rather than irony.
+
+The Prophet Samuel, coming after the unsettled period of the Judges,
+had only partial success in purifying the views of the people and
+elevating it out of degradation to a higher spiritual level. His work
+was continued with more marked results in the brilliant reigns of
+Saul, David, and Solomon. An end was put to the baleful disunion among
+the tribes, and the bond of national tradition was strengthened. The
+consolidated Israelitish kingdom triumphed over its former oppressors.
+The gods of the strange peoples cringed in the dust before the
+all-powerful "Eternal." But, with the division of the kingdom and the
+political rupture between Judah and Israel, the period of
+efflorescence soon came to an end. Again confusion reigned supreme,
+and customs and convictions deteriorated under foreign influence.
+Prophets like Elijah and Elisha, feverish though their activity was,
+stood powerless before the rank immorality in the two states. The
+northern kingdom of Israel, composed of the Ten Tribes, passed swiftly
+downward on the road to destruction, sharing the fate of the
+numberless Oriental states whose end was inevitable by reason of inner
+decay. The inspired words of the early Israelitish Prophets, Amos,
+Hosea, and Micah, their trumpet-toned reproofs, their thrilling
+admonitions, died unheeded upon the air--society was too depraved to
+understand their import. It was reserved for later generations to give
+ear to their immortal utterances, eloquent witnesses to the lofty
+heights to which the Jewish spirit was permitted to mount in times of
+general decline. The northern kingdom sank into irretrievable ruin.
+Then came the turn of Judah. He, too, had disregarded the law of
+"sanctification" from Sinai, and had nearly arrived at the point of
+stifling his better impulses in the morass of materialistic living.
+
+At this critical moment, on the line between to be and not to be, a
+miracle came to pass. The spirit of the people, become flesh in its
+noblest sons, rose aloft. From out of the midst of the political
+disturbances, the frightful infamy, and the moral corruption,
+resounded the impressive call of the great Prophets of Judah. Like a
+flaming torch carried through dense darkness, they cast a glaring
+light upon the vices of society, at the same time illuminating the
+path that leads upward to the goal of the ethical ideal. At first the
+negative, denouncing element predominated in the exhortations of the
+Prophets: unsparingly they scourged the demoralization and the
+iniquity, the social injustice and the political errors prevalent in
+their time; they threatened divine punishment, that is, the natural
+consequences of evil-doing, and appealed to the reason rather than the
+feelings of the people. But gradually they elaborated positive ideals,
+more soul-stirring than the ideals identified with the old religious
+tradition. The Prophets were the first to touch the root of the evil.
+It is clear that they realized that alien influences and the low grade
+of intelligence possessed by the masses were not the sole causes of
+the frequent backsliding of the people. The Jewish doctrine itself
+bore within it the germ of error. The two chief pillars of the old
+faith--the nationalizing of the God-idea, and the stress laid upon the
+cult, the ceremonial side of religion, as compared with moral
+requirements--were first and foremost to be held responsible for the
+flagrant departures from the spirit of Judaism. This was the direction
+in which reform was needed. Thereafter the sermons of the Prophets
+betray everywhere the intense desire, on the one hand, to restore to
+the God-idea its original universal character, and, on the other hand,
+while strongly emphasizing the importance of morality in the religious
+and the social sphere, to derogate from the value of the ceremonial
+system. The "Eternal" is no longer the national God of Israel,
+belonging to him exclusively; He becomes the God of the whole of
+mankind, the same _Elohim_, Creator and Preserver of the world,
+whom the Patriarchs had worshiped, and to whom, being His creatures,
+all men owe worship. His precepts and His laws of morality are binding
+upon all nations; they will bring salvation and blessing to all
+without distinction.[11] The ideal of piety consists in the profession
+of God and a life of rectitude. The time will come when all nations
+will be penetrated by true knowledge of God and actuated by the
+noblest motives; then will follow the universal brotherhood of man.
+Until this consummation is reached, and so long as Israel is the only
+nation formally professing the one true God, and accepting His blessed
+law, Israel's sole task is to embody in himself the highest ideals, to
+be an "ensign to the nations," to bear before them the banner of God's
+law, destined in time to effect the transformation of the whole of
+mankind. Israel is a missionary to the nations. As such he must stand
+before them as a model of holiness and purity. Here is the origin of
+the great idea of the spiritual "Messianism" of the Jewish people, or,
+better, its "missionism," an eternal idea, far more comprehensive than
+the old idea of national election, which it supplanted.
+
+ [11] Two Biblical passages, the one from Deuteronomy, the other
+ from Deutero-Isaiah, afford a signal illustration of the
+ contrast between the religious nationalism of the Mosaic law
+ and the universalism of the Prophets. Moses says to Israel:
+ "Thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God: the Lord thy
+ God hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself,
+ above all people that are upon the face of the earth. The Lord
+ did not set his love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were
+ more in number than any people: for ye were the fewest of all
+ people. But because the Lord loved you...." (Deut. vii, 6-8).
+ And these are the words of the prophecy: "Listen, O isles,
+ unto me, and hearken, ye people, from far! The Lord hath
+ called me... and said unto me, Thou art my servant, O Israel,
+ in whom I will be glorified! But I had thought, I have labored
+ in vain, I have spent my strength for nought, and in vain; yet
+ surely my judgment is with the Lord, and my work with my God.
+ For now said the Lord unto me... It is too light a thing that
+ thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob,
+ and to restore the preserved of Israel: no, I will also give
+ thee for a light to the Gentiles, that my salvation may reach
+ unto the end of the earth" (Is. xlix, 1-6).
+
+These sublime teachings were inculcated at the moment in which Judah
+was hastening to meet his fate. It had become impossible to check the
+natural results of the earlier transgressions. The inevitable
+happened; Babylon the mighty laid her ponderous hand upon tiny Judah.
+But Judah could not be crushed. From the heavy chastisement the Jewish
+nation emerged purified, re-born for a new life.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD
+
+
+The rank and file of a people are instructed by revolutions and
+catastrophes better than by sermons. More quickly than Isaiah and
+Jeremiah, Nebuchadnezzar brought the Jews to a recognition of their
+tasks. The short span of the Babylonian Exile (586-538 B. C. E.) was a
+period of introspection and searching self-examination for the people.
+Spiritual forces hitherto latent came into play; a degree of
+self-consciousness asserted itself. The people grasped its mission. At
+last it comprehended that to imitate inferior races, instead of
+teaching them and making itself a model for them to follow, was
+treason to its vocation in life. When the hour of release from the
+Babylonian yoke struck, the people suddenly saw under its feet "a new
+earth," and to "a new heaven" above it raised eyes dim with tears of
+repentance and emotion. It renewed its covenant with God. Like the
+Exodus from Egypt, so the second national deliverance was connected
+with a revelation. But the messages delivered by the last
+Prophets--especially by "the great unknown," the author of the latter
+part of the Book of Isaiah--were too exalted, too universal in
+conception, for a people but lately emerged from a severe crisis to
+set about their realization at once. They could only illumine its path
+as a guiding-star, inspire it as the ultimate goal, the far-off
+Messianic ideal. Meanwhile the necessity appeared for uniform
+religious laws, dogmas, and customs, to bind the Jews together
+externally as a nation. The moralizing religion of the Prophets was
+calculated to bring about the regeneration of the individual,
+regardless of national ties; but at that moment the chief point
+involved was the nation. It had to be established and its organization
+perfected. The universalism of the Prophets was inadequate for the
+consolidating of a nation. To this end outward religious discipline
+was requisite, an official cult and public ceremonies. Led by such
+considerations, the Jewish captives, on their return to Jerusalem,
+first of all devoted themselves to the erection of a Temple, to the
+creating of a visible religious centre, which was to be the rallying
+point for the whole nation.
+
+The days of the Prophets were over. Their religious universalism could
+apply only to a distant future. In the present, the nation, before it
+might pose as a teacher, had to learn and grow spiritually strong.
+Aims of such compass require centuries for their realization.
+Therefore, the spiritual-national unification of the people was pushed
+into the foreground. The place of the Prophet was filled by the Priest
+and the Scribe. Zerubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah were permeated by the
+purpose to make religion and the cult subservient to the cause of
+national union and isolation. The erection of the Temple, the solemn
+service with the singing of Psalms and the public reading from the
+"Book of the Law" (the Pentateuch, which underwent its final redaction
+at that time), the removal of whatever might arouse the remembrance of
+strange and heathen institutions--these were the levers of their
+unifying activity. At first sight this activity might appear almost
+too one-sided. But if we summon to mind a picture of the conditions
+prevailing in those days, we are forced to the conclusion that, in the
+interest of national restoration, a consistent course was imperative.
+In point of fact, however, some of Ezra's innovations testify to the
+broad-minded, reformatory character of this activity; as, for
+instance, the public reading of the Pentateuch, introduced with a view
+to making the people see the necessity of obtaining detailed knowledge
+of the principles of its religion, and obeying the precepts of the
+Law, not blindly, but with conscious assent. The object steadily aimed
+at was the elevation of the whole body of the people to the plane of
+spirituality, its transformation, in accordance with the Biblical
+injunction, into a "kingdom of priests."
+
+This injunction of civilizing import became the starting point of the
+activity of all of Ezra's successors, of the so-called school of the
+_Soferim_, the Scribes, those versed in the art of writing. The
+political calm that prevailed during the two centuries of the Persian
+supremacy (538-332 B. C. E.), was calculated to an eminent degree to
+promote spiritual development and the organization of the inner life
+of the people. During this period, a large part of the writings after
+the Pentateuch that have been received into the Bible were collected,
+compiled, and reduced to writing. The immortal thoughts of the
+Prophets clothed themselves in the visible garb of letters. On
+parchment rolls and in books they were made accessible to distant
+ages. The impressive traditions transmitted from earliest times, the
+chronicles of the past of the people, the Psalms brought forth by the
+religious enthusiasm of a long series of poets, all were gathered and
+put into literary shape with the extreme of care. The spiritual
+treasures of the nation were capitalized, and to this process of
+capitalization solely and alone generations of men have owed the
+possibility of resorting to them as a source of faith and knowledge.
+Without the work of compilation achieved by the _Soferim_, of
+which the uninstructed are apt to speak slightingly, mankind to-day
+had no Bible, that central sun in world-literature.
+
+These two centuries may fitly be called the school-days of the Jewish
+nation; the Scribes were the teachers of Jewry. In the way of original
+work but little was produced. The people fed upon the store of
+spiritual food, of which sufficient had been laid up for several
+generations. It was then that the Jews first earned their title to the
+name, "the People of the Book." They made subservient to themselves
+the two mightiest instruments of thought, the art of writing and of
+reading. Their progress was brilliant, and when their schooling had
+come to an end, and they stepped out into the broader life, they were
+at once able to apply their knowledge successfully to practical
+contingencies. They were prepared for all the vicissitudes of life.
+Their spiritual equipment was complete.
+
+Nothing could have been more opportune than this readiness to assume
+the responsibilities of existence, for a time of peril and menace was
+again approaching. From out of the West, a new agent of civilization,
+Hellenism, advanced upon the East. Alexander the Great had put an end
+to the huge Persian monarchy, and brought the whole of Western Asia
+under his dominion (332 B. C. E.). His generals divided the conquered
+lands among themselves. With all their might, the Ptolemies in Egypt
+and the Seleucidae in Syria hellenized the countries subject to their
+rule. In the old domain of the Pharaohs, as in Babylonia, in Phoenicia,
+and in Syria, the Greek language was currently spoken, Greek
+ceremonies were observed, the Greek mode of life was adopted. Athens
+ceded her rights of primogeniture to New Athens, Alexandria, capital
+of Egypt, and cosmopolitan centre of the civilized world. For a whole
+century Judea played the sad part of the apple of discord between the
+Egyptian and the Syrian dynasty (320-203 B. C. E.). By turns she owned
+the sway of the Ptolemies and the Seleucidae, until finally, in 203,
+she was declared a Syro-Macedonian province. Here, as in the other
+parts of their realm, the rulers devoted themselves energetically to
+the dissemination of Greek culture. Meeting with resistance, they had
+resort to main force. At first, indeed, a large part of the people
+permitted itself to be blinded by the "beauty of Japheth," and
+promoted assimilation with the Greeks. But when the spread of
+Hellenism began to threaten the spiritual individuality of Judaism,
+the rest of the nation, endowed with greater capacity of resistance,
+arose and sturdily repulsed the enemy.
+
+Hellenism was the first gravely dangerous opponent Judaism had to
+encounter. It was not the ordinary meeting of two peoples, or of two
+kinds of civilization. It was a clash between two theories of life
+that stood abruptly opposed to each other, were, indeed, mutually
+exclusive. It was a duel between "the Eternal" on the one side, and
+Zeus on the other--between the Creator of the universe, the invisible
+spiritual Being who had, in a miraculous way, revealed religious and
+ethical ideals to mankind, and the deity who resided upon Olympus, who
+personified the highest force of nature, consumed vast quantities of
+nectar and ambrosia, and led a pretty wild life upon Olympus and
+elsewhere. In the sphere of religion and morality, Hellene and Judean
+could not come close to each other. The former deified nature herself,
+the material universe; the latter deified the Creator of nature, the
+spirit informing the material universe. The Hellene paid homage first
+and foremost to external beauty and physical strength; the Judean to
+inner beauty and spiritual heroism. The Hellenic theory identified the
+moral with the beautiful and the agreeable, and made life consist of
+an uninterrupted series of physical and mental pleasures. The Judean
+theory is permeated by the strictly ethical notions of duty, of
+purity, of "holiness"; it denounces licentiousness, and sets up as its
+ideal the controlling of the passions and the infinite improvement of
+the soul, not of the intellect alone, but of the feelings as well.
+These differences between the two theories of life showed themselves
+in the brusque opposition in character and customs that made the
+Greeks and the Jews absolute antipodes in many spheres of life. It
+cannot be denied that in matters of the intellect, especially in the
+field of philosophy and science, not to mention art, it might have
+been greatly to the advantage of the Jews to become disciples of the
+Greeks. Nor is there any doubt that the brighter aspects of Hellenism
+would make an admirable complement to Judaism. An harmonious blending
+of the Prophets with Socrates and Plato would have produced a
+many-sided, ideal _Weltanschauung_. The course of historical events
+from the first made such blending, which would doubtless have
+required great sacrifices on both sides, an impossible consummation.
+In point of fact, the events were such as to widen the abyss between
+the two systems. The meeting of Judaism and Hellenism unfortunately
+occurred at the very moment when the classical Hellenes had been
+supplanted by the hellenized Macedonians and Syrians, who had accepted
+what were probably the worst elements of the antique system, while
+appropriating but few of the intellectual excellencies of Greek
+culture. There was another thwarting circumstance. In this epoch, the
+Greeks were the political oppressors of the Jews, outraging Jewish
+national feeling through their tyranny to the same degree as by their
+immoral life they shocked Jewish ethical feeling and Jewish chastity.
+
+Outraged national and religious feeling found expression in the
+insurrection of the Maccabees (168 B. C. E.). The hoary priest
+Mattathias and his sons fought for the dearest and noblest treasures
+of Judaism. Enthusiasm begets heroism. The Syrian-Greek yoke was
+thrown off, and, after groaning under alien rule, the Persian, the
+Egyptian, and the Syro-Macedonian, for four hundred years, Judea
+became an independent state. In its foreign relations, the new state
+was secured by the self-sacrificing courage of the first Maccabean
+brothers, and from within it was supported by the deep-sunk pillars of
+the spiritual life. The rise of the three famous parties, the
+Sadducees, the Pharisees, and the Essenes, by no means testifies, as
+many would have us believe, to national disintegration, but rather to
+the intense spiritual activity of the people. The three tendencies
+afforded opportunity for the self-consciousness of the nation to
+express itself in all its variety and force. The unbending religious
+dogmatism of the Sadducees, the comprehensive practical sense of the
+Pharisees in religious and Rational concerns, the contemplative
+mysticism of the Essenes, they are the most important offshoots from
+the Jewish system as held at that time. In consequence of the external
+conditions that brought about the destruction of the Maccabean
+state[12] after a century's existence (165-63 B. C. E.), the Pharisee
+tendency, which had proved itself the best in practice, won the upper
+hand. When Judea was held fast in the clutches of the Roman eagle, all
+hope of escape being cut off, the far-seeing leaders of the people
+gained the firm conviction that the only trustworthy support of the
+Jewish nation lay in its religion. They realized that the preservation
+of national unity could be effected only by a consistent organization
+of the religious law, which was to envelop and shape the whole
+external life of the people. This explains the feverish activity of
+the early creators of the Mishna, of Hillel, Shammai, and others, and
+it interprets also the watchword of still older fame, "Make a fence
+about the Law." If up to that moment religious usage in its
+development had kept abreast of the requirements of social and
+individual life, the requirements out of which it had grown forth, it
+now became a national function, and its further evolution advanced
+with tremendous strides. For the protection of the old "Mosaic Laws,"
+a twofold and a threefold fence of new legal ordinances was erected
+about them, and the cult became more and more complicated. But the
+externals of religion did not monopolize all the forces. The moral
+element in the nation was promoted with equal vigor. Hillel, the head
+of the Pharisee party, was not a legislator alone, he was also a model
+of humane principles and rare moral attainments.
+
+ [12] The external causes of the downfall of the Maccabean state,
+ dynastic quarrels, are well known. Much less light has been
+ thrown upon the inner, deeper-lying causes of the catastrophe.
+ These are possibly to be sought in the priestly-political
+ dualism of the Judean form of government. The ideal of a
+ nation educated by means of the Bible was a theocratic state,
+ and the first princes of the Maccabean house, acting at once
+ as regents and as high priests, in a measure reached this
+ ideal. But the attempts of other nations had demonstrated
+ conclusively enough that a dualistic form of government cannot
+ maintain itself permanently. Sooner or later one of the two
+ elements, the priestly or the secular, is bound to prevail
+ over the other and crush it. In the Judean realm, with its
+ profoundly religious trend, the priestly element obtained the
+ ascendency, and political ruin ensued. The priestly-political
+ retreated before the priestly-national form of government.
+ Though the religious element was powerless to preserve the
+ _state_ from destruction, we shall see that it has
+ brilliantly vindicated its ability to keep the _nation_
+ intact.
+
+While Judaism, in its native country was striving to isolate itself,
+and was seizing upon all sorts of expedients to insure this end, it
+readily entered into relations, outside of Judea, with other systems
+of thought, and accepted elements of the classical culture. Instead of
+the violent opposition which the Palestinian Judaism of the
+pre-Maccabean period, that is, the period of strife, had offered to
+Hellenism, the tendency to make mutual concessions, and pave the way
+for an understanding between the two theories of life, asserted itself
+in Alexandria. In the capital city of the hellenized world the Jews
+constituted one of the most important elements of culture. According
+to Mommsen, the Jewish colony in Alexandria was not inferior, in point
+of numbers, to the Jewish population of Jerusalem, the metropolis.
+Influenced by Greek civilization, the Jews in turn exercised decisive
+influence upon their heathen surroundings, and introduced a new
+principle of development into the activity of the cultivated classes.
+The Greek translation of the Biblical writings formed the connecting
+link between Judaism and Hellenism. The "Septuaginta," the translation
+of the Pentateuch, in use since the third century before the Christian
+era, had acquainted the classical world with Jewish views and
+principles. The productions of the Prophets and, in later centuries,
+of the other Biblical authors, translated and spread broadcast, acted
+irresistibly upon the spirit of the cultivated heathen, and granted
+him a glimpse into a world of hitherto unknown notions. On this soil
+sprang up the voluminous Judeo-Hellenic literature, of which but a
+few, though characteristic, specimens have descended to us. The
+intermingling of Greek philosophy with Jewish religious conceptions
+resulted in a new religio-philosophic doctrine, with a mystic tinge,
+of which Philo is the chief exponent. In Jerusalem, Judaism appeared
+as a system of practical ceremonies and moral principles; in
+Alexandria, it presented itself as a complex of abstract symbols and
+poetical allegories. The Alexandrian form of Judaism might satisfy the
+intellect, but it could not appeal to the feelings. It may have made
+Judaism accessible to the cultivated minority, to the upper ten
+thousand with philosophic training; for the masses of the heathen
+people Judaism continued unintelligible. Yet it was pre-eminently the
+masses that were strongly possessed by religious craving. Disappointed
+in their old beliefs, they panted after a new belief, after spiritual
+enlightenment. In the decaying classical world, which had so long
+filled out life with materialistic and intellectual interests, the
+moral and religious feelings, the desire for a living faith, for an
+active inspiration, had awakened, and was growing with irresistible
+force.
+
+Then, from deep out of the bosom of Judaism, there sprang a moral,
+religious doctrine destined to allay the burning thirst for religion,
+and bring about a reorganization of the heathen world. The originators
+of Christianity stood wholly upon the ground of Judaism. In their
+teachings were reflected as well the lofty moral principles of the
+Pharisee leader as the contemplative aims of the Essenes. But the same
+external circumstances that had put Judaism under the necessity of
+choosing a sharply-defined practical, national policy, made it
+impossible for Judaism to fraternize with the preachers of the new
+doctrine. Judaism, in fact, was compelled to put aside entirely the
+thought of universal missionary activity. Instead, it had to devote
+its powers to the more pressing task of guarding the spiritual unity
+of a nation whose political bonds were visibly dropping away.
+
+For just then the Jewish nation, gory with its own blood, was
+struggling in the talons of the Roman eagle. Its sons fought
+heroically, without thought of self. When, finally, physical strength
+gave out, their spiritual energy rose to an intenser degree. The state
+was annihilated, the nation remained alive. At the very moment when
+the Temple was enwrapped in flames, and the Roman legions flooded
+Jerusalem, the spiritual leaders of Jewry sat musing, busily casting
+about for a means whereby, without a state, without a capital, without
+a Temple, Jewish unity might be maintained. And they solved the
+difficult problem.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS PERIOD
+
+
+The solution of the problem consisted chiefly in more strictly
+following out the process of isolation. In a time in which the worship
+of God preached by Judaism was rapidly spreading to all parts of the
+classical world, and the fundamental principles of the Jewish religion
+were steadily gaining appreciation and active adherence, this intense
+desire for seclusion may at first glance seem curious. But the
+phenomenon is perfectly simple. A foremost factor was national
+feeling, enhanced to a tremendous degree at the time of the
+destruction of Jerusalem. Lacking a political basis, it was
+transferred to religious soil. Every tradition, every custom, however
+insignificant, was cherished as a jewel. Though without a state and
+without territory, the Jews desired to form a nation, if only a
+spiritual nation, complete in itself. They considered themselves then
+as before the sole guardians of the law of God. They did not believe
+in a speedy fulfilment of the prophetical promise concerning "the end
+of time" when all nations would be converted to God. A scrupulous
+keeper of the Law, Judaism would not hear of the compromises that
+heathendom, lately entered into the bosom of the faith, claimed as its
+due consideration. It refused to sacrifice a single feature of its
+simple dogmatism, of its essential ceremonies, such as circumcision
+and Sabbath rest. Moreover, in the period following close upon the
+fall of the Temple, a part of the people still nursed the hope of
+political restoration, a hope repudiating in its totality the
+proclamation of quite another Messianic doctrine. The delusion ended
+tragically in Bar Kochba's hapless rebellion (135 C. E.), whose
+disastrous issue cut off the last remnant of hope for the restoration
+of an "earthly kingdom." Thereafter the ideal of a spiritual state was
+replaced by the ideal of a spiritual nation, rallying about a peculiar
+religious banner. Jewry grew more and more absorbed in itself. Its
+seclusion from the rest of the world became progressively more
+complete. Instinct dictated this course as an escape from the danger
+of extinction, or, at least, of stagnation. It was conscious of
+possessing enough vitality and energy to live for itself and work out
+its own salvation. It had its spiritual interests, its peculiar
+ideals, and a firm belief in the future. It constituted an ancient
+order, whose patent of nobility had been conferred upon it in the days
+of the hoary past by the Lord God Himself. Such as it was, it could
+not consent to ally itself with _parvenus_, ennobled but to-day,
+and yesterday still bowing down before "gods of silver and gods of
+gold." This white-haired old man, with a stormy past full of
+experiences and thought, would not mingle with the scatter-brained
+crowd, would not descend to the level of neophytes dominated by
+fleeting, youthful enthusiasm. Loyally this weather-bronzed,
+inflexible guardian of the Law stuck to his post--the post entrusted
+to him by God Himself--and, faithful to his duty, held fast to the
+principle _j'y suis, j'y reste_.
+
+As a political nation threatened by its neighbors seeks support in its
+army, and provides sufficient implements of war, so a spiritual nation
+must have spiritual weapons of defense at its command. Such weapons
+were forged in great numbers, and deposited in the vast arsenal called
+the Talmud. The Talmud represents a complicated spiritual discipline,
+enjoining unconditional obedience to a higher invisible power. Where
+discipline is concerned, questions as to the necessity for one or
+another regulation are out of place. Every regulation is necessary, if
+only because it contributes to the desired end, namely, discipline.
+Let no one ask, then, to what purpose the innumerable religious and
+ritual regulations, sometimes reaching the extreme of pettiness, to
+what purpose the comprehensive code in which every step in the life of
+the faithful is foreseen. The Talmudic religious provisions, all taken
+together, aim to put the regimen of the nation on a strictly uniform
+basis, so that everywhere the Jew may be able to distinguish a brother
+in faith by his peculiar mode of life. It is a uniform with insignia,
+by which soldiers of the same regiment recognize one another. Despite
+the vast extent of the Jewish diaspora, the Jews formed a
+well-articulated spiritual army, an invisible "state of God"
+(_civitas dei_). Hence these "knights of the spirit," the
+citizens of this invisible state, had to wear a distinct uniform, and
+be governed by a suitable code of army regulations.
+
+As a protection for Jewish national unity, which was exposed to the
+greatest danger after the downfall of the state, there arose and
+developed, without any external influence whatsoever, an extraordinary
+dictatorship, unofficial and spiritual. The legislative activity of
+all the dictators--such as, Rabbi Jochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Akiba,
+the Hillelites, and the Shammaites--was formulated in the Mishna, the
+"oral law," which was the substructure of the Talmud. Their activity
+had a characteristic feature, which deserves somewhat particularized
+description. The laws were not laid down arbitrarily and without
+ceremony. In order to possess binding force, they required the
+authoritative confirmation to be found in the Mosaic Books. From
+these, whether by logical or by forced interpretation of the holy
+text, its words, or, perchance, its letters, they had to be derived.
+Each law, barring only the original "traditions," the _Halacha
+le-Moshe mi-Sinai_, was promulgated over the supreme signature, as
+it were, that is, with the authentication of a word from the Holy
+Scriptures. Or it was inferred from another law so authenticated. The
+elaboration of every law was thus connected with a very complicated
+process of thought, requiring both inductive and deductive reasoning,
+and uniting juridical interpretation with the refinements of
+casuistry. This legislation was the beginning of Talmudic science,
+which from that time on, for many centuries, growing with the ages,
+claimed in chief part the intellectual activity of Jewry. The schools
+and the academies worked out a system of laws at once religious and
+practical in character, which constituted, in turn, the object of
+further theoretic study in the same schools and academies. In the
+course of time, however, the means became the end. Theoretic
+investigation of the law, extending and developing to the furthest
+limits, in itself, without reference to its practical value, afforded
+satisfaction to the spiritual need. The results of theorizing often
+attained the binding force of law in practical life, not because
+circumstances ordered it, but simply because one or another academy,
+by dint of logic or casuistry, had established it as law. The number
+of such deductions from original and secondary laws increased in
+geometric progression, and practical life all but failed to keep up
+with the theory. The "close of the Mishna," that is, its reduction to
+writing, had no daunting effect upon the zeal for research. If
+anything, a new and strong impetus was imparted to it. As up to that
+time the text of the Holy Scriptures had been made the basis of
+interpretation, giving rise to the most diverse inferences, so the
+rabbis now began to use the law book recently canonized as a new basis
+of interpretation, and to carry its principles to their utmost
+consequences. In this way originated first the "Palestinian Gemara."
+Later, when the Patriarchate in Palestine was stripped of its glory by
+persecutions, and, in consequence, the centre of activity had to be
+transferred from the Talmud academies of Palestine to those of
+Babylonia, supreme place and exclusive dominion were obtained by the
+"Babylonian Gemara," put into permanent form about the year 500 C. E.,
+a gigantic work, the result of two hundred years of mental labor.
+
+This busy intellectual activity was as comprehensive as it was
+thoroughgoing. Talmudic legislation, the Halacha, by no means confines
+itself to religious practices, extensive as this field is. It embraces
+the whole range of civil and social life. Apart from the dietary laws,
+the regulations for the festivals and the divine service, and a mass
+of enactments for the shaping of daily life, the Talmud elaborated a
+comprehensive and fairly well-ordered system of civil and criminal
+law, which not infrequently bears favorable comparison with the famous
+_rationi scriptae_ of the Romans. While proceeding with extreme
+rigor and scrupulousness in ritual matters, the Talmud is governed in
+its social legislation by the noblest humanitarian principles.
+Doubtless this difference of attitude can be explained by the fact
+that religious norms are of very much greater importance for a nation
+than judicial regulations, which concern themselves only with the
+interests of the individual, and exercise but little influence upon
+the development of the national spirit.
+
+The most sympathetic aspects of the Jewish spirit in that epoch are
+revealed in the moral and poetic elements of the Talmud, in the Agada.
+They are the receptacles into which the people poured all its
+sentiments, its whole soul. They are a clear reflex of its inner
+world, its feelings, hopes, ideals. The collective work of the nation
+and the trend of history have left much plainer traces in the Agada
+than in the dry, methodical Halacha. In the Agada the learned jurist
+and formalist appears transformed into a sage or poet, conversing with
+the people in a warm, cordial tone, about the phenomena of nature,
+history, and life. The reader is often thrown into amazement by the
+depth of thought and the loftiness of feeling manifested in the Agada.
+Involuntarily one pays the tribute of reverence to its practical
+wisdom, to its touching legends pervaded by the magic breath of poesy,
+to the patriarchal purity of its views. But these pearls are not
+strung upon one string, they are not arranged in a complete system.
+They are imbedded here and there, in gay variety, in a vast mass of
+heterogeneous opinions and sentiments naive at times and at times
+eccentric. The reader becomes aware of the thoughts before they are
+consolidated. They are still in a fluid, mobile state, still in
+process of making. The same vivacious, versatile spirit is revealed in
+the Midrashim literature, directly continuing the Agada up to the end
+of the middle ages. These two species of Jewish literature, the Agada
+and the Midrashim, have a far greater absolute value than the Halacha.
+The latter is an official work, the former a national product. Like
+every other special legislation, the Halacha is bound to definite
+conditions and times, while the Agada concerns itself with the eternal
+verities. The creations of the philosophers, poets, and moralists are
+more permanent than the work of legislators.
+
+Beautiful as the Agada is, and with all its profundity, it lacks
+breadth. It rests wholly on the national, not on a universal basis. It
+would be vain to seek in it for the comprehensive universalism of the
+Prophets. Every lofty ideal is claimed as exclusively Jewish. So far
+from bridging over the chasm between Israel and the other nations,
+knowledge and morality served to widen it. It could not be otherwise,
+there was no influx of air from without. The national horizon grew
+more and more contracted. The activities of the people gathered
+intensity, but in the same measure they lost in breadth. It was the
+only result to be expected from the course of history in those ages.
+Let us try to conceive what the first five centuries of the Christian
+era, the centuries during which the Talmud was built up, meant in the
+life of mankind. Barbarism, darkness, and elemental outbreaks of man's
+migratory instincts, illustrated by the "great migration of races,"
+are characteristic features of those centuries. It was a wretched
+transition period between the fall of the world of antique culture and
+the first germinating of a new Christian civilization. The Orient, the
+centre and hearth of Judaism, was shrouded in impenetrable darkness.
+In Palestine and in Babylonia, their two chief seats, the Jews were
+surrounded by nations that still occupied the lowest rung of the
+ladder of civilization, that had not yet risen above naive mysticism
+in religion, or continued to be immersed in superstitions of the
+grossest sort.
+
+In this abysmal night of the middle ages, the lamp of thought was fed
+and guarded solely and alone by the Jews. It is not astonishing, then,
+that oblivious of the other nations they should have dispensed light
+only for themselves. Furthermore, the circumstance must be considered
+that, in the period under discussion, the impulse to separate from
+Judaism gained ground in the Christian world. After the Council of
+Nicaea, after Constantine the Great had established Christianity as
+the state-church, the official breach between the Old Testament and
+the New Testament partisans became unavoidable.
+
+Thus the Jews, robbed of their political home, created a spiritual
+home for themselves. Through the instrumentality of the numberless
+religious rules which the Talmud had laid down, and which shaped the
+life of the individual as well as that of the community, they were
+welded into a firmly united whole. The Jewish spirit--national feeling
+and individual mental effort alike--was absorbed in this pursuit of
+unification. Head, heart, hands, all human functions of the Jew, were
+brought under complete control and cast into fixed forms, by these
+five centuries of labor. With painful exactitude, the Talmud
+prescribed ordinances for all the vicissitudes of life, yet, at the
+same time, offered sufficient food for brain and heart. It was at once
+a religion and a science. The Jew was equipped with all the
+necessaries. He could satisfy his wants from his own store. There was
+no need for him to knock at strange doors, even though he had thereby
+profited. The consequences of this attitude, positive as well as
+negative consequences, asserted themselves in the further course of
+Jewish history.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+
+
+With the close of the Talmud, at the beginning of the sixth century,
+the feverish intellectual activity abated. The Jewish centre of
+gravity continued in Babylonia. In this country, in which the Jewish
+race had heard its cradle song at the dawn of existence, and later on
+_Judaea capta_ had sat and wept remembering Zion, Judaism, after
+the destruction of the second Temple and hundreds of years of trials,
+was favored with a secure asylum. In the rest of the diaspora,
+persecution gave the Jews no respite, but in Babylonia, under Persian
+rule, they lived for some centuries comparatively free from
+molestation. Indeed, they enjoyed a measure of autonomy in internal
+affairs, under a chief who was entitled Exilarch (_Resh-Galutha_).
+The Law and the word of God went forth from Babylonia for the Jews of
+all lands. The Babylonian Talmud became the anthoritative code for the
+Jewish people, a holy book second only to the Bible. The intellectual
+calm that supervened at the beginning of the sixth century and lasted
+until the end of the eighth century, betrayed itself in the slackening of
+independent creation, though not in the flagging of intellectual activity
+in general. In the schools and academies of Pumbeditha, Nahardea,
+and Sura, scientific work was carried on with the same zest as before,
+only this work had for its primary object the sifting and exposition of
+the material heaped up by the preceding generations. This was the
+province of the Sabureans and the Geonim, whose relation to the Talmud
+was the same as that of the Scribes (the _Soferim_) of the Second
+Temple to the Bible (see above, ch. vi). In the later period, as in the
+earlier, the aim was the capitalization of the accumulated spiritual
+treasures, an undertaking that gives little occasion for movement and
+life, but all the more for endurance and industry.
+
+This intellectual balance was destroyed by two events: the appearance
+of Islam and the rise of Karaism. Islam, the second legitimate
+offspring of Judaism, was appointed to give to religious thought in
+the slumbering Orient the slight impulse it needed to start it on its
+rapid career of sovereign power. Barely emancipated from swaddling
+clothes, young Hotspur at once began to rage. He sought an outlet for
+his unconquerable thirst for action, his lust for world-dominion. The
+victorious religious wars of the followers of Allah ensued. This
+foreign movement was not without significance for the fate of the
+Jews. They were surrounded no longer by heathens but by Mohammedans,
+who believed in the God of the Bible, and through the mouth of their
+prophet conferred upon the Jews the honorable appellation of "the
+People of the Book." In the eighth century the wars ceased, and the
+impetuous energy of the rejuvenated Orient was diverted into quieter
+channels. The Bagdad Khalifate arose, the peaceful era of the growth
+of industry, the sciences, and the arts was inaugurated. Endowed with
+quick discernment for every enlightening movement, the Jews yielded to
+the vivifying magic of young Arabic culture.
+
+Partly under the influence of the Arabic tendency to split into
+religio-philosophic sects, partly from inner causes, Karaism sprang up
+in the second half of the eighth century. Its active career began with
+a vehement protest against the Talmud as the regulator of life and
+thought. It proclaimed the creators of this vast encyclopedia to be
+usurpers of spiritual power, and urged a return to the Biblical laws
+in their unadulterated simplicity. The weakness of its positive
+principles hindered the spread of Karaism, keeping it forever within
+the narrow limits of a sect and consigning it to stagnation. What gave
+it vogue during the first century of its existence was its negative
+strength, its violent opposition to the Talmud, which aroused
+strenuous intellectual activity. For a long time it turned Judaism
+away from its one-sided Talmudic tendency, and opened up new avenues
+of work for it. True to their motto: "Search diligently in the Holy
+Scriptures," the adherents of Karaism applied themselves to the
+rational study of the Bible, which had come to be, among the
+Talmudists, the object of casuistic interpretation and legendary
+adornment. By the cultivation of grammar and lexicography as applied
+to the Biblical thesaurus of words, they resuscitated the Hebrew
+language, which, ousted by the Aramaic dialect, had already sunk into
+oblivion. By the same means they laid the foundation of a school of
+rejuvenated poetry. In general, thought on religious and philosophic
+subjects was promoted to a higher degree by the lively discussions
+between them and the Talmudists.
+
+By imperceptible steps Talmudic Judaism, influenced at once by the
+enlightened Arabs and the protesting Karaites, departed from the "four
+ells of the Halacha," and widened its horizon. Among the spiritual
+leaders of the people arose men who occupied themselves not only with
+the study of the Talmud but also with a rational exegesis of the
+Bible, with philology, poetry, philosophy. The great Gaon Saadiah
+(892-942) united within himself all strands of thought. Over and above
+a large number of philological and other writings of scientific
+purport, he created a momentous religio-philosophic system, with the
+aim to clarify Judaism and refine religious conceptions. He was an
+encyclopedic thinker, a representative of the highest Jewish culture
+and of Arabic culture as well--he wrote his works in Arabic by
+preference. In this way Jewish thought gained ground more and more in
+the Orient. It was in the West, however, that it attained soon after
+to the climax of its development.
+
+Gradually the centre of gravity of Jewry shifted from Asia Minor to
+Western Europe. Beginning with the sixth century, the sparsely sown
+Jewish population of Occidental Europe increased rapidly in numbers.
+In Italy, Byzantium, France, and Visigothic Spain, important Jewish
+communities were formed. The medieval intolerance of the Church,
+though neither so widespread nor so violent as it later became,
+suffered its first outbreak in that early century. The persecutions of
+the Jews by the Visigothic kings of Spain and the Bishops Avitus of
+Clermont and Agobard in France (sixth to the ninth century) were the
+prelude to the more systematic and the more bloody cruelties of
+subsequent days. The insignificant numbers of the European Jews and
+the insecurity of their condition stood in the way of forming an
+intellectual centre of their own. They were compelled to acknowledge
+the spiritual supremacy of their Oriental brethren in faith. With the
+beginning of the tenth century the situation underwent a change.
+Arabic civilization, which had penetrated to Spain in previous
+centuries, brought about a radical transformation in the character of
+the country. The realm of the fanatic Visigoths, half barbarous and
+wholly averse to the light of progress, changed into the prosperous
+and civilized Khalifate of the Ommeyyades. Thither the best forces of
+Oriental Jewry transferred themselves. With the growth of the Jewish
+population in Arabic Spain and the strengthening of its communal
+organization, the spiritual centre of the Jewish people gradually
+established itself in Spain. The academies of Sura and Pumbeditha
+yielded first place to the high schools of Cordova and Toledo.
+
+The Jewry of the East resigned the national hegemony to the Jewry of
+the West. The Geonim withdrew in favor of the Rabbis. After centuries
+of seclusion, the Jewish spirit once more asserted itself, and enjoyed
+a period of efflorescence. The process of national growth became more
+complex, more varied.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH JEWS
+(980-1492)
+
+
+The five centuries marked at their beginning by the rise of
+Arabic-Jewish civilization in Spain and at their end by the banishment
+of the Jews from Spain (980-1492), offer the Jewish historian an
+abundance of culture manifestations and intellectual movements so
+luxuriant that it is well-nigh impossible to gather them up in one
+formula. The monotony formerly prevailing in Jewish national life,
+both in its external and in its internal relations, was succeeded by
+almost gaily checkered variety. Swept along by the movement towards
+enlightenment that dominated their surroundings, the Jews of Arabic
+Spain threw themselves into energetic work in all the spheres of life
+and thought. While they had political ground more or less firm under
+their feet, and for the most part enjoyed peace and liberty, the Jews
+in the Christian lands of Europe stood upon volcanic soil, every
+moment threatening to swallow them up. Exposed constantly to
+persecutions, they lived more or less isolated, and devoted themselves
+to one-sided though intense intellectual activity. Sombre shadows and
+streaks of bright light alternate with each other in this period. In
+its second half, the clouds massed themselves heavily upon the
+darkening horizon. Even the "privileged" Spanish Jews suffered an
+untoward change in their affairs at the beginning of the thirteenth
+century: gradually they were withdrawn from under the sovereignty of
+the Arabs, and made subject to the power of the Catholic monarchs.
+They became thenceforward the equal partners of their brethren in
+faith in the rest of Europe. All without distinction had a share in
+the spiritual martyrdom which is the greenest bayleaf in the crown of
+Jewish history. To think and to suffer became the watchword of the
+whole nation.
+
+At first, as we have said, a considerable portion of the Jewish people
+enjoyed the happy possibility of thinking. This was during the
+classical epoch of the Arabic-Jewish Renaissance, which preceded the
+Italian Renaissance by four centuries. There is a fundamental
+difference between the two Renaissance periods: the earlier one was
+signalized by a re-birth of the sciences and of philosophy, the later
+one pre-eminently of the arts and of literature. The eleventh and
+twelfth centuries marked the meridian of the intellectual development
+of medieval Judaism. As once, in Alexandria, the union of Judaic with
+Hellenic culture brought in its train a superabundance of new ideas of
+a universal character, so again the amalgamation, on Spanish soil, of
+Jewish culture with Arabic gave rise to rich intellectual results,
+more lasting and fruitful than the Alexandrian, inasmuch as, in spite
+of their universal character, they did not contravene the national
+spirit. The Jewish people dropped its misanthropy and its leaning
+toward isolation. The Jews entered all sorts of careers: by the side
+of influential and cultivated statesmen, such as Chasdai ibn Shaprut
+and Samuel Hanagid, at the courts of the Khalifs, stood a brilliant
+group of grammarians, poets, and philosophers, like Jonah ibn Ganach,
+Solomon Gabirol, and Moses ibn Ezra. The philosophic-critical
+scepticism of Abraham ibn Ezra co-existed in peace and harmony with
+the philosophic-poetic enthusiasm of Jehuda Halevi. The study of
+medicine, mathematics, physics, and astronomy went hand in hand with
+the study of the Talmud, which, though it may not have occupied the
+first place with the Spanish Jews of this time, by no means
+disappeared, as witness the compendium by Alphassi. Unusual breadth
+and fulness of the spiritual life is the distinction of the epoch.
+This variety of mental traits combined in a marvelous union to form
+the great personality of Maimonides, the crown of a glorious period.
+With one "Strong Hand," this intellectual giant brought order out of
+the Talmudic chaos, which at his word was transformed into a
+symmetrical, legal system; with the other, he "guided the Perplexed"
+through the realm of faith and knowledge. For rationalistic clarity
+and breadth of view no counterpart to the religio-philosophic doctrine
+which he formulated can be found in the whole extent of medieval
+literature. The main feature of the philosophy of Maimonides and of
+the systems based upon it is rationalism, not a dry, scholastic,
+abstract rationalism, but a living rationalism, embracing the whole
+field of the most exalted psychic phenomena. It is not philosophy pure
+and simple, but religious philosophy, an harmonization, more or less
+felicitous, of the postulates of reason with the dogmas of faith. It
+is reason mitigated by faith, and faith regulated by reason. In the
+darkness of the middle ages, when the Romish Church impregnated
+religion with the crudest superstitions, going so far as to forbid its
+adherents to read the Bible, and when the greatest philosopher
+representatives of the Church, like Albertus Magnus, would have
+rejected offhand, as a childish fancy or, indeed, as an heretical
+chimera, any attempt to rescue the lower classes of the people from
+their wretched state of spiritual servitude--in a time like this, the
+truly majestic spectacle is presented of a philosophy declaring war on
+superstition, and setting out to purify the religious notions of the
+people.
+
+Not a breath of this ample spiritual development of the Jews of Arabic
+Spain reached the Jews living in the Christian countries of Europe.
+Their circumstances were too grievous, and in sombreness their inner
+life matched their outer estate. Their horizon was as contracted as
+the streets of the Jewries in which they were penned. The crusades
+(beginning in 1096) clearly showed the Jews of France and Germany what
+sentiments their neighbors cherished towards them. They were the first
+returns which Christianity paid the Jewish people for its old-time
+teaching of religion. The descendants of the "chosen people," the
+originators of the Bible, were condemned to torture of a sort to
+exhaust their spiritual heritage. Judaism suffered the tragic fate of
+King Lear. Was it conceivable that the horrors--the rivers of blood,
+the groans of massacred communities, the serried ranks of martyrs, the
+ever-haunting fear of the morrow--should fail to leave traces in the
+character of Judaism? The Jewish people realized its imminent danger.
+It convulsively held fast to its precious relics, clung to the pillars
+of its religion, which it regarded as the only asylum. The Jewish
+spirit again withdrew from the outer world. It gave itself up wholly
+to the study of the Talmud. In northern France and in Germany,
+Talmudic learning degenerated into the extreme of scholastic pedantry,
+the lot of every branch of science that is lopped off from the main
+trunk of knowledge, and vegetates in a heavy, dank atmosphere, lacking
+light and air. Rashi (1064-1105), whose genial activity began before
+the first crusade, opened up Jewish religious literature to the
+popular mind, by his systematic commentaries on the Bible and the
+Talmud. On the other hand, the Tossafists, the school of commentators
+succeeding him, by their petty quibbling and hairsplitting casuistry
+made the Talmudic books more intricate and less intelligible. Such
+being the intellectual bias of the age, a sober, rationalistic
+philosophy could not assert itself. In lieu of an Ibn Ezra or a
+Maimonides, we have Jehuda Hachassid and Eliezer of Worms, with their
+mystical books of devotion, _Sefer Chassidim, Rokeach_, etc.,
+filled with pietistic reflections on the other world, in which the
+earth figures as a "vale of tears." Poetry likewise took on the dismal
+hue of its environment. Instead of the varied lyrical notes of Gabirol
+and Halevi, who sang the weal and woe, not only of the nation, but
+also of the individual, and lost themselves in psychologic analysis,
+there now fall upon our ear the melancholy, heartrending strains of
+synagogue poetry, the harrowing outcries that forced themselves from
+the oppressed bosoms of the hunted people, the prayerful lamentations
+that so often shook the crumbling walls of the medieval synagogues at
+the very moment when, full of worshipers, they were fired by the
+inhuman crusaders. A mighty chord reverberates in this poetry:
+_Morituri te salutant_.
+
+One small spot there was, in the whole of Europe, in which Jews could
+still hope to endure existence and enjoy a measure of security. This
+was Southern France, or the Provence. The population of Provence had
+assimilated the culture of the neighboring country, Arabic Spain, and
+become the mediator between it and the rest of Europe. This work of
+mediation was undertaken primarily by the Jews. In the twelfth century
+several universities existed in Provence, which were frequented in
+great numbers by students from all countries. At these universities
+the teachers of philosophy, medicine, and other branches of science
+were for the most part Jews. The rationalistic philosophy of the
+Spanish Jews was there proclaimed _ex cathedra_. The Tibbonides
+translated all the more important works of the Jewish thinkers of
+Spain from Arabic into Hebrew. The Kimchis devoted themselves to
+grammatical studies and the investigation of the Bible. In
+Montpellier, Narbonne, and Lunel, intellectual work was in full swing.
+Rational ideas gradually leavened the masses of the Provençal
+population. Conscience freed from intellectual trammels began to
+revolt against the oppression exercised by the Roman clergy. Through
+the Albigensian heresy, Innocent III, founder of the papal power, had
+his attention directed to the Jews, whom he considered the dangerous
+protagonists of rationalism. The "heresy" was stifled, Provence in all
+her magnificence fell a prey to the Roman mania for destruction, and,
+on the ruins of a noble civilization, the Dominican Inquisition raged
+with all its horrors (1213).
+
+Thenceforward the Catholic Church devoted herself to a hostile watch
+upon the Jews. Either she persecuted them directly through her
+Inquisition, or indirectly through her omnipotent influence on kings
+and peoples. In the hearts of the citizens of medieval Europe, the
+flame of religious hatred was enkindled, and religious hatred served
+as a cloak for the basest passions. Jewish history from that time on
+became a history of uninterrupted suffering. The Lateran Council
+declared the Jews to be outcasts, and designed a peculiar,
+dishonorable badge for them, a round patch of yellow cloth, to be worn
+on their upper garment (1215). In France the Jews became by turns the
+victims of royal rapacity and the scapegoats of popular fanaticism.
+Massacres, confiscations, banishments followed by dearly purchased
+permission to return, by renewed restrictions, persecutions, and
+oppressions--these were the measures that characterized the treatment
+of the Jews in France until their final expulsion (1394). In Germany
+the Jews were not so much hated as despised. They were _servi
+camerae_, serfs of the state, and as such had to pay oppressive
+taxes. Besides, they were limited to the meanest trades and to usury
+and peddling. They were shut up in their narrow Jewries, huddled in
+wretched cabins, which clustered about the dilapidated synagogue in a
+shamefaced way. What strange homes! What gigantic misery, what
+boundless suffering dumbly borne, was concealed in those crumbling,
+curse-laden dwellings! And yet, how resplendent they were with
+spiritual light, what exalted virtues, what lofty heroism they
+harbored! In those gloomy, tumbledown Jew houses, intellectual
+endeavor was at white heat. The torch of faith blazed clear in them,
+and on the pure domestic hearth played a gentle flame. In the abject,
+dishonored son of the Ghetto was hidden an intellectual giant. In his
+nerveless body, bent double by suffering, and enveloped in the shabby
+old cloak still further disfigured by the yellow wheel, dwelt the soul
+of a thinker. The son of the Ghetto might have worn his badge with
+pride, for in truth it was a medal of distinction awarded by the papal
+Church to the Jews, for dauntlessness and courage. The awkward, puny
+Jew in his way was stronger and braver than a German knight armed
+cap-a-pie, for he was penetrated by the faith that "moves mountains."
+And when the worst came to the worst, he demonstrated his courage.
+When his peaceful home was stormed by the bestialized hordes of
+Armleder, or the drunken bands of the Flagellants, or the furious
+avengers of the "Black Death," he did not yield, did not purchase life
+by disgraceful treason. With invincible courage he put his head under
+the executioner's axe, and breathed forth his heroic spirit with the
+enthusiastic cry: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is One."
+
+At length the turn of the Spanish Jews arrived. For the unbroken peace
+they had enjoyed, they had to atone by centuries of unexampled
+suffering. By degrees, the Arabs were forced out of the Pyrenean
+Peninsula, and the power they had to abdicate was assumed by the
+Catholic kings of Castile and Aragon. In 1236 occurred the fall of
+Cordova, the most important centre of Arabic Jewish culture.
+Thereafter Arab power held sway only in the province of Granada. The
+fortunes of the Spanish Jews underwent a calamitous change. The kings
+and the upper ten thousand were, indeed, favorably disposed toward
+them. At the courts of Castile and Aragon, the Jews were active as
+ministers, physicians, astronomers. But the people, incited by the
+propaganda of the clerics, nursed frightful hatred against the Jews,
+not only as "infidels," but also as intellectual aristocrats. The rage
+of the populace was the combustible material in the terrific
+explosions that occurred periodically, in the bloody saturnalia of the
+Pastouraux (1320), in the Black Death riots (1348), in the massacre of
+Seville (1391).
+
+Dire blows of fortune were unable to weigh down the Spanish Jew,
+accustomed to independence, as they did the German Jew. He carried his
+head proudly on high, for he was conscious that in all respects he
+stood above the rabble pursuing him, above its very leaders, the
+clerics. In spite of untoward fate his mental development proceeded,
+but inevitably it was modified by the trend of the times. By the side
+of the philosophic tendency of the previous age, a mystical tendency
+appeared in literature. The Kabbala, with its mist-shrouded symbolism,
+so grateful to the feelings and the imagination, chimed in better than
+rationalistic philosophy with the depressed humor under which the
+greater part of the Jews were then laboring. Another force
+antagonistic to rationalistic philosophy was the Rabbinism
+transplanted from France and Germany. The controversy between
+Rabbinism and philosophy, which dragged itself through three-quarters
+of a century (1232-1305), ended in the formal triumph of Rabbinism.
+However, philosophic activity merely languished, it did not cease
+entirely; in fact, the three currents for some time ran along parallel
+with one another. Next to the pillars of Rabbinism, Asheri, Rashba,
+Isaac ben Sheshet, loomed up the philosophers, Gersonides (Ralbag),
+Kreskas, and Albo, and a long line of Kabbalists, beginning with
+Nachmanides and Moses de Leon, the compiler of the Zohar, and ending
+with the anonymous authors of the mysterious "Kana and Pelia."
+
+The times grew less and less propitious. Catholicism steadily gained
+ground in Spain. The scowling Dominican put forward his claim upon the
+Jewish soul with vehement emphasis, and made every effort to drag it
+into the bosom of the alone-saving Church. The conversion of the Jews
+would have been a great triumph, indeed, for Catholicism militant. The
+conversion methods of the Dominican monk were of a most insinuating
+kind--he usually began with a public religious disputation.
+Unfortunately, the Jews were experts in the art of debate, and too
+often by their bold replies covered the self-sufficient dignitaries of
+Rome with confusion. The Jews should have known, from bitter
+experience, that such boldness would not be passed over silently. From
+sumptuous debating hall to Dominican prison and scaffold was but a
+short step. In 1391, one of these worthy soul-catchers, Bishop
+Ferdinando Martinez, set the fanatical mob of Seville on the Jews, and
+not without success. Terrorized by the threat of death, many accepted
+Catholicism under duress. But they became Christians only in
+appearance; in reality they remained true to the faith of their
+fathers, and, in secret, running the risk of loss of life, they
+fulfilled all the Jewish ordinances. This is the prologue to the
+thrilling Marrano tragedy.
+
+Finally, the moment approached when gloomy Catholicism attained to
+unchallenged supremacy in the Pyrenean Peninsula. On the ruins of the
+enlightened culture of the Arabs, Ferdinand the Catholic and Isabella
+of Castile reared the reactionary government of medieval Rome. The
+Inquisition was introduced (1480). Torquemada presided as high priest
+over the rites attending the human sacrifices. _Ad gloriam
+ecclesiae_, the whole of Spain was illuminated. Everywhere the
+funeral pyres of the Inquisition flared to the skies, the air was rent
+by the despairing shrieks of martyrs enveloped in flames or racked by
+tortures, the prisons overflowed with Marranos,--all instruments of
+torture were vigorously plied.
+
+At last the hour of redemption struck: in 1492 all Jews were driven
+from Spain, and a few years later from Portugal. Jewish-Arabic culture
+after five centuries of ascendency suffered a sudden collapse. The
+unhappy people again grasped its staff, and wandered forth into the
+world without knowing whither.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH
+JEWS (1492-1789)
+
+
+The expulsion from Spain was a stunning blow. The hoary martyr people
+which had defied so many storms in its long life was for a moment
+dazed. The soil of Europe was quaking under its feet. At the time when
+the medieval period had formally come to a close for Occidental
+Christendom, and the modern period had opened, the middle ages
+continued in unmitigated brutality for the Jews. If anything, the life
+of the Jews had become more unendurable than before. What, indeed, had
+the much-vaunted modern age to offer them? In the ranks of the
+humanistic movement Reuchlin alone stood forth prominently as the
+advocate of the Jews, and he was powerless before the prejudices of
+the populace. The Reformation in Germany and elsewhere had illuminated
+the minds of the people, but had not softened their hearts. Luther
+himself, the creator of the Reformation, was not innocent of hating
+the followers of an alien faith. The Jews especially did not enjoy too
+great a measure of his sympathies. The wars growing out of the
+Reformation, which in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
+devastated Europe in the name of religion, were not calculated to
+favor the spread of tolerance and milder manners. The conflict raging
+in the bosom of the Church and setting her own children by the ears,
+was yet insufficient to divert her maternal care from her
+"unbelieving" stepchildren. In Spain and Portugal, stakes continued to
+burn two centuries longer for the benefit of the Marranos, the false
+Christians. In Germany and Austria, the Jews were kept in the same
+condition of servitude as before. Their economic circumstances were
+appalling. They were forced to emigrate _en masse_ to Poland,
+which offered the adherents of their faith a comparatively quiet life,
+and by and by was invested with the Jewish hegemony. Some of the
+smaller states and independent towns of Italy also afforded the Jews
+an asylum, though one not always to be depended upon. A group of
+hard-driven Spanish exiles, for instance, under the leadership of
+Abarbanel had found peace in Italy. The rest had turned to Turkey and
+her province Palestine,
+
+For a time, indeed, the Jewish spiritual centre was located in Turkey.
+What Europe, old, Christian, and hardhearted, refused the Jews, was
+granted them by Turkey, young, Mussulman, and liberal. On hearing of
+the banishment of the Jews from Spain, Sultan Bajazet exclaimed: "How
+can you call Ferdinand of Aragon a wise king, the same Ferdinand who
+has made his land poor and enriched ours?" His amazement characterizes
+the relation of Turkey to the Jews of the day. The one-time Marrano,
+Joseph Nassi, rose to be a considerable dignitary at the court of
+Sultan Selim (1566-1580). Occasionally he succeeded, by diplomatic
+means, in wreaking vengeance upon European courts in retaliation for
+the brutal tortures inflicted upon his people. With the generosity of
+a Maecenas, he assembled Jewish scholars and poets, and surrounded
+himself with a sunlit atmosphere of intellectuality and talent. All
+other Jewish communities looked up to that of Constantinople. Now and
+again its rabbis played the part of Patriarchs of the synagogue. To
+this commanding position the rabbis of Palestine especially were
+inclined to lay claim. They even attempted to restore the
+Patriarchate, and the famous controversy between Jacob Berab and Levi
+ben Chabib regarding the _Semicha_ is another evidence of the
+same assertive tendency. Among the Spanish exiles settled in the Holy
+Land a peculiar spiritual current set in. The storm-tossed wanderers,
+but now returned to their native Jordan from the shores of the
+blood-stained Tagus and Guadalquivir, were mightily moved at the sight
+of their ancestral home. Ahasuerus, who on his thorn-strewn pilgrim's
+path had drained the cup of woe to the dregs, suddenly caught sight of
+the home of his childhood razed level with the ground. The precious,
+never-to-be-forgotten ruins exhaled the home feeling, which took
+possession of him with irresistible charm. Into his soul there flowed
+sweet memories of a golden youth, past beyond recall. The impact of
+these emotions enkindled passionate "longing for Zion" in the heart of
+the forlorn, homeless martyr. He was seized by torturing thirst for
+political resurrection. Such melancholy feelings and vehement
+outbursts found expression in the practical Kabbala, originating with
+Ari (Isaac Luria) and his famous Safed school. A mystical belief in
+the coming of Messiah thenceforward became one of the essential
+elements of the Jewish spirit. It vanquished the heart of the learned
+Joseph Karo, who had brought Rabbinism to its climax by the
+compilation of his celebrated ritual code, the Shulchan Aruch. With
+equal force it dominated the being of Solomon Molcho, the enthusiastic
+youth who, at one time a Marrano, on his public return to Judaism
+proclaimed the speedy regeneration of Israel. He sealed his faith in
+his prophecy with death at the stake (1532). The Marranos beyond the
+Pyrenees and the unfortunate Jews of Italy, who, in the second half of
+the sixteenth century had to bear the brunt of papal fanaticism, on
+the increase since the Reformation, were kept in a state of constant
+excitement by this Messianic doctrine, with its obscure stirrings of
+hope. A mournful national feeling pervades the Jewish literature of
+the time. Recollections of torments endured enflamed all hearts. A
+series of chronicles were thus produced that record the centuries of
+Jewish martyrdom--_Jocha-sin, Shebet Jehuda, Emek ha-Bacha_, etc.
+The art of printing, even then developed to a considerable degree of
+perfection, became for the dispersed Jews the strongest bond of
+spiritual union. The papal _index librorum prohibitorum_ was
+impotent in the face of the all-pervading propaganda for thought and
+feeling carried on by the printing press.
+
+After Palestine and Turkey, Holland for a time became the spiritual
+centre of the scattered Jews (in the seventeenth century). Holland was
+warmly attached to the cause of liberty. When it succeeded in freeing
+itself from the clutches of fanatical Spain and her rapacious king,
+Philip II, it inaugurated the golden era of liberty of conscience, of
+peaceful development in culture and industry, and granted an asylum to
+the persecuted and abandoned of all countries. By the thousands the
+harassed Ghetto sons, especially the Marranos from Spain and Portugal,
+migrated to Holland. Amsterdam became a second Cordova. The
+intellectual life was quickened. Freedom from restraint tended to
+break down the national exclusivism of the Jew, and intercourse with
+his liberal surroundings varied his mental pursuits. Rabbinism, the
+Kabbala, philosophy, national poetry--they all had their prominent
+representatives in Holland. These manifold tendencies were united in
+the literary activity of Manasseh ben Israel, a scholar of extensive,
+though not intensive, encyclopedic attainments. Free thought and
+religious rationalism were embodied in Uriel Acosta. To a still higher
+degree they were illustrated in the theory of life expounded by the
+immortal author of the "Theologico-Political Tractate" (1640-1677).
+This advanced state of culture in Holland did not fail to react upon
+the neighboring countries. Under the impulse of enthusiasm for the
+Bible Puritan England under Cromwell opened its portals to the Jews.
+In Italy, in the dank atmosphere of rabbinical dialectics and morbid
+mysticism, great figures loom up--Leon de Modena, the antagonist of
+Rabbinism and of the Kabbala, and Joseph del Medigo, mathematician,
+philosopher, and mystic, the disciple of Galileo.
+
+These purple patches were nothing more than the accidents of a
+transition period. The people as a whole was on the decline. The
+Jewish mind darted hither and thither, like a startled bird seeking
+its nest. Holland or Turkey was an inadequate substitute for Spain, if
+only for the reason that but a tiny fraction of the Jews had found
+shelter in either. The Jewish national centre must perforce coincide
+with the numerical centre of the dispersed people, in which, moreover,
+conditions must grant Jews the possibility of living undisturbed in
+closely compacted masses, and of perfecting a well-knit organization
+of social and individual life. Outside of Spain these conditions were
+fulfilled only by Poland, which gradually, beginning with the
+sixteenth century, assumed the hegemony over the Jewry of the world.
+This marks the displacement of the Sephardic (Spanish, in a broader
+sense, Romanic) element, and the supremacy of the Ashkenazic
+(German-Polish) element.
+
+Poland had been a resort for Jewish immigrants from Germany since the
+outbreak of the Crusades, until, in the sixteenth century, it rose to
+the position of a Jewish centre of the first magnitude. As the
+merchant middle class, the Jews were protected and advanced by the
+kings and the Szlachta. The consequent security of their position
+induced so rapid a growth of the Jewish element that in a little while
+the Jews of Poland outnumbered those of the old Jewish settlements in
+Occidental Europe. The numerous privileges granted the Jews, by
+Boleslaus of Kalish (1246), Kasimir the Great (1347-1370), Witowt
+(1388), Kasimir IV (1447), and some of their successors, fortified
+their position in the extended territory covered by Poland, Lithuania,
+and the Ukraine. Their peculiar circumstances in Poland left an
+impress upon their inner life. An intense mental activity was called
+forth. This activity can be traced back to German beginnings, though
+at the same time it is made up of many original elements. For a space
+Rabbinism monopolized the intellectual endeavors of the Polish Jews.
+The rabbi of Cracow, Moses Isserles, and the rabbi of Ostrog, Solomon
+Luria (d. 1572), disputed first place with the foremost rabbinical
+authorities of other countries. Their decisions and circular letters
+regarding religious and legal questions were accorded binding force.
+Associates and successors of theirs founded Talmud academies
+throughout the country, and large numbers of students attended them.
+Commentators upon the Talmud and expounders of classical works in
+Jewish theological literature appeared in shoals. Jewish printing
+establishments in Cracow and Lublin were assiduous in turning out a
+mass of writings, which spread the fame of the Polish rabbis to the
+remotest communities. The large autonomy enjoyed by the Polish and
+Lithuanian Jews conferred executive power upon rabbinical legislation.
+The _Kahal_, or Jewish communal government, to a certain degree
+invested with judicial and administrative competence, could not do
+without the guiding hand of the rabbis as interpreters of the law. The
+guild of rabbis, on their side, chose a "college of judges," with
+fairly extensive jurisdiction, from among their own members. The
+organization of the Rabbinical Conferences, or the "Synods of the Four
+Countries," formed the keystone of this intricate social-spiritual
+hierarchy. The comprehensive inner autonomy and the system of Talmud
+academies (_Yeshiboth_) that covered the whole of Poland remind
+one of the brilliant days of the Exilarchate and the Babylonia of the
+Geonim. One element was lacking, there was no versatile, commanding
+thinker like Saadia Gaon. Secular knowledge and philosophy were under
+the ban in Poland. Rabbinism absorbed the whole output of intellectual
+energy. As little as the Poles resembled the Arabs of the "golden
+age," did the Polish Jews resemble their brethren in faith in the
+Orient at Saadia's time or in the Spain of Gabirol and Maimonides.
+Isolation and clannishness were inevitable in view of the character of
+the Christian environment and the almost insuperable barriers raised
+between the classes of Polish society. But it was this exclusiveness
+that gave peculiar stability and completeness to the life of the Jew
+as an individual and as a member of Jewish society, and it was the
+same exclusiveness that afforded opportunity for the development of a
+sharply defined culture, for its fixation to the point of resisting
+violent shocks and beyond the danger point of extinction through
+foreign invasion.
+
+The fateful year 1648 formed a turning point in the history of the
+Polish Jews, as in the history of the countries belonging to the
+Polish crown. The Cossack butcheries and wars of extermination of
+1648-1658 were the same for the Polish Jews that the Crusades, the
+Black Death, and all the other occasions for carnage had been for the
+Jews of Western Europe. It seemed as though history desired to avoid
+the reproach of partiality, and hastened to mete out even-handed
+justice by apportioning the same measure of woe to the Jews of Poland
+as to the Jews of Western Europe. But the Polish Jews were prepared to
+accept the questionable gift from the hands of history. They had
+mounted that eminence of spiritual stability on which suffering loses
+the power to weaken its victim, but, on the contrary, endues him with
+strength. More than ever they shrank into their shell. They shut
+themselves up more completely in their inner world, and became morally
+dulled against the persecutions, the bitter humiliations, the deep
+scorn, which their surroundings visited upon them. The Polish Jew
+gradually accustomed himself to his pitiable condition. He hardly knew
+that life might be other than it was. That the Polish lord to whom he
+was a means of entertainment might treat him with a trace of respect,
+or that his neighbors, the middle class merchant, the German guild
+member, and the Little Russian peasant, might cherish kindly feelings
+toward him, he could not conceive as a possibility. Seeing himself
+surrounded by enemies, he took precautions to fortify his camp, not so
+much to protect himself against hostile assaults from without--they
+were inevitable--as to paralyze the disastrous consequences of such
+assaults in his inner world. To compass this end he brought into play
+all the means suggested by his exceptional position before the law and
+by his own peculiar social constitution. The _Kahal_, the
+autonomous rabbinical administration of communal affairs, more and
+more assumed the character of an inner dictatorship. Jewish society
+was persistently kept under the discipline of rigid principles. In
+many affairs the synagogue attained the position of a court of final
+appeal. The people were united, or rather packed, into a solid mass by
+purely mechanical processes--by pressure from without, and by drawing
+tight a noose from within. Besides this social factor tending to
+consolidate the Jewish people into a separate union, an intellectual
+lever was applied to produce the same result. Rabbinism employed the
+mystical as its adjutant. The one exercised control over all minds,
+the other over all hearts. The growth of mysticism was fostered both
+by the unfortunate conditions under which the Polish Jews endured
+existence and by the Messianic movements which made their appearance
+among the Jews of other countries.
+
+In the second half of the seventeenth century, mysticism reached its
+zenith in Turkey, the country in which, had stood the cradle of the
+"practical Kabbala." The teachings of Ari, Vital, and the school
+established by them spread like wildfire. Messianic extravagances
+intoxicated the baited and persecuted people. In Smyrna appeared the
+false Messiah, Sabbatai Zebi. As by magic he attracted to himself a
+tremendous company of adherents in the East and in the West. For a
+quarter of a century (1650-1676), he kept the Jewish communities
+everywhere in a state of quivering suspense.
+
+The harassed people tossed to and fro like a fever patient, and raved
+about political re-birth. Its delirious visions still further heated
+its agitated blood. It came to its senses but slowly. Not even the
+apostasy and death of Sabbatai Zebi sufficed to sober all his
+followers. Under the guise of a symbolic faith in a Messiah, many of
+them, publicly or secretly, continued the propaganda for his
+doctrines.
+
+This propaganda prepared the fertile soil from which, in the
+eighteenth century, shot up Messianic systems, tending to split
+Judaism into sects. Nowhere did the mystical teachings evoke so ready
+a response as in Poland, the very centre of Judaism. At first an ally
+of the rabbinical school, mysticism grown passionate and
+uncontrollable now and again acted as the violent opponent of
+Rabbinism. Secret devotion to the Sabbatian doctrines, which had made
+their home in Poland, sometimes led to such extremes in dogma and
+ethics that the rabbis could not contain themselves. Chayyim Malach,
+Judah Chassid, and other Galician mystics, in the second decade of the
+eighteenth century brought down upon themselves a rabbinical decree of
+excommunication. The mystical tendency was the precursor of the
+heretical half-Christian sect of Frankists, who ventured so far as to
+lift a hand against the fundamentals of Judaism: they rejected the
+Talmud in favor of the Zohar (1756-1773). At the same time a much more
+profound movement, instinct with greater vitality, made its appearance
+among the Polish-Jewish masses, a movement rooted in their social and
+spiritual organization. The wretched, debased condition of the average
+Jew, conjoined with the traditions of the Kabbala and the excrescences
+of Rabbinism, created a foothold for Chassidic teaching. Chassidism
+replaced Talmudic ratiocination by exalted religious sentiment. By the
+force of enthusiasm for faith, it drew its adherents together into a
+firmly welded unit in contrast with Rabbinism, which sought the same
+goal by the aid of the formal law. Scenting danger, the rabbinical
+hierarchy declared war upon the Kabbala. Emden opposed Eibeschütz, the
+Polish Sabbatians and Frankists were fought to the death, the Wilna
+Gaon organized a campaign against the Chassidim. Too late! Rabbinism
+was too old, too arid, to tone down the impulsive outbreaks of passion
+among the people. In their religious exaltation the masses were
+looking for an elixir. They were languishing, not for light to
+illumine the reason, but for warmth to set the heart aglow. They
+desired to lose themselves in ecstatic self-renunciation. Chassidism
+and its necessary dependence upon the Zaddik offered the masses the
+means of this forgetfulness of self through faith. They were the
+medium through which the people saw the world in a rosy light, and the
+consequences following upon their prevalence were seen in a marked
+intensification of Jewish exclusiveness.
+
+The same aloofness characterizes the Jews of the rest of the
+eighteenth century diaspora. Wherever, as in Germany, Austria, and
+Italy, Jews were settled in considerable numbers, they were separated
+from their surroundings by forbidding Ghetto walls. On the whole, no
+difference is noticeable between conditions affecting Jews in one
+country and those in another. Everywhere they were merely tolerated,
+everywhere oppressed and humiliated. The bloody persecutions of the
+middle ages were replaced by the burden of the exceptional laws, which
+in practice degraded the Jews socially to an inferior race, to
+citizens of a subordinate degree. The consequences were uniformly the
+same in all countries: spiritual isolation and a morbid religious
+mood. During the first half of the "century of reason," Jewry
+presented the appearance of an exhausted wanderer, heavily dragging
+himself on his way, his consciousness clouded, his trend of thought
+obviously anti-rationalistic. At the very moment in which Europe was
+beginning to realize its medieval errors and repent of them, and the
+era of universal ideals of humanity was dawning, Judaism raised
+barricades between itself and the world at large. Elijah Gaon and
+Israel Besht were the contemporaries of Voltaire and Rousseau.
+Apparently there was no possibility of establishing communication
+between these two diametrically opposed worlds. But history is a
+magician. Not far from the Poland enveloped in medieval darkness, the
+morning light of a new life was breaking upon slumbering Jewry in
+German lands. New voices made themselves heard, reverberating like an
+echo to the appeal issued by the "great century" in behalf of a
+spiritual and social regeneration of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY)
+
+
+Two phenomena signalized the beginning of the latest period in Jewish
+history: the lofty activity of Mendelssohn and the occurrence of the
+great French Revolution. The man stands for the spiritual emancipation
+of the Jews, the movement for their political emancipation. At bottom,
+these two phenomena were by no means the ultimate causes of the social
+and spiritual regeneration of the Jewish people. They were only the
+products of the more general causes that had effected a similar
+regeneration in all the peoples of Western Europe. The new currents,
+the abandonment of effete intellectual and social forms, the
+substitution of juster and more energetic principles, the protest
+against superstition and despotism--all these traits had a common
+origin, the resuscitation of reason and free thought, which dominated
+all minds without asking whether they belonged to Jew or to Christian.
+It might seem that the rejuvenation of the Jews had been consummated
+more rapidly than the rejuvenation of the other peoples. The latter
+had had two centuries, the period elapsing since the middle ages, that
+is, the period between the Reformation and the great Revolution, in
+which to prepare for a more rational and a more humane conduct of
+life. As for the Jews, their middle ages began much later, and ended
+later, almost on the eve of 1789, so that the revolution in their
+minds and their mode of life had to accomplish itself hastily, under
+the urgence of swiftly crowding events, by the omission of
+intermediate stages. But it must be taken into consideration that long
+before, in the Judeo-Hellenic and in the Arabic-Spanish period, the
+Jews had passed through their "century of reason." In spite of the
+intervening ages of suffering and gloom, the faculty of assimilating
+new principles had survived. For the descendants of Philo and
+Maimonides the rationalistic movement of the eighteenth century was in
+part a repetition of a well-known historical process. They had had the
+benefit of a similar course of studies before, and, therefore, had no
+need to cram on the eve of the final examination.
+
+In point of fact, the transformation in the life of the Jews did take
+place with extraordinary swiftness. It was hastened in France by the
+principles of the Revolution and the proclamation of the civil
+equality of Jews with the other citizens. In Germany, however, it
+advanced upon purely spiritual lines. Mendelssohn and Lessing, the
+heralds of spiritual reform, who exposed old prejudices, carried on
+their labors at a time in which the Jews still stood beyond the pale
+of the law, a condition which it did not occur to Frederick II, "the
+philosopher upon the throne," to improve. A whole generation was
+destined to pass before the civil emancipation of the German Jews was
+accomplished. Meantime their spiritual emancipation proceeded apace,
+without help from the ruling powers. A time so early as the end of the
+eighteenth century found the German Jews in a position to keep step
+with their Christian fellow-citizens in cultural progress. Enlightened
+Jews formed close connections with enlightened Christians, and joined
+them in the universal concerns of mankind as confederates espousing
+the same fundamental principles. If they renounced some of their
+religious and national traditions, it was by no means out of
+complaisance for their neighbors. They were guided solely and alone by
+those universal principles that forced non-Jews as well as Jews to
+reject many traditions as incompatible with reason and conscience.
+Non-Jews and Jews alike yielded themselves up to the fresh inspiration
+of the time, and permitted themselves to be carried along by the
+universal transforming movement. Mendelssohn himself, circumspect and
+wise, did not move off from religious national ground. But the
+generation after him abandoned his position for that of universal
+humanity, or, better, German nationality. His successors intoxicated
+themselves with deep draughts of the marvelous poetry created by the
+magic of Goethe and Schiller. They permitted themselves to be rushed
+along by the liberty doctrines of 1789, they plunged head over heels
+into the vortex of romanticism, and took an active part in the
+conspicuous movements of Europe, political, social, and literary, as
+witness Bôrne, Heine, and their fellow-combatants.
+
+The excitement soon evaporated. When the noise of the liberty
+love-feasts had subsided, when the cruel reaction (after 1814) had
+settled heavily upon the Europe of the nineteenth century, and God's
+earth had again become the arena of those agents of darkness whom
+dreamers had thought buried forever beneath the ruins of the old
+order, then the German Jews, or such of them as thought, came to their
+senses. The more intelligent Jewish circles realized that, in devotion
+to the German national movement, they had completely neglected their
+own people. Yet their people, too, had needs, practical or spiritual,
+had its peculiar national sphere of activity, circumscribed, indeed,
+by the larger sphere of mankind's activities as by a concentric
+circle, but by no means merged into it. To atone for their sin,
+thinking Jews retraced their steps. They took in hand the transforming
+of Jewish inner life, the simplification of the extremely complicated
+Jewish ritual, the remodeling of pedagogic methods, and, above all,
+the cultivation of the extended fields of Jewish science, whose head
+and front is Jewish historical research in all its vastness and
+detail. Heine's friend, Zunz, laid the cornerstone of Jewish science
+in the second decade of the nineteenth century. His work was taken up
+by a goodly company of zealous and able builders occupied for half a
+century with the task of rearing the proud edifice of a scientific
+historical literature, in which national self-consciousness was
+sheltered and fostered. At the very height of this reforming and
+literary activity, German Jewry was overwhelmed by the civil
+emancipation of 1848. Again a stirring movement drew them into
+sympathy with a great general cause, but this time without drawing
+them away from Jewish national interests. Cultural and civil
+assimilation was accomplished as an inner compelling necessity, as a
+natural outcome of living. But spiritual assimilation, in the sense of
+a merging of Judaism in foreign elements, was earnestly repudiated by
+the noblest representatives of Judaism. It was their ideal that
+universal activity and national activity should be pursued to the
+prejudice of neither, certainly not to the exclusion of one or the
+other, but in perfect harmony with each other. In point of fact, it
+may be asserted that, in spite of a frequent tendency to go to the one
+or the other extreme, the two currents, the universal and the
+national, co-exist within German Jewry, and there is no fear of their
+uniting, they run parallel with each other. The Jewish genius is
+versatile. Without hurt to itself it can be active in all sorts of
+careers: in politics and in civil life, in parliament and on the
+lecture platform, in all branches of science and departments of
+literature, in every one of the chambers of mankind's intellectual
+laboratory. At the same time it has its domestic hearth, its national
+sanctuary; it has its sphere of original work and its self-consciousness,
+its national interests and spiritual ideals rooted in the past of the Jew.
+By the side of a Lassalle, a Lasker, and a Marx towers a Riesser, a
+Geiger, a Graetz. The leveling process unavoidably connected with
+widespread culture, so far from causing spiritual desolation in
+German Judaism, has, on the contrary, furnished redundant proof
+that even under present conditions, so unfavorable to what is
+individual and original, the Jewish people has preserved its vitality
+to the full.
+
+An analogous movement stirred the other countries of Western
+Europe--France, Italy, and England. The political emancipation of the
+Jews was accomplished earlier in them than in Germany. The
+reconstruction of the inner life, too, proceeded more quietly and
+regularly, without leaps and bounds, and religious reform established
+itself by degrees. Yet even here, where the Jewish contingent was
+insignificant, the spiritual physiognomy of the Jews maintained its
+typical character. In these countries, as in Germany, the Jew
+assimilated European culture with all its advantages and its
+drawbacks. He was active on diplomatic fields, he devoted himself to
+economic investigations, he produced intellectual creations of all
+kinds--first and last he felt himself to be a citizen of his country.
+None the less he was a loyal son of the Jewish people considered as a
+spiritual people with an appointed task. Crémieux, Beaconsfield,
+Luzzatti are counterbalanced by Salvador, Frank, Munk, Reggio, and
+Montefiore. All the good qualities and the shortcomings distinctive of
+the civilization of modern times adhere to the Jew. But at its worst
+modern civilization has not succeeded in extinguishing the national
+spirit in Jewry. The national spirit continues to live in the people,
+and it is this spirit that quickens the people. The genius of Jewish
+history, as in centuries gone by, holds watch over the sons of the
+"eternal people" scattered to all ends of the earth. West-European
+Jewry may say of itself, without presumption: _Cogito ergo sum_.
+
+Russian Jewry, the Jewry that had been Polish, and that is counted by
+the millions, might, if necessary, prove its existence by even more
+tangible marks than Occidental Jewry. To begin with, the centre of
+gravity of the Jewish nation lies in Russia, whose Jews not only
+outnumber those of the rest of Europe, but continue to live in a
+compact mass. Besides, they have preserved the original Jewish culture
+and their traditional physiognomy to a higher degree than the Jews of
+other countries. The development of the Russian Jews took a course
+very different from that of the Jews of the West. This difference was
+conditioned by the tremendous contrast between Russian culture and
+West-European culture, and by the change which the external
+circumstances of Jews outside of Russia underwent during the modern
+period. The admission of the Polish provinces into the Russian Empire
+at the end of the eighteenth century found the numerous Jewish
+population in an almost medieval condition, the same condition in
+which the non-Jewish population of Russian Poland was at that time.
+The Polish regime, as we saw above, had isolated the Jews alike in
+civil and spiritual relations. The new order did not break down the
+barriers. The masses of Jews cooped up in the "Pale of Settlement"
+were strong only by reason of their inner unity, their firmly
+established patriarchal organization. The bulwark of Rabbinism and the
+citadel of Chassidism protected them against alien influences. They
+guarded their isolation jealously. True to the law of inertia, they
+would not allow the privilege of isolation to be wrested from them.
+They did not care to step beyond the ramparts. Why, indeed, should the
+Jews have quitted their fortress, if outside of their walls they could
+expect nothing but scorn and blows? The unfortunates encaged in the
+sinister Pale of Settlement could have been lured out of their
+exclusive position only by complete civil emancipation combined with a
+higher degree of culture than had been attained by Russian society, an
+impossible set of circumstances in the first half of the nineteenth
+century. The legislative measures of the time, in so far as they
+relate to the Jews, breathe the spirit of police surveillance rather
+than of enlightenment and humanity. To civilizing and intellectual
+influences from without the way was equally barred. Yet all this
+watchfulness was of no avail. Nothing could prevent the liberty
+principles espoused by the Jews of Western Europe from being smuggled
+into the Pale, to leaven the sad, serried masses. A sluggish process
+of fermentation set in, and culminated in the literary activity of
+Isaac Beer Levinsohn and of the Wilna reformers of the second and
+fourth decades of the nineteenth century. They were the harbingers of
+approaching spring.
+
+When spring finally came (after 1855), and the sun sent down his
+genial rays upon the wretched Jewry of Russia, life and activity began
+to appear at once, especially in the upper strata. As in Germany, so
+in Russia spiritual emancipation preceded political emancipation.
+Still shorn almost entirely of the elementary rights of citizens, the
+Russian Jews nevertheless followed their ideal promptings, and
+participated enthusiastically in the movement for enlightenment which
+at that time held the noblest of the Russians enthralled. In a
+considerable portion of the Russian Jewish community a process of
+culture regeneration began, an eager throwing off of outworn forms of
+life and thought, a swift adoption of humane principles. Jewish young
+men crowded into the secular schools, in which they came in close
+contact with their Christian contemporaries. Influenced by their new
+companions, they gave themselves up to Russian national movements,
+often at the cost of renunciation of self. Some of them, indeed, in
+one-sided aspiration strove to become, not Russians, but men. The
+influence exercised by literature was more moderate than that of the
+schools. Rabbinic and Chassidistic literature, on the point of dying
+out as it was, abandoned the field to the literature of enlightenment
+in the Hebrew language, a literature of somewhat primitive character.
+It consisted chiefly of naive novels and of didactic writings of
+publicists, and lacked the solid scientific and historical element
+that forms the crown of Western Jewish literature. It is indisputable,
+however, that it exerted an educational influence. Besides, it
+possesses the merit of having resuscitated one of the most valuable of
+Jewish national possessions, the Hebrew language in its purity, which
+in Russia alone has become a pliant instrument of literary expression.
+A still greater field was reserved for the Jewish-Russian literature
+that arose in the "sixties." It was called into being in order to
+present a vivid and true picture of the social and spiritual interests
+of the Jews. Proceeding from discussions of current political topics,
+this literature gradually widened its limits so as to include Jewish
+history, Jewish science, and the portrayal of Jewish life, and more
+and more approached the character of a normal European literature. All
+this was in the making, and the most important work had not yet begun.
+The lower strata of the people had not been touched by the fresh air.
+In time, if all had gone well, they, too, would have had their day.
+And if the minority of the Jewish people in the West in a short span
+of time brought forth so many notable workers in so many departments
+of life and thought, how much superior would be the culture
+achievements of the Eastern majority! How vigorously the mighty mental
+forces latent in Russian Jewry would develop when their advance was no
+longer obstructed by all sorts of obstacles, and they could be applied
+to every sphere of political, social, and intellectual life!
+
+Nothing of all this came to pass; exactly the opposite happened. Not
+only were the barriers in the way of a prosperous, free development of
+Jewry not removed, but fresh hindrances without number were
+multiplied. Some spectre of the middle ages, some power of darkness,
+put brakes upon the wheel of history. It first appeared in the West,
+under the name anti-Semitism, among the dregs of European society. But
+in its earliest abode it was and is still met with an abrupt rebuff on
+the part of the most intelligent circles, those whom even the present
+age of decadence has not succeeded in robbing of belief in lofty moral
+ideals. Anti-Semitism in the West is in _anima vili_. Its cult is
+confined to a certain party, which enjoys a rather scandalous
+reputation. But there are countries in which this power of darkness,
+in the coarser form of Judophobia[13], has cast its baleful spell upon
+the most influential members of society and upon the press. There it
+has ripened noxious fruit. Mocking at the exalted ideals and the
+ethical traditions of religious and thinking mankind, Judophobia
+shamelessly professes the dogma of misanthropy. Its propaganda is
+bringing about the moral ruin of an immature society, not yet
+confirmed in ethical or truly religious principles. Upon its victims,
+the Jews, it has the same effect as the misfortunes of the middle
+ages, which were meted out to our hoary people with overflowing
+measure, and against which it learnt to assume an armor of steel. The
+recent severe trials are having the same result as the persecutions of
+former days: they do not weaken, on the contrary, they invigorate the
+Jewish spirit, they spur on to thought, they stimulate the pulse of
+the people.
+
+ "The hammer shivers glass,
+ But iron by its blows is forged."[14]
+
+ [13] As anti-Semitism is called in Russia.
+ [14] Pushkin.
+
+The historical process Jewry has undergone repeatedly, it must undergo
+once again. But now, too, in this blasting time of confusion and
+dispersion, of daily torture and the horrors of international
+conflict, "the keeper of Israel slumbereth not and sleepeth not." The
+Jewish spirit is on the alert. It is ever purging and tempering itself
+in the furnace of suffering. The people which justly bears the name of
+the veteran of history withdraws and falls into a revery. It is not a
+narrow-minded fanatic's flight from the world, but the concentrated
+thought of a mourner. Jewry is absorbed in contemplation of its great,
+unparalleled past. More than ever it is now in need of the teachings
+of its past, of the moral support and the prudent counsels of its
+history, its four thousand years of life crowded with checkered
+experiences.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+Let us return now to the starting point of our discussion, and
+endeavor to establish the thoughts and lessons to be deduced from the
+course of Jewish history.
+
+Above all, Jewish history possesses the student with the conviction
+that Jewry at all times, even in the period of political independence,
+was pre-eminently a spiritual nation, and a spiritual nation it
+continues to be in our own days, too. Furthermore, it inspires him
+with the belief that Jewry, being a spiritual entity, cannot suffer
+annihilation: the body, the mold, may be destroyed, the spirit is
+immortal. Bereft of country and dispersed as it is, the Jewish nation
+lives, and will go on living, because a creative principle permeates
+it, a principle that is the root of its being and an indigenous
+product of its history. This principle consists first in a sum of
+definite religious, moral, or philosophic ideals, whose exponent at
+all times was the Jewish people, either in its totality, or in the
+person of its most prominent representatives. Next, this principle
+consists in a sum of historical memories, recollections of what in the
+course of many centuries the Jewish people experienced, thought, and
+felt, in the depths of its being. Finally, it consists in the
+consciousness that true Judaism, which has accomplished great things
+for humanity in the past, has not yet played out its part, and,
+therefore, may not perish. In short, the Jewish people lives because
+it contains a living soul which refuses to separate from its
+integument, and cannot be forced out of it by heavy trials and
+misfortunes, such as would unfailingly inflict mortal injury upon less
+sturdy organisms.
+
+This self-consciousness is the source from which the suffering Jewish
+soul draws comfort. History speaks to it constantly through the mouth
+of the great apostle who went forth from the midst of Israel eighteen
+hundred years ago: "Call to remembrance the former days, in which,
+after ye were enlightened, ye endured a great conflict of sufferings;
+partly, being made a gazing-stock both by reproaches and afflictions;
+and partly, becoming partakers with them that were so used.... Cast
+not away therefore your boldness, which hath great recompense of
+reward" (Epistle to the Hebrews, x, 32-34, 35).
+
+Jewish history, moreover, arouses in the Jew the desire to work
+unceasingly at the task of perfecting himself. To direct his attention
+to his glorious past, to the resplendent intellectual feats of his
+ancestors, to their masterly skill in thinking and suffering, does not
+lull him to sleep, does not awaken a dullard's complacency or hollow
+self-conceit. On the contrary, it makes exacting demands upon him.
+Jewish history admonishes the Jews: "_Noblesse oblige_. The
+privilege of belonging to a people to whom the honorable title of the
+'veteran of history' has been conceded, puts serious responsibilities
+on your shoulders. You must demonstrate that you are worthy of your
+heroic past. The descendants of teachers of religion and martyrs of
+the faith dare not be insignificant, not to say wicked. If the long
+centuries of wandering and misery have inoculated you with faults,
+extirpate them in the name of the exalted moral ideals whose bearers
+you were commissioned to be. If, in the course of time, elements out
+of harmony with your essential being have fastened upon your mind,
+cast them out, purify yourselves. In all places and at all times, in
+joy and and in sorrow, you must aim to live for the higher, the
+spiritual interests. But never may you deem yourselves perfect. If you
+become faithless to these sacred principles, you sever the bonds that
+unite you with the most vital elements of your past, with the first
+cause of your national existence."
+
+The final lesson to be learned is that in the sunny days of mankind's
+history, in which reason, justice, and philanthropic instinct had the
+upper hand, the Jews steadfastly made common cause with the other
+nations. Hand in hand with them, they trod the path leading to
+perfection. But in the dark days, during the reign of rude force,
+prejudice, and passion, of which they were the first victims, the Jews
+retired from the world, withdrew into their shell, to await better
+days. Union with mankind at large, on the basis of the spiritual and
+the intellectual, the goal set up by the Jewish Prophets in their
+sublime vision of the future (Isaiah, ch. ii, and Micah, ch. iv), is
+the ultimate ideal of Judaism's noblest votaries. Will their radiant
+hope ever attain to realization? If ever it should be realized,--and
+it is incumbent upon us to believe that it will,--not a slight part of
+the merits involved will be due to Jewish history. We have adverted to
+the lofty moral and humanitarian significance of Jewish history in its
+role as conciliator. With regard to one-half of Jewish history, this
+conciliatory power is even now a well-established fact. The first part
+of Jewish history, the Biblical part, is a source from which, for many
+centuries, millions of human beings belonging to the most diverse
+denominations have derived instruction, solace, and inspiration. It is
+read with devotion by Christians in both hemispheres, in their houses
+and their temples. Its heroes have long ago become types, incarnations
+of great ideas. The events it relates serve as living ethical
+formulas. But a time will come--perhaps it is not very far off--when
+the second half of Jewish history, the record of the two thousand
+years of the Jewish people's life after the Biblical period, will be
+accorded the same treatment. This latter part of Jewish history is not
+yet known, and many, in the thrall of prejudice, do not wish to know
+it. But ere long it will be known and appreciated. For the thinking
+portion of mankind it will be a source of uplifting moral and
+philosophical teaching. The thousand years' martyrdom of the Jewish
+people, its unbroken pilgrimage, its tragic fate, its teachers of
+religion, its martyrs, philosophers, champions, this whole epic will
+in days to come sink deep into the memory of men. It will speak to the
+heart and the conscience of men, not merely to their curious mind. It
+will secure respect for the silvery hair of the Jewish people, a
+people of thinkers and sufferers. It will dispense consolation to the
+afflicted, and by its examples of spiritual steadfastness and
+self-denial encourage martyrs in their devotion. It is our firm
+conviction that the time is approaching in which the second half of
+Jewish history will be to the noblest part of _thinking_ humanity
+what its first half has long been to _believing_ humanity, a
+source of sublime moral truths. In this sense, Jewish history in its
+entirety is the pledge of the spiritual union between the Jews and the
+rest of the nations.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
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+
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Jewish History
+
+Author: S. M. Dubnow
+
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7836]
+This file was first posted on May 21, 2003
+Last Updated: May 8, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JEWISH HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by David King, Charles Franks, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY<br /> OF HISTORY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By S. M. Dubnow
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The author of the present essay, S. M. Dubnow, occupies a well-nigh
+ dominating position in Russian-Jewish literature as an historian and an
+ acute critic. His investigations into the history of the Polish-Russian
+ Jews, especially his achievements in the history of Chassidism, have been
+ of fundamental importance in these departments. What raises Mr. Dubnow far
+ above the status of the professional historian, and awakens the reader's
+ lively interest in him, is not so much the matter of his books, as the
+ manner of presentation. It is rare to meet with an historian in whom
+ scientific objectivity and thoroughness are so harmoniously combined with
+ an ardent temperament and plastic ability. Mr. Dubnow's scientific
+ activity, first and last, is a striking refutation of the widespread
+ opinion that identifies attractiveness of form in the work of a scholar
+ with superficiality of content. Even his strictly scientific
+ investigations, besides offering the scholar a wealth of new suggestions,
+ form instructive and entertaining reading matter for the educated layman.
+ In his critical essays, Mr. Dubnow shows himself to be possessed of keen
+ psychologic insight. By virtue of this quality of delicate perception, he
+ aims to assign to every historical fact its proper place in the line of
+ development, and so establish the bond between it and the general history
+ of mankind. This psychologic ability contributes vastly to the interest
+ aroused by Mr. Dubnow's historical works outside of the limited circle of
+ scholars. There is a passage in one of his books<a href="#linknote-1"
+ name="linknoteref-1" id="noteref-1"><small>1</small></a> in which, in his
+ incisive manner, he expresses his views on the limits and tasks of
+ historical writing. As the passage bears upon the methods employed in the
+ present essay, and, at the same time, is a characteristic specimen of our
+ author's style, I take the liberty of quoting:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The popularization of history is by no means to be pursued to the
+ detriment of its severely scientific treatment. What is to be guarded
+ against is the notion that tedium is inseparable from the scientific
+ method. I have always been of the opinion that the dulness commonly looked
+ upon as the prerogative of scholarly inquiries, is not an inherent
+ attribute. In most cases it is conditioned, not by the nature of the
+ subject under investigation, but by the temper of the investigator. Often,
+ indeed, the tediousness of a learned disquisition is intentional: it is
+ considered one of the polite conventions of the academic guild, and by
+ many is identified with scientific thoroughness and profound learning....
+ If, in general, deadening, hide-bound caste methods, not seldom the cover
+ for poverty of thought and lack of cleverness, are reprehensible, they are
+ doubly reprehensible in history. The history of a people is not a mere
+ mental discipline, like botany or mathematics, but a living science, a <i>magistra
+ vitae</i>, leading straight to national self-knowledge, and acting to a
+ certain degree upon the national character. History is a science <i>by</i>
+ the people, <i>for</i> the people, and, therefore, its place is the open
+ forum, not the scholar's musty closet. We relate the events of the past to
+ the people, not merely to a handful of archaeologists and numismaticians.
+ We work for national self-knowledge, not for our own intellectual
+ diversion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the principles that have guided Mr. Dubnow in all his works, and
+ he has been true to them in the present essay, which exhibits in a
+ remarkably striking way the author's art of making "all things seem fresh
+ and new, important and attractive." New and important his essay
+ undoubtedly is. The author attempts, for the first time, a psychologic
+ characterization of Jewish history. He endeavors to demonstrate the inner
+ connection between events, and develop the ideas that underlie them, or,
+ to use his own expression, lay bare the soul of Jewish history, which
+ clothes itself with external events as with a bodily envelope. Jewish
+ history has never before been considered from this philosophic point of
+ view, certainly not in German literature. The present work, therefore,
+ cannot fail to prove stimulating. As for the poet's other requirement,
+ attractiveness, it is fully met by the work here translated. The qualities
+ of Mr. Dubnow's style, as described above, are present to a marked degree.
+ The enthusiasm flaming up in every line, coupled with his plastic,
+ figurative style, and his scintillating conceits, which lend vivacity to
+ his presentation, is bound to charm the reader. Yet, in spite of the racy
+ style, even the layman will have no difficulty in discovering that it is
+ not a clever journalist, an artificer of well-turned phrases, who is
+ speaking to him, but a scholar by profession, whose foremost concern is
+ with historical truth, and whose every statement rests upon accurate,
+ scientific knowledge; not a bookworm with pale, academic blood trickling
+ through his veins, but a man who, with unsoured mien, with fresh, buoyant
+ delight, offers the world the results laboriously reached in his study,
+ after all evidences of toil and moil have been carefully removed; who
+ derives inspiration from the noble and the sublime in whatever guise it
+ may appear, and who knows how to communicate his inspiration to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The translator lays this book of an accomplished and spirited historian
+ before the German public. He does so in the hope that it will shed new
+ light upon Jewish history even for professional scholars. He is confident
+ that in many to whom our unexampled past of four thousand years' duration
+ is now <i>terra incognita</i>, it will arouse enthusiastic interest, and
+ even to those who, like the translator himself, differ from the author in
+ religious views, it will furnish edifying and suggestive reading. J. F.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF2"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The English translation of Mr. Dubnow's Essay is based upon the authorized
+ German translation, which was made from the original Russian. It is
+ published under the joint auspices of the Jewish Publication Society of
+ America and the Jewish Historical Society of England. H. S.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF2"> PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_TOC"> DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> INTRODUCTORY NOTE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> <b>JEWISH HISTORY</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> I. THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> II. THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> III. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> IV. THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> V. THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VI. THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> VII. THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS
+ PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> VIII. THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE
+ ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> IX. THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE
+ HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH JEWS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> X. THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF
+ THE GERMAN-POLISH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XI. THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE
+ NINETEENTH CENTURY) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XII. THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_FOOT"> FOOTNOTES: </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_TOC"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> INTRODUCTORY NOTE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> I. THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I. THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY <br /> Historical and Unhistorical Peoples
+ <br /> Three Groups of Nations <br /> The "Most Historical" People <br />
+ Extent of Jewish History <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> II. THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II. THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY <br /> Two Periods of Jewish History
+ <br /> The Period of Independence <br /> The Election of the Jewish People
+ <br /> Priests and Prophets <br /> The Babylonian Exile and the Scribes
+ <br /> The Dispersion <br /> Jewish History and Universal History <br />
+ Jewish History Characterized <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> III. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ III. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY <br /> The National Aspect of
+ Jewish History <br /> The Historical Consciousness <br /> The National Idea
+ and National Feeling <br /> The Universal Aspect of Jewish History <br /> An
+ Historical Experiment <br /> A Moral Discipline <br /> Humanitarian
+ Significance of Jewish History <br /> Schleiden and George Eliot <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> IV. THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IV. THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS <br /> Three Primary Periods <br /> Four
+ Composite Periods <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> V. THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ V. THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD <br /> Cosmic Origin of the Jewish
+ Religion <br /> Tribal Organization <br /> Egyptian Influence and
+ Experiences <br /> Moses <br /> Mosaism a Religious and Moral as well as a
+ Social and Political <br /> System <br /> National Deities <br /> The
+ Prophets and the two Kingdoms <br /> Judaism a Universal Religion <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> VI. THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VI. THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD <br /> Growth of National
+ Feeling <br /> Ezra and Nehemiah <br /> The Scribes <br /> Hellenism <br />
+ The Maccabees <br /> Sadducees, Pharisees, and Essenes <br /> Alexandrian
+ Jews <br /> Christianity <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> VII. THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS
+ PERIOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VII. THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS PERIOD <br /> The
+ Isolation of Jewry and Judaism <br /> The Mishna <br /> The Talmud <br />
+ Intellectual Activity in Palestine and Babylonia <br /> The Agada and the
+ Midrash <br /> Unification of Judaism <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> VIII. THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE
+ ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VIII. THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+ <br /> The Academies <br /> Islam <br /> Karaism <br /> Beginning of
+ Persecutions in Europe <br /> Arabic Civilization in Europe <br /> IX. THE
+ RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH JEWS
+ (980-1492) <br /> The Spanish Jews <br /> The Arabic-Jewish Renaissance
+ <br /> The Crusades and the Jews <br /> Degradation of the Jews in Christian
+ Europe <br /> The Provence <br /> The Lateran Council <br /> The Kabbala
+ <br /> Expulsion from Spain <br /> X. THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE
+ HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH JEWS (1492-1789) <br /> The Humanists and the
+ Reformation <br /> Palestine an Asylum for Jews <br /> Messianic Belief and
+ Hopes <br /> Holland a Jewish Centre <br /> Poland and the Jews <br /> The
+ Rabbinical Authorities of Poland <br /> Isolation of the Polish Jews <br />
+ Mysticism and the Practical Kabbala <br /> Chassidism <br /> Persecutions
+ and Morbid Piety <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XI. THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE
+ NINETEENTH CENTURY) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XI. THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY) <br /> The
+ French Revolution <br /> The Jewish Middle Ages <br /> Spiritual and Civil
+ Emancipation <br /> The Successors of Mendelssohn <br /> Zunz and the
+ Science of Judaism <br /> The Modern Movements outside of Germany <br /> The
+ Jew in Russia <br /> His Regeneration <br /> Anti-Semitism and Judophobia
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XII. THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ XII. THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY <br /> Jewry a Spiritual Community
+ <br /> Jewry Indestructible <br /> The Creative Principle of Jewry <br /> The
+ Task of the Future <br /> The Jew and the Nations <br /> The Ultimate Ideal
+ <br /> <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What is Jewish History? In the first place, what does it offer as to
+ quantity and as to quality? What are its range and content, and what
+ distinguishes it in these two respects from the history of other nations?
+ Furthermore, what is the essential meaning, what the spirit, of Jewish
+ History? Or, to put the question in another way, to what general results
+ are we led by the aggregate of its facts, considered, not as a whole, but
+ genetically, as a succession of evolutionary stages in the consciousness
+ and education of the Jewish people?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we could find precise answers to these several questions, they would
+ constitute a characterization of Jewish History as accurate as is
+ attainable. To present such a characterization succinctly is the purpose
+ of the following essay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Le peuple juif n'est pas seulement considérable par son
+ antiquité, mais il est encore singulier en sa durée, qui a
+ toujours continué depuis son origine jusqu'à maintenant ...
+ S'étendant depuis les premiers temps jusqu'aux derniers,
+ l'histoire des juifs enferme dans sa durée celle de toutes nos
+ histoires.&mdash;PASCAL, <i>Pensées</i>, II, 7.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To make clear the range of Jewish history, it is necessary to set down a
+ few general, elementary definitions by way of introduction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has long been recognized that a fundamental difference exists between
+ historical and unhistorical peoples, a difference growing out of the fact
+ of the natural inequality between the various elements composing the human
+ race. Unhistorical is the attribute applied to peoples that have not yet
+ broken away, or have not departed very far, from the state of primitive
+ savagery, as, for instance, the barbarous races of Asia and Africa who
+ were the prehistoric ancestors of the Europeans, or the obscure, untutored
+ tribes of the present, like the Tartars and the Kirghiz. Unhistorical
+ peoples, then, are ethnic groups of all sorts that are bereft of a
+ distinctive, spiritual individuality, and have failed to display normal,
+ independent capacity for culture. The term historical, on the other hand,
+ is applied to the nations that have had a conscious, purposeful history of
+ appreciable duration; that have progressed, stage by stage, in their
+ growth and in the improvement of their mode and their views of life; that
+ have demonstrated mental productivity of some sort, and have elaborated
+ principles of civilization and social life more or less rational; nations,
+ in short, representing not only zoologic, but also spiritual types.<a
+ href="#linknote-2" name="linknoteref-2" id="noteref-2"><small>2</small></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chronologically considered, these latter nations, of a higher type, are
+ usually divided into three groups: 1, the most ancient civilized peoples
+ of the Orient, such as the Chinese, the Hindoos, the Egyptians, the
+ Chaldeans; 2, the ancient or classic peoples of the Occident, the Greeks
+ and the Romans; and 3, the modern peoples, the civilized nations of Europe
+ and America of the present day. The most ancient peoples of the Orient,
+ standing "at the threshold of history," were the first heralds of a
+ religious consciousness and of moral principles. In hoary antiquity, when
+ most of the representatives of the human kind were nothing more than a
+ peculiar variety of the class mammalia, the peoples called the most
+ ancient brought forth recognized forms of social life and a variety of
+ theories of living of fairly far-reaching effect. All these
+ culture-bearers of the Orient soon disappeared from the surface of
+ history. Some (the Chaldeans, Phoenicians, and Egyptians) were washed away
+ by the flood of time, and their remnants were absorbed by younger and more
+ vigorous peoples. Others (the Hindoos and Persians) relapsed into a
+ semi-barbarous state; and a third class (the Chinese) were arrested in
+ their growth, and remained fixed in immobility. The best that the antique
+ Orient had to bequeath in the way of spiritual possessions fell to the
+ share of the classic nations of the West, the Greeks and the Romans. They
+ greatly increased the heritage by their own spiritual achievements, and so
+ produced a much more complex and diversified civilization, which has
+ served as the substratum for the further development of the better part of
+ mankind. Even the classic nations had to step aside as soon as their
+ historical mission was fulfilled. They left the field free for the younger
+ nations, with greater capability of living, which at that time had barely
+ worked their way up to the beginnings of a civilization. One after the
+ other, during the first two centuries of the Christian era, the members of
+ this European family of nations appeared in the arena of history. They
+ form the kernel of the civilized part of mankind at the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, if we examine this accepted classification with a view to finding the
+ place belonging to the Jewish people in the chronological series, we meet
+ with embarrassing difficulties, and finally arrive at the conclusion that
+ its history cannot be accommodated within the compass of the
+ classification. Into which of the three historical groups mentioned could
+ the Jewish people be put? Are we to call it one of the most ancient, one
+ of the ancient, or one of the modern nations? It is evident that it may
+ lay claim to the first description, as well as to the second and the last.
+ In company with the most ancient nations of the Orient, the Jewish people
+ stood at the "threshold of history." It was the contemporary of the
+ earliest civilized nations, the Egyptians and the Chaldeans. In those
+ remote days it created and spread a religious world-idea underlying an
+ exalted social and moral system surpassing everything produced in this
+ sphere by its Oriental contemporaries. Again, with the classical Greeks
+ and Romans, it forms the celebrated historical triad universally
+ recognized as the source of all great systems of civilization. Finally, in
+ fellowship with the nations of to-day, it leads an historical life,
+ striding onward in the path of progress without stay or interruption.
+ Deprived of political independence, it nevertheless continues to fill a
+ place in the world of thought as a distinctly marked spiritual
+ individuality, as one of the most active and intelligent forces. How,
+ then, are we to denominate this omnipresent people, which, from the first
+ moment of its historical existence up to our days, a period of thirty-five
+ hundred years, has been developing continuously. In view of this
+ Methuselah among the nations, whose life is co-extensive with the whole of
+ history, how are we to dispose of the inevitable barriers between "the
+ most ancient" and "the ancient," between "the ancient" and "the modern"
+ nations&mdash;the fateful barriers which form the milestones on the path
+ of the historical peoples, and which the Jewish people has more than once
+ overstepped?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A definition of the Jewish people must needs correspond to the aggregate
+ of the concepts expressed by the three group-names, most ancient, ancient,
+ and modern. The only description applicable to it is "the historical
+ nation of all times," a description bringing into relief the contrast
+ between it and all other nations of modern and ancient times, whose
+ historical existence either came to an end in days long past, or began at
+ a date comparatively recent. And granted that there are "historical" and
+ "unhistorical" peoples, then it is beyond dispute that the Jewish people
+ deserves to be called "the most historical" (<i>historicissimus</i>). If
+ the history of the world be conceived as a circle, then Jewish history
+ occupies the position of the diameter, the line passing through its
+ centre, and the history of every other nation is represented by a chord
+ marking off a smaller segment of the circle. The history of the Jewish
+ people is like an axis crossing the history of mankind from one of its
+ poles to the other. As an unbroken thread it runs through the ancient
+ civilization of Egypt and Mesopotamia, down to the present-day culture of
+ France and Germany. Its divisions are measured by thousands of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jewish history, then, in its range, or, better, in its duration, presents
+ an unique phenomenon. It consists of the longest series of events ever
+ recorded in the annals of a single people. To sum up its peculiarity
+ briefly, it embraces a period of thirty-five hundred years, and in all
+ this vast extent it suffers no interruption. At every point it is alive,
+ full of sterling content. Presently we shall see that in respect to
+ content, too, it is distinguished by exceptional characteristics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From the point of view of content, or qualitative structure, Jewish
+ history, it is well known, falls into two parts. The dividing point
+ between the two parts is the moment in which the Jewish state collapsed
+ irretrievably under the blows of the Roman Empire (70 C. E.). The first
+ half deals with the vicissitudes of a nation, which, though frequently at
+ the mercy of stronger nations, still maintained possession of its
+ territory and government, and was ruled by its own laws. In the second
+ half, we encounter the history of a people without a government, more than
+ that, without a land, a people stripped of all the tangible accompaniments
+ of nationality, and nevertheless successful in preserving its spiritual
+ unity, its originality, complete and undiminished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first glance, Jewish history during the period of independence seems to
+ be but slightly different from the history of other nations. Though not
+ without individual coloring, there are yet the same wars and intestine
+ disturbances, the same political revolutions and dynastic quarrels, the
+ same conflicts between the classes of the people, the same warring between
+ economical interests. This is only a surface view of Jewish history. If we
+ pierce to its depths, and scrutinize the processes that take place in its
+ penetralia, we perceive that even in the early period there were latent
+ within it great powers of intellect, universal principles, which, visibly
+ or invisibly, determined the course of events. We have before us not a
+ simple political or racial entity, but, to an eminent degree, "a spiritual
+ people." The national development is based upon an all-pervasive religious
+ tradition, which lives in the soul of the people as the Sinaitic
+ Revelation, the Law of Moses. With this holy tradition, embracing a
+ luminous theory of life and an explicit code of morality and social
+ converse, was associated the idea of the election of the Jewish people, of
+ its peculiar spiritual mission. "And ye shall be unto me a kingdom of
+ priests and a holy nation" is the figurative expression of this ideal
+ calling. It conveys the thought that the Israelitish people as a whole,
+ without distinction of rank and regardless of the social prominence of
+ individuals, has been called to guide the other nations toward sublime
+ moral and religious principles, and to officiate for them, the laity as it
+ were, in the capacity of priests. This exalted ideal would never have been
+ reached, if the development of the Jewish people had lain along hackneyed
+ lines; if, like the Egyptians and the Chaldeans, it had had an inflexible
+ caste of priests, who consider the guardianship of the spiritual treasures
+ of the nation the exclusive privilege of their estate, and strive to keep
+ the mass of the people in crass ignorance. For a time, something
+ approaching this condition prevailed among the Jews. The priests descended
+ from Aaron, with the Temple servants (the Levites), formed a priestly
+ class, and played the part of authoritative bearers of the religious
+ tradition. But early, in the very infancy of the nation, there arose by
+ the side of this official, aristocratic hierarchy, a far mightier
+ priesthood, a democratic fraternity, seeking to enlighten the whole
+ nation, and inculcating convictions that make for a consciously held aim.
+ The Prophets were the real and appointed executors of the holy command
+ enjoining the "conversion" of all Jews into "a kingdom of priests and a
+ holy nation." Their activity cannot be paralleled in the whole range of
+ the world's history. They were not priests, but popular educators and
+ popular teachers. They were animated by the desire to instil into every
+ soul a deeply religious consciousness, to ennoble every heart by moral
+ aspirations, to indoctrinate every individual with an unequivocal theory
+ of life, to inspire every member of the nation with lofty ideals. Their
+ work did not fail to leave its traces. Slowly but deeply idealism entered
+ into the very pith and marrow of the national consciousness. This
+ consciousness gained in strength and amplitude century by century, showing
+ itself particularly in the latter part of the first period, after the
+ crisis known as "the Babylonian Exile." Thanks to the exertions of the <i>Soferim</i>
+ (Scribes), directed toward the broadest popularization of the Holy
+ Writings, and constituting the formal complement to the work of the
+ Prophets, spiritual activity became an integral part of Jewish national
+ life. In the closing centuries of its political existence, the Jewish
+ people received its permanent form. There was imposed upon it the
+ unmistakable hallmark of spirituality that has always identified it in the
+ throng of the nations. Out of the bosom of Judaism went forth the religion
+ that in a short time ran its triumphant course through the whole ancient
+ world, transforming races of barbarians into civilized beings. It was the
+ fulfilment of the Prophetical promise&mdash;that the nations would walk in
+ the light of Israel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very moment when the strength and fertility of the Jewish mind
+ reached the culminating point, occurred a political revolution&mdash;the
+ period of homeless wandering began. It seemed as though, before scattering
+ the Jewish people to all ends of the earth, the providence of history
+ desired to teach it a final lesson, to take with it on its way. It seemed
+ to say: "Now you may go forth. Your character has been sufficiently
+ tempered; you can bear the bitterest of hardships. You are equipped with
+ an inexhaustible store of energy, and you can live for centuries, yea, for
+ thousands of years, under conditions that would prove the bane of other
+ nations in less than a single century. State, territory, army, the
+ external attributes of national power, are for you superfluous luxury. Go
+ out into the world to prove that a people can continue to live without
+ these attributes, solely and alone through strength of spirit welding its
+ widely scattered particles into one firm organism!"&mdash;And the Jewish
+ people went forth and proved it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This "proof" adduced by Jewry at the cost of eighteen centuries of
+ privation and suffering, forms the characteristic feature of the second
+ half of Jewish history, the period of homelessness and dispersion.
+ Uprooted from its political soil, national life displayed itself on
+ intellectual fields exclusively. "To think and to suffer" became the
+ watchword of the Jewish people, not merely because forced upon it by
+ external circumstances beyond its control, but chiefly because it was
+ conditioned by the very disposition of the people, by its national
+ inclinations. The extraordinary mental energy that had matured the Bible
+ and the old writings in the first period, manifested itself in the second
+ period in the encyclopedic productions of the Talmudists, in the religious
+ philosophy of the middle ages, in Rabbinism, in the Kabbala, in mysticism,
+ and in science. The spiritual discipline of the school came to mean for
+ the Jew what military discipline is for other nations. His remarkable
+ longevity is due, I am tempted to say, to the acrid spiritual brine in
+ which he was cured. In its second half, the originality of Jewish history
+ consists indeed, in the circumstance that it is the only history stripped
+ of every active political element. There are no diplomatic artifices, no
+ wars, no campaigns, no unwarranted encroachments backed by armed force
+ upon the rights of other nations, nothing of all that constitutes the
+ chief content&mdash;the monotonous and for the most part idea-less content&mdash;of
+ many other chapters in the history of the world. Jewish history presents
+ the chronicle of an ample spiritual life, a gallery of pictures
+ representing national scenes. Before our eyes passes a long procession of
+ facts from the fields of intellectual effort, of morality, religion, and
+ social converse. Finally, the thrilling drama of Jewish martyrdom is
+ unrolled to our astonished gaze. If the inner life and the social and
+ intellectual development of a people form the kernel of history, and
+ politics and occasional wars are but its husk,<a href="#linknote-3"
+ name="linknoteref-3" id="noteref-3"><small>3</small></a> then certainly the
+ history of the Jewish diaspora is all kernel. In contrast with the history
+ of other nations it describes, not the accidental deeds of princes and
+ generals, not external pomp and physical prowess, but the life and
+ development of a whole people. It gives heartrending expression to the
+ spiritual strivings of a nation whose brow is resplendent with the thorny
+ crown of martyrdom. It breathes heroism of mind that conquers bodily pain.
+ In a word, Jewish history is history sublimated.<a href="#linknote-4"
+ name="linknoteref-4" id="noteref-4"><small>4</small></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the noteworthy features that raise Jewish history above the
+ level of the ordinary, and assign it a peculiar place, it is nevertheless
+ not isolated, not severed from the history of mankind. Rather is it most
+ intimately interwoven with world-affairs at every point throughout its
+ whole extent. As the diameter, Jewish history is again and again
+ intersected by the chords of the historical circle. The fortunes of the
+ pilgrim people scattered in all the countries of the civilized world are
+ organically connected with the fortunes of the most representative nations
+ and states, and with manifold tendencies of human thought. The bond
+ uniting them is twofold: in the times when the powers of darkness and
+ fanaticism held sway, the Jews were amenable to the "physical" influence
+ exerted by their neighbors in the form of persecutions, infringements of
+ the liberty of conscience, inquisitions, violence of every sort; and
+ during the prevalence of enlightment and humanity, the Jews were acted
+ upon by the intellectual and cultural stimulus proceeding from the peoples
+ with whom they entered into close relations. Momentary aberrations and
+ reactionary incidents are not taken into account here. On its side, Jewry
+ made its personality felt among the nations by its independent,
+ intellectual activity, its theory of life, its literature, by the very
+ fact, indeed, of its ideal staunchness and tenacity, its peculiar
+ historical physiognomy. From this reciprocal relation issued a great cycle
+ of historical events and spiritual currents, making the past of the Jewish
+ people an organic constituent of the past of all that portion of mankind
+ which has contributed to the treasury of human thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see, then, that in reference to content Jewish history is unique in
+ both its halves. In the first "national" period, it is the history of a
+ people to which the epithet "peculiar" has been conceded, a people which
+ has developed under the influence of exceptional circumstances, and
+ finally attained to so high a degree of spiritual perfection and fertility
+ that the creation of a new religious theory of life, which eventually
+ gained universal supremacy, neither exhausted its resources nor ended its
+ activity. Not only did it continue to live upon its vast store of
+ spiritual energy, but day by day it increased the store. In the second
+ "lackland" half, it is the instructive history of a scattered people,
+ organically one, in spite of dispersion, by reason of its unshaken ideal
+ traditions; a people accepting misery and hardship with stoic calm,
+ combining the characteristics of the thinker with those of the sufferer,
+ and eking out existence under conditions which no other nation has found
+ adequate, or, indeed, can ever find adequate. The account of the people as
+ teacher of religion&mdash;this is the content of the first half of Jewish
+ history; the account of the people as thinker, stoic, and sufferer&mdash;this
+ is the content of the second half of Jewish history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A summing up of all that has been said in this and the previous chapter
+ proves true the statement with which we began, that Jewish history, in
+ respect to its quantitative dimensions as well as its qualitative
+ structure, is to the last degree distinctive and presents a phenomenon of
+ undeniable uniqueness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We turn now to the question of the significance to be attached to Jewish
+ history. In view of its peculiar qualities, what has it to offer to the
+ present generation and to future generations as a subject of study and
+ research?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The significance of Jewish history is twofold. It is at once national and
+ universal. At present the fulcrum of Jewish national being lies in the
+ historical consciousness. In the days of antiquity, the Jews were welded
+ into a single united nation by the triple agencies of state, race, and
+ religion, the complete array of material and spiritual forces directed to
+ one point. Later, in the period of homelessness and dispersion, it was
+ chiefly religious consciousness that cemented Jewry into a whole, and
+ replaced the severed political bond as well as the dulled racial instinct,
+ which is bound to go on losing in keenness in proportion to the degree of
+ removal from primitive conditions and native soil. In our days, when the
+ liberal movements leavening the whole of mankind, if they have not
+ completely shattered the religious consciousness, have at least, in an
+ important section of Jewry, effected a change in its form; when abrupt
+ differences of opinion with regard to questions of faith and cult are
+ asserting their presence; and traditional Judaism developed in historical
+ sequence is proving powerless to hold together the diverse factors of the
+ national organism,&mdash;in these days the keystone of national unity
+ seems to be the historical consciousness. Composed alike of physical,
+ intellectual, and moral elements, of habits and views, of emotions and
+ impressions nursed into being and perfection by the hereditary instinct
+ active for thousands of years, this historical consciousness is a
+ remarkably puzzling and complex psychic phenomenon. By our common memory
+ of a great, stirring past and heroic deeds on the battle-fields of the
+ spirit, by the exalted historical mission allotted to us, by our
+ thorn-strewn pilgrim's path, our martyrdom assumed for the sake of our
+ principles, by such moral ties, we Jews, whether consciously or
+ unconsciously, are bound fast to one another. As Renan well says: "Common
+ sorrow unites men more closely than common joy." A long chain of
+ historical traditions is cast about us all like a strong ring. Our
+ wonderful, unparalleled past attracts us with magnetic power. In the
+ course of centuries, as generation followed generation, similarity of
+ historical fortunes produced a mass of similar impressions which have
+ crystallized, and have thrown off the deposit that may be called "the
+ Jewish national soul." This is the soil in which, deep down, lies
+ imbedded, as an unconscious element, the Jewish national <i>feeling</i>,
+ and as a conscious element, the Jewish national <i>idea</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It follows that the Jewish national idea and the national feeling
+ connected with it have their origin primarily in the historical
+ consciousness, in a certain complex of ideas and psychic predispositions.
+ These ideas and predispositions, the deposit left by the aggregate of
+ historical impressions, are of necessity the common property of the whole
+ nation, and they can be developed and quickened to a considerable degree
+ by a renewal of the impressions through the study of history. Upon the
+ knowledge of history, then, depends the strength of the national
+ consciousness.<a href="#linknote-5" name="linknoteref-5" id="noteref-5"><small>5</small></a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But over and above its national significance, Jewish history, we repeat,
+ possesses universal significance. Let us, in the first place, examine its
+ value for science and philosophy. Inasmuch as it is pre-eminently a
+ chronicle of ideas and spiritual movements, Jewish history affords the
+ philosopher or psychologist material for observation of the most important
+ and useful kind. The study of other, mostly dull chapters of universal
+ history has led to the fixing of psychologic or sociologic theses, to the
+ working out of comprehensive philosophic systems, to the determination of
+ general laws. Surely it follows without far-fetched proof, that in some
+ respects the chapter dealing with Jewish history must supply material of
+ the most original character for such theses and philosophies. If it is
+ true, as the last chapter set out to demonstrate, that Jewish history is
+ distinguished by sharply marked and peculiar features, and refuses to
+ accommodate itself to conventional forms, then its content must have an
+ original contribution to make to philosophy. It does not admit of a doubt
+ that the study of Jewish history would yield new propositions appertaining
+ to the philosophy of history and the psychology of nations, hitherto
+ overlooked by inquirers occupied with the other divisions of universal
+ history. Inductive logic lays down a rule for ascertaining the law of a
+ phenomenon produced by two or more contributory causes. By means of what
+ might be called a laboratory experiment, the several causes must be
+ disengaged from one another, and the effect of each observed by itself.
+ Thus it becomes possible to arrive with mathematical precision at the
+ share of each cause in the result achieved by several co-operating causes.
+ This method of difference, as it is called, is available, however, only
+ for a limited number of phenomena, only for phenomena in the department of
+ the natural sciences. It is in the nature of the case that mental and
+ spiritual phenomena, though they may be observed, cannot be artificially
+ reproduced. Now, in one respect, Jewish history affords the advantages of
+ an arranged experiment. The historical life of ordinary nations, such
+ nations as are endowed with territory and are organized into a state, is a
+ complete intermingling of the political with the spiritual element.
+ Totally ignorant as we are of the development either would have assumed,
+ had it been dissevered from the other, the laws governing each of the
+ elements singly can be discovered only approximately. Jewish history, in
+ which the two elements have for many centuries been completely
+ disentangled from each other, presents a natural experiment, with the
+ advantage of artificial exclusions, rendering possible the determination
+ of the laws of spiritual phenomena with far greater scientific exactitude
+ than the laws of phenomena that result from several similar causes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this high value for the purposes of science, this fruitful
+ suggestiveness for philosophic thought, Jewish history, as compared with
+ the history of other nations, enjoys another distinction in its capacity
+ to exercise an ennobling influence upon the heart. Nothing so exalts and
+ refines human nature as the contemplation of moral steadfastness, the
+ history of the trials of a martyr who has fought and suffered for his
+ convictions. At bottom, the second half of Jewish history is nothing but
+ this. The effective educational worth of the Biblical part of Jewish
+ history is disputed by none. It is called "sacred" history, and he who
+ acquires a knowledge of it is thought to advance the salvation of his
+ soul. Only a very few, however, recognize the profound, moral content of
+ the second half of Jewish history, the history of the diaspora. Yet, by
+ reason of its exceptional qualities and intensely tragic circumstances, it
+ is beyond all others calculated to yield edification to a notable degree.
+ The Jewish people is deserving of attention not only in the time when it
+ displayed its power and enjoyed its independence, but as well in the
+ period of its weakness and oppression, during which it was compelled to
+ purchase spiritual development by constant sacrifice of self. A thinker
+ crowned with thorns demands no less veneration than a thinker with the
+ laurel wreath upon his brow. The flame issuing from the funeral pile on
+ which martyrs die an heroic death for their ideas is, in its way, as
+ awe-inspiring as the flame from Sinai's height. With equal force, though
+ by different methods, both touch the heart, and arouse the moral
+ sentiment. Biblical Israel the celebrated&mdash;medieval Judah the
+ despised&mdash;it is one and the same people, judged variously in the
+ various phases of its historical life. If Israel bestowed upon mankind a
+ religious theory of life, Judah gave it a thrilling example of tenacious
+ vitality and power of resistance for the sake of conviction. This
+ uninterrupted life of the spirit, this untiring aspiration for the higher
+ and the better in the domain of religious thought, philosophy, and
+ science, this moral intrepidity in night and storm and in despite of all
+ the blows of fortune&mdash;is it not an imposing, soul-stirring spectacle?
+ The inexpressible tragedy of the Jewish historical life is unfailing in
+ its effect upon a susceptible heart.<a href="#linknote-6" name="linknoteref-6"
+ id="noteref-6"><small>6</small></a> The wonderful exhibition of spirit
+ triumphant, subduing the pangs of the flesh, must move every heart, and
+ exercise uplifting influence upon the non-Jew no less than upon the Jew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For non-Jews a knowledge of Jewish history may, under certain conditions,
+ come to have another, an humanitarian significance. It is inconceivable
+ that the Jewish people should be held in execration by those acquainted
+ with the course of its history, with its tragic and heroic past.<a
+ href="#linknote-7" name="linknoteref-7" id="noteref-7"><small>7</small></a>
+ Indeed, so far as Jew-haters by profession are concerned, it is running a
+ risk to recommend the study of Jewish history to them, without adding a
+ word of caution. Its effect upon them might be disastrous. They might find
+ themselves cured of their modern disease, and in the possession of ideas
+ that would render worthless their whole stock in trade. Verily, he must
+ have fallen to the zero-point of anti-Semitic callousness who is not
+ thrilled through and through by the lofty fortitude, the saint-like
+ humility, the trustful resignation to the will of God, the stoic firmness,
+ laid bare by the study of Jewish history. The tribute of respect cannot be
+ readily withheld from him to whom the words of the poet<a href="#linknote-8"
+ name="linknoteref-8" id="noteref-8"><small>8</small></a> are applicable:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "To die was not his hope; he fain
+ Would live to think and suffer pain."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When, in days to come, the curtain rises upon the touching tragedy of
+ Jewish history, revealing it to the astonished eye of a modern generation,
+ then, perhaps, hearts will be attuned to tenderness, and on the ruins of
+ national hostility will be enthroned mutual love, growing out of mutual
+ understanding and mutual esteem. And who can tell&mdash;perhaps Jewish
+ history will have a not inconsiderable share in the spiritual change that
+ is to annihilate national intolerance, the modern substitute for the
+ religious bigotry of the middle ages. In this case, the future task of
+ Jewish history will prove as sublime as was the mission of the Jewish
+ people in the past. The latter consisted in the spread of the dogma of the
+ unity of creation; the former will contribute indirectly to the
+ realization of the not yet accepted dogma of the unity of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To define the scope of Jewish history, its content and its significance,
+ or its place among scientific pursuits, disposes only of the formal part
+ of the task we have set ourselves. The central problem is to unfold the
+ meaning of Jewish history, to discover the principle toward which its
+ diversified phenomena converge, to state the universal laws and
+ philosophic inferences deducible from the peculiar course of its events.
+ If we liken history to an organic being, then the skeleton of facts is its
+ body, and the soul is the spiritual bond that unites the facts into a
+ whole, that conveys the meaning, the psychologic essence, of the facts. It
+ becomes our duty, then, to unbare the soul of Jewish history, or, in
+ scientific parlance, to construct, on the basis of the facts, the
+ synthesis of the whole of Jewish national life. To this end, we must pass
+ in review, by periods and epochs, one after another, the most important
+ groups of historical events, the most noteworthy currents in life and
+ thought that tell of the stages in the development of Jewry and of
+ Judaism. Exhaustive treatment of the philosophical synthesis of a history
+ extending over three thousand years is possible only in a voluminous work.
+ In an essay like the present it can merely be sketched in large outline,
+ or painted in miniature. We cannot expect to do more than state a series
+ of general principles substantiated by the most fundamental arguments.
+ Complete demonstration of each of the principles must be sought in the
+ annals that recount the events of Jewish history in detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The historical synthesis reduces itself, then, to uncovering the
+ psychologic processes of national development. The object before us to be
+ studied is the national spirit undergoing continuous evolution during
+ thousands of years. Our task is to arrive at the laws underlying this
+ growth. We shall reach our goal by imitating the procedure of the
+ geologist, who divides the mass of the earth into its several strata or
+ formations. In Jewish history there may be distinguished three chief
+ stratifications answering to its first three periods, the Biblical period,
+ the period of the Second Temple, and the Talmudic period. The later
+ periods are nothing more than these same formations combined in various
+ ways, with now and then the addition of new strata. Of the composite
+ periods there are four, which arrange themselves either according to
+ hegemonies, the countries in which at given times lay the centre of
+ gravity of the scattered Jewish people, or according to the intellectual
+ currents there predominant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, then, is our scheme:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I. The chief formations:
+ a) The primary or Biblical period.
+ b) The secondary or spiritual-political period
+ (the period of the Second Temple, 538
+ B. C. E. to 70 C.E.)
+ c) The tertiary or national-religious period
+ (the Talmudic period, 70-500).
+
+ II. The composite formations:
+ a) The Gaonic period, or the hegemony of
+ the Oriental Jews (500-980).
+ b) The Rabbinic-philosophical period, or the
+ hegemony of the Spanish Jews (980-1492).
+ c) The Rabbinic-mystical period, or the hegemony
+ of the German-Polish Jews
+ (1492-1789).
+ d) The modern period of enlightenment (the
+ nineteenth century).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the daybreak of history, the hoary days when seeming and reality merge
+ into each other, and the outlines of persons and things fade into the
+ surrounding mist, the picture of a nomad people, moving from the deserts
+ of Arabia in the direction of Mesopotamia and Western Asia, detaches
+ itself clear and distinct from the dim background. The tiny tribe, a
+ branch of the Semitic race, bears a peculiar stamp of its own. A shepherd
+ people, always living in close touch with nature, it yet resists the
+ potent influence of the natural phenomena, which, as a rule, entrap
+ primitive man, and make him the bond-slave of the visible and material.
+ Tent life has attuned these Semitic nomads to contemplativeness. In the
+ endless variety of the phenomena of nature, they seek to discover a single
+ guiding power. They entertain an obscure presentiment of the existence of
+ an invisible, universal soul animating the visible, material universe. The
+ intuition is personified in the Patriarch Abraham, who, according to
+ Biblical tradition, held communion with God, when, on the open field, "he
+ looked up toward heaven, and counted the stars," or when, "at the setting
+ of the sun, he fell into benumbing sleep, and terror seized upon him by
+ reason of the impenetrable darkness." Here we have a clear expression of
+ the original, purely cosmical character of the Jewish religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no lack of human influence acting from without. Chaldea, which
+ the peculiar Semitic shepherds crossed in their pilgrimage, presented them
+ with notions from its rich mythology and cosmogony. The natives of Syria
+ and Canaan, among whom in the course of time the Abrahamites settled,
+ imparted to them many of their religious views and customs. Nevertheless,
+ the kernel of their pure original theory remained intact. The patriarchal
+ mode of life, admirable in its simplicity, continued to hold its own
+ within the circle of the firmly-knitted tribe. It was in Canaan, however,
+ that the shepherd people hailing from Arabia showed the first signs of
+ approaching disintegration. Various tribal groups, like Moab and Ammon,
+ consolidated themselves. They took permanent foothold in the land, and
+ submitted with more or less readiness to the influences exerted by the
+ indigenous peoples. The guardianship of the sublime traditions of the
+ tribe remained with one group alone, the "sons of Jacob" or the "sons of
+ Israel," so named from the third Patriarch Jacob. To this group of the
+ Israelites composed of smaller, closely united divisions, a special
+ mission was allotted; its development was destined to lie along peculiar
+ lines. The fortunes awaiting it were distinctive, and for thousands of
+ years have filled thinking and believing mankind with wondering
+ admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great characters are formed under the influence of powerful impressions,
+ of violent convulsions, and especially under the influence of suffering.
+ The Israelites early passed through their school of suffering in Egypt.
+ The removal of the sons of Jacob from the banks of the Jordan to those of
+ the Nile was of decisive importance for the progress of their history.
+ When the patriarchal Israelitish shepherds encountered the old, highly
+ complex culture of the Egyptians, crystallized into fixed forms even at
+ that early date, it was like the clash between two opposing electric
+ currents. The pure conception of God, of <i>Elohim</i>, as of the spirit
+ informing and supporting the universe, collided with the blurred system of
+ heathen deities and crass idolatry. The simple cult of the shepherds,
+ consisting of a few severely plain ceremonies, transmitted from generation
+ to generation, was confronted with the insidious, coarsely sensual animal
+ worship of the Egyptians. The patriarchal customs of the Israelites were
+ brought into marked contrast with the vices of a corrupt civilization.
+ Sound in body and soul, the son of nature suddenly found himself in
+ unsavory surroundings fashioned by culture, in which he was as much
+ despised as the inoffensive nomad is by "civilized" man of settled habit.
+ The scorn had a practical result in the enslavement of the Israelites by
+ the Pharaohs. Association with the Egyptians acted as a force at once of
+ attraction and of repulsion. The manners and customs of the natives could
+ not fail to leave an impression upon the simple aliens, and invite
+ imitation on their part. On the other hand, the whole life of the
+ Egyptians, their crude notions of religion, and their immoral ways, were
+ calculated to inspire the more enlightened among the Israelites with
+ disgust. The hostility of the Egyptians toward the "intruders," and the
+ horrible persecutions in which it expressed itself, could not but bring
+ out more aggressively the old spiritual opposition between the two races.
+ The antagonism between them was the first influence to foster the germ of
+ Israel's national consciousness, the consciousness of his peculiar
+ character, his individuality. This early intimation of a national
+ consciousness was weak. It manifested itself only in the chosen few. But
+ it existed, and the time was appointed when, under more favorable
+ conditions, it would develop, and display the extent of its power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This consciousness it was that inspired the activity of Moses, Israel's
+ teacher and liberator. He was penetrated alike by national and religious
+ feeling, and his desire was to impart both national and religious feeling
+ to his brethren. The fact of national redemption he connected with the
+ fact of religious revelation. "I am the Lord thy God who have brought thee
+ forth out of the land of Egypt" was proclaimed from Sinai. The God-idea
+ was nationalized. Thenceforth "Eternal" became the name peculiar to the
+ God of Israel. He was, indeed, the same <i>Elohim</i>, the Creator of the
+ world and its Guide, who had been dimly discerned by the spiritual vision
+ of the Patriarchs. At the same time He was the special God of the
+ Israelitish nation, the only nation that avouched Him with a full and
+ undivided heart, the nation chosen by God Himself to carry out, alone, His
+ sublime plans.<a href="#linknote-9" name="linknoteref-9" id="noteref-9"><small>9</small></a>
+ In his wanderings, Israel became acquainted with the chaotic religious
+ systems of other nations. Seeing to what they paid the tribute of divine
+ adoration, he could not but be dominated by the consciousness that he
+ alone from of old had been the exponent of the religious idea in its
+ purity. The resolution must have ripened within him to continue for all
+ time to advocate and cherish this idea. From that moment Israel was
+ possessed of a clear theory of life in religion and morality, and of a
+ definite aim pursued with conscious intent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its originators designed that this Israelitish conception of life should
+ serve not merely theoretically, as the basis of religious doctrine, but
+ also practically, as the starting point of legislation. It was to be
+ realized in the daily walks of the people, which at this very time
+ attained to political independence. Sublime religious conceptions were not
+ to be made the content of a visionary creed, the subject of dreamy
+ contemplation, but, in the form of perspicuous guiding principles, were to
+ control all spheres of individual and social life. Men must beware of
+ looking upon religion as an ideal to be yearned for, it should be an ideal
+ to be applied directly, day by day, to practical contingencies. In
+ "Mosaism," so-called, the religious and the ethical are intimately
+ interwoven with the social and the political. The chief dogmas of creed
+ are stated as principles shaping practical life. For instance, the exalted
+ idea of One God applied to social life produces the principle of the
+ equality of all men before the One Supreme Power, a principle on which the
+ whole of Biblical legislation is built. The commands concerning love of
+ neighbor, the condemnation of slavery, the obligation to aid the poor,
+ humane treatment of the stranger, sympathy and compassion with every
+ living being&mdash;all these lofty injunctions ensue as inevitable
+ consequences from the principle of equality. Biblical legislation is
+ perhaps the only example of a political and social code based, not upon
+ abstract reasoning alone, but also upon the requirements of the feelings,
+ upon the finest impulses of the human soul. By the side of formal right
+ and legality, it emphasizes, and, in a series of precepts, makes tangible,
+ the principle of justice and humanity. The Mosaic law is a "propaganda by
+ deed." Everywhere it demands active, more than passive, morality. Herein,
+ in this elevated characteristic, this vital attribute, consists the chief
+ source of the power of Mosaism. The same characteristic, to be sure,
+ prevented it from at once gaining ground in the national life. It
+ established itself only gradually, after many fluctuations and errors. In
+ the course of the centuries, and keeping pace with the growth of the
+ national consciousness, it was cultivated and perfected in detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conquest of Canaan wrought a radical transformation in the life of the
+ Israelitish people. The acquiring of national territory supplied firm
+ ground for the development and manifold application of the principles of
+ Mosaism. At first, however, advance was out of the question. The mass of
+ the people had not reached the degree of spiritual maturity requisite for
+ the espousal of principles constituting an exalted theory of life. It
+ could be understood and represented only by a thoughtful minority, which
+ consisted chiefly of Aaronites and Levites, together forming a priestly
+ estate, though not a hierarchy animated by the isolating spirit of caste
+ that flourished among all the other peoples of the Orient. The populace
+ discovered only the ceremonial side of the religion; its kernel was hidden
+ from their sight. Defective spiritual culture made the people susceptible
+ to alien influences, to notions more closely akin to its understanding.
+ Residence in Canaan, among related Semitic tribes that had long before
+ separated from the Israelites, and adopted altogether different views and
+ customs, produced a far greater metamorphosis in the character of the
+ Israelites than the sojourn in Egypt. After the first flush of victory,
+ when the unity of the Israelitish people had been weakened by the
+ particularistic efforts of several of the tribes, the spiritual bonds
+ confining the nation began to relax. Political decay always brings
+ religious defection in its train. Whenever Israel came under the dominion
+ of the neighboring tribes, he also fell a victim to their cult. This
+ phenomenon is throughout characteristic of the so-called era of the
+ Judges. It is a natural phenomenon readily explained on psychologic
+ grounds. The Mosaic national conception of the "Eternal" entered more and
+ more deeply into the national consciousness, and, accommodating itself to
+ the limited mental capacity of the majority, became narrower and narrower
+ in compass&mdash;the lot of all great ideas! The "Eternal" was no longer
+ thought of as the only One God of the whole universe, but as the tutelar
+ deity of the Israelitish tribe. The idea of national tutelar deities was
+ at that time deeply rooted in the consciousness of all the peoples of
+ Western Asia. Each nation, as it had a king of its own, had a tribal god
+ of its own. The Phoenicians had their Baal, the Moabites their Kemosh, the
+ Ammonites their Milkom. Belief in the god peculiar to a nation by no means
+ excluded belief in the existence of other national gods. A people
+ worshiped its own god, because it regarded him as its master and
+ protecting lord. In fact, according to the views then prevalent, a
+ conflict between two nations was the conflict between two national
+ deities. In the measure in which respect for the god of the defeated party
+ waned, waxed the number of worshipers of the god of the victorious nation,
+ and not merely among the conquerors, but also among the adherents of other
+ religions.<a href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10" id="noteref-10"><small>10</small></a>
+ These crude, coarsely materialistic conceptions of God gained entrance
+ with the masses of the Israelitish people. If Moab had his Kemosh, and
+ Ammon his Milkom, then Israel had his "Eternal," who, after the model of
+ all other national gods, protected and abandoned his "clients" at
+ pleasure, in the one case winning, in the other losing, the devotion of
+ his partisans. In times of distress, in which the Israelites groaned under
+ the yoke of the alien, the enslaved "forgot" their "conquered" "Eternal."
+ As they paid the tribute due the strange king, and yielded themselves to
+ his power, so they submitted to the strange god, and paid him his due
+ tribute of devotion. It followed that liberation from the yoke of the
+ stranger coincided with return to the God of Israel, the "Eternal." At
+ such times the national spirit leaped into flaming life. This sums up the
+ achievements of the hero-Judges. But the traces of repeated backsliding
+ were deep and long visible, for, together with the religious ideas of the
+ strange peoples, the Israelites accepted their customs, as a rule corrupt
+ and noxious customs, in sharp contrast with the lofty principles of the
+ Mosaic Law, designed to control social life and the life of the
+ individual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prophet Samuel, coming after the unsettled period of the Judges, had
+ only partial success in purifying the views of the people and elevating it
+ out of degradation to a higher spiritual level. His work was continued
+ with more marked results in the brilliant reigns of Saul, David, and
+ Solomon. An end was put to the baleful disunion among the tribes, and the
+ bond of national tradition was strengthened. The consolidated Israelitish
+ kingdom triumphed over its former oppressors. The gods of the strange
+ peoples cringed in the dust before the all-powerful "Eternal." But, with
+ the division of the kingdom and the political rupture between Judah and
+ Israel, the period of efflorescence soon came to an end. Again confusion
+ reigned supreme, and customs and convictions deteriorated under foreign
+ influence. Prophets like Elijah and Elisha, feverish though their activity
+ was, stood powerless before the rank immorality in the two states. The
+ northern kingdom of Israel, composed of the Ten Tribes, passed swiftly
+ downward on the road to destruction, sharing the fate of the numberless
+ Oriental states whose end was inevitable by reason of inner decay. The
+ inspired words of the early Israelitish Prophets, Amos, Hosea, and Micah,
+ their trumpet-toned reproofs, their thrilling admonitions, died unheeded
+ upon the air&mdash;society was too depraved to understand their import. It
+ was reserved for later generations to give ear to their immortal
+ utterances, eloquent witnesses to the lofty heights to which the Jewish
+ spirit was permitted to mount in times of general decline. The northern
+ kingdom sank into irretrievable ruin. Then came the turn of Judah. He,
+ too, had disregarded the law of "sanctification" from Sinai, and had
+ nearly arrived at the point of stifling his better impulses in the morass
+ of materialistic living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this critical moment, on the line between to be and not to be, a
+ miracle came to pass. The spirit of the people, become flesh in its
+ noblest sons, rose aloft. From out of the midst of the political
+ disturbances, the frightful infamy, and the moral corruption, resounded
+ the impressive call of the great Prophets of Judah. Like a flaming torch
+ carried through dense darkness, they cast a glaring light upon the vices
+ of society, at the same time illuminating the path that leads upward to
+ the goal of the ethical ideal. At first the negative, denouncing element
+ predominated in the exhortations of the Prophets: unsparingly they
+ scourged the demoralization and the iniquity, the social injustice and the
+ political errors prevalent in their time; they threatened divine
+ punishment, that is, the natural consequences of evil-doing, and appealed
+ to the reason rather than the feelings of the people. But gradually they
+ elaborated positive ideals, more soul-stirring than the ideals identified
+ with the old religious tradition. The Prophets were the first to touch the
+ root of the evil. It is clear that they realized that alien influences and
+ the low grade of intelligence possessed by the masses were not the sole
+ causes of the frequent backsliding of the people. The Jewish doctrine
+ itself bore within it the germ of error. The two chief pillars of the old
+ faith&mdash;the nationalizing of the God-idea, and the stress laid upon
+ the cult, the ceremonial side of religion, as compared with moral
+ requirements&mdash;were first and foremost to be held responsible for the
+ flagrant departures from the spirit of Judaism. This was the direction in
+ which reform was needed. Thereafter the sermons of the Prophets betray
+ everywhere the intense desire, on the one hand, to restore to the God-idea
+ its original universal character, and, on the other hand, while strongly
+ emphasizing the importance of morality in the religious and the social
+ sphere, to derogate from the value of the ceremonial system. The "Eternal"
+ is no longer the national God of Israel, belonging to him exclusively; He
+ becomes the God of the whole of mankind, the same <i>Elohim</i>, Creator
+ and Preserver of the world, whom the Patriarchs had worshiped, and to
+ whom, being His creatures, all men owe worship. His precepts and His laws
+ of morality are binding upon all nations; they will bring salvation and
+ blessing to all without distinction.<a href="#linknote-11" name="linknoteref-11"
+ id="noteref-11"><small>11</small></a> The ideal of piety consists in the
+ profession of God and a life of rectitude. The time will come when all
+ nations will be penetrated by true knowledge of God and actuated by the
+ noblest motives; then will follow the universal brotherhood of man. Until
+ this consummation is reached, and so long as Israel is the only nation
+ formally professing the one true God, and accepting His blessed law,
+ Israel's sole task is to embody in himself the highest ideals, to be an
+ "ensign to the nations," to bear before them the banner of God's law,
+ destined in time to effect the transformation of the whole of mankind.
+ Israel is a missionary to the nations. As such he must stand before them
+ as a model of holiness and purity. Here is the origin of the great idea of
+ the spiritual "Messianism" of the Jewish people, or, better, its
+ "missionism," an eternal idea, far more comprehensive than the old idea of
+ national election, which it supplanted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These sublime teachings were inculcated at the moment in which Judah was
+ hastening to meet his fate. It had become impossible to check the natural
+ results of the earlier transgressions. The inevitable happened; Babylon
+ the mighty laid her ponderous hand upon tiny Judah. But Judah could not be
+ crushed. From the heavy chastisement the Jewish nation emerged purified,
+ re-born for a new life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The rank and file of a people are instructed by revolutions and
+ catastrophes better than by sermons. More quickly than Isaiah and
+ Jeremiah, Nebuchadnezzar brought the Jews to a recognition of their tasks.
+ The short span of the Babylonian Exile (586-538 B. C. E.) was a period of
+ introspection and searching self-examination for the people. Spiritual
+ forces hitherto latent came into play; a degree of self-consciousness
+ asserted itself. The people grasped its mission. At last it comprehended
+ that to imitate inferior races, instead of teaching them and making itself
+ a model for them to follow, was treason to its vocation in life. When the
+ hour of release from the Babylonian yoke struck, the people suddenly saw
+ under its feet "a new earth," and to "a new heaven" above it raised eyes
+ dim with tears of repentance and emotion. It renewed its covenant with
+ God. Like the Exodus from Egypt, so the second national deliverance was
+ connected with a revelation. But the messages delivered by the last
+ Prophets&mdash;especially by "the great unknown," the author of the latter
+ part of the Book of Isaiah&mdash;were too exalted, too universal in
+ conception, for a people but lately emerged from a severe crisis to set
+ about their realization at once. They could only illumine its path as a
+ guiding-star, inspire it as the ultimate goal, the far-off Messianic
+ ideal. Meanwhile the necessity appeared for uniform religious laws,
+ dogmas, and customs, to bind the Jews together externally as a nation. The
+ moralizing religion of the Prophets was calculated to bring about the
+ regeneration of the individual, regardless of national ties; but at that
+ moment the chief point involved was the nation. It had to be established
+ and its organization perfected. The universalism of the Prophets was
+ inadequate for the consolidating of a nation. To this end outward
+ religious discipline was requisite, an official cult and public
+ ceremonies. Led by such considerations, the Jewish captives, on their
+ return to Jerusalem, first of all devoted themselves to the erection of a
+ Temple, to the creating of a visible religious centre, which was to be the
+ rallying point for the whole nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days of the Prophets were over. Their religious universalism could
+ apply only to a distant future. In the present, the nation, before it
+ might pose as a teacher, had to learn and grow spiritually strong. Aims of
+ such compass require centuries for their realization. Therefore, the
+ spiritual-national unification of the people was pushed into the
+ foreground. The place of the Prophet was filled by the Priest and the
+ Scribe. Zerubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah were permeated by the purpose to
+ make religion and the cult subservient to the cause of national union and
+ isolation. The erection of the Temple, the solemn service with the singing
+ of Psalms and the public reading from the "Book of the Law" (the
+ Pentateuch, which underwent its final redaction at that time), the removal
+ of whatever might arouse the remembrance of strange and heathen
+ institutions&mdash;these were the levers of their unifying activity. At
+ first sight this activity might appear almost too one-sided. But if we
+ summon to mind a picture of the conditions prevailing in those days, we
+ are forced to the conclusion that, in the interest of national
+ restoration, a consistent course was imperative. In point of fact,
+ however, some of Ezra's innovations testify to the broad-minded,
+ reformatory character of this activity; as, for instance, the public
+ reading of the Pentateuch, introduced with a view to making the people see
+ the necessity of obtaining detailed knowledge of the principles of its
+ religion, and obeying the precepts of the Law, not blindly, but with
+ conscious assent. The object steadily aimed at was the elevation of the
+ whole body of the people to the plane of spirituality, its transformation,
+ in accordance with the Biblical injunction, into a "kingdom of priests."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This injunction of civilizing import became the starting point of the
+ activity of all of Ezra's successors, of the so-called school of the <i>Soferim</i>,
+ the Scribes, those versed in the art of writing. The political calm that
+ prevailed during the two centuries of the Persian supremacy (538-332 B. C.
+ E.), was calculated to an eminent degree to promote spiritual development
+ and the organization of the inner life of the people. During this period,
+ a large part of the writings after the Pentateuch that have been received
+ into the Bible were collected, compiled, and reduced to writing. The
+ immortal thoughts of the Prophets clothed themselves in the visible garb
+ of letters. On parchment rolls and in books they were made accessible to
+ distant ages. The impressive traditions transmitted from earliest times,
+ the chronicles of the past of the people, the Psalms brought forth by the
+ religious enthusiasm of a long series of poets, all were gathered and put
+ into literary shape with the extreme of care. The spiritual treasures of
+ the nation were capitalized, and to this process of capitalization solely
+ and alone generations of men have owed the possibility of resorting to
+ them as a source of faith and knowledge. Without the work of compilation
+ achieved by the <i>Soferim</i>, of which the uninstructed are apt to speak
+ slightingly, mankind to-day had no Bible, that central sun in
+ world-literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two centuries may fitly be called the school-days of the Jewish
+ nation; the Scribes were the teachers of Jewry. In the way of original
+ work but little was produced. The people fed upon the store of spiritual
+ food, of which sufficient had been laid up for several generations. It was
+ then that the Jews first earned their title to the name, "the People of
+ the Book." They made subservient to themselves the two mightiest
+ instruments of thought, the art of writing and of reading. Their progress
+ was brilliant, and when their schooling had come to an end, and they
+ stepped out into the broader life, they were at once able to apply their
+ knowledge successfully to practical contingencies. They were prepared for
+ all the vicissitudes of life. Their spiritual equipment was complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could have been more opportune than this readiness to assume the
+ responsibilities of existence, for a time of peril and menace was again
+ approaching. From out of the West, a new agent of civilization, Hellenism,
+ advanced upon the East. Alexander the Great had put an end to the huge
+ Persian monarchy, and brought the whole of Western Asia under his dominion
+ (332 B. C. E.). His generals divided the conquered lands among themselves.
+ With all their might, the Ptolemies in Egypt and the Seleucidae in Syria
+ hellenized the countries subject to their rule. In the old domain of the
+ Pharaohs, as in Babylonia, in Phoenicia, and in Syria, the Greek language
+ was currently spoken, Greek ceremonies were observed, the Greek mode of
+ life was adopted. Athens ceded her rights of primogeniture to New Athens,
+ Alexandria, capital of Egypt, and cosmopolitan centre of the civilized
+ world. For a whole century Judea played the sad part of the apple of
+ discord between the Egyptian and the Syrian dynasty (320-203 B. C. E.). By
+ turns she owned the sway of the Ptolemies and the Seleucidae, until
+ finally, in 203, she was declared a Syro-Macedonian province. Here, as in
+ the other parts of their realm, the rulers devoted themselves
+ energetically to the dissemination of Greek culture. Meeting with
+ resistance, they had resort to main force. At first, indeed, a large part
+ of the people permitted itself to be blinded by the "beauty of Japheth,"
+ and promoted assimilation with the Greeks. But when the spread of
+ Hellenism began to threaten the spiritual individuality of Judaism, the
+ rest of the nation, endowed with greater capacity of resistance, arose and
+ sturdily repulsed the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hellenism was the first gravely dangerous opponent Judaism had to
+ encounter. It was not the ordinary meeting of two peoples, or of two kinds
+ of civilization. It was a clash between two theories of life that stood
+ abruptly opposed to each other, were, indeed, mutually exclusive. It was a
+ duel between "the Eternal" on the one side, and Zeus on the other&mdash;between
+ the Creator of the universe, the invisible spiritual Being who had, in a
+ miraculous way, revealed religious and ethical ideals to mankind, and the
+ deity who resided upon Olympus, who personified the highest force of
+ nature, consumed vast quantities of nectar and ambrosia, and led a pretty
+ wild life upon Olympus and elsewhere. In the sphere of religion and
+ morality, Hellene and Judean could not come close to each other. The
+ former deified nature herself, the material universe; the latter deified
+ the Creator of nature, the spirit informing the material universe. The
+ Hellene paid homage first and foremost to external beauty and physical
+ strength; the Judean to inner beauty and spiritual heroism. The Hellenic
+ theory identified the moral with the beautiful and the agreeable, and made
+ life consist of an uninterrupted series of physical and mental pleasures.
+ The Judean theory is permeated by the strictly ethical notions of duty, of
+ purity, of "holiness"; it denounces licentiousness, and sets up as its
+ ideal the controlling of the passions and the infinite improvement of the
+ soul, not of the intellect alone, but of the feelings as well. These
+ differences between the two theories of life showed themselves in the
+ brusque opposition in character and customs that made the Greeks and the
+ Jews absolute antipodes in many spheres of life. It cannot be denied that
+ in matters of the intellect, especially in the field of philosophy and
+ science, not to mention art, it might have been greatly to the advantage
+ of the Jews to become disciples of the Greeks. Nor is there any doubt that
+ the brighter aspects of Hellenism would make an admirable complement to
+ Judaism. An harmonious blending of the Prophets with Socrates and Plato
+ would have produced a many-sided, ideal <i>Weltanschauung</i>. The course
+ of historical events from the first made such blending, which would
+ doubtless have required great sacrifices on both sides, an impossible
+ consummation. In point of fact, the events were such as to widen the abyss
+ between the two systems. The meeting of Judaism and Hellenism
+ unfortunately occurred at the very moment when the classical Hellenes had
+ been supplanted by the hellenized Macedonians and Syrians, who had
+ accepted what were probably the worst elements of the antique system,
+ while appropriating but few of the intellectual excellencies of Greek
+ culture. There was another thwarting circumstance. In this epoch, the
+ Greeks were the political oppressors of the Jews, outraging Jewish
+ national feeling through their tyranny to the same degree as by their
+ immoral life they shocked Jewish ethical feeling and Jewish chastity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outraged national and religious feeling found expression in the
+ insurrection of the Maccabees (168 B. C. E.). The hoary priest Mattathias
+ and his sons fought for the dearest and noblest treasures of Judaism.
+ Enthusiasm begets heroism. The Syrian-Greek yoke was thrown off, and,
+ after groaning under alien rule, the Persian, the Egyptian, and the
+ Syro-Macedonian, for four hundred years, Judea became an independent
+ state. In its foreign relations, the new state was secured by the
+ self-sacrificing courage of the first Maccabean brothers, and from within
+ it was supported by the deep-sunk pillars of the spiritual life. The rise
+ of the three famous parties, the Sadducees, the Pharisees, and the
+ Essenes, by no means testifies, as many would have us believe, to national
+ disintegration, but rather to the intense spiritual activity of the
+ people. The three tendencies afforded opportunity for the
+ self-consciousness of the nation to express itself in all its variety and
+ force. The unbending religious dogmatism of the Sadducees, the
+ comprehensive practical sense of the Pharisees in religious and Rational
+ concerns, the contemplative mysticism of the Essenes, they are the most
+ important offshoots from the Jewish system as held at that time. In
+ consequence of the external conditions that brought about the destruction
+ of the Maccabean state<a href="#linknote-12" name="linknoteref-12" id="noteref-12"><small>12</small></a>
+ after a century's existence (165-63 B. C. E.), the Pharisee tendency,
+ which had proved itself the best in practice, won the upper hand. When
+ Judea was held fast in the clutches of the Roman eagle, all hope of escape
+ being cut off, the far-seeing leaders of the people gained the firm
+ conviction that the only trustworthy support of the Jewish nation lay in
+ its religion. They realized that the preservation of national unity could
+ be effected only by a consistent organization of the religious law, which
+ was to envelop and shape the whole external life of the people. This
+ explains the feverish activity of the early creators of the Mishna, of
+ Hillel, Shammai, and others, and it interprets also the watchword of still
+ older fame, "Make a fence about the Law." If up to that moment religious
+ usage in its development had kept abreast of the requirements of social
+ and individual life, the requirements out of which it had grown forth, it
+ now became a national function, and its further evolution advanced with
+ tremendous strides. For the protection of the old "Mosaic Laws," a twofold
+ and a threefold fence of new legal ordinances was erected about them, and
+ the cult became more and more complicated. But the externals of religion
+ did not monopolize all the forces. The moral element in the nation was
+ promoted with equal vigor. Hillel, the head of the Pharisee party, was not
+ a legislator alone, he was also a model of humane principles and rare
+ moral attainments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Judaism, in its native country was striving to isolate itself, and
+ was seizing upon all sorts of expedients to insure this end, it readily
+ entered into relations, outside of Judea, with other systems of thought,
+ and accepted elements of the classical culture. Instead of the violent
+ opposition which the Palestinian Judaism of the pre-Maccabean period, that
+ is, the period of strife, had offered to Hellenism, the tendency to make
+ mutual concessions, and pave the way for an understanding between the two
+ theories of life, asserted itself in Alexandria. In the capital city of
+ the hellenized world the Jews constituted one of the most important
+ elements of culture. According to Mommsen, the Jewish colony in Alexandria
+ was not inferior, in point of numbers, to the Jewish population of
+ Jerusalem, the metropolis. Influenced by Greek civilization, the Jews in
+ turn exercised decisive influence upon their heathen surroundings, and
+ introduced a new principle of development into the activity of the
+ cultivated classes. The Greek translation of the Biblical writings formed
+ the connecting link between Judaism and Hellenism. The "Septuaginta," the
+ translation of the Pentateuch, in use since the third century before the
+ Christian era, had acquainted the classical world with Jewish views and
+ principles. The productions of the Prophets and, in later centuries, of
+ the other Biblical authors, translated and spread broadcast, acted
+ irresistibly upon the spirit of the cultivated heathen, and granted him a
+ glimpse into a world of hitherto unknown notions. On this soil sprang up
+ the voluminous Judeo-Hellenic literature, of which but a few, though
+ characteristic, specimens have descended to us. The intermingling of Greek
+ philosophy with Jewish religious conceptions resulted in a new
+ religio-philosophic doctrine, with a mystic tinge, of which Philo is the
+ chief exponent. In Jerusalem, Judaism appeared as a system of practical
+ ceremonies and moral principles; in Alexandria, it presented itself as a
+ complex of abstract symbols and poetical allegories. The Alexandrian form
+ of Judaism might satisfy the intellect, but it could not appeal to the
+ feelings. It may have made Judaism accessible to the cultivated minority,
+ to the upper ten thousand with philosophic training; for the masses of the
+ heathen people Judaism continued unintelligible. Yet it was pre-eminently
+ the masses that were strongly possessed by religious craving. Disappointed
+ in their old beliefs, they panted after a new belief, after spiritual
+ enlightenment. In the decaying classical world, which had so long filled
+ out life with materialistic and intellectual interests, the moral and
+ religious feelings, the desire for a living faith, for an active
+ inspiration, had awakened, and was growing with irresistible force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, from deep out of the bosom of Judaism, there sprang a moral,
+ religious doctrine destined to allay the burning thirst for religion, and
+ bring about a reorganization of the heathen world. The originators of
+ Christianity stood wholly upon the ground of Judaism. In their teachings
+ were reflected as well the lofty moral principles of the Pharisee leader
+ as the contemplative aims of the Essenes. But the same external
+ circumstances that had put Judaism under the necessity of choosing a
+ sharply-defined practical, national policy, made it impossible for Judaism
+ to fraternize with the preachers of the new doctrine. Judaism, in fact,
+ was compelled to put aside entirely the thought of universal missionary
+ activity. Instead, it had to devote its powers to the more pressing task
+ of guarding the spiritual unity of a nation whose political bonds were
+ visibly dropping away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For just then the Jewish nation, gory with its own blood, was struggling
+ in the talons of the Roman eagle. Its sons fought heroically, without
+ thought of self. When, finally, physical strength gave out, their
+ spiritual energy rose to an intenser degree. The state was annihilated,
+ the nation remained alive. At the very moment when the Temple was
+ enwrapped in flames, and the Roman legions flooded Jerusalem, the
+ spiritual leaders of Jewry sat musing, busily casting about for a means
+ whereby, without a state, without a capital, without a Temple, Jewish
+ unity might be maintained. And they solved the difficult problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS PERIOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The solution of the problem consisted chiefly in more strictly following
+ out the process of isolation. In a time in which the worship of God
+ preached by Judaism was rapidly spreading to all parts of the classical
+ world, and the fundamental principles of the Jewish religion were steadily
+ gaining appreciation and active adherence, this intense desire for
+ seclusion may at first glance seem curious. But the phenomenon is
+ perfectly simple. A foremost factor was national feeling, enhanced to a
+ tremendous degree at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem. Lacking a
+ political basis, it was transferred to religious soil. Every tradition,
+ every custom, however insignificant, was cherished as a jewel. Though
+ without a state and without territory, the Jews desired to form a nation,
+ if only a spiritual nation, complete in itself. They considered themselves
+ then as before the sole guardians of the law of God. They did not believe
+ in a speedy fulfilment of the prophetical promise concerning "the end of
+ time" when all nations would be converted to God. A scrupulous keeper of
+ the Law, Judaism would not hear of the compromises that heathendom, lately
+ entered into the bosom of the faith, claimed as its due consideration. It
+ refused to sacrifice a single feature of its simple dogmatism, of its
+ essential ceremonies, such as circumcision and Sabbath rest. Moreover, in
+ the period following close upon the fall of the Temple, a part of the
+ people still nursed the hope of political restoration, a hope repudiating
+ in its totality the proclamation of quite another Messianic doctrine. The
+ delusion ended tragically in Bar Kochba's hapless rebellion (135 C. E.),
+ whose disastrous issue cut off the last remnant of hope for the
+ restoration of an "earthly kingdom." Thereafter the ideal of a spiritual
+ state was replaced by the ideal of a spiritual nation, rallying about a
+ peculiar religious banner. Jewry grew more and more absorbed in itself.
+ Its seclusion from the rest of the world became progressively more
+ complete. Instinct dictated this course as an escape from the danger of
+ extinction, or, at least, of stagnation. It was conscious of possessing
+ enough vitality and energy to live for itself and work out its own
+ salvation. It had its spiritual interests, its peculiar ideals, and a firm
+ belief in the future. It constituted an ancient order, whose patent of
+ nobility had been conferred upon it in the days of the hoary past by the
+ Lord God Himself. Such as it was, it could not consent to ally itself with
+ <i>parvenus</i>, ennobled but to-day, and yesterday still bowing down
+ before "gods of silver and gods of gold." This white-haired old man, with
+ a stormy past full of experiences and thought, would not mingle with the
+ scatter-brained crowd, would not descend to the level of neophytes
+ dominated by fleeting, youthful enthusiasm. Loyally this weather-bronzed,
+ inflexible guardian of the Law stuck to his post&mdash;the post entrusted
+ to him by God Himself&mdash;and, faithful to his duty, held fast to the
+ principle <i>j'y suis, j'y reste</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a political nation threatened by its neighbors seeks support in its
+ army, and provides sufficient implements of war, so a spiritual nation
+ must have spiritual weapons of defense at its command. Such weapons were
+ forged in great numbers, and deposited in the vast arsenal called the
+ Talmud. The Talmud represents a complicated spiritual discipline,
+ enjoining unconditional obedience to a higher invisible power. Where
+ discipline is concerned, questions as to the necessity for one or another
+ regulation are out of place. Every regulation is necessary, if only
+ because it contributes to the desired end, namely, discipline. Let no one
+ ask, then, to what purpose the innumerable religious and ritual
+ regulations, sometimes reaching the extreme of pettiness, to what purpose
+ the comprehensive code in which every step in the life of the faithful is
+ foreseen. The Talmudic religious provisions, all taken together, aim to
+ put the regimen of the nation on a strictly uniform basis, so that
+ everywhere the Jew may be able to distinguish a brother in faith by his
+ peculiar mode of life. It is a uniform with insignia, by which soldiers of
+ the same regiment recognize one another. Despite the vast extent of the
+ Jewish diaspora, the Jews formed a well-articulated spiritual army, an
+ invisible "state of God" (<i>civitas dei</i>). Hence these "knights of the
+ spirit," the citizens of this invisible state, had to wear a distinct
+ uniform, and be governed by a suitable code of army regulations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a protection for Jewish national unity, which was exposed to the
+ greatest danger after the downfall of the state, there arose and
+ developed, without any external influence whatsoever, an extraordinary
+ dictatorship, unofficial and spiritual. The legislative activity of all
+ the dictators&mdash;such as, Rabbi Jochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Akiba, the
+ Hillelites, and the Shammaites&mdash;was formulated in the Mishna, the
+ "oral law," which was the substructure of the Talmud. Their activity had a
+ characteristic feature, which deserves somewhat particularized
+ description. The laws were not laid down arbitrarily and without ceremony.
+ In order to possess binding force, they required the authoritative
+ confirmation to be found in the Mosaic Books. From these, whether by
+ logical or by forced interpretation of the holy text, its words, or,
+ perchance, its letters, they had to be derived. Each law, barring only the
+ original "traditions," the <i>Halacha le-Moshe mi-Sinai</i>, was
+ promulgated over the supreme signature, as it were, that is, with the
+ authentication of a word from the Holy Scriptures. Or it was inferred from
+ another law so authenticated. The elaboration of every law was thus
+ connected with a very complicated process of thought, requiring both
+ inductive and deductive reasoning, and uniting juridical interpretation
+ with the refinements of casuistry. This legislation was the beginning of
+ Talmudic science, which from that time on, for many centuries, growing
+ with the ages, claimed in chief part the intellectual activity of Jewry.
+ The schools and the academies worked out a system of laws at once
+ religious and practical in character, which constituted, in turn, the
+ object of further theoretic study in the same schools and academies. In
+ the course of time, however, the means became the end. Theoretic
+ investigation of the law, extending and developing to the furthest limits,
+ in itself, without reference to its practical value, afforded satisfaction
+ to the spiritual need. The results of theorizing often attained the
+ binding force of law in practical life, not because circumstances ordered
+ it, but simply because one or another academy, by dint of logic or
+ casuistry, had established it as law. The number of such deductions from
+ original and secondary laws increased in geometric progression, and
+ practical life all but failed to keep up with the theory. The "close of
+ the Mishna," that is, its reduction to writing, had no daunting effect
+ upon the zeal for research. If anything, a new and strong impetus was
+ imparted to it. As up to that time the text of the Holy Scriptures had
+ been made the basis of interpretation, giving rise to the most diverse
+ inferences, so the rabbis now began to use the law book recently canonized
+ as a new basis of interpretation, and to carry its principles to their
+ utmost consequences. In this way originated first the "Palestinian
+ Gemara." Later, when the Patriarchate in Palestine was stripped of its
+ glory by persecutions, and, in consequence, the centre of activity had to
+ be transferred from the Talmud academies of Palestine to those of
+ Babylonia, supreme place and exclusive dominion were obtained by the
+ "Babylonian Gemara," put into permanent form about the year 500 C. E., a
+ gigantic work, the result of two hundred years of mental labor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This busy intellectual activity was as comprehensive as it was
+ thoroughgoing. Talmudic legislation, the Halacha, by no means confines
+ itself to religious practices, extensive as this field is. It embraces the
+ whole range of civil and social life. Apart from the dietary laws, the
+ regulations for the festivals and the divine service, and a mass of
+ enactments for the shaping of daily life, the Talmud elaborated a
+ comprehensive and fairly well-ordered system of civil and criminal law,
+ which not infrequently bears favorable comparison with the famous <i>rationi
+ scriptae</i> of the Romans. While proceeding with extreme rigor and
+ scrupulousness in ritual matters, the Talmud is governed in its social
+ legislation by the noblest humanitarian principles. Doubtless this
+ difference of attitude can be explained by the fact that religious norms
+ are of very much greater importance for a nation than judicial
+ regulations, which concern themselves only with the interests of the
+ individual, and exercise but little influence upon the development of the
+ national spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most sympathetic aspects of the Jewish spirit in that epoch are
+ revealed in the moral and poetic elements of the Talmud, in the Agada.
+ They are the receptacles into which the people poured all its sentiments,
+ its whole soul. They are a clear reflex of its inner world, its feelings,
+ hopes, ideals. The collective work of the nation and the trend of history
+ have left much plainer traces in the Agada than in the dry, methodical
+ Halacha. In the Agada the learned jurist and formalist appears transformed
+ into a sage or poet, conversing with the people in a warm, cordial tone,
+ about the phenomena of nature, history, and life. The reader is often
+ thrown into amazement by the depth of thought and the loftiness of feeling
+ manifested in the Agada. Involuntarily one pays the tribute of reverence
+ to its practical wisdom, to its touching legends pervaded by the magic
+ breath of poesy, to the patriarchal purity of its views. But these pearls
+ are not strung upon one string, they are not arranged in a complete
+ system. They are imbedded here and there, in gay variety, in a vast mass
+ of heterogeneous opinions and sentiments naive at times and at times
+ eccentric. The reader becomes aware of the thoughts before they are
+ consolidated. They are still in a fluid, mobile state, still in process of
+ making. The same vivacious, versatile spirit is revealed in the Midrashim
+ literature, directly continuing the Agada up to the end of the middle
+ ages. These two species of Jewish literature, the Agada and the Midrashim,
+ have a far greater absolute value than the Halacha. The latter is an
+ official work, the former a national product. Like every other special
+ legislation, the Halacha is bound to definite conditions and times, while
+ the Agada concerns itself with the eternal verities. The creations of the
+ philosophers, poets, and moralists are more permanent than the work of
+ legislators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beautiful as the Agada is, and with all its profundity, it lacks breadth.
+ It rests wholly on the national, not on a universal basis. It would be
+ vain to seek in it for the comprehensive universalism of the Prophets.
+ Every lofty ideal is claimed as exclusively Jewish. So far from bridging
+ over the chasm between Israel and the other nations, knowledge and
+ morality served to widen it. It could not be otherwise, there was no
+ influx of air from without. The national horizon grew more and more
+ contracted. The activities of the people gathered intensity, but in the
+ same measure they lost in breadth. It was the only result to be expected
+ from the course of history in those ages. Let us try to conceive what the
+ first five centuries of the Christian era, the centuries during which the
+ Talmud was built up, meant in the life of mankind. Barbarism, darkness,
+ and elemental outbreaks of man's migratory instincts, illustrated by the
+ "great migration of races," are characteristic features of those
+ centuries. It was a wretched transition period between the fall of the
+ world of antique culture and the first germinating of a new Christian
+ civilization. The Orient, the centre and hearth of Judaism, was shrouded
+ in impenetrable darkness. In Palestine and in Babylonia, their two chief
+ seats, the Jews were surrounded by nations that still occupied the lowest
+ rung of the ladder of civilization, that had not yet risen above naive
+ mysticism in religion, or continued to be immersed in superstitions of the
+ grossest sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this abysmal night of the middle ages, the lamp of thought was fed and
+ guarded solely and alone by the Jews. It is not astonishing, then, that
+ oblivious of the other nations they should have dispensed light only for
+ themselves. Furthermore, the circumstance must be considered that, in the
+ period under discussion, the impulse to separate from Judaism gained
+ ground in the Christian world. After the Council of Nicaea, after
+ Constantine the Great had established Christianity as the state-church,
+ the official breach between the Old Testament and the New Testament
+ partisans became unavoidable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Jews, robbed of their political home, created a spiritual home
+ for themselves. Through the instrumentality of the numberless religious
+ rules which the Talmud had laid down, and which shaped the life of the
+ individual as well as that of the community, they were welded into a
+ firmly united whole. The Jewish spirit&mdash;national feeling and
+ individual mental effort alike&mdash;was absorbed in this pursuit of
+ unification. Head, heart, hands, all human functions of the Jew, were
+ brought under complete control and cast into fixed forms, by these five
+ centuries of labor. With painful exactitude, the Talmud prescribed
+ ordinances for all the vicissitudes of life, yet, at the same time,
+ offered sufficient food for brain and heart. It was at once a religion and
+ a science. The Jew was equipped with all the necessaries. He could satisfy
+ his wants from his own store. There was no need for him to knock at
+ strange doors, even though he had thereby profited. The consequences of
+ this attitude, positive as well as negative consequences, asserted
+ themselves in the further course of Jewish history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With the close of the Talmud, at the beginning of the sixth century, the
+ feverish intellectual activity abated. The Jewish centre of gravity
+ continued in Babylonia. In this country, in which the Jewish race had
+ heard its cradle song at the dawn of existence, and later on <i>Judaea
+ capta</i> had sat and wept remembering Zion, Judaism, after the
+ destruction of the second Temple and hundreds of years of trials, was
+ favored with a secure asylum. In the rest of the diaspora, persecution
+ gave the Jews no respite, but in Babylonia, under Persian rule, they lived
+ for some centuries comparatively free from molestation. Indeed, they
+ enjoyed a measure of autonomy in internal affairs, under a chief who was
+ entitled Exilarch (<i>Resh-Galutha</i>). The Law and the word of God went
+ forth from Babylonia for the Jews of all lands. The Babylonian Talmud
+ became the anthoritative code for the Jewish people, a holy book second
+ only to the Bible. The intellectual calm that supervened at the beginning
+ of the sixth century and lasted until the end of the eighth century,
+ betrayed itself in the slackening of independent creation, though not in
+ the flagging of intellectual activity in general. In the schools and
+ academies of Pumbeditha, Nahardea, and Sura, scientific work was carried
+ on with the same zest as before, only this work had for its primary object
+ the sifting and exposition of the material heaped up by the preceding
+ generations. This was the province of the Sabureans and the Geonim, whose
+ relation to the Talmud was the same as that of the Scribes (the <i>Soferim</i>)
+ of the Second Temple to the Bible (see above, ch. vi). In the later
+ period, as in the earlier, the aim was the capitalization of the
+ accumulated spiritual treasures, an undertaking that gives little occasion
+ for movement and life, but all the more for endurance and industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intellectual balance was destroyed by two events: the appearance of
+ Islam and the rise of Karaism. Islam, the second legitimate offspring of
+ Judaism, was appointed to give to religious thought in the slumbering
+ Orient the slight impulse it needed to start it on its rapid career of
+ sovereign power. Barely emancipated from swaddling clothes, young Hotspur
+ at once began to rage. He sought an outlet for his unconquerable thirst
+ for action, his lust for world-dominion. The victorious religious wars of
+ the followers of Allah ensued. This foreign movement was not without
+ significance for the fate of the Jews. They were surrounded no longer by
+ heathens but by Mohammedans, who believed in the God of the Bible, and
+ through the mouth of their prophet conferred upon the Jews the honorable
+ appellation of "the People of the Book." In the eighth century the wars
+ ceased, and the impetuous energy of the rejuvenated Orient was diverted
+ into quieter channels. The Bagdad Khalifate arose, the peaceful era of the
+ growth of industry, the sciences, and the arts was inaugurated. Endowed
+ with quick discernment for every enlightening movement, the Jews yielded
+ to the vivifying magic of young Arabic culture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Partly under the influence of the Arabic tendency to split into
+ religio-philosophic sects, partly from inner causes, Karaism sprang up in
+ the second half of the eighth century. Its active career began with a
+ vehement protest against the Talmud as the regulator of life and thought.
+ It proclaimed the creators of this vast encyclopedia to be usurpers of
+ spiritual power, and urged a return to the Biblical laws in their
+ unadulterated simplicity. The weakness of its positive principles hindered
+ the spread of Karaism, keeping it forever within the narrow limits of a
+ sect and consigning it to stagnation. What gave it vogue during the first
+ century of its existence was its negative strength, its violent opposition
+ to the Talmud, which aroused strenuous intellectual activity. For a long
+ time it turned Judaism away from its one-sided Talmudic tendency, and
+ opened up new avenues of work for it. True to their motto: "Search
+ diligently in the Holy Scriptures," the adherents of Karaism applied
+ themselves to the rational study of the Bible, which had come to be, among
+ the Talmudists, the object of casuistic interpretation and legendary
+ adornment. By the cultivation of grammar and lexicography as applied to
+ the Biblical thesaurus of words, they resuscitated the Hebrew language,
+ which, ousted by the Aramaic dialect, had already sunk into oblivion. By
+ the same means they laid the foundation of a school of rejuvenated poetry.
+ In general, thought on religious and philosophic subjects was promoted to
+ a higher degree by the lively discussions between them and the Talmudists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By imperceptible steps Talmudic Judaism, influenced at once by the
+ enlightened Arabs and the protesting Karaites, departed from the "four
+ ells of the Halacha," and widened its horizon. Among the spiritual leaders
+ of the people arose men who occupied themselves not only with the study of
+ the Talmud but also with a rational exegesis of the Bible, with philology,
+ poetry, philosophy. The great Gaon Saadiah (892-942) united within himself
+ all strands of thought. Over and above a large number of philological and
+ other writings of scientific purport, he created a momentous
+ religio-philosophic system, with the aim to clarify Judaism and refine
+ religious conceptions. He was an encyclopedic thinker, a representative of
+ the highest Jewish culture and of Arabic culture as well&mdash;he wrote
+ his works in Arabic by preference. In this way Jewish thought gained
+ ground more and more in the Orient. It was in the West, however, that it
+ attained soon after to the climax of its development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually the centre of gravity of Jewry shifted from Asia Minor to
+ Western Europe. Beginning with the sixth century, the sparsely sown Jewish
+ population of Occidental Europe increased rapidly in numbers. In Italy,
+ Byzantium, France, and Visigothic Spain, important Jewish communities were
+ formed. The medieval intolerance of the Church, though neither so
+ widespread nor so violent as it later became, suffered its first outbreak
+ in that early century. The persecutions of the Jews by the Visigothic
+ kings of Spain and the Bishops Avitus of Clermont and Agobard in France
+ (sixth to the ninth century) were the prelude to the more systematic and
+ the more bloody cruelties of subsequent days. The insignificant numbers of
+ the European Jews and the insecurity of their condition stood in the way
+ of forming an intellectual centre of their own. They were compelled to
+ acknowledge the spiritual supremacy of their Oriental brethren in faith.
+ With the beginning of the tenth century the situation underwent a change.
+ Arabic civilization, which had penetrated to Spain in previous centuries,
+ brought about a radical transformation in the character of the country.
+ The realm of the fanatic Visigoths, half barbarous and wholly averse to
+ the light of progress, changed into the prosperous and civilized Khalifate
+ of the Ommeyyades. Thither the best forces of Oriental Jewry transferred
+ themselves. With the growth of the Jewish population in Arabic Spain and
+ the strengthening of its communal organization, the spiritual centre of
+ the Jewish people gradually established itself in Spain. The academies of
+ Sura and Pumbeditha yielded first place to the high schools of Cordova and
+ Toledo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jewry of the East resigned the national hegemony to the Jewry of the
+ West. The Geonim withdrew in favor of the Rabbis. After centuries of
+ seclusion, the Jewish spirit once more asserted itself, and enjoyed a
+ period of efflorescence. The process of national growth became more
+ complex, more varied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH JEWS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ (980-1492)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five centuries marked at their beginning by the rise of Arabic-Jewish
+ civilization in Spain and at their end by the banishment of the Jews from
+ Spain (980-1492), offer the Jewish historian an abundance of culture
+ manifestations and intellectual movements so luxuriant that it is
+ well-nigh impossible to gather them up in one formula. The monotony
+ formerly prevailing in Jewish national life, both in its external and in
+ its internal relations, was succeeded by almost gaily checkered variety.
+ Swept along by the movement towards enlightenment that dominated their
+ surroundings, the Jews of Arabic Spain threw themselves into energetic
+ work in all the spheres of life and thought. While they had political
+ ground more or less firm under their feet, and for the most part enjoyed
+ peace and liberty, the Jews in the Christian lands of Europe stood upon
+ volcanic soil, every moment threatening to swallow them up. Exposed
+ constantly to persecutions, they lived more or less isolated, and devoted
+ themselves to one-sided though intense intellectual activity. Sombre
+ shadows and streaks of bright light alternate with each other in this
+ period. In its second half, the clouds massed themselves heavily upon the
+ darkening horizon. Even the "privileged" Spanish Jews suffered an untoward
+ change in their affairs at the beginning of the thirteenth century:
+ gradually they were withdrawn from under the sovereignty of the Arabs, and
+ made subject to the power of the Catholic monarchs. They became
+ thenceforward the equal partners of their brethren in faith in the rest of
+ Europe. All without distinction had a share in the spiritual martyrdom
+ which is the greenest bayleaf in the crown of Jewish history. To think and
+ to suffer became the watchword of the whole nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, as we have said, a considerable portion of the Jewish people
+ enjoyed the happy possibility of thinking. This was during the classical
+ epoch of the Arabic-Jewish Renaissance, which preceded the Italian
+ Renaissance by four centuries. There is a fundamental difference between
+ the two Renaissance periods: the earlier one was signalized by a re-birth
+ of the sciences and of philosophy, the later one pre-eminently of the arts
+ and of literature. The eleventh and twelfth centuries marked the meridian
+ of the intellectual development of medieval Judaism. As once, in
+ Alexandria, the union of Judaic with Hellenic culture brought in its train
+ a superabundance of new ideas of a universal character, so again the
+ amalgamation, on Spanish soil, of Jewish culture with Arabic gave rise to
+ rich intellectual results, more lasting and fruitful than the Alexandrian,
+ inasmuch as, in spite of their universal character, they did not
+ contravene the national spirit. The Jewish people dropped its misanthropy
+ and its leaning toward isolation. The Jews entered all sorts of careers:
+ by the side of influential and cultivated statesmen, such as Chasdai ibn
+ Shaprut and Samuel Hanagid, at the courts of the Khalifs, stood a
+ brilliant group of grammarians, poets, and philosophers, like Jonah ibn
+ Ganach, Solomon Gabirol, and Moses ibn Ezra. The philosophic-critical
+ scepticism of Abraham ibn Ezra co-existed in peace and harmony with the
+ philosophic-poetic enthusiasm of Jehuda Halevi. The study of medicine,
+ mathematics, physics, and astronomy went hand in hand with the study of
+ the Talmud, which, though it may not have occupied the first place with
+ the Spanish Jews of this time, by no means disappeared, as witness the
+ compendium by Alphassi. Unusual breadth and fulness of the spiritual life
+ is the distinction of the epoch. This variety of mental traits combined in
+ a marvelous union to form the great personality of Maimonides, the crown
+ of a glorious period. With one "Strong Hand," this intellectual giant
+ brought order out of the Talmudic chaos, which at his word was transformed
+ into a symmetrical, legal system; with the other, he "guided the
+ Perplexed" through the realm of faith and knowledge. For rationalistic
+ clarity and breadth of view no counterpart to the religio-philosophic
+ doctrine which he formulated can be found in the whole extent of medieval
+ literature. The main feature of the philosophy of Maimonides and of the
+ systems based upon it is rationalism, not a dry, scholastic, abstract
+ rationalism, but a living rationalism, embracing the whole field of the
+ most exalted psychic phenomena. It is not philosophy pure and simple, but
+ religious philosophy, an harmonization, more or less felicitous, of the
+ postulates of reason with the dogmas of faith. It is reason mitigated by
+ faith, and faith regulated by reason. In the darkness of the middle ages,
+ when the Romish Church impregnated religion with the crudest
+ superstitions, going so far as to forbid its adherents to read the Bible,
+ and when the greatest philosopher representatives of the Church, like
+ Albertus Magnus, would have rejected offhand, as a childish fancy or,
+ indeed, as an heretical chimera, any attempt to rescue the lower classes
+ of the people from their wretched state of spiritual servitude&mdash;in a
+ time like this, the truly majestic spectacle is presented of a philosophy
+ declaring war on superstition, and setting out to purify the religious
+ notions of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a breath of this ample spiritual development of the Jews of Arabic
+ Spain reached the Jews living in the Christian countries of Europe. Their
+ circumstances were too grievous, and in sombreness their inner life
+ matched their outer estate. Their horizon was as contracted as the streets
+ of the Jewries in which they were penned. The crusades (beginning in 1096)
+ clearly showed the Jews of France and Germany what sentiments their
+ neighbors cherished towards them. They were the first returns which
+ Christianity paid the Jewish people for its old-time teaching of religion.
+ The descendants of the "chosen people," the originators of the Bible, were
+ condemned to torture of a sort to exhaust their spiritual heritage.
+ Judaism suffered the tragic fate of King Lear. Was it conceivable that the
+ horrors&mdash;the rivers of blood, the groans of massacred communities,
+ the serried ranks of martyrs, the ever-haunting fear of the morrow&mdash;should
+ fail to leave traces in the character of Judaism? The Jewish people
+ realized its imminent danger. It convulsively held fast to its precious
+ relics, clung to the pillars of its religion, which it regarded as the
+ only asylum. The Jewish spirit again withdrew from the outer world. It
+ gave itself up wholly to the study of the Talmud. In northern France and
+ in Germany, Talmudic learning degenerated into the extreme of scholastic
+ pedantry, the lot of every branch of science that is lopped off from the
+ main trunk of knowledge, and vegetates in a heavy, dank atmosphere,
+ lacking light and air. Rashi (1064-1105), whose genial activity began
+ before the first crusade, opened up Jewish religious literature to the
+ popular mind, by his systematic commentaries on the Bible and the Talmud.
+ On the other hand, the Tossafists, the school of commentators succeeding
+ him, by their petty quibbling and hairsplitting casuistry made the
+ Talmudic books more intricate and less intelligible. Such being the
+ intellectual bias of the age, a sober, rationalistic philosophy could not
+ assert itself. In lieu of an Ibn Ezra or a Maimonides, we have Jehuda
+ Hachassid and Eliezer of Worms, with their mystical books of devotion, <i>Sefer
+ Chassidim, Rokeach</i>, etc., filled with pietistic reflections on the
+ other world, in which the earth figures as a "vale of tears." Poetry
+ likewise took on the dismal hue of its environment. Instead of the varied
+ lyrical notes of Gabirol and Halevi, who sang the weal and woe, not only
+ of the nation, but also of the individual, and lost themselves in
+ psychologic analysis, there now fall upon our ear the melancholy,
+ heartrending strains of synagogue poetry, the harrowing outcries that
+ forced themselves from the oppressed bosoms of the hunted people, the
+ prayerful lamentations that so often shook the crumbling walls of the
+ medieval synagogues at the very moment when, full of worshipers, they were
+ fired by the inhuman crusaders. A mighty chord reverberates in this
+ poetry: <i>Morituri te salutant</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One small spot there was, in the whole of Europe, in which Jews could
+ still hope to endure existence and enjoy a measure of security. This was
+ Southern France, or the Provence. The population of Provence had
+ assimilated the culture of the neighboring country, Arabic Spain, and
+ become the mediator between it and the rest of Europe. This work of
+ mediation was undertaken primarily by the Jews. In the twelfth century
+ several universities existed in Provence, which were frequented in great
+ numbers by students from all countries. At these universities the teachers
+ of philosophy, medicine, and other branches of science were for the most
+ part Jews. The rationalistic philosophy of the Spanish Jews was there
+ proclaimed <i>ex cathedra</i>. The Tibbonides translated all the more
+ important works of the Jewish thinkers of Spain from Arabic into Hebrew.
+ The Kimchis devoted themselves to grammatical studies and the
+ investigation of the Bible. In Montpellier, Narbonne, and Lunel,
+ intellectual work was in full swing. Rational ideas gradually leavened the
+ masses of the Provençal population. Conscience freed from intellectual
+ trammels began to revolt against the oppression exercised by the Roman
+ clergy. Through the Albigensian heresy, Innocent III, founder of the papal
+ power, had his attention directed to the Jews, whom he considered the
+ dangerous protagonists of rationalism. The "heresy" was stifled, Provence
+ in all her magnificence fell a prey to the Roman mania for destruction,
+ and, on the ruins of a noble civilization, the Dominican Inquisition raged
+ with all its horrors (1213).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thenceforward the Catholic Church devoted herself to a hostile watch upon
+ the Jews. Either she persecuted them directly through her Inquisition, or
+ indirectly through her omnipotent influence on kings and peoples. In the
+ hearts of the citizens of medieval Europe, the flame of religious hatred
+ was enkindled, and religious hatred served as a cloak for the basest
+ passions. Jewish history from that time on became a history of
+ uninterrupted suffering. The Lateran Council declared the Jews to be
+ outcasts, and designed a peculiar, dishonorable badge for them, a round
+ patch of yellow cloth, to be worn on their upper garment (1215). In France
+ the Jews became by turns the victims of royal rapacity and the scapegoats
+ of popular fanaticism. Massacres, confiscations, banishments followed by
+ dearly purchased permission to return, by renewed restrictions,
+ persecutions, and oppressions&mdash;these were the measures that
+ characterized the treatment of the Jews in France until their final
+ expulsion (1394). In Germany the Jews were not so much hated as despised.
+ They were <i>servi camerae</i>, serfs of the state, and as such had to pay
+ oppressive taxes. Besides, they were limited to the meanest trades and to
+ usury and peddling. They were shut up in their narrow Jewries, huddled in
+ wretched cabins, which clustered about the dilapidated synagogue in a
+ shamefaced way. What strange homes! What gigantic misery, what boundless
+ suffering dumbly borne, was concealed in those crumbling, curse-laden
+ dwellings! And yet, how resplendent they were with spiritual light, what
+ exalted virtues, what lofty heroism they harbored! In those gloomy,
+ tumbledown Jew houses, intellectual endeavor was at white heat. The torch
+ of faith blazed clear in them, and on the pure domestic hearth played a
+ gentle flame. In the abject, dishonored son of the Ghetto was hidden an
+ intellectual giant. In his nerveless body, bent double by suffering, and
+ enveloped in the shabby old cloak still further disfigured by the yellow
+ wheel, dwelt the soul of a thinker. The son of the Ghetto might have worn
+ his badge with pride, for in truth it was a medal of distinction awarded
+ by the papal Church to the Jews, for dauntlessness and courage. The
+ awkward, puny Jew in his way was stronger and braver than a German knight
+ armed cap-a-pie, for he was penetrated by the faith that "moves
+ mountains." And when the worst came to the worst, he demonstrated his
+ courage. When his peaceful home was stormed by the bestialized hordes of
+ Armleder, or the drunken bands of the Flagellants, or the furious avengers
+ of the "Black Death," he did not yield, did not purchase life by
+ disgraceful treason. With invincible courage he put his head under the
+ executioner's axe, and breathed forth his heroic spirit with the
+ enthusiastic cry: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is One."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the turn of the Spanish Jews arrived. For the unbroken peace
+ they had enjoyed, they had to atone by centuries of unexampled suffering.
+ By degrees, the Arabs were forced out of the Pyrenean Peninsula, and the
+ power they had to abdicate was assumed by the Catholic kings of Castile
+ and Aragon. In 1236 occurred the fall of Cordova, the most important
+ centre of Arabic Jewish culture. Thereafter Arab power held sway only in
+ the province of Granada. The fortunes of the Spanish Jews underwent a
+ calamitous change. The kings and the upper ten thousand were, indeed,
+ favorably disposed toward them. At the courts of Castile and Aragon, the
+ Jews were active as ministers, physicians, astronomers. But the people,
+ incited by the propaganda of the clerics, nursed frightful hatred against
+ the Jews, not only as "infidels," but also as intellectual aristocrats.
+ The rage of the populace was the combustible material in the terrific
+ explosions that occurred periodically, in the bloody saturnalia of the
+ Pastouraux (1320), in the Black Death riots (1348), in the massacre of
+ Seville (1391).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dire blows of fortune were unable to weigh down the Spanish Jew,
+ accustomed to independence, as they did the German Jew. He carried his
+ head proudly on high, for he was conscious that in all respects he stood
+ above the rabble pursuing him, above its very leaders, the clerics. In
+ spite of untoward fate his mental development proceeded, but inevitably it
+ was modified by the trend of the times. By the side of the philosophic
+ tendency of the previous age, a mystical tendency appeared in literature.
+ The Kabbala, with its mist-shrouded symbolism, so grateful to the feelings
+ and the imagination, chimed in better than rationalistic philosophy with
+ the depressed humor under which the greater part of the Jews were then
+ laboring. Another force antagonistic to rationalistic philosophy was the
+ Rabbinism transplanted from France and Germany. The controversy between
+ Rabbinism and philosophy, which dragged itself through three-quarters of a
+ century (1232-1305), ended in the formal triumph of Rabbinism. However,
+ philosophic activity merely languished, it did not cease entirely; in
+ fact, the three currents for some time ran along parallel with one
+ another. Next to the pillars of Rabbinism, Asheri, Rashba, Isaac ben
+ Sheshet, loomed up the philosophers, Gersonides (Ralbag), Kreskas, and
+ Albo, and a long line of Kabbalists, beginning with Nachmanides and Moses
+ de Leon, the compiler of the Zohar, and ending with the anonymous authors
+ of the mysterious "Kana and Pelia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The times grew less and less propitious. Catholicism steadily gained
+ ground in Spain. The scowling Dominican put forward his claim upon the
+ Jewish soul with vehement emphasis, and made every effort to drag it into
+ the bosom of the alone-saving Church. The conversion of the Jews would
+ have been a great triumph, indeed, for Catholicism militant. The
+ conversion methods of the Dominican monk were of a most insinuating kind&mdash;he
+ usually began with a public religious disputation. Unfortunately, the Jews
+ were experts in the art of debate, and too often by their bold replies
+ covered the self-sufficient dignitaries of Rome with confusion. The Jews
+ should have known, from bitter experience, that such boldness would not be
+ passed over silently. From sumptuous debating hall to Dominican prison and
+ scaffold was but a short step. In 1391, one of these worthy soul-catchers,
+ Bishop Ferdinando Martinez, set the fanatical mob of Seville on the Jews,
+ and not without success. Terrorized by the threat of death, many accepted
+ Catholicism under duress. But they became Christians only in appearance;
+ in reality they remained true to the faith of their fathers, and, in
+ secret, running the risk of loss of life, they fulfilled all the Jewish
+ ordinances. This is the prologue to the thrilling Marrano tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, the moment approached when gloomy Catholicism attained to
+ unchallenged supremacy in the Pyrenean Peninsula. On the ruins of the
+ enlightened culture of the Arabs, Ferdinand the Catholic and Isabella of
+ Castile reared the reactionary government of medieval Rome. The
+ Inquisition was introduced (1480). Torquemada presided as high priest over
+ the rites attending the human sacrifices. <i>Ad gloriam ecclesiae</i>, the
+ whole of Spain was illuminated. Everywhere the funeral pyres of the
+ Inquisition flared to the skies, the air was rent by the despairing
+ shrieks of martyrs enveloped in flames or racked by tortures, the prisons
+ overflowed with Marranos,&mdash;all instruments of torture were vigorously
+ plied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the hour of redemption struck: in 1492 all Jews were driven from
+ Spain, and a few years later from Portugal. Jewish-Arabic culture after
+ five centuries of ascendency suffered a sudden collapse. The unhappy
+ people again grasped its staff, and wandered forth into the world without
+ knowing whither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ JEWS (1492-1789)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expulsion from Spain was a stunning blow. The hoary martyr people
+ which had defied so many storms in its long life was for a moment dazed.
+ The soil of Europe was quaking under its feet. At the time when the
+ medieval period had formally come to a close for Occidental Christendom,
+ and the modern period had opened, the middle ages continued in unmitigated
+ brutality for the Jews. If anything, the life of the Jews had become more
+ unendurable than before. What, indeed, had the much-vaunted modern age to
+ offer them? In the ranks of the humanistic movement Reuchlin alone stood
+ forth prominently as the advocate of the Jews, and he was powerless before
+ the prejudices of the populace. The Reformation in Germany and elsewhere
+ had illuminated the minds of the people, but had not softened their
+ hearts. Luther himself, the creator of the Reformation, was not innocent
+ of hating the followers of an alien faith. The Jews especially did not
+ enjoy too great a measure of his sympathies. The wars growing out of the
+ Reformation, which in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries devastated
+ Europe in the name of religion, were not calculated to favor the spread of
+ tolerance and milder manners. The conflict raging in the bosom of the
+ Church and setting her own children by the ears, was yet insufficient to
+ divert her maternal care from her "unbelieving" stepchildren. In Spain and
+ Portugal, stakes continued to burn two centuries longer for the benefit of
+ the Marranos, the false Christians. In Germany and Austria, the Jews were
+ kept in the same condition of servitude as before. Their economic
+ circumstances were appalling. They were forced to emigrate <i>en masse</i>
+ to Poland, which offered the adherents of their faith a comparatively
+ quiet life, and by and by was invested with the Jewish hegemony. Some of
+ the smaller states and independent towns of Italy also afforded the Jews
+ an asylum, though one not always to be depended upon. A group of
+ hard-driven Spanish exiles, for instance, under the leadership of
+ Abarbanel had found peace in Italy. The rest had turned to Turkey and her
+ province Palestine,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time, indeed, the Jewish spiritual centre was located in Turkey.
+ What Europe, old, Christian, and hardhearted, refused the Jews, was
+ granted them by Turkey, young, Mussulman, and liberal. On hearing of the
+ banishment of the Jews from Spain, Sultan Bajazet exclaimed: "How can you
+ call Ferdinand of Aragon a wise king, the same Ferdinand who has made his
+ land poor and enriched ours?" His amazement characterizes the relation of
+ Turkey to the Jews of the day. The one-time Marrano, Joseph Nassi, rose to
+ be a considerable dignitary at the court of Sultan Selim (1566-1580).
+ Occasionally he succeeded, by diplomatic means, in wreaking vengeance upon
+ European courts in retaliation for the brutal tortures inflicted upon his
+ people. With the generosity of a Maecenas, he assembled Jewish scholars
+ and poets, and surrounded himself with a sunlit atmosphere of
+ intellectuality and talent. All other Jewish communities looked up to that
+ of Constantinople. Now and again its rabbis played the part of Patriarchs
+ of the synagogue. To this commanding position the rabbis of Palestine
+ especially were inclined to lay claim. They even attempted to restore the
+ Patriarchate, and the famous controversy between Jacob Berab and Levi ben
+ Chabib regarding the <i>Semicha</i> is another evidence of the same
+ assertive tendency. Among the Spanish exiles settled in the Holy Land a
+ peculiar spiritual current set in. The storm-tossed wanderers, but now
+ returned to their native Jordan from the shores of the blood-stained Tagus
+ and Guadalquivir, were mightily moved at the sight of their ancestral
+ home. Ahasuerus, who on his thorn-strewn pilgrim's path had drained the
+ cup of woe to the dregs, suddenly caught sight of the home of his
+ childhood razed level with the ground. The precious, never-to-be-forgotten
+ ruins exhaled the home feeling, which took possession of him with
+ irresistible charm. Into his soul there flowed sweet memories of a golden
+ youth, past beyond recall. The impact of these emotions enkindled
+ passionate "longing for Zion" in the heart of the forlorn, homeless
+ martyr. He was seized by torturing thirst for political resurrection. Such
+ melancholy feelings and vehement outbursts found expression in the
+ practical Kabbala, originating with Ari (Isaac Luria) and his famous Safed
+ school. A mystical belief in the coming of Messiah thenceforward became
+ one of the essential elements of the Jewish spirit. It vanquished the
+ heart of the learned Joseph Karo, who had brought Rabbinism to its climax
+ by the compilation of his celebrated ritual code, the Shulchan Aruch. With
+ equal force it dominated the being of Solomon Molcho, the enthusiastic
+ youth who, at one time a Marrano, on his public return to Judaism
+ proclaimed the speedy regeneration of Israel. He sealed his faith in his
+ prophecy with death at the stake (1532). The Marranos beyond the Pyrenees
+ and the unfortunate Jews of Italy, who, in the second half of the
+ sixteenth century had to bear the brunt of papal fanaticism, on the
+ increase since the Reformation, were kept in a state of constant
+ excitement by this Messianic doctrine, with its obscure stirrings of hope.
+ A mournful national feeling pervades the Jewish literature of the time.
+ Recollections of torments endured enflamed all hearts. A series of
+ chronicles were thus produced that record the centuries of Jewish
+ martyrdom&mdash;<i>Jocha-sin, Shebet Jehuda, Emek ha-Bacha</i>, etc. The
+ art of printing, even then developed to a considerable degree of
+ perfection, became for the dispersed Jews the strongest bond of spiritual
+ union. The papal <i>index librorum prohibitorum</i> was impotent in the
+ face of the all-pervading propaganda for thought and feeling carried on by
+ the printing press.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Palestine and Turkey, Holland for a time became the spiritual centre
+ of the scattered Jews (in the seventeenth century). Holland was warmly
+ attached to the cause of liberty. When it succeeded in freeing itself from
+ the clutches of fanatical Spain and her rapacious king, Philip II, it
+ inaugurated the golden era of liberty of conscience, of peaceful
+ development in culture and industry, and granted an asylum to the
+ persecuted and abandoned of all countries. By the thousands the harassed
+ Ghetto sons, especially the Marranos from Spain and Portugal, migrated to
+ Holland. Amsterdam became a second Cordova. The intellectual life was
+ quickened. Freedom from restraint tended to break down the national
+ exclusivism of the Jew, and intercourse with his liberal surroundings
+ varied his mental pursuits. Rabbinism, the Kabbala, philosophy, national
+ poetry&mdash;they all had their prominent representatives in Holland.
+ These manifold tendencies were united in the literary activity of Manasseh
+ ben Israel, a scholar of extensive, though not intensive, encyclopedic
+ attainments. Free thought and religious rationalism were embodied in Uriel
+ Acosta. To a still higher degree they were illustrated in the theory of
+ life expounded by the immortal author of the "Theologico-Political
+ Tractate" (1640-1677). This advanced state of culture in Holland did not
+ fail to react upon the neighboring countries. Under the impulse of
+ enthusiasm for the Bible Puritan England under Cromwell opened its portals
+ to the Jews. In Italy, in the dank atmosphere of rabbinical dialectics and
+ morbid mysticism, great figures loom up&mdash;Leon de Modena, the
+ antagonist of Rabbinism and of the Kabbala, and Joseph del Medigo,
+ mathematician, philosopher, and mystic, the disciple of Galileo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These purple patches were nothing more than the accidents of a transition
+ period. The people as a whole was on the decline. The Jewish mind darted
+ hither and thither, like a startled bird seeking its nest. Holland or
+ Turkey was an inadequate substitute for Spain, if only for the reason that
+ but a tiny fraction of the Jews had found shelter in either. The Jewish
+ national centre must perforce coincide with the numerical centre of the
+ dispersed people, in which, moreover, conditions must grant Jews the
+ possibility of living undisturbed in closely compacted masses, and of
+ perfecting a well-knit organization of social and individual life. Outside
+ of Spain these conditions were fulfilled only by Poland, which gradually,
+ beginning with the sixteenth century, assumed the hegemony over the Jewry
+ of the world. This marks the displacement of the Sephardic (Spanish, in a
+ broader sense, Romanic) element, and the supremacy of the Ashkenazic
+ (German-Polish) element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poland had been a resort for Jewish immigrants from Germany since the
+ outbreak of the Crusades, until, in the sixteenth century, it rose to the
+ position of a Jewish centre of the first magnitude. As the merchant middle
+ class, the Jews were protected and advanced by the kings and the Szlachta.
+ The consequent security of their position induced so rapid a growth of the
+ Jewish element that in a little while the Jews of Poland outnumbered those
+ of the old Jewish settlements in Occidental Europe. The numerous
+ privileges granted the Jews, by Boleslaus of Kalish (1246), Kasimir the
+ Great (1347-1370), Witowt (1388), Kasimir IV (1447), and some of their
+ successors, fortified their position in the extended territory covered by
+ Poland, Lithuania, and the Ukraine. Their peculiar circumstances in Poland
+ left an impress upon their inner life. An intense mental activity was
+ called forth. This activity can be traced back to German beginnings,
+ though at the same time it is made up of many original elements. For a
+ space Rabbinism monopolized the intellectual endeavors of the Polish Jews.
+ The rabbi of Cracow, Moses Isserles, and the rabbi of Ostrog, Solomon
+ Luria (d. 1572), disputed first place with the foremost rabbinical
+ authorities of other countries. Their decisions and circular letters
+ regarding religious and legal questions were accorded binding force.
+ Associates and successors of theirs founded Talmud academies throughout
+ the country, and large numbers of students attended them. Commentators
+ upon the Talmud and expounders of classical works in Jewish theological
+ literature appeared in shoals. Jewish printing establishments in Cracow
+ and Lublin were assiduous in turning out a mass of writings, which spread
+ the fame of the Polish rabbis to the remotest communities. The large
+ autonomy enjoyed by the Polish and Lithuanian Jews conferred executive
+ power upon rabbinical legislation. The <i>Kahal</i>, or Jewish communal
+ government, to a certain degree invested with judicial and administrative
+ competence, could not do without the guiding hand of the rabbis as
+ interpreters of the law. The guild of rabbis, on their side, chose a
+ "college of judges," with fairly extensive jurisdiction, from among their
+ own members. The organization of the Rabbinical Conferences, or the
+ "Synods of the Four Countries," formed the keystone of this intricate
+ social-spiritual hierarchy. The comprehensive inner autonomy and the
+ system of Talmud academies (<i>Yeshiboth</i>) that covered the whole of
+ Poland remind one of the brilliant days of the Exilarchate and the
+ Babylonia of the Geonim. One element was lacking, there was no versatile,
+ commanding thinker like Saadia Gaon. Secular knowledge and philosophy were
+ under the ban in Poland. Rabbinism absorbed the whole output of
+ intellectual energy. As little as the Poles resembled the Arabs of the
+ "golden age," did the Polish Jews resemble their brethren in faith in the
+ Orient at Saadia's time or in the Spain of Gabirol and Maimonides.
+ Isolation and clannishness were inevitable in view of the character of the
+ Christian environment and the almost insuperable barriers raised between
+ the classes of Polish society. But it was this exclusiveness that gave
+ peculiar stability and completeness to the life of the Jew as an
+ individual and as a member of Jewish society, and it was the same
+ exclusiveness that afforded opportunity for the development of a sharply
+ defined culture, for its fixation to the point of resisting violent shocks
+ and beyond the danger point of extinction through foreign invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fateful year 1648 formed a turning point in the history of the Polish
+ Jews, as in the history of the countries belonging to the Polish crown.
+ The Cossack butcheries and wars of extermination of 1648-1658 were the
+ same for the Polish Jews that the Crusades, the Black Death, and all the
+ other occasions for carnage had been for the Jews of Western Europe. It
+ seemed as though history desired to avoid the reproach of partiality, and
+ hastened to mete out even-handed justice by apportioning the same measure
+ of woe to the Jews of Poland as to the Jews of Western Europe. But the
+ Polish Jews were prepared to accept the questionable gift from the hands
+ of history. They had mounted that eminence of spiritual stability on which
+ suffering loses the power to weaken its victim, but, on the contrary,
+ endues him with strength. More than ever they shrank into their shell.
+ They shut themselves up more completely in their inner world, and became
+ morally dulled against the persecutions, the bitter humiliations, the deep
+ scorn, which their surroundings visited upon them. The Polish Jew
+ gradually accustomed himself to his pitiable condition. He hardly knew
+ that life might be other than it was. That the Polish lord to whom he was
+ a means of entertainment might treat him with a trace of respect, or that
+ his neighbors, the middle class merchant, the German guild member, and the
+ Little Russian peasant, might cherish kindly feelings toward him, he could
+ not conceive as a possibility. Seeing himself surrounded by enemies, he
+ took precautions to fortify his camp, not so much to protect himself
+ against hostile assaults from without&mdash;they were inevitable&mdash;as
+ to paralyze the disastrous consequences of such assaults in his inner
+ world. To compass this end he brought into play all the means suggested by
+ his exceptional position before the law and by his own peculiar social
+ constitution. The <i>Kahal</i>, the autonomous rabbinical administration
+ of communal affairs, more and more assumed the character of an inner
+ dictatorship. Jewish society was persistently kept under the discipline of
+ rigid principles. In many affairs the synagogue attained the position of a
+ court of final appeal. The people were united, or rather packed, into a
+ solid mass by purely mechanical processes&mdash;by pressure from without,
+ and by drawing tight a noose from within. Besides this social factor
+ tending to consolidate the Jewish people into a separate union, an
+ intellectual lever was applied to produce the same result. Rabbinism
+ employed the mystical as its adjutant. The one exercised control over all
+ minds, the other over all hearts. The growth of mysticism was fostered
+ both by the unfortunate conditions under which the Polish Jews endured
+ existence and by the Messianic movements which made their appearance among
+ the Jews of other countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second half of the seventeenth century, mysticism reached its
+ zenith in Turkey, the country in which, had stood the cradle of the
+ "practical Kabbala." The teachings of Ari, Vital, and the school
+ established by them spread like wildfire. Messianic extravagances
+ intoxicated the baited and persecuted people. In Smyrna appeared the false
+ Messiah, Sabbatai Zebi. As by magic he attracted to himself a tremendous
+ company of adherents in the East and in the West. For a quarter of a
+ century (1650-1676), he kept the Jewish communities everywhere in a state
+ of quivering suspense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The harassed people tossed to and fro like a fever patient, and raved
+ about political re-birth. Its delirious visions still further heated its
+ agitated blood. It came to its senses but slowly. Not even the apostasy
+ and death of Sabbatai Zebi sufficed to sober all his followers. Under the
+ guise of a symbolic faith in a Messiah, many of them, publicly or
+ secretly, continued the propaganda for his doctrines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This propaganda prepared the fertile soil from which, in the eighteenth
+ century, shot up Messianic systems, tending to split Judaism into sects.
+ Nowhere did the mystical teachings evoke so ready a response as in Poland,
+ the very centre of Judaism. At first an ally of the rabbinical school,
+ mysticism grown passionate and uncontrollable now and again acted as the
+ violent opponent of Rabbinism. Secret devotion to the Sabbatian doctrines,
+ which had made their home in Poland, sometimes led to such extremes in
+ dogma and ethics that the rabbis could not contain themselves. Chayyim
+ Malach, Judah Chassid, and other Galician mystics, in the second decade of
+ the eighteenth century brought down upon themselves a rabbinical decree of
+ excommunication. The mystical tendency was the precursor of the heretical
+ half-Christian sect of Frankists, who ventured so far as to lift a hand
+ against the fundamentals of Judaism: they rejected the Talmud in favor of
+ the Zohar (1756-1773). At the same time a much more profound movement,
+ instinct with greater vitality, made its appearance among the
+ Polish-Jewish masses, a movement rooted in their social and spiritual
+ organization. The wretched, debased condition of the average Jew,
+ conjoined with the traditions of the Kabbala and the excrescences of
+ Rabbinism, created a foothold for Chassidic teaching. Chassidism replaced
+ Talmudic ratiocination by exalted religious sentiment. By the force of
+ enthusiasm for faith, it drew its adherents together into a firmly welded
+ unit in contrast with Rabbinism, which sought the same goal by the aid of
+ the formal law. Scenting danger, the rabbinical hierarchy declared war
+ upon the Kabbala. Emden opposed Eibeschütz, the Polish Sabbatians and
+ Frankists were fought to the death, the Wilna Gaon organized a campaign
+ against the Chassidim. Too late! Rabbinism was too old, too arid, to tone
+ down the impulsive outbreaks of passion among the people. In their
+ religious exaltation the masses were looking for an elixir. They were
+ languishing, not for light to illumine the reason, but for warmth to set
+ the heart aglow. They desired to lose themselves in ecstatic
+ self-renunciation. Chassidism and its necessary dependence upon the Zaddik
+ offered the masses the means of this forgetfulness of self through faith.
+ They were the medium through which the people saw the world in a rosy
+ light, and the consequences following upon their prevalence were seen in a
+ marked intensification of Jewish exclusiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same aloofness characterizes the Jews of the rest of the eighteenth
+ century diaspora. Wherever, as in Germany, Austria, and Italy, Jews were
+ settled in considerable numbers, they were separated from their
+ surroundings by forbidding Ghetto walls. On the whole, no difference is
+ noticeable between conditions affecting Jews in one country and those in
+ another. Everywhere they were merely tolerated, everywhere oppressed and
+ humiliated. The bloody persecutions of the middle ages were replaced by
+ the burden of the exceptional laws, which in practice degraded the Jews
+ socially to an inferior race, to citizens of a subordinate degree. The
+ consequences were uniformly the same in all countries: spiritual isolation
+ and a morbid religious mood. During the first half of the "century of
+ reason," Jewry presented the appearance of an exhausted wanderer, heavily
+ dragging himself on his way, his consciousness clouded, his trend of
+ thought obviously anti-rationalistic. At the very moment in which Europe
+ was beginning to realize its medieval errors and repent of them, and the
+ era of universal ideals of humanity was dawning, Judaism raised barricades
+ between itself and the world at large. Elijah Gaon and Israel Besht were
+ the contemporaries of Voltaire and Rousseau. Apparently there was no
+ possibility of establishing communication between these two diametrically
+ opposed worlds. But history is a magician. Not far from the Poland
+ enveloped in medieval darkness, the morning light of a new life was
+ breaking upon slumbering Jewry in German lands. New voices made themselves
+ heard, reverberating like an echo to the appeal issued by the "great
+ century" in behalf of a spiritual and social regeneration of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two phenomena signalized the beginning of the latest period in Jewish
+ history: the lofty activity of Mendelssohn and the occurrence of the great
+ French Revolution. The man stands for the spiritual emancipation of the
+ Jews, the movement for their political emancipation. At bottom, these two
+ phenomena were by no means the ultimate causes of the social and spiritual
+ regeneration of the Jewish people. They were only the products of the more
+ general causes that had effected a similar regeneration in all the peoples
+ of Western Europe. The new currents, the abandonment of effete
+ intellectual and social forms, the substitution of juster and more
+ energetic principles, the protest against superstition and despotism&mdash;all
+ these traits had a common origin, the resuscitation of reason and free
+ thought, which dominated all minds without asking whether they belonged to
+ Jew or to Christian. It might seem that the rejuvenation of the Jews had
+ been consummated more rapidly than the rejuvenation of the other peoples.
+ The latter had had two centuries, the period elapsing since the middle
+ ages, that is, the period between the Reformation and the great
+ Revolution, in which to prepare for a more rational and a more humane
+ conduct of life. As for the Jews, their middle ages began much later, and
+ ended later, almost on the eve of 1789, so that the revolution in their
+ minds and their mode of life had to accomplish itself hastily, under the
+ urgence of swiftly crowding events, by the omission of intermediate
+ stages. But it must be taken into consideration that long before, in the
+ Judeo-Hellenic and in the Arabic-Spanish period, the Jews had passed
+ through their "century of reason." In spite of the intervening ages of
+ suffering and gloom, the faculty of assimilating new principles had
+ survived. For the descendants of Philo and Maimonides the rationalistic
+ movement of the eighteenth century was in part a repetition of a
+ well-known historical process. They had had the benefit of a similar
+ course of studies before, and, therefore, had no need to cram on the eve
+ of the final examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In point of fact, the transformation in the life of the Jews did take
+ place with extraordinary swiftness. It was hastened in France by the
+ principles of the Revolution and the proclamation of the civil equality of
+ Jews with the other citizens. In Germany, however, it advanced upon purely
+ spiritual lines. Mendelssohn and Lessing, the heralds of spiritual reform,
+ who exposed old prejudices, carried on their labors at a time in which the
+ Jews still stood beyond the pale of the law, a condition which it did not
+ occur to Frederick II, "the philosopher upon the throne," to improve. A
+ whole generation was destined to pass before the civil emancipation of the
+ German Jews was accomplished. Meantime their spiritual emancipation
+ proceeded apace, without help from the ruling powers. A time so early as
+ the end of the eighteenth century found the German Jews in a position to
+ keep step with their Christian fellow-citizens in cultural progress.
+ Enlightened Jews formed close connections with enlightened Christians, and
+ joined them in the universal concerns of mankind as confederates espousing
+ the same fundamental principles. If they renounced some of their religious
+ and national traditions, it was by no means out of complaisance for their
+ neighbors. They were guided solely and alone by those universal principles
+ that forced non-Jews as well as Jews to reject many traditions as
+ incompatible with reason and conscience. Non-Jews and Jews alike yielded
+ themselves up to the fresh inspiration of the time, and permitted
+ themselves to be carried along by the universal transforming movement.
+ Mendelssohn himself, circumspect and wise, did not move off from religious
+ national ground. But the generation after him abandoned his position for
+ that of universal humanity, or, better, German nationality. His successors
+ intoxicated themselves with deep draughts of the marvelous poetry created
+ by the magic of Goethe and Schiller. They permitted themselves to be
+ rushed along by the liberty doctrines of 1789, they plunged head over
+ heels into the vortex of romanticism, and took an active part in the
+ conspicuous movements of Europe, political, social, and literary, as
+ witness Bôrne, Heine, and their fellow-combatants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excitement soon evaporated. When the noise of the liberty love-feasts
+ had subsided, when the cruel reaction (after 1814) had settled heavily
+ upon the Europe of the nineteenth century, and God's earth had again
+ become the arena of those agents of darkness whom dreamers had thought
+ buried forever beneath the ruins of the old order, then the German Jews,
+ or such of them as thought, came to their senses. The more intelligent
+ Jewish circles realized that, in devotion to the German national movement,
+ they had completely neglected their own people. Yet their people, too, had
+ needs, practical or spiritual, had its peculiar national sphere of
+ activity, circumscribed, indeed, by the larger sphere of mankind's
+ activities as by a concentric circle, but by no means merged into it. To
+ atone for their sin, thinking Jews retraced their steps. They took in hand
+ the transforming of Jewish inner life, the simplification of the extremely
+ complicated Jewish ritual, the remodeling of pedagogic methods, and, above
+ all, the cultivation of the extended fields of Jewish science, whose head
+ and front is Jewish historical research in all its vastness and detail.
+ Heine's friend, Zunz, laid the cornerstone of Jewish science in the second
+ decade of the nineteenth century. His work was taken up by a goodly
+ company of zealous and able builders occupied for half a century with the
+ task of rearing the proud edifice of a scientific historical literature,
+ in which national self-consciousness was sheltered and fostered. At the
+ very height of this reforming and literary activity, German Jewry was
+ overwhelmed by the civil emancipation of 1848. Again a stirring movement
+ drew them into sympathy with a great general cause, but this time without
+ drawing them away from Jewish national interests. Cultural and civil
+ assimilation was accomplished as an inner compelling necessity, as a
+ natural outcome of living. But spiritual assimilation, in the sense of a
+ merging of Judaism in foreign elements, was earnestly repudiated by the
+ noblest representatives of Judaism. It was their ideal that universal
+ activity and national activity should be pursued to the prejudice of
+ neither, certainly not to the exclusion of one or the other, but in
+ perfect harmony with each other. In point of fact, it may be asserted
+ that, in spite of a frequent tendency to go to the one or the other
+ extreme, the two currents, the universal and the national, co-exist within
+ German Jewry, and there is no fear of their uniting, they run parallel
+ with each other. The Jewish genius is versatile. Without hurt to itself it
+ can be active in all sorts of careers: in politics and in civil life, in
+ parliament and on the lecture platform, in all branches of science and
+ departments of literature, in every one of the chambers of mankind's
+ intellectual laboratory. At the same time it has its domestic hearth, its
+ national sanctuary; it has its sphere of original work and its
+ self-consciousness, its national interests and spiritual ideals rooted in
+ the past of the Jew. By the side of a Lassalle, a Lasker, and a Marx
+ towers a Riesser, a Geiger, a Graetz. The leveling process unavoidably
+ connected with widespread culture, so far from causing spiritual
+ desolation in German Judaism, has, on the contrary, furnished redundant
+ proof that even under present conditions, so unfavorable to what is
+ individual and original, the Jewish people has preserved its vitality to
+ the full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An analogous movement stirred the other countries of Western Europe&mdash;France,
+ Italy, and England. The political emancipation of the Jews was
+ accomplished earlier in them than in Germany. The reconstruction of the
+ inner life, too, proceeded more quietly and regularly, without leaps and
+ bounds, and religious reform established itself by degrees. Yet even here,
+ where the Jewish contingent was insignificant, the spiritual physiognomy
+ of the Jews maintained its typical character. In these countries, as in
+ Germany, the Jew assimilated European culture with all its advantages and
+ its drawbacks. He was active on diplomatic fields, he devoted himself to
+ economic investigations, he produced intellectual creations of all kinds&mdash;first
+ and last he felt himself to be a citizen of his country. None the less he
+ was a loyal son of the Jewish people considered as a spiritual people with
+ an appointed task. Crémieux, Beaconsfield, Luzzatti are counterbalanced by
+ Salvador, Frank, Munk, Reggio, and Montefiore. All the good qualities and
+ the shortcomings distinctive of the civilization of modern times adhere to
+ the Jew. But at its worst modern civilization has not succeeded in
+ extinguishing the national spirit in Jewry. The national spirit continues
+ to live in the people, and it is this spirit that quickens the people. The
+ genius of Jewish history, as in centuries gone by, holds watch over the
+ sons of the "eternal people" scattered to all ends of the earth.
+ West-European Jewry may say of itself, without presumption: <i>Cogito ergo
+ sum</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russian Jewry, the Jewry that had been Polish, and that is counted by the
+ millions, might, if necessary, prove its existence by even more tangible
+ marks than Occidental Jewry. To begin with, the centre of gravity of the
+ Jewish nation lies in Russia, whose Jews not only outnumber those of the
+ rest of Europe, but continue to live in a compact mass. Besides, they have
+ preserved the original Jewish culture and their traditional physiognomy to
+ a higher degree than the Jews of other countries. The development of the
+ Russian Jews took a course very different from that of the Jews of the
+ West. This difference was conditioned by the tremendous contrast between
+ Russian culture and West-European culture, and by the change which the
+ external circumstances of Jews outside of Russia underwent during the
+ modern period. The admission of the Polish provinces into the Russian
+ Empire at the end of the eighteenth century found the numerous Jewish
+ population in an almost medieval condition, the same condition in which
+ the non-Jewish population of Russian Poland was at that time. The Polish
+ regime, as we saw above, had isolated the Jews alike in civil and
+ spiritual relations. The new order did not break down the barriers. The
+ masses of Jews cooped up in the "Pale of Settlement" were strong only by
+ reason of their inner unity, their firmly established patriarchal
+ organization. The bulwark of Rabbinism and the citadel of Chassidism
+ protected them against alien influences. They guarded their isolation
+ jealously. True to the law of inertia, they would not allow the privilege
+ of isolation to be wrested from them. They did not care to step beyond the
+ ramparts. Why, indeed, should the Jews have quitted their fortress, if
+ outside of their walls they could expect nothing but scorn and blows? The
+ unfortunates encaged in the sinister Pale of Settlement could have been
+ lured out of their exclusive position only by complete civil emancipation
+ combined with a higher degree of culture than had been attained by Russian
+ society, an impossible set of circumstances in the first half of the
+ nineteenth century. The legislative measures of the time, in so far as
+ they relate to the Jews, breathe the spirit of police surveillance rather
+ than of enlightenment and humanity. To civilizing and intellectual
+ influences from without the way was equally barred. Yet all this
+ watchfulness was of no avail. Nothing could prevent the liberty principles
+ espoused by the Jews of Western Europe from being smuggled into the Pale,
+ to leaven the sad, serried masses. A sluggish process of fermentation set
+ in, and culminated in the literary activity of Isaac Beer Levinsohn and of
+ the Wilna reformers of the second and fourth decades of the nineteenth
+ century. They were the harbingers of approaching spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When spring finally came (after 1855), and the sun sent down his genial
+ rays upon the wretched Jewry of Russia, life and activity began to appear
+ at once, especially in the upper strata. As in Germany, so in Russia
+ spiritual emancipation preceded political emancipation. Still shorn almost
+ entirely of the elementary rights of citizens, the Russian Jews
+ nevertheless followed their ideal promptings, and participated
+ enthusiastically in the movement for enlightenment which at that time held
+ the noblest of the Russians enthralled. In a considerable portion of the
+ Russian Jewish community a process of culture regeneration began, an eager
+ throwing off of outworn forms of life and thought, a swift adoption of
+ humane principles. Jewish young men crowded into the secular schools, in
+ which they came in close contact with their Christian contemporaries.
+ Influenced by their new companions, they gave themselves up to Russian
+ national movements, often at the cost of renunciation of self. Some of
+ them, indeed, in one-sided aspiration strove to become, not Russians, but
+ men. The influence exercised by literature was more moderate than that of
+ the schools. Rabbinic and Chassidistic literature, on the point of dying
+ out as it was, abandoned the field to the literature of enlightenment in
+ the Hebrew language, a literature of somewhat primitive character. It
+ consisted chiefly of naive novels and of didactic writings of publicists,
+ and lacked the solid scientific and historical element that forms the
+ crown of Western Jewish literature. It is indisputable, however, that it
+ exerted an educational influence. Besides, it possesses the merit of
+ having resuscitated one of the most valuable of Jewish national
+ possessions, the Hebrew language in its purity, which in Russia alone has
+ become a pliant instrument of literary expression. A still greater field
+ was reserved for the Jewish-Russian literature that arose in the
+ "sixties." It was called into being in order to present a vivid and true
+ picture of the social and spiritual interests of the Jews. Proceeding from
+ discussions of current political topics, this literature gradually widened
+ its limits so as to include Jewish history, Jewish science, and the
+ portrayal of Jewish life, and more and more approached the character of a
+ normal European literature. All this was in the making, and the most
+ important work had not yet begun. The lower strata of the people had not
+ been touched by the fresh air. In time, if all had gone well, they, too,
+ would have had their day. And if the minority of the Jewish people in the
+ West in a short span of time brought forth so many notable workers in so
+ many departments of life and thought, how much superior would be the
+ culture achievements of the Eastern majority! How vigorously the mighty
+ mental forces latent in Russian Jewry would develop when their advance was
+ no longer obstructed by all sorts of obstacles, and they could be applied
+ to every sphere of political, social, and intellectual life!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing of all this came to pass; exactly the opposite happened. Not only
+ were the barriers in the way of a prosperous, free development of Jewry
+ not removed, but fresh hindrances without number were multiplied. Some
+ spectre of the middle ages, some power of darkness, put brakes upon the
+ wheel of history. It first appeared in the West, under the name
+ anti-Semitism, among the dregs of European society. But in its earliest
+ abode it was and is still met with an abrupt rebuff on the part of the
+ most intelligent circles, those whom even the present age of decadence has
+ not succeeded in robbing of belief in lofty moral ideals. Anti-Semitism in
+ the West is in <i>anima vili</i>. Its cult is confined to a certain party,
+ which enjoys a rather scandalous reputation. But there are countries in
+ which this power of darkness, in the coarser form of Judophobia<a
+ href="#linknote-13" name="linknoteref-13" id="noteref-13"><small>13</small></a>,
+ has cast its baleful spell upon the most influential members of society
+ and upon the press. There it has ripened noxious fruit. Mocking at the
+ exalted ideals and the ethical traditions of religious and thinking
+ mankind, Judophobia shamelessly professes the dogma of misanthropy. Its
+ propaganda is bringing about the moral ruin of an immature society, not
+ yet confirmed in ethical or truly religious principles. Upon its victims,
+ the Jews, it has the same effect as the misfortunes of the middle ages,
+ which were meted out to our hoary people with overflowing measure, and
+ against which it learnt to assume an armor of steel. The recent severe
+ trials are having the same result as the persecutions of former days: they
+ do not weaken, on the contrary, they invigorate the Jewish spirit, they
+ spur on to thought, they stimulate the pulse of the people.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The hammer shivers glass,
+ But iron by its blows is forged."<a href="#linknote-14" name="linknoteref-14"
+ id="noteref-14">14</a>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The historical process Jewry has undergone repeatedly, it must undergo
+ once again. But now, too, in this blasting time of confusion and
+ dispersion, of daily torture and the horrors of international conflict,
+ "the keeper of Israel slumbereth not and sleepeth not." The Jewish spirit
+ is on the alert. It is ever purging and tempering itself in the furnace of
+ suffering. The people which justly bears the name of the veteran of
+ history withdraws and falls into a revery. It is not a narrow-minded
+ fanatic's flight from the world, but the concentrated thought of a
+ mourner. Jewry is absorbed in contemplation of its great, unparalleled
+ past. More than ever it is now in need of the teachings of its past, of
+ the moral support and the prudent counsels of its history, its four
+ thousand years of life crowded with checkered experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Let us return now to the starting point of our discussion, and endeavor to
+ establish the thoughts and lessons to be deduced from the course of Jewish
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all, Jewish history possesses the student with the conviction that
+ Jewry at all times, even in the period of political independence, was
+ pre-eminently a spiritual nation, and a spiritual nation it continues to
+ be in our own days, too. Furthermore, it inspires him with the belief that
+ Jewry, being a spiritual entity, cannot suffer annihilation: the body, the
+ mold, may be destroyed, the spirit is immortal. Bereft of country and
+ dispersed as it is, the Jewish nation lives, and will go on living,
+ because a creative principle permeates it, a principle that is the root of
+ its being and an indigenous product of its history. This principle
+ consists first in a sum of definite religious, moral, or philosophic
+ ideals, whose exponent at all times was the Jewish people, either in its
+ totality, or in the person of its most prominent representatives. Next,
+ this principle consists in a sum of historical memories, recollections of
+ what in the course of many centuries the Jewish people experienced,
+ thought, and felt, in the depths of its being. Finally, it consists in the
+ consciousness that true Judaism, which has accomplished great things for
+ humanity in the past, has not yet played out its part, and, therefore, may
+ not perish. In short, the Jewish people lives because it contains a living
+ soul which refuses to separate from its integument, and cannot be forced
+ out of it by heavy trials and misfortunes, such as would unfailingly
+ inflict mortal injury upon less sturdy organisms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This self-consciousness is the source from which the suffering Jewish soul
+ draws comfort. History speaks to it constantly through the mouth of the
+ great apostle who went forth from the midst of Israel eighteen hundred
+ years ago: "Call to remembrance the former days, in which, after ye were
+ enlightened, ye endured a great conflict of sufferings; partly, being made
+ a gazing-stock both by reproaches and afflictions; and partly, becoming
+ partakers with them that were so used.... Cast not away therefore your
+ boldness, which hath great recompense of reward" (Epistle to the Hebrews,
+ x, 32-34, 35).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jewish history, moreover, arouses in the Jew the desire to work
+ unceasingly at the task of perfecting himself. To direct his attention to
+ his glorious past, to the resplendent intellectual feats of his ancestors,
+ to their masterly skill in thinking and suffering, does not lull him to
+ sleep, does not awaken a dullard's complacency or hollow self-conceit. On
+ the contrary, it makes exacting demands upon him. Jewish history
+ admonishes the Jews: "<i>Noblesse oblige</i>. The privilege of belonging
+ to a people to whom the honorable title of the 'veteran of history' has
+ been conceded, puts serious responsibilities on your shoulders. You must
+ demonstrate that you are worthy of your heroic past. The descendants of
+ teachers of religion and martyrs of the faith dare not be insignificant,
+ not to say wicked. If the long centuries of wandering and misery have
+ inoculated you with faults, extirpate them in the name of the exalted
+ moral ideals whose bearers you were commissioned to be. If, in the course
+ of time, elements out of harmony with your essential being have fastened
+ upon your mind, cast them out, purify yourselves. In all places and at all
+ times, in joy and and in sorrow, you must aim to live for the higher, the
+ spiritual interests. But never may you deem yourselves perfect. If you
+ become faithless to these sacred principles, you sever the bonds that
+ unite you with the most vital elements of your past, with the first cause
+ of your national existence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final lesson to be learned is that in the sunny days of mankind's
+ history, in which reason, justice, and philanthropic instinct had the
+ upper hand, the Jews steadfastly made common cause with the other nations.
+ Hand in hand with them, they trod the path leading to perfection. But in
+ the dark days, during the reign of rude force, prejudice, and passion, of
+ which they were the first victims, the Jews retired from the world,
+ withdrew into their shell, to await better days. Union with mankind at
+ large, on the basis of the spiritual and the intellectual, the goal set up
+ by the Jewish Prophets in their sublime vision of the future (Isaiah, ch.
+ ii, and Micah, ch. iv), is the ultimate ideal of Judaism's noblest
+ votaries. Will their radiant hope ever attain to realization? If ever it
+ should be realized,&mdash;and it is incumbent upon us to believe that it
+ will,&mdash;not a slight part of the merits involved will be due to Jewish
+ history. We have adverted to the lofty moral and humanitarian significance
+ of Jewish history in its role as conciliator. With regard to one-half of
+ Jewish history, this conciliatory power is even now a well-established
+ fact. The first part of Jewish history, the Biblical part, is a source
+ from which, for many centuries, millions of human beings belonging to the
+ most diverse denominations have derived instruction, solace, and
+ inspiration. It is read with devotion by Christians in both hemispheres,
+ in their houses and their temples. Its heroes have long ago become types,
+ incarnations of great ideas. The events it relates serve as living ethical
+ formulas. But a time will come&mdash;perhaps it is not very far off&mdash;when
+ the second half of Jewish history, the record of the two thousand years of
+ the Jewish people's life after the Biblical period, will be accorded the
+ same treatment. This latter part of Jewish history is not yet known, and
+ many, in the thrall of prejudice, do not wish to know it. But ere long it
+ will be known and appreciated. For the thinking portion of mankind it will
+ be a source of uplifting moral and philosophical teaching. The thousand
+ years' martyrdom of the Jewish people, its unbroken pilgrimage, its tragic
+ fate, its teachers of religion, its martyrs, philosophers, champions, this
+ whole epic will in days to come sink deep into the memory of men. It will
+ speak to the heart and the conscience of men, not merely to their curious
+ mind. It will secure respect for the silvery hair of the Jewish people, a
+ people of thinkers and sufferers. It will dispense consolation to the
+ afflicted, and by its examples of spiritual steadfastness and self-denial
+ encourage martyrs in their devotion. It is our firm conviction that the
+ time is approaching in which the second half of Jewish history will be to
+ the noblest part of <i>thinking</i> humanity what its first half has long
+ been to <i>believing</i> humanity, a source of sublime moral truths. In
+ this sense, Jewish history in its entirety is the pledge of the spiritual
+ union between the Jews and the rest of the nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_FOOT"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FOOTNOTES:
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-1" id="note-1"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 1 (<a href="#linknoteref-1">return</a>)<br /> [ In the introduction to his <i>Historische
+ Mitteilungen, Vorarbeiten zu einer Geschichte der pol-nischrussischen
+ Juden</i>.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-2" id="note-2"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 2 (<a href="#linknoteref-2">return</a>)<br /> [ "The primitive peoples that
+ change with their environment, constantly adapting themselves to their
+ habitat and to external nature, have no history.... Only those nations and
+ states belong to history which display self-conscious action; which evince
+ an inner spiritual life by diversified manifestations; and combine into an
+ organic whole what they receive from without, and what they themselves
+ originate." (Introduction to Weber's <i>Allgemeine Weltgeschichte</i>, i,
+ pp. 16-18.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-3" id="note-3"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 3 (<a href="#linknoteref-3">return</a>)<br /> [ "History, without these (inner,
+ spiritual elements), is a shell without a kernel; and such is almost all
+ the history which is extant in the world." (Macaulay, on Mitford's History
+ of Greece, Collected Works, i, 198, ed. A. and C. Armstrong and Son.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-4" id="note-4"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 4 (<a href="#linknoteref-4">return</a>)<br /> [ A Jewish historian makes the
+ pregnant remark: "If ever the time comes when the prophecies of the Jewish
+ seers are fulfilled, and nation no longer raises the sword against nation;
+ when the olive leaf instead of the laurel adorns the brow of the great,
+ and the achievements of noble minds are familiar to the dwellers in
+ cottages and palaces alike, then the history of the world will have the
+ same character as Jewish history. On its pages will be inscribed, not the
+ warrior's prowess and his victories, nor diplomatic schemes and triumphs,
+ but the progress of culture and its practical application in real life."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-5" id="note-5"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 5 (<a href="#linknoteref-5">return</a>)<br /> [ A different aspect of the same
+ thought is presented with logical clearness in another publication by our
+ author. "The national <i>idea</i>, and the national <i>feeling</i>," says
+ Mr. Dubnow, "must be kept strictly apart. Unfortunately the difference
+ between them is usually obliterated. National feeling is spontaneous. To a
+ greater or less degree it is inborn in all the members of the nation as a
+ feeling of kinship. It has its flood-tide and its ebbtide in
+ correspondence to external conditions, either forcing the nation to defend
+ its nationality, or relieving it of the necessity for self-defense. As
+ this feeling is not merely a blind impulse, but a complicated psychic
+ phenomenon, it can be subjected to a psychologic analysis. From the given
+ historical facts or the ideas that have become the common treasure of a
+ nation, thinking men, living life consciously, can, in one way or another,
+ derive the origin, development, and vital force of its national feeling.
+ The results of such an analysis, arranged in some sort of system, form the
+ content of the national idea. The task of the national idea it is to
+ clarify the national feeling, and give it logical sanction for the benefit
+ of those who cannot rest satisfied with an unconscious feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ "In what, to be specific, does the essence of our Jewish national idea
+ consist? Or, putting the question in another form, what is the cement that
+ unites us into a single compact organism? Territory and government, the
+ external ties usually binding a nation together, we have long ago lost.
+ Their place is filled by abstract principles, by religion and race.
+ Undeniably these are factors of first importance, and yet we ask the
+ question, do they alone and exclusively maintain the national cohesion of
+ Jewry? No, we reply, for if we admitted this proposition, we should by
+ consequence have to accept the inference, that the laxity of religious
+ principle prevailing among free-thinking Jews, and the obliteration of
+ race peculiarities in the 'civilized' strata of our people, bring in their
+ train a corresponding weakening, or, indeed, a complete breaking up, of
+ our national foundations&mdash;which in point of fact is not the case. On
+ the contrary, it is noticeable that the latitudinarians, the <i>libres
+ penseurs</i>, and the indifferent on the subject of religion, stand in the
+ forefront of all our national movements. Seeing that to belong to it is in
+ most cases heroism, and in many martyrdom, what is it that attracts these
+ Jews so forcibly to their people? There must be something common to us
+ all, so comprehensive that in the face of multifarious views and degrees
+ of culture it acts as a consolidating force. This 'something,' I am
+ convinced, is the community of historical fortunes of all the scattered
+ parts of the Jewish nation. We are welded together by our glorious past.
+ We are encircled by a mighty chain of similar historical impressions
+ suffered by our ancestors, century after century pressing in upon the
+ Jewish soul, and leaving behind a substantial deposit. In short, the
+ Jewish national idea is based chiefly upon the historical consciousness."
+ (Footnote Note of the German trl.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-6" id="note-6"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 6 (<a href="#linknoteref-6">return</a>)<br /> [ "If there are ranks in
+ suffering, Israel takes precedence of all the nations&mdash;if the
+ duration of sorrows and the patience with which they are borne ennoble,
+ the Jews are among the aristocracy of every land&mdash;if a literature is
+ called rich in the possession of a few classic tragedies, what shall we
+ say to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years, in which the
+ poets and the actors were also the heroes?" (Zunz, <i>Die synagogale
+ Poesie</i>. Translation by George Eliot in "Daniel Deronda.")]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-7" id="note-7"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 7 (<a href="#linknoteref-7">return</a>)<br /> [ As examples and a proof of the
+ strong humanitarian influence Jewish history exercises upon Christians, I
+ would point to the relation established between the Jews and two
+ celebrities of the nineteenth century, Schleiden and George Eliot. In his
+ old age, the great scientist and thinker accidentally, in the course of
+ his study of sources for the history of botany, became acquainted with
+ medieval Jewish history. It filled him with ardent enthusiasm for the
+ Jews, for their intellectual strength, their patience under martyrdom.
+ Dominated by this feeling, he wrote the two admirable sketches: <i>Die
+ Bedeutung der Juden für Erhaltung und Wiederbelebung der Wissenschaften im
+ Mittelalter</i> (1876) and <i>Die Romantik des Martyriums bei den Juden im
+ Mittelalter</i> (1878). According to his own confession, the impulse to
+ write them was "the wish to take at least the first step toward making
+ partial amends for the unspeakable wrong inflicted by Christians upon
+ Jews." As for George Eliot, it may not be generally known that it was her
+ reading of histories of the Jews that inspired her with the profound
+ veneration for the Jewish people to which she gave glowing utterance in
+ "Daniel Deronda." (She cites Zunz, was personally acquainted with Emanuel
+ Deutsch, and carried on a correspondence with Professor Dr. David
+ Kaufmann. See <i>George Eliot's Life as related in her Letters and
+ Journals</i>. Arranged and edited by her husband, J. W. Cross, Vol. iii,
+ ed. Harper and Brothers.) Her enthusiasm prompted her, in 1879, to indite
+ her passionate apology for the Jews, under the title, "The Modern Hep!
+ Hep! Hep!"]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-8" id="note-8"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 8 (<a href="#linknoteref-8">return</a>)<br /> [ Pushkin.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-9" id="note-9"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 9 (<a href="#linknoteref-9">return</a>)<br /> [ This is the true recondite
+ meaning of the verses Exod. vi, 2-3: "And God spake unto Moses, and said
+ unto him, I am the Eternal: and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and
+ unto Jacob, as <i>El-Shaddai</i> (God Almighty), but by my name Eternal I
+ was not known unto them."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-10" id="note-10"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 10 (<a href="#linknoteref-10">return</a>)<br /> [ "Ye have forsaken me," says
+ God unto Israel, "and served other gods; wherefore I will deliver you no
+ more. Go and cry unto the gods which ye have chosen: let them deliver you
+ in the time of your tribulations" (Judges X, 13-14). The same idea is
+ brought out still more forcibly in the arguments adduced by Jephthah in
+ his message to the king of Ammon (more correctly, Moab), who had laid
+ claim to Israelitish lands: "Thou," says Jephthah, "mayest possess that
+ which Kemosh thy god giveth thee to possess, but what the Lord our God
+ giveth us to possess, that will we possess" (Judges xi, 24). Usually these
+ words are taken ironically; to me they seem to convey literal truth rather
+ than irony.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-11" id="note-11"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 11 (<a href="#linknoteref-11">return</a>)<br /> [ Two Biblical passages, the
+ one from Deuteronomy, the other from Deutero-Isaiah, afford a signal
+ illustration of the contrast between the religious nationalism of the
+ Mosaic law and the universalism of the Prophets. Moses says to Israel:
+ "Thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God: the Lord thy God hath
+ chosen thee to be a special people unto himself, above all people that are
+ upon the face of the earth. The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor
+ choose you, because ye were more in number than any people: for ye were
+ the fewest of all people. But because the Lord loved you...." (Deut. vii,
+ 6-8). And these are the words of the prophecy: "Listen, O isles, unto me,
+ and hearken, ye people, from far! The Lord hath called me... and said unto
+ me, Thou art my servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified! But I had
+ thought, I have labored in vain, I have spent my strength for nought, and
+ in vain; yet surely my judgment is with the Lord, and my work with my God.
+ For now said the Lord unto me... It is too light a thing that thou
+ shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore
+ the preserved of Israel: no, I will also give thee for a light to the
+ Gentiles, that my salvation may reach unto the end of the earth" (Is.
+ xlix, 1-6).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-12" id="note-12"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 12 (<a href="#linknoteref-12">return</a>)<br /> [ The external causes of the
+ downfall of the Maccabean state, dynastic quarrels, are well known. Much
+ less light has been thrown upon the inner, deeper-lying causes of the
+ catastrophe. These are possibly to be sought in the priestly-political
+ dualism of the Judean form of government. The ideal of a nation educated
+ by means of the Bible was a theocratic state, and the first princes of the
+ Maccabean house, acting at once as regents and as high priests, in a
+ measure reached this ideal. But the attempts of other nations had
+ demonstrated conclusively enough that a dualistic form of government
+ cannot maintain itself permanently. Sooner or later one of the two
+ elements, the priestly or the secular, is bound to prevail over the other
+ and crush it. In the Judean realm, with its profoundly religious trend,
+ the priestly element obtained the ascendency, and political ruin ensued.
+ The priestly- political retreated before the priestly-national form of
+ government. Though the religious element was powerless to preserve the <i>state</i>
+ from destruction, we shall see that it has brilliantly vindicated its
+ ability to keep the <i>nation</i> intact.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-13" id="note-13"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 13 (<a href="#linknoteref-13">return</a>)<br /> [ As anti-Semitism is called in
+ Russia.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linknote-14" id="note-14"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="foot">
+ 14 (<a href="#linknoteref-14">return</a>)<br /> [ Pushkin.]
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
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+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/7836.txt b/7836.txt
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+++ b/7836.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Jewish History
+
+Author: S. M. Dubnow
+
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7836]
+This file was first posted on May 21, 2003
+Last Updated: May 8, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JEWISH HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David King, Charles Franks, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+JEWISH HISTORY
+
+AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY
+OF HISTORY
+
+By S. M. Dubnow
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION
+
+
+The author of the present essay, S. M. Dubnow, occupies a well-nigh
+dominating position in Russian-Jewish literature as an historian and
+an acute critic. His investigations into the history of the
+Polish-Russian Jews, especially his achievements in the history of
+Chassidism, have been of fundamental importance in these departments.
+What raises Mr. Dubnow far above the status of the professional
+historian, and awakens the reader's lively interest in him, is not so
+much the matter of his books, as the manner of presentation. It is
+rare to meet with an historian in whom scientific objectivity and
+thoroughness are so harmoniously combined with an ardent temperament
+and plastic ability. Mr. Dubnow's scientific activity, first and last,
+is a striking refutation of the widespread opinion that identifies
+attractiveness of form in the work of a scholar with superficiality of
+content. Even his strictly scientific investigations, besides offering
+the scholar a wealth of new suggestions, form instructive and
+entertaining reading matter for the educated layman. In his critical
+essays, Mr. Dubnow shows himself to be possessed of keen psychologic
+insight. By virtue of this quality of delicate perception, he aims to
+assign to every historical fact its proper place in the line of
+development, and so establish the bond between it and the general
+history of mankind. This psychologic ability contributes vastly to the
+interest aroused by Mr. Dubnow's historical works outside of the
+limited circle of scholars. There is a passage in one of his books[1]
+in which, in his incisive manner, he expresses his views on the limits
+and tasks of historical writing. As the passage bears upon the methods
+employed in the present essay, and, at the same time, is a
+characteristic specimen of our author's style, I take the liberty of
+quoting:
+
+"The popularization of history is by no means to be pursued to the
+detriment of its severely scientific treatment. What is to be guarded
+against is the notion that tedium is inseparable from the scientific
+method. I have always been of the opinion that the dulness commonly
+looked upon as the prerogative of scholarly inquiries, is not an
+inherent attribute. In most cases it is conditioned, not by the nature
+of the subject under investigation, but by the temper of the
+investigator. Often, indeed, the tediousness of a learned disquisition
+is intentional: it is considered one of the polite conventions of the
+academic guild, and by many is identified with scientific thoroughness
+and profound learning.... If, in general, deadening, hide-bound caste
+methods, not seldom the cover for poverty of thought and lack of
+cleverness, are reprehensible, they are doubly reprehensible in
+history. The history of a people is not a mere mental discipline, like
+botany or mathematics, but a living science, a _magistra vitae_,
+leading straight to national self-knowledge, and acting to a certain
+degree upon the national character. History is a science _by_ the
+people, _for_ the people, and, therefore, its place is the open
+forum, not the scholar's musty closet. We relate the events of the
+past to the people, not merely to a handful of archaeologists and
+numismaticians. We work for national self-knowledge, not for our own
+intellectual diversion."
+
+ [1] In the introduction to his _Historische Mitteilungen,
+ Vorarbeiten zu einer Geschichte der pol-nischrussischen
+ Juden_.
+
+These are the principles that have guided Mr. Dubnow in all his works,
+and he has been true to them in the present essay, which exhibits in a
+remarkably striking way the author's art of making "all things seem
+fresh and new, important and attractive." New and important his essay
+undoubtedly is. The author attempts, for the first time, a psychologic
+characterization of Jewish history. He endeavors to demonstrate the
+inner connection between events, and develop the ideas that underlie
+them, or, to use his own expression, lay bare the soul of Jewish
+history, which clothes itself with external events as with a bodily
+envelope. Jewish history has never before been considered from this
+philosophic point of view, certainly not in German literature. The
+present work, therefore, cannot fail to prove stimulating. As for the
+poet's other requirement, attractiveness, it is fully met by the work
+here translated. The qualities of Mr. Dubnow's style, as described
+above, are present to a marked degree. The enthusiasm flaming up in
+every line, coupled with his plastic, figurative style, and his
+scintillating conceits, which lend vivacity to his presentation, is
+bound to charm the reader. Yet, in spite of the racy style, even the
+layman will have no difficulty in discovering that it is not a clever
+journalist, an artificer of well-turned phrases, who is speaking to
+him, but a scholar by profession, whose foremost concern is with
+historical truth, and whose every statement rests upon accurate,
+scientific knowledge; not a bookworm with pale, academic blood
+trickling through his veins, but a man who, with unsoured mien, with
+fresh, buoyant delight, offers the world the results laboriously
+reached in his study, after all evidences of toil and moil have been
+carefully removed; who derives inspiration from the noble and the
+sublime in whatever guise it may appear, and who knows how to
+communicate his inspiration to others.
+
+The translator lays this book of an accomplished and spirited
+historian before the German public. He does so in the hope that it
+will shed new light upon Jewish history even for professional
+scholars. He is confident that in many to whom our unexampled past of
+four thousand years' duration is now _terra incognita_, it will
+arouse enthusiastic interest, and even to those who, like the
+translator himself, differ from the author in religious views, it will
+furnish edifying and suggestive reading. J. F.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION
+
+
+The English translation of Mr. Dubnow's Essay is based upon the
+authorized German translation, which was made from the original
+Russian. It is published under the joint auspices of the Jewish
+Publication Society of America and the Jewish Historical Society of
+England. H. S.
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE GERMAN TRANSLATION
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+I
+
+THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Historical and Unhistorical Peoples
+ Three Groups of Nations
+ The "Most Historical" People
+ Extent of Jewish History
+
+II
+
+THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Two Periods of Jewish History
+ The Period of Independence
+ The Election of the Jewish People
+ Priests and Prophets
+ The Babylonian Exile and the Scribes
+ The Dispersion
+ Jewish History and Universal History
+ Jewish History Characterized
+
+III
+
+THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ The National Aspect of Jewish History
+ The Historical Consciousness
+ The National Idea and National Feeling
+ The Universal Aspect of Jewish History
+ An Historical Experiment
+ A Moral Discipline
+ Humanitarian Significance of Jewish History
+ Schleiden and George Eliot
+
+IV
+
+THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS
+ Three Primary Periods
+ Four Composite Periods
+
+V
+
+THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD
+ Cosmic Origin of the Jewish Religion
+ Tribal Organization
+ Egyptian Influence and Experiences
+ Moses
+ Mosaism a Religious and Moral as well as a Social and Political
+ System
+ National Deities
+ The Prophets and the two Kingdoms
+ Judaism a Universal Religion
+
+VI
+
+THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD
+ Growth of National Feeling
+ Ezra and Nehemiah
+ The Scribes
+ Hellenism
+ The Maccabees
+ Sadducees, Pharisees, and Essenes
+ Alexandrian Jews
+ Christianity
+
+VII
+
+THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS
+PERIOD
+ The Isolation of Jewry and Judaism
+ The Mishna
+ The Talmud
+ Intellectual Activity in Palestine and Babylonia
+ The Agada and the Midrash
+ Unification of Judaism
+
+VIII
+
+THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+ The Academies
+ Islam
+ Karaism
+ Beginning of Persecutions in Europe
+ Arabic Civilization in Europe
+
+IX
+
+THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH
+JEWS (980-1492)
+ The Spanish Jews
+ The Arabic-Jewish Renaissance
+ The Crusades and the Jews
+ Degradation of the Jews in Christian Europe
+ The Provence
+ The Lateran Council
+ The Kabbala
+ Expulsion from Spain
+
+X
+
+THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH
+JEWS (1492-1789)
+ The Humanists and the Reformation
+ Palestine an Asylum for Jews
+ Messianic Belief and Hopes
+ Holland a Jewish Centre
+ Poland and the Jews
+ The Rabbinical Authorities of Poland
+ Isolation of the Polish Jews
+ Mysticism and the Practical Kabbala
+ Chassidism
+ Persecutions and Morbid Piety
+
+XI
+
+THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY)
+ The French Revolution
+ The Jewish Middle Ages
+ Spiritual and Civil Emancipation
+ The Successors of Mendelssohn
+ Zunz and the Science of Judaism
+ The Modern Movements outside of Germany
+ The Jew in Russia
+ His Regeneration
+ Anti-Semitism and Judophobia
+
+XII
+
+THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY
+ Jewry a Spiritual Community
+ Jewry Indestructible
+ The Creative Principle of Jewry
+ The Task of the Future
+ The Jew and the Nations
+ The Ultimate Ideal
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+
+
+What is Jewish History? In the first place, what does it offer as to
+quantity and as to quality? What are its range and content, and what
+distinguishes it in these two respects from the history of other
+nations? Furthermore, what is the essential meaning, what the spirit,
+of Jewish History? Or, to put the question in another way, to what
+general results are we led by the aggregate of its facts, considered,
+not as a whole, but genetically, as a succession of evolutionary
+stages in the consciousness and education of the Jewish people?
+
+If we could find precise answers to these several questions, they
+would constitute a characterization of Jewish History as accurate as
+is attainable. To present such a characterization succinctly is the
+purpose of the following essay.
+
+
+
+
+JEWISH HISTORY
+
+AN ESSAY IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE RANGE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+ Le peuple juif n'est pas seulement considerable par son
+ antiquite, mais il est encore singulier en sa duree, qui a
+ toujours continue depuis son origine jusqu'a maintenant ...
+ S'etendant depuis les premiers temps jusqu'aux derniers,
+ l'histoire des juifs enferme dans sa duree celle de toutes nos
+ histoires.--PASCAL, _Pensees_, II, 7.
+
+To make clear the range of Jewish history, it is necessary to set down
+a few general, elementary definitions by way of introduction.
+
+It has long been recognized that a fundamental difference exists
+between historical and unhistorical peoples, a difference growing out
+of the fact of the natural inequality between the various elements
+composing the human race. Unhistorical is the attribute applied to
+peoples that have not yet broken away, or have not departed very far,
+from the state of primitive savagery, as, for instance, the barbarous
+races of Asia and Africa who were the prehistoric ancestors of the
+Europeans, or the obscure, untutored tribes of the present, like the
+Tartars and the Kirghiz. Unhistorical peoples, then, are ethnic groups
+of all sorts that are bereft of a distinctive, spiritual
+individuality, and have failed to display normal, independent capacity
+for culture. The term historical, on the other hand, is applied to the
+nations that have had a conscious, purposeful history of appreciable
+duration; that have progressed, stage by stage, in their growth and in
+the improvement of their mode and their views of life; that have
+demonstrated mental productivity of some sort, and have elaborated
+principles of civilization and social life more or less rational;
+nations, in short, representing not only zoologic, but also spiritual
+types.[2]
+
+ [2] "The primitive peoples that change with their environment,
+ constantly adapting themselves to their habitat and to
+ external nature, have no history.... Only those nations and
+ states belong to history which display self-conscious action;
+ which evince an inner spiritual life by diversified
+ manifestations; and combine into an organic whole what they
+ receive from without, and what they themselves originate."
+ (Introduction to Weber's _Allgemeine Weltgeschichte_, i,
+ pp. 16-18.)
+
+Chronologically considered, these latter nations, of a higher type,
+are usually divided into three groups: 1, the most ancient civilized
+peoples of the Orient, such as the Chinese, the Hindoos, the
+Egyptians, the Chaldeans; 2, the ancient or classic peoples of the
+Occident, the Greeks and the Romans; and 3, the modern peoples, the
+civilized nations of Europe and America of the present day. The most
+ancient peoples of the Orient, standing "at the threshold of history,"
+were the first heralds of a religious consciousness and of moral
+principles. In hoary antiquity, when most of the representatives of
+the human kind were nothing more than a peculiar variety of the class
+mammalia, the peoples called the most ancient brought forth recognized
+forms of social life and a variety of theories of living of fairly
+far-reaching effect. All these culture-bearers of the Orient soon
+disappeared from the surface of history. Some (the Chaldeans,
+Phoenicians, and Egyptians) were washed away by the flood of time, and
+their remnants were absorbed by younger and more vigorous peoples.
+Others (the Hindoos and Persians) relapsed into a semi-barbarous
+state; and a third class (the Chinese) were arrested in their growth,
+and remained fixed in immobility. The best that the antique Orient had
+to bequeath in the way of spiritual possessions fell to the share of
+the classic nations of the West, the Greeks and the Romans. They
+greatly increased the heritage by their own spiritual achievements,
+and so produced a much more complex and diversified civilization,
+which has served as the substratum for the further development of the
+better part of mankind. Even the classic nations had to step aside as
+soon as their historical mission was fulfilled. They left the field
+free for the younger nations, with greater capability of living, which
+at that time had barely worked their way up to the beginnings of a
+civilization. One after the other, during the first two centuries of
+the Christian era, the members of this European family of nations
+appeared in the arena of history. They form the kernel of the
+civilized part of mankind at the present day.
+
+Now, if we examine this accepted classification with a view to finding
+the place belonging to the Jewish people in the chronological series,
+we meet with embarrassing difficulties, and finally arrive at the
+conclusion that its history cannot be accommodated within the compass
+of the classification. Into which of the three historical groups
+mentioned could the Jewish people be put? Are we to call it one of the
+most ancient, one of the ancient, or one of the modern nations? It is
+evident that it may lay claim to the first description, as well as to
+the second and the last. In company with the most ancient nations of
+the Orient, the Jewish people stood at the "threshold of history." It
+was the contemporary of the earliest civilized nations, the Egyptians
+and the Chaldeans. In those remote days it created and spread a
+religious world-idea underlying an exalted social and moral system
+surpassing everything produced in this sphere by its Oriental
+contemporaries. Again, with the classical Greeks and Romans, it forms
+the celebrated historical triad universally recognized as the source
+of all great systems of civilization. Finally, in fellowship with the
+nations of to-day, it leads an historical life, striding onward in the
+path of progress without stay or interruption. Deprived of political
+independence, it nevertheless continues to fill a place in the world
+of thought as a distinctly marked spiritual individuality, as one of
+the most active and intelligent forces. How, then, are we to
+denominate this omnipresent people, which, from the first moment of
+its historical existence up to our days, a period of thirty-five
+hundred years, has been developing continuously. In view of this
+Methuselah among the nations, whose life is co-extensive with the
+whole of history, how are we to dispose of the inevitable barriers
+between "the most ancient" and "the ancient," between "the ancient"
+and "the modern" nations--the fateful barriers which form the
+milestones on the path of the historical peoples, and which the Jewish
+people has more than once overstepped?
+
+A definition of the Jewish people must needs correspond to the
+aggregate of the concepts expressed by the three group-names, most
+ancient, ancient, and modern. The only description applicable to it is
+"the historical nation of all times," a description bringing into
+relief the contrast between it and all other nations of modern and
+ancient times, whose historical existence either came to an end in
+days long past, or began at a date comparatively recent. And granted
+that there are "historical" and "unhistorical" peoples, then it is
+beyond dispute that the Jewish people deserves to be called "the most
+historical" (_historicissimus_). If the history of the world be
+conceived as a circle, then Jewish history occupies the position of
+the diameter, the line passing through its centre, and the history of
+every other nation is represented by a chord marking off a smaller
+segment of the circle. The history of the Jewish people is like an
+axis crossing the history of mankind from one of its poles to the
+other. As an unbroken thread it runs through the ancient civilization
+of Egypt and Mesopotamia, down to the present-day culture of France
+and Germany. Its divisions are measured by thousands of years.
+
+Jewish history, then, in its range, or, better, in its duration,
+presents an unique phenomenon. It consists of the longest series of
+events ever recorded in the annals of a single people. To sum up its
+peculiarity briefly, it embraces a period of thirty-five hundred
+years, and in all this vast extent it suffers no interruption. At
+every point it is alive, full of sterling content. Presently we shall
+see that in respect to content, too, it is distinguished by
+exceptional characteristics.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE CONTENT OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+From the point of view of content, or qualitative structure, Jewish
+history, it is well known, falls into two parts. The dividing point
+between the two parts is the moment in which the Jewish state
+collapsed irretrievably under the blows of the Roman Empire (70 C.
+E.). The first half deals with the vicissitudes of a nation, which,
+though frequently at the mercy of stronger nations, still maintained
+possession of its territory and government, and was ruled by its own
+laws. In the second half, we encounter the history of a people without
+a government, more than that, without a land, a people stripped of all
+the tangible accompaniments of nationality, and nevertheless
+successful in preserving its spiritual unity, its originality,
+complete and undiminished.
+
+At first glance, Jewish history during the period of independence
+seems to be but slightly different from the history of other nations.
+Though not without individual coloring, there are yet the same wars
+and intestine disturbances, the same political revolutions and
+dynastic quarrels, the same conflicts between the classes of the
+people, the same warring between economical interests. This is only a
+surface view of Jewish history. If we pierce to its depths, and
+scrutinize the processes that take place in its penetralia, we
+perceive that even in the early period there were latent within it
+great powers of intellect, universal principles, which, visibly or
+invisibly, determined the course of events. We have before us not a
+simple political or racial entity, but, to an eminent degree, "a
+spiritual people." The national development is based upon an
+all-pervasive religious tradition, which lives in the soul of the
+people as the Sinaitic Revelation, the Law of Moses. With this holy
+tradition, embracing a luminous theory of life and an explicit code of
+morality and social converse, was associated the idea of the election
+of the Jewish people, of its peculiar spiritual mission. "And ye shall
+be unto me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation" is the figurative
+expression of this ideal calling. It conveys the thought that the
+Israelitish people as a whole, without distinction of rank and
+regardless of the social prominence of individuals, has been called to
+guide the other nations toward sublime moral and religious principles,
+and to officiate for them, the laity as it were, in the capacity of
+priests. This exalted ideal would never have been reached, if the
+development of the Jewish people had lain along hackneyed lines; if,
+like the Egyptians and the Chaldeans, it had had an inflexible caste
+of priests, who consider the guardianship of the spiritual treasures
+of the nation the exclusive privilege of their estate, and strive to
+keep the mass of the people in crass ignorance. For a time, something
+approaching this condition prevailed among the Jews. The priests
+descended from Aaron, with the Temple servants (the Levites), formed a
+priestly class, and played the part of authoritative bearers of the
+religious tradition. But early, in the very infancy of the nation,
+there arose by the side of this official, aristocratic hierarchy, a
+far mightier priesthood, a democratic fraternity, seeking to enlighten
+the whole nation, and inculcating convictions that make for a
+consciously held aim. The Prophets were the real and appointed
+executors of the holy command enjoining the "conversion" of all Jews
+into "a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." Their activity cannot
+be paralleled in the whole range of the world's history. They were not
+priests, but popular educators and popular teachers. They were
+animated by the desire to instil into every soul a deeply religious
+consciousness, to ennoble every heart by moral aspirations, to
+indoctrinate every individual with an unequivocal theory of life, to
+inspire every member of the nation with lofty ideals. Their work did
+not fail to leave its traces. Slowly but deeply idealism entered into
+the very pith and marrow of the national consciousness. This
+consciousness gained in strength and amplitude century by century,
+showing itself particularly in the latter part of the first period,
+after the crisis known as "the Babylonian Exile." Thanks to the
+exertions of the _Soferim_ (Scribes), directed toward the
+broadest popularization of the Holy Writings, and constituting the
+formal complement to the work of the Prophets, spiritual activity
+became an integral part of Jewish national life. In the closing
+centuries of its political existence, the Jewish people received its
+permanent form. There was imposed upon it the unmistakable hallmark of
+spirituality that has always identified it in the throng of the
+nations. Out of the bosom of Judaism went forth the religion that in a
+short time ran its triumphant course through the whole ancient world,
+transforming races of barbarians into civilized beings. It was the
+fulfilment of the Prophetical promise--that the nations would walk in
+the light of Israel.
+
+At the very moment when the strength and fertility of the Jewish mind
+reached the culminating point, occurred a political revolution--the
+period of homeless wandering began. It seemed as though, before
+scattering the Jewish people to all ends of the earth, the providence
+of history desired to teach it a final lesson, to take with it on its
+way. It seemed to say: "Now you may go forth. Your character has been
+sufficiently tempered; you can bear the bitterest of hardships. You
+are equipped with an inexhaustible store of energy, and you can live
+for centuries, yea, for thousands of years, under conditions that
+would prove the bane of other nations in less than a single century.
+State, territory, army, the external attributes of national power, are
+for you superfluous luxury. Go out into the world to prove that a
+people can continue to live without these attributes, solely and alone
+through strength of spirit welding its widely scattered particles into
+one firm organism!"--And the Jewish people went forth and proved it.
+
+This "proof" adduced by Jewry at the cost of eighteen centuries of
+privation and suffering, forms the characteristic feature of the
+second half of Jewish history, the period of homelessness and
+dispersion. Uprooted from its political soil, national life displayed
+itself on intellectual fields exclusively. "To think and to suffer"
+became the watchword of the Jewish people, not merely because forced
+upon it by external circumstances beyond its control, but chiefly
+because it was conditioned by the very disposition of the people, by
+its national inclinations. The extraordinary mental energy that had
+matured the Bible and the old writings in the first period, manifested
+itself in the second period in the encyclopedic productions of the
+Talmudists, in the religious philosophy of the middle ages, in
+Rabbinism, in the Kabbala, in mysticism, and in science. The spiritual
+discipline of the school came to mean for the Jew what military
+discipline is for other nations. His remarkable longevity is due, I am
+tempted to say, to the acrid spiritual brine in which he was cured. In
+its second half, the originality of Jewish history consists indeed, in
+the circumstance that it is the only history stripped of every active
+political element. There are no diplomatic artifices, no wars, no
+campaigns, no unwarranted encroachments backed by armed force upon the
+rights of other nations, nothing of all that constitutes the chief
+content--the monotonous and for the most part idea-less content--of
+many other chapters in the history of the world. Jewish history
+presents the chronicle of an ample spiritual life, a gallery of
+pictures representing national scenes. Before our eyes passes a long
+procession of facts from the fields of intellectual effort, of
+morality, religion, and social converse. Finally, the thrilling drama
+of Jewish martyrdom is unrolled to our astonished gaze. If the inner
+life and the social and intellectual development of a people form the
+kernel of history, and politics and occasional wars are but its
+husk,[3] then certainly the history of the Jewish diaspora is all
+kernel. In contrast with the history of other nations it describes,
+not the accidental deeds of princes and generals, not external pomp
+and physical prowess, but the life and development of a whole people.
+It gives heartrending expression to the spiritual strivings of a
+nation whose brow is resplendent with the thorny crown of martyrdom.
+It breathes heroism of mind that conquers bodily pain. In a word,
+Jewish history is history sublimated.[4]
+
+ [3] "History, without these (inner, spiritual elements), is a
+ shell without a kernel; and such is almost all the history
+ which is extant in the world." (Macaulay, on Mitford's History
+ of Greece, Collected Works, i, 198, ed. A. and C. Armstrong
+ and Son.)
+
+ [4] A Jewish historian makes the pregnant remark: "If ever the
+ time comes when the prophecies of the Jewish seers are
+ fulfilled, and nation no longer raises the sword against
+ nation; when the olive leaf instead of the laurel adorns the
+ brow of the great, and the achievements of noble minds are
+ familiar to the dwellers in cottages and palaces alike, then
+ the history of the world will have the same character as
+ Jewish history. On its pages will be inscribed, not the
+ warrior's prowess and his victories, nor diplomatic schemes
+ and triumphs, but the progress of culture and its practical
+ application in real life."
+
+In spite of the noteworthy features that raise Jewish history above
+the level of the ordinary, and assign it a peculiar place, it is
+nevertheless not isolated, not severed from the history of mankind.
+Rather is it most intimately interwoven with world-affairs at every
+point throughout its whole extent. As the diameter, Jewish history is
+again and again intersected by the chords of the historical circle.
+The fortunes of the pilgrim people scattered in all the countries of
+the civilized world are organically connected with the fortunes of the
+most representative nations and states, and with manifold tendencies
+of human thought. The bond uniting them is twofold: in the times when
+the powers of darkness and fanaticism held sway, the Jews were
+amenable to the "physical" influence exerted by their neighbors in the
+form of persecutions, infringements of the liberty of conscience,
+inquisitions, violence of every sort; and during the prevalence of
+enlightment and humanity, the Jews were acted upon by the intellectual
+and cultural stimulus proceeding from the peoples with whom they
+entered into close relations. Momentary aberrations and reactionary
+incidents are not taken into account here. On its side, Jewry made its
+personality felt among the nations by its independent, intellectual
+activity, its theory of life, its literature, by the very fact,
+indeed, of its ideal staunchness and tenacity, its peculiar historical
+physiognomy. From this reciprocal relation issued a great cycle of
+historical events and spiritual currents, making the past of the
+Jewish people an organic constituent of the past of all that portion
+of mankind which has contributed to the treasury of human thought.
+
+We see, then, that in reference to content Jewish history is unique in
+both its halves. In the first "national" period, it is the history of
+a people to which the epithet "peculiar" has been conceded, a people
+which has developed under the influence of exceptional circumstances,
+and finally attained to so high a degree of spiritual perfection and
+fertility that the creation of a new religious theory of life, which
+eventually gained universal supremacy, neither exhausted its resources
+nor ended its activity. Not only did it continue to live upon its vast
+store of spiritual energy, but day by day it increased the store. In
+the second "lackland" half, it is the instructive history of a
+scattered people, organically one, in spite of dispersion, by reason
+of its unshaken ideal traditions; a people accepting misery and
+hardship with stoic calm, combining the characteristics of the thinker
+with those of the sufferer, and eking out existence under conditions
+which no other nation has found adequate, or, indeed, can ever find
+adequate. The account of the people as teacher of religion--this is
+the content of the first half of Jewish history; the account of the
+people as thinker, stoic, and sufferer--this is the content of the
+second half of Jewish history.
+
+A summing up of all that has been said in this and the previous
+chapter proves true the statement with which we began, that Jewish
+history, in respect to its quantitative dimensions as well as its
+qualitative structure, is to the last degree distinctive and presents
+a phenomenon of undeniable uniqueness.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE SIGNIFICANCE OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+We turn now to the question of the significance to be attached to
+Jewish history. In view of its peculiar qualities, what has it to
+offer to the present generation and to future generations as a subject
+of study and research?
+
+The significance of Jewish history is twofold. It is at once national
+and universal. At present the fulcrum of Jewish national being lies in
+the historical consciousness. In the days of antiquity, the Jews were
+welded into a single united nation by the triple agencies of state,
+race, and religion, the complete array of material and spiritual
+forces directed to one point. Later, in the period of homelessness and
+dispersion, it was chiefly religious consciousness that cemented Jewry
+into a whole, and replaced the severed political bond as well as the
+dulled racial instinct, which is bound to go on losing in keenness in
+proportion to the degree of removal from primitive conditions and
+native soil. In our days, when the liberal movements leavening the
+whole of mankind, if they have not completely shattered the religious
+consciousness, have at least, in an important section of Jewry,
+effected a change in its form; when abrupt differences of opinion with
+regard to questions of faith and cult are asserting their presence;
+and traditional Judaism developed in historical sequence is proving
+powerless to hold together the diverse factors of the national
+organism,--in these days the keystone of national unity seems to be
+the historical consciousness. Composed alike of physical,
+intellectual, and moral elements, of habits and views, of emotions and
+impressions nursed into being and perfection by the hereditary
+instinct active for thousands of years, this historical consciousness
+is a remarkably puzzling and complex psychic phenomenon. By our common
+memory of a great, stirring past and heroic deeds on the battle-fields
+of the spirit, by the exalted historical mission allotted to us, by
+our thorn-strewn pilgrim's path, our martyrdom assumed for the sake of
+our principles, by such moral ties, we Jews, whether consciously or
+unconsciously, are bound fast to one another. As Renan well says:
+"Common sorrow unites men more closely than common joy." A long chain
+of historical traditions is cast about us all like a strong ring. Our
+wonderful, unparalleled past attracts us with magnetic power. In the
+course of centuries, as generation followed generation, similarity of
+historical fortunes produced a mass of similar impressions which have
+crystallized, and have thrown off the deposit that may be called "the
+Jewish national soul." This is the soil in which, deep down, lies
+imbedded, as an unconscious element, the Jewish national _feeling_,
+and as a conscious element, the Jewish national _idea_.
+
+It follows that the Jewish national idea and the national feeling
+connected with it have their origin primarily in the historical
+consciousness, in a certain complex of ideas and psychic
+predispositions. These ideas and predispositions, the deposit left by
+the aggregate of historical impressions, are of necessity the common
+property of the whole nation, and they can be developed and quickened
+to a considerable degree by a renewal of the impressions through the
+study of history. Upon the knowledge of history, then, depends the
+strength of the national consciousness.[5]
+
+ [5] A different aspect of the same thought is presented with
+ logical clearness in another publication by our author. "The
+ national _idea_, and the national _feeling_," says
+ Mr. Dubnow, "must be kept strictly apart. Unfortunately the
+ difference between them is usually obliterated. National
+ feeling is spontaneous. To a greater or less degree it is
+ inborn in all the members of the nation as a feeling of
+ kinship. It has its flood-tide and its ebbtide in
+ correspondence to external conditions, either forcing the
+ nation to defend its nationality, or relieving it of the
+ necessity for self-defense. As this feeling is not merely a
+ blind impulse, but a complicated psychic phenomenon, it can be
+ subjected to a psychologic analysis. From the given historical
+ facts or the ideas that have become the common treasure of a
+ nation, thinking men, living life consciously, can, in one way
+ or another, derive the origin, development, and vital force of
+ its national feeling. The results of such an analysis,
+ arranged in some sort of system, form the content of the
+ national idea. The task of the national idea it is to clarify
+ the national feeling, and give it logical sanction for the
+ benefit of those who cannot rest satisfied with an unconscious
+ feeling.
+
+ "In what, to be specific, does the essence of our Jewish national
+ idea consist? Or, putting the question in another form, what
+ is the cement that unites us into a single compact organism?
+ Territory and government, the external ties usually binding a
+ nation together, we have long ago lost. Their place is filled
+ by abstract principles, by religion and race. Undeniably these
+ are factors of first importance, and yet we ask the question,
+ do they alone and exclusively maintain the national cohesion
+ of Jewry? No, we reply, for if we admitted this proposition,
+ we should by consequence have to accept the inference, that
+ the laxity of religious principle prevailing among
+ free-thinking Jews, and the obliteration of race peculiarities
+ in the 'civilized' strata of our people, bring in their train
+ a corresponding weakening, or, indeed, a complete breaking up,
+ of our national foundations--which in point of fact is not the
+ case. On the contrary, it is noticeable that the
+ latitudinarians, the _libres penseurs_, and the
+ indifferent on the subject of religion, stand in the forefront
+ of all our national movements. Seeing that to belong to it is
+ in most cases heroism, and in many martyrdom, what is it that
+ attracts these Jews so forcibly to their people? There must be
+ something common to us all, so comprehensive that in the face
+ of multifarious views and degrees of culture it acts as a
+ consolidating force. This 'something,' I am convinced, is the
+ community of historical fortunes of all the scattered parts of
+ the Jewish nation. We are welded together by our glorious
+ past. We are encircled by a mighty chain of similar historical
+ impressions suffered by our ancestors, century after century
+ pressing in upon the Jewish soul, and leaving behind a
+ substantial deposit. In short, the Jewish national idea is
+ based chiefly upon the historical consciousness." [Note of the
+ German trl.]
+
+But over and above its national significance, Jewish history, we
+repeat, possesses universal significance. Let us, in the first place,
+examine its value for science and philosophy. Inasmuch as it is
+pre-eminently a chronicle of ideas and spiritual movements, Jewish
+history affords the philosopher or psychologist material for
+observation of the most important and useful kind. The study of other,
+mostly dull chapters of universal history has led to the fixing of
+psychologic or sociologic theses, to the working out of comprehensive
+philosophic systems, to the determination of general laws. Surely it
+follows without far-fetched proof, that in some respects the chapter
+dealing with Jewish history must supply material of the most original
+character for such theses and philosophies. If it is true, as the last
+chapter set out to demonstrate, that Jewish history is distinguished
+by sharply marked and peculiar features, and refuses to accommodate
+itself to conventional forms, then its content must have an original
+contribution to make to philosophy. It does not admit of a doubt that
+the study of Jewish history would yield new propositions appertaining
+to the philosophy of history and the psychology of nations, hitherto
+overlooked by inquirers occupied with the other divisions of universal
+history. Inductive logic lays down a rule for ascertaining the law of
+a phenomenon produced by two or more contributory causes. By means of
+what might be called a laboratory experiment, the several causes must
+be disengaged from one another, and the effect of each observed by
+itself. Thus it becomes possible to arrive with mathematical precision
+at the share of each cause in the result achieved by several
+co-operating causes. This method of difference, as it is called, is
+available, however, only for a limited number of phenomena, only for
+phenomena in the department of the natural sciences. It is in the
+nature of the case that mental and spiritual phenomena, though they
+may be observed, cannot be artificially reproduced. Now, in one
+respect, Jewish history affords the advantages of an arranged
+experiment. The historical life of ordinary nations, such nations as
+are endowed with territory and are organized into a state, is a
+complete intermingling of the political with the spiritual element.
+Totally ignorant as we are of the development either would have
+assumed, had it been dissevered from the other, the laws governing
+each of the elements singly can be discovered only approximately.
+Jewish history, in which the two elements have for many centuries been
+completely disentangled from each other, presents a natural
+experiment, with the advantage of artificial exclusions, rendering
+possible the determination of the laws of spiritual phenomena with far
+greater scientific exactitude than the laws of phenomena that result
+from several similar causes.
+
+Besides this high value for the purposes of science, this fruitful
+suggestiveness for philosophic thought, Jewish history, as compared
+with the history of other nations, enjoys another distinction in its
+capacity to exercise an ennobling influence upon the heart. Nothing so
+exalts and refines human nature as the contemplation of moral
+steadfastness, the history of the trials of a martyr who has fought
+and suffered for his convictions. At bottom, the second half of Jewish
+history is nothing but this. The effective educational worth of the
+Biblical part of Jewish history is disputed by none. It is called
+"sacred" history, and he who acquires a knowledge of it is thought to
+advance the salvation of his soul. Only a very few, however, recognize
+the profound, moral content of the second half of Jewish history, the
+history of the diaspora. Yet, by reason of its exceptional qualities
+and intensely tragic circumstances, it is beyond all others calculated
+to yield edification to a notable degree. The Jewish people is
+deserving of attention not only in the time when it displayed its
+power and enjoyed its independence, but as well in the period of its
+weakness and oppression, during which it was compelled to purchase
+spiritual development by constant sacrifice of self. A thinker crowned
+with thorns demands no less veneration than a thinker with the laurel
+wreath upon his brow. The flame issuing from the funeral pile on which
+martyrs die an heroic death for their ideas is, in its way, as
+awe-inspiring as the flame from Sinai's height. With equal force,
+though by different methods, both touch the heart, and arouse the
+moral sentiment. Biblical Israel the celebrated--medieval Judah the
+despised--it is one and the same people, judged variously in the
+various phases of its historical life. If Israel bestowed upon mankind
+a religious theory of life, Judah gave it a thrilling example of
+tenacious vitality and power of resistance for the sake of conviction.
+This uninterrupted life of the spirit, this untiring aspiration for
+the higher and the better in the domain of religious thought,
+philosophy, and science, this moral intrepidity in night and storm and
+in despite of all the blows of fortune--is it not an imposing,
+soul-stirring spectacle? The inexpressible tragedy of the Jewish
+historical life is unfailing in its effect upon a susceptible
+heart.[6] The wonderful exhibition of spirit triumphant, subduing the
+pangs of the flesh, must move every heart, and exercise uplifting
+influence upon the non-Jew no less than upon the Jew.
+
+ [6] "If there are ranks in suffering, Israel takes precedence of
+ all the nations--if the duration of sorrows and the patience
+ with which they are borne ennoble, the Jews are among the
+ aristocracy of every land--if a literature is called rich in
+ the possession of a few classic tragedies, what shall we say
+ to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years, in
+ which the poets and the actors were also the heroes?" (Zunz,
+ _Die synagogale Poesie_. Translation by George Eliot in
+ "Daniel Deronda.")
+
+For non-Jews a knowledge of Jewish history may, under certain
+conditions, come to have another, an humanitarian significance. It is
+inconceivable that the Jewish people should be held in execration by
+those acquainted with the course of its history, with its tragic and
+heroic past.[7] Indeed, so far as Jew-haters by profession are
+concerned, it is running a risk to recommend the study of Jewish
+history to them, without adding a word of caution. Its effect upon
+them might be disastrous. They might find themselves cured of their
+modern disease, and in the possession of ideas that would render
+worthless their whole stock in trade. Verily, he must have fallen to
+the zero-point of anti-Semitic callousness who is not thrilled through
+and through by the lofty fortitude, the saint-like humility, the
+trustful resignation to the will of God, the stoic firmness, laid bare
+by the study of Jewish history. The tribute of respect cannot be
+readily withheld from him to whom the words of the poet[8] are
+applicable:
+
+ "To die was not his hope; he fain
+ Would live to think and suffer pain."
+
+ [7] As examples and a proof of the strong humanitarian influence
+ Jewish history exercises upon Christians, I would point to the
+ relation established between the Jews and two celebrities of
+ the nineteenth century, Schleiden and George Eliot. In his old
+ age, the great scientist and thinker accidentally, in the
+ course of his study of sources for the history of botany,
+ became acquainted with medieval Jewish history. It filled him
+ with ardent enthusiasm for the Jews, for their intellectual
+ strength, their patience under martyrdom. Dominated by this
+ feeling, he wrote the two admirable sketches: _Die Bedeutung
+ der Juden fuer Erhaltung und Wiederbelebung der Wissenschaften
+ im Mittelalter_ (1876) and _Die Romantik des Martyriums
+ bei den Juden im Mittelalter_ (1878). According to his own
+ confession, the impulse to write them was "the wish to take at
+ least the first step toward making partial amends for the
+ unspeakable wrong inflicted by Christians upon Jews." As for
+ George Eliot, it may not be generally known that it was her
+ reading of histories of the Jews that inspired her with the
+ profound veneration for the Jewish people to which she gave
+ glowing utterance in "Daniel Deronda." (She cites Zunz, was
+ personally acquainted with Emanuel Deutsch, and carried on a
+ correspondence with Professor Dr. David Kaufmann. See
+ _George Eliot's Life as related in her Letters and
+ Journals_. Arranged and edited by her husband, J. W. Cross,
+ Vol. iii, ed. Harper and Brothers.) Her enthusiasm prompted
+ her, in 1879, to indite her passionate apology for the Jews,
+ under the title, "The Modern Hep! Hep! Hep!"
+
+ [8] Pushkin.
+
+When, in days to come, the curtain rises upon the touching tragedy of
+Jewish history, revealing it to the astonished eye of a modern
+generation, then, perhaps, hearts will be attuned to tenderness, and
+on the ruins of national hostility will be enthroned mutual love,
+growing out of mutual understanding and mutual esteem. And who can
+tell--perhaps Jewish history will have a not inconsiderable share in
+the spiritual change that is to annihilate national intolerance, the
+modern substitute for the religious bigotry of the middle ages. In
+this case, the future task of Jewish history will prove as sublime as
+was the mission of the Jewish people in the past. The latter consisted
+in the spread of the dogma of the unity of creation; the former will
+contribute indirectly to the realization of the not yet accepted dogma
+of the unity of the human race.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE HISTORICAL SYNTHESIS
+
+
+To define the scope of Jewish history, its content and its
+significance, or its place among scientific pursuits, disposes only of
+the formal part of the task we have set ourselves. The central problem
+is to unfold the meaning of Jewish history, to discover the principle
+toward which its diversified phenomena converge, to state the
+universal laws and philosophic inferences deducible from the peculiar
+course of its events. If we liken history to an organic being, then
+the skeleton of facts is its body, and the soul is the spiritual bond
+that unites the facts into a whole, that conveys the meaning, the
+psychologic essence, of the facts. It becomes our duty, then, to
+unbare the soul of Jewish history, or, in scientific parlance, to
+construct, on the basis of the facts, the synthesis of the whole of
+Jewish national life. To this end, we must pass in review, by periods
+and epochs, one after another, the most important groups of historical
+events, the most noteworthy currents in life and thought that tell of
+the stages in the development of Jewry and of Judaism. Exhaustive
+treatment of the philosophical synthesis of a history extending over
+three thousand years is possible only in a voluminous work. In an
+essay like the present it can merely be sketched in large outline, or
+painted in miniature. We cannot expect to do more than state a series
+of general principles substantiated by the most fundamental arguments.
+Complete demonstration of each of the principles must be sought in the
+annals that recount the events of Jewish history in detail.
+
+The historical synthesis reduces itself, then, to uncovering the
+psychologic processes of national development. The object before us to
+be studied is the national spirit undergoing continuous evolution
+during thousands of years. Our task is to arrive at the laws
+underlying this growth. We shall reach our goal by imitating the
+procedure of the geologist, who divides the mass of the earth into its
+several strata or formations. In Jewish history there may be
+distinguished three chief stratifications answering to its first three
+periods, the Biblical period, the period of the Second Temple, and the
+Talmudic period. The later periods are nothing more than these same
+formations combined in various ways, with now and then the addition of
+new strata. Of the composite periods there are four, which arrange
+themselves either according to hegemonies, the countries in which at
+given times lay the centre of gravity of the scattered Jewish people,
+or according to the intellectual currents there predominant.
+
+This, then, is our scheme:
+
+ I. The chief formations:
+ a) The primary or Biblical period.
+ b) The secondary or spiritual-political period
+ (the period of the Second Temple, 538
+ B. C. E. to 70 C.E.)
+ c) The tertiary or national-religious period
+ (the Talmudic period, 70-500).
+
+ II. The composite formations:
+ a) The Gaonic period, or the hegemony of
+ the Oriental Jews (500-980).
+ b) The Rabbinic-philosophical period, or the
+ hegemony of the Spanish Jews (980-1492).
+ c) The Rabbinic-mystical period, or the hegemony
+ of the German-Polish Jews
+ (1492-1789).
+ d) The modern period of enlightenment (the
+ nineteenth century).
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE PRIMARY OR BIBLICAL PERIOD
+
+
+In the daybreak of history, the hoary days when seeming and reality
+merge into each other, and the outlines of persons and things fade
+into the surrounding mist, the picture of a nomad people, moving from
+the deserts of Arabia in the direction of Mesopotamia and Western
+Asia, detaches itself clear and distinct from the dim background. The
+tiny tribe, a branch of the Semitic race, bears a peculiar stamp of
+its own. A shepherd people, always living in close touch with nature,
+it yet resists the potent influence of the natural phenomena, which,
+as a rule, entrap primitive man, and make him the bond-slave of the
+visible and material. Tent life has attuned these Semitic nomads to
+contemplativeness. In the endless variety of the phenomena of nature,
+they seek to discover a single guiding power. They entertain an
+obscure presentiment of the existence of an invisible, universal soul
+animating the visible, material universe. The intuition is personified
+in the Patriarch Abraham, who, according to Biblical tradition, held
+communion with God, when, on the open field, "he looked up toward
+heaven, and counted the stars," or when, "at the setting of the sun,
+he fell into benumbing sleep, and terror seized upon him by reason of
+the impenetrable darkness." Here we have a clear expression of the
+original, purely cosmical character of the Jewish religion.
+
+There was no lack of human influence acting from without. Chaldea,
+which the peculiar Semitic shepherds crossed in their pilgrimage,
+presented them with notions from its rich mythology and cosmogony. The
+natives of Syria and Canaan, among whom in the course of time the
+Abrahamites settled, imparted to them many of their religious views
+and customs. Nevertheless, the kernel of their pure original theory
+remained intact. The patriarchal mode of life, admirable in its
+simplicity, continued to hold its own within the circle of the
+firmly-knitted tribe. It was in Canaan, however, that the shepherd
+people hailing from Arabia showed the first signs of approaching
+disintegration. Various tribal groups, like Moab and Ammon,
+consolidated themselves. They took permanent foothold in the land, and
+submitted with more or less readiness to the influences exerted by the
+indigenous peoples. The guardianship of the sublime traditions of the
+tribe remained with one group alone, the "sons of Jacob" or the "sons
+of Israel," so named from the third Patriarch Jacob. To this group of
+the Israelites composed of smaller, closely united divisions, a
+special mission was allotted; its development was destined to lie
+along peculiar lines. The fortunes awaiting it were distinctive, and
+for thousands of years have filled thinking and believing mankind with
+wondering admiration.
+
+Great characters are formed under the influence of powerful
+impressions, of violent convulsions, and especially under the
+influence of suffering. The Israelites early passed through their
+school of suffering in Egypt. The removal of the sons of Jacob from
+the banks of the Jordan to those of the Nile was of decisive
+importance for the progress of their history. When the patriarchal
+Israelitish shepherds encountered the old, highly complex culture of
+the Egyptians, crystallized into fixed forms even at that early date,
+it was like the clash between two opposing electric currents. The pure
+conception of God, of _Elohim_, as of the spirit informing and
+supporting the universe, collided with the blurred system of heathen
+deities and crass idolatry. The simple cult of the shepherds,
+consisting of a few severely plain ceremonies, transmitted from
+generation to generation, was confronted with the insidious, coarsely
+sensual animal worship of the Egyptians. The patriarchal customs of
+the Israelites were brought into marked contrast with the vices of a
+corrupt civilization. Sound in body and soul, the son of nature
+suddenly found himself in unsavory surroundings fashioned by culture,
+in which he was as much despised as the inoffensive nomad is by
+"civilized" man of settled habit. The scorn had a practical result in
+the enslavement of the Israelites by the Pharaohs. Association with
+the Egyptians acted as a force at once of attraction and of repulsion.
+The manners and customs of the natives could not fail to leave an
+impression upon the simple aliens, and invite imitation on their part.
+On the other hand, the whole life of the Egyptians, their crude
+notions of religion, and their immoral ways, were calculated to
+inspire the more enlightened among the Israelites with disgust. The
+hostility of the Egyptians toward the "intruders," and the horrible
+persecutions in which it expressed itself, could not but bring out
+more aggressively the old spiritual opposition between the two races.
+The antagonism between them was the first influence to foster the germ
+of Israel's national consciousness, the consciousness of his peculiar
+character, his individuality. This early intimation of a national
+consciousness was weak. It manifested itself only in the chosen few.
+But it existed, and the time was appointed when, under more favorable
+conditions, it would develop, and display the extent of its power.
+
+This consciousness it was that inspired the activity of Moses,
+Israel's teacher and liberator. He was penetrated alike by national
+and religious feeling, and his desire was to impart both national and
+religious feeling to his brethren. The fact of national redemption he
+connected with the fact of religious revelation. "I am the Lord thy
+God who have brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt" was
+proclaimed from Sinai. The God-idea was nationalized. Thenceforth
+"Eternal" became the name peculiar to the God of Israel. He was,
+indeed, the same _Elohim_, the Creator of the world and its
+Guide, who had been dimly discerned by the spiritual vision of the
+Patriarchs. At the same time He was the special God of the Israelitish
+nation, the only nation that avouched Him with a full and undivided
+heart, the nation chosen by God Himself to carry out, alone, His
+sublime plans.[9] In his wanderings, Israel became acquainted with the
+chaotic religious systems of other nations. Seeing to what they paid
+the tribute of divine adoration, he could not but be dominated by the
+consciousness that he alone from of old had been the exponent of the
+religious idea in its purity. The resolution must have ripened within
+him to continue for all time to advocate and cherish this idea. From
+that moment Israel was possessed of a clear theory of life in religion
+and morality, and of a definite aim pursued with conscious intent.
+
+ [9] This is the true recondite meaning of the verses Exod. vi,
+ 2-3: "And God spake unto Moses, and said unto him, I am the
+ Eternal: and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto
+ Jacob, as _El-Shaddai_ (God Almighty), but by my name
+ Eternal I was not known unto them."
+
+Its originators designed that this Israelitish conception of life
+should serve not merely theoretically, as the basis of religious
+doctrine, but also practically, as the starting point of legislation.
+It was to be realized in the daily walks of the people, which at this
+very time attained to political independence. Sublime religious
+conceptions were not to be made the content of a visionary creed, the
+subject of dreamy contemplation, but, in the form of perspicuous
+guiding principles, were to control all spheres of individual and
+social life. Men must beware of looking upon religion as an ideal to
+be yearned for, it should be an ideal to be applied directly, day by
+day, to practical contingencies. In "Mosaism," so-called, the
+religious and the ethical are intimately interwoven with the social
+and the political. The chief dogmas of creed are stated as principles
+shaping practical life. For instance, the exalted idea of One God
+applied to social life produces the principle of the equality of all
+men before the One Supreme Power, a principle on which the whole of
+Biblical legislation is built. The commands concerning love of
+neighbor, the condemnation of slavery, the obligation to aid the poor,
+humane treatment of the stranger, sympathy and compassion with every
+living being--all these lofty injunctions ensue as inevitable
+consequences from the principle of equality. Biblical legislation is
+perhaps the only example of a political and social code based, not
+upon abstract reasoning alone, but also upon the requirements of the
+feelings, upon the finest impulses of the human soul. By the side of
+formal right and legality, it emphasizes, and, in a series of
+precepts, makes tangible, the principle of justice and humanity. The
+Mosaic law is a "propaganda by deed." Everywhere it demands active,
+more than passive, morality. Herein, in this elevated characteristic,
+this vital attribute, consists the chief source of the power of
+Mosaism. The same characteristic, to be sure, prevented it from at
+once gaining ground in the national life. It established itself only
+gradually, after many fluctuations and errors. In the course of the
+centuries, and keeping pace with the growth of the national
+consciousness, it was cultivated and perfected in detail.
+
+The conquest of Canaan wrought a radical transformation in the life of
+the Israelitish people. The acquiring of national territory supplied
+firm ground for the development and manifold application of the
+principles of Mosaism. At first, however, advance was out of the
+question. The mass of the people had not reached the degree of
+spiritual maturity requisite for the espousal of principles
+constituting an exalted theory of life. It could be understood and
+represented only by a thoughtful minority, which consisted chiefly of
+Aaronites and Levites, together forming a priestly estate, though not
+a hierarchy animated by the isolating spirit of caste that flourished
+among all the other peoples of the Orient. The populace discovered
+only the ceremonial side of the religion; its kernel was hidden from
+their sight. Defective spiritual culture made the people susceptible
+to alien influences, to notions more closely akin to its
+understanding. Residence in Canaan, among related Semitic tribes that
+had long before separated from the Israelites, and adopted altogether
+different views and customs, produced a far greater metamorphosis in
+the character of the Israelites than the sojourn in Egypt. After the
+first flush of victory, when the unity of the Israelitish people had
+been weakened by the particularistic efforts of several of the tribes,
+the spiritual bonds confining the nation began to relax. Political
+decay always brings religious defection in its train. Whenever Israel
+came under the dominion of the neighboring tribes, he also fell a
+victim to their cult. This phenomenon is throughout characteristic of
+the so-called era of the Judges. It is a natural phenomenon readily
+explained on psychologic grounds. The Mosaic national conception of
+the "Eternal" entered more and more deeply into the national
+consciousness, and, accommodating itself to the limited mental
+capacity of the majority, became narrower and narrower in compass--the
+lot of all great ideas! The "Eternal" was no longer thought of as the
+only One God of the whole universe, but as the tutelar deity of the
+Israelitish tribe. The idea of national tutelar deities was at that
+time deeply rooted in the consciousness of all the peoples of Western
+Asia. Each nation, as it had a king of its own, had a tribal god of
+its own. The Phoenicians had their Baal, the Moabites their Kemosh, the
+Ammonites their Milkom. Belief in the god peculiar to a nation by no
+means excluded belief in the existence of other national gods. A
+people worshiped its own god, because it regarded him as its master
+and protecting lord. In fact, according to the views then prevalent, a
+conflict between two nations was the conflict between two national
+deities. In the measure in which respect for the god of the defeated
+party waned, waxed the number of worshipers of the god of the
+victorious nation, and not merely among the conquerors, but also among
+the adherents of other religions.[10] These crude, coarsely
+materialistic conceptions of God gained entrance with the masses of
+the Israelitish people. If Moab had his Kemosh, and Ammon his Milkom,
+then Israel had his "Eternal," who, after the model of all other
+national gods, protected and abandoned his "clients" at pleasure, in
+the one case winning, in the other losing, the devotion of his
+partisans. In times of distress, in which the Israelites groaned under
+the yoke of the alien, the enslaved "forgot" their "conquered"
+"Eternal." As they paid the tribute due the strange king, and yielded
+themselves to his power, so they submitted to the strange god, and
+paid him his due tribute of devotion. It followed that liberation from
+the yoke of the stranger coincided with return to the God of Israel,
+the "Eternal." At such times the national spirit leaped into flaming
+life. This sums up the achievements of the hero-Judges. But the traces
+of repeated backsliding were deep and long visible, for, together with
+the religious ideas of the strange peoples, the Israelites accepted
+their customs, as a rule corrupt and noxious customs, in sharp
+contrast with the lofty principles of the Mosaic Law, designed to
+control social life and the life of the individual.
+
+ [10] "Ye have forsaken me," says God unto Israel, "and served
+ other gods; wherefore I will deliver you no more. Go and cry
+ unto the gods which ye have chosen: let them deliver you in
+ the time of your tribulations" (Judges X, 13-14). The same
+ idea is brought out still more forcibly in the arguments
+ adduced by Jephthah in his message to the king of Ammon (more
+ correctly, Moab), who had laid claim to Israelitish lands:
+ "Thou," says Jephthah, "mayest possess that which Kemosh thy
+ god giveth thee to possess, but what the Lord our God giveth
+ us to possess, that will we possess" (Judges xi, 24). Usually
+ these words are taken ironically; to me they seem to convey
+ literal truth rather than irony.
+
+The Prophet Samuel, coming after the unsettled period of the Judges,
+had only partial success in purifying the views of the people and
+elevating it out of degradation to a higher spiritual level. His work
+was continued with more marked results in the brilliant reigns of
+Saul, David, and Solomon. An end was put to the baleful disunion among
+the tribes, and the bond of national tradition was strengthened. The
+consolidated Israelitish kingdom triumphed over its former oppressors.
+The gods of the strange peoples cringed in the dust before the
+all-powerful "Eternal." But, with the division of the kingdom and the
+political rupture between Judah and Israel, the period of
+efflorescence soon came to an end. Again confusion reigned supreme,
+and customs and convictions deteriorated under foreign influence.
+Prophets like Elijah and Elisha, feverish though their activity was,
+stood powerless before the rank immorality in the two states. The
+northern kingdom of Israel, composed of the Ten Tribes, passed swiftly
+downward on the road to destruction, sharing the fate of the
+numberless Oriental states whose end was inevitable by reason of inner
+decay. The inspired words of the early Israelitish Prophets, Amos,
+Hosea, and Micah, their trumpet-toned reproofs, their thrilling
+admonitions, died unheeded upon the air--society was too depraved to
+understand their import. It was reserved for later generations to give
+ear to their immortal utterances, eloquent witnesses to the lofty
+heights to which the Jewish spirit was permitted to mount in times of
+general decline. The northern kingdom sank into irretrievable ruin.
+Then came the turn of Judah. He, too, had disregarded the law of
+"sanctification" from Sinai, and had nearly arrived at the point of
+stifling his better impulses in the morass of materialistic living.
+
+At this critical moment, on the line between to be and not to be, a
+miracle came to pass. The spirit of the people, become flesh in its
+noblest sons, rose aloft. From out of the midst of the political
+disturbances, the frightful infamy, and the moral corruption,
+resounded the impressive call of the great Prophets of Judah. Like a
+flaming torch carried through dense darkness, they cast a glaring
+light upon the vices of society, at the same time illuminating the
+path that leads upward to the goal of the ethical ideal. At first the
+negative, denouncing element predominated in the exhortations of the
+Prophets: unsparingly they scourged the demoralization and the
+iniquity, the social injustice and the political errors prevalent in
+their time; they threatened divine punishment, that is, the natural
+consequences of evil-doing, and appealed to the reason rather than the
+feelings of the people. But gradually they elaborated positive ideals,
+more soul-stirring than the ideals identified with the old religious
+tradition. The Prophets were the first to touch the root of the evil.
+It is clear that they realized that alien influences and the low grade
+of intelligence possessed by the masses were not the sole causes of
+the frequent backsliding of the people. The Jewish doctrine itself
+bore within it the germ of error. The two chief pillars of the old
+faith--the nationalizing of the God-idea, and the stress laid upon the
+cult, the ceremonial side of religion, as compared with moral
+requirements--were first and foremost to be held responsible for the
+flagrant departures from the spirit of Judaism. This was the direction
+in which reform was needed. Thereafter the sermons of the Prophets
+betray everywhere the intense desire, on the one hand, to restore to
+the God-idea its original universal character, and, on the other hand,
+while strongly emphasizing the importance of morality in the religious
+and the social sphere, to derogate from the value of the ceremonial
+system. The "Eternal" is no longer the national God of Israel,
+belonging to him exclusively; He becomes the God of the whole of
+mankind, the same _Elohim_, Creator and Preserver of the world,
+whom the Patriarchs had worshiped, and to whom, being His creatures,
+all men owe worship. His precepts and His laws of morality are binding
+upon all nations; they will bring salvation and blessing to all
+without distinction.[11] The ideal of piety consists in the profession
+of God and a life of rectitude. The time will come when all nations
+will be penetrated by true knowledge of God and actuated by the
+noblest motives; then will follow the universal brotherhood of man.
+Until this consummation is reached, and so long as Israel is the only
+nation formally professing the one true God, and accepting His blessed
+law, Israel's sole task is to embody in himself the highest ideals, to
+be an "ensign to the nations," to bear before them the banner of God's
+law, destined in time to effect the transformation of the whole of
+mankind. Israel is a missionary to the nations. As such he must stand
+before them as a model of holiness and purity. Here is the origin of
+the great idea of the spiritual "Messianism" of the Jewish people, or,
+better, its "missionism," an eternal idea, far more comprehensive than
+the old idea of national election, which it supplanted.
+
+ [11] Two Biblical passages, the one from Deuteronomy, the other
+ from Deutero-Isaiah, afford a signal illustration of the
+ contrast between the religious nationalism of the Mosaic law
+ and the universalism of the Prophets. Moses says to Israel:
+ "Thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God: the Lord thy
+ God hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself,
+ above all people that are upon the face of the earth. The Lord
+ did not set his love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were
+ more in number than any people: for ye were the fewest of all
+ people. But because the Lord loved you...." (Deut. vii, 6-8).
+ And these are the words of the prophecy: "Listen, O isles,
+ unto me, and hearken, ye people, from far! The Lord hath
+ called me... and said unto me, Thou art my servant, O Israel,
+ in whom I will be glorified! But I had thought, I have labored
+ in vain, I have spent my strength for nought, and in vain; yet
+ surely my judgment is with the Lord, and my work with my God.
+ For now said the Lord unto me... It is too light a thing that
+ thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob,
+ and to restore the preserved of Israel: no, I will also give
+ thee for a light to the Gentiles, that my salvation may reach
+ unto the end of the earth" (Is. xlix, 1-6).
+
+These sublime teachings were inculcated at the moment in which Judah
+was hastening to meet his fate. It had become impossible to check the
+natural results of the earlier transgressions. The inevitable
+happened; Babylon the mighty laid her ponderous hand upon tiny Judah.
+But Judah could not be crushed. From the heavy chastisement the Jewish
+nation emerged purified, re-born for a new life.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE SECONDARY OR SPIRITUAL-POLITICAL PERIOD
+
+
+The rank and file of a people are instructed by revolutions and
+catastrophes better than by sermons. More quickly than Isaiah and
+Jeremiah, Nebuchadnezzar brought the Jews to a recognition of their
+tasks. The short span of the Babylonian Exile (586-538 B. C. E.) was a
+period of introspection and searching self-examination for the people.
+Spiritual forces hitherto latent came into play; a degree of
+self-consciousness asserted itself. The people grasped its mission. At
+last it comprehended that to imitate inferior races, instead of
+teaching them and making itself a model for them to follow, was
+treason to its vocation in life. When the hour of release from the
+Babylonian yoke struck, the people suddenly saw under its feet "a new
+earth," and to "a new heaven" above it raised eyes dim with tears of
+repentance and emotion. It renewed its covenant with God. Like the
+Exodus from Egypt, so the second national deliverance was connected
+with a revelation. But the messages delivered by the last
+Prophets--especially by "the great unknown," the author of the latter
+part of the Book of Isaiah--were too exalted, too universal in
+conception, for a people but lately emerged from a severe crisis to
+set about their realization at once. They could only illumine its path
+as a guiding-star, inspire it as the ultimate goal, the far-off
+Messianic ideal. Meanwhile the necessity appeared for uniform
+religious laws, dogmas, and customs, to bind the Jews together
+externally as a nation. The moralizing religion of the Prophets was
+calculated to bring about the regeneration of the individual,
+regardless of national ties; but at that moment the chief point
+involved was the nation. It had to be established and its organization
+perfected. The universalism of the Prophets was inadequate for the
+consolidating of a nation. To this end outward religious discipline
+was requisite, an official cult and public ceremonies. Led by such
+considerations, the Jewish captives, on their return to Jerusalem,
+first of all devoted themselves to the erection of a Temple, to the
+creating of a visible religious centre, which was to be the rallying
+point for the whole nation.
+
+The days of the Prophets were over. Their religious universalism could
+apply only to a distant future. In the present, the nation, before it
+might pose as a teacher, had to learn and grow spiritually strong.
+Aims of such compass require centuries for their realization.
+Therefore, the spiritual-national unification of the people was pushed
+into the foreground. The place of the Prophet was filled by the Priest
+and the Scribe. Zerubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah were permeated by the
+purpose to make religion and the cult subservient to the cause of
+national union and isolation. The erection of the Temple, the solemn
+service with the singing of Psalms and the public reading from the
+"Book of the Law" (the Pentateuch, which underwent its final redaction
+at that time), the removal of whatever might arouse the remembrance of
+strange and heathen institutions--these were the levers of their
+unifying activity. At first sight this activity might appear almost
+too one-sided. But if we summon to mind a picture of the conditions
+prevailing in those days, we are forced to the conclusion that, in the
+interest of national restoration, a consistent course was imperative.
+In point of fact, however, some of Ezra's innovations testify to the
+broad-minded, reformatory character of this activity; as, for
+instance, the public reading of the Pentateuch, introduced with a view
+to making the people see the necessity of obtaining detailed knowledge
+of the principles of its religion, and obeying the precepts of the
+Law, not blindly, but with conscious assent. The object steadily aimed
+at was the elevation of the whole body of the people to the plane of
+spirituality, its transformation, in accordance with the Biblical
+injunction, into a "kingdom of priests."
+
+This injunction of civilizing import became the starting point of the
+activity of all of Ezra's successors, of the so-called school of the
+_Soferim_, the Scribes, those versed in the art of writing. The
+political calm that prevailed during the two centuries of the Persian
+supremacy (538-332 B. C. E.), was calculated to an eminent degree to
+promote spiritual development and the organization of the inner life
+of the people. During this period, a large part of the writings after
+the Pentateuch that have been received into the Bible were collected,
+compiled, and reduced to writing. The immortal thoughts of the
+Prophets clothed themselves in the visible garb of letters. On
+parchment rolls and in books they were made accessible to distant
+ages. The impressive traditions transmitted from earliest times, the
+chronicles of the past of the people, the Psalms brought forth by the
+religious enthusiasm of a long series of poets, all were gathered and
+put into literary shape with the extreme of care. The spiritual
+treasures of the nation were capitalized, and to this process of
+capitalization solely and alone generations of men have owed the
+possibility of resorting to them as a source of faith and knowledge.
+Without the work of compilation achieved by the _Soferim_, of
+which the uninstructed are apt to speak slightingly, mankind to-day
+had no Bible, that central sun in world-literature.
+
+These two centuries may fitly be called the school-days of the Jewish
+nation; the Scribes were the teachers of Jewry. In the way of original
+work but little was produced. The people fed upon the store of
+spiritual food, of which sufficient had been laid up for several
+generations. It was then that the Jews first earned their title to the
+name, "the People of the Book." They made subservient to themselves
+the two mightiest instruments of thought, the art of writing and of
+reading. Their progress was brilliant, and when their schooling had
+come to an end, and they stepped out into the broader life, they were
+at once able to apply their knowledge successfully to practical
+contingencies. They were prepared for all the vicissitudes of life.
+Their spiritual equipment was complete.
+
+Nothing could have been more opportune than this readiness to assume
+the responsibilities of existence, for a time of peril and menace was
+again approaching. From out of the West, a new agent of civilization,
+Hellenism, advanced upon the East. Alexander the Great had put an end
+to the huge Persian monarchy, and brought the whole of Western Asia
+under his dominion (332 B. C. E.). His generals divided the conquered
+lands among themselves. With all their might, the Ptolemies in Egypt
+and the Seleucidae in Syria hellenized the countries subject to their
+rule. In the old domain of the Pharaohs, as in Babylonia, in Phoenicia,
+and in Syria, the Greek language was currently spoken, Greek
+ceremonies were observed, the Greek mode of life was adopted. Athens
+ceded her rights of primogeniture to New Athens, Alexandria, capital
+of Egypt, and cosmopolitan centre of the civilized world. For a whole
+century Judea played the sad part of the apple of discord between the
+Egyptian and the Syrian dynasty (320-203 B. C. E.). By turns she owned
+the sway of the Ptolemies and the Seleucidae, until finally, in 203,
+she was declared a Syro-Macedonian province. Here, as in the other
+parts of their realm, the rulers devoted themselves energetically to
+the dissemination of Greek culture. Meeting with resistance, they had
+resort to main force. At first, indeed, a large part of the people
+permitted itself to be blinded by the "beauty of Japheth," and
+promoted assimilation with the Greeks. But when the spread of
+Hellenism began to threaten the spiritual individuality of Judaism,
+the rest of the nation, endowed with greater capacity of resistance,
+arose and sturdily repulsed the enemy.
+
+Hellenism was the first gravely dangerous opponent Judaism had to
+encounter. It was not the ordinary meeting of two peoples, or of two
+kinds of civilization. It was a clash between two theories of life
+that stood abruptly opposed to each other, were, indeed, mutually
+exclusive. It was a duel between "the Eternal" on the one side, and
+Zeus on the other--between the Creator of the universe, the invisible
+spiritual Being who had, in a miraculous way, revealed religious and
+ethical ideals to mankind, and the deity who resided upon Olympus, who
+personified the highest force of nature, consumed vast quantities of
+nectar and ambrosia, and led a pretty wild life upon Olympus and
+elsewhere. In the sphere of religion and morality, Hellene and Judean
+could not come close to each other. The former deified nature herself,
+the material universe; the latter deified the Creator of nature, the
+spirit informing the material universe. The Hellene paid homage first
+and foremost to external beauty and physical strength; the Judean to
+inner beauty and spiritual heroism. The Hellenic theory identified the
+moral with the beautiful and the agreeable, and made life consist of
+an uninterrupted series of physical and mental pleasures. The Judean
+theory is permeated by the strictly ethical notions of duty, of
+purity, of "holiness"; it denounces licentiousness, and sets up as its
+ideal the controlling of the passions and the infinite improvement of
+the soul, not of the intellect alone, but of the feelings as well.
+These differences between the two theories of life showed themselves
+in the brusque opposition in character and customs that made the
+Greeks and the Jews absolute antipodes in many spheres of life. It
+cannot be denied that in matters of the intellect, especially in the
+field of philosophy and science, not to mention art, it might have
+been greatly to the advantage of the Jews to become disciples of the
+Greeks. Nor is there any doubt that the brighter aspects of Hellenism
+would make an admirable complement to Judaism. An harmonious blending
+of the Prophets with Socrates and Plato would have produced a
+many-sided, ideal _Weltanschauung_. The course of historical events
+from the first made such blending, which would doubtless have
+required great sacrifices on both sides, an impossible consummation.
+In point of fact, the events were such as to widen the abyss between
+the two systems. The meeting of Judaism and Hellenism unfortunately
+occurred at the very moment when the classical Hellenes had been
+supplanted by the hellenized Macedonians and Syrians, who had accepted
+what were probably the worst elements of the antique system, while
+appropriating but few of the intellectual excellencies of Greek
+culture. There was another thwarting circumstance. In this epoch, the
+Greeks were the political oppressors of the Jews, outraging Jewish
+national feeling through their tyranny to the same degree as by their
+immoral life they shocked Jewish ethical feeling and Jewish chastity.
+
+Outraged national and religious feeling found expression in the
+insurrection of the Maccabees (168 B. C. E.). The hoary priest
+Mattathias and his sons fought for the dearest and noblest treasures
+of Judaism. Enthusiasm begets heroism. The Syrian-Greek yoke was
+thrown off, and, after groaning under alien rule, the Persian, the
+Egyptian, and the Syro-Macedonian, for four hundred years, Judea
+became an independent state. In its foreign relations, the new state
+was secured by the self-sacrificing courage of the first Maccabean
+brothers, and from within it was supported by the deep-sunk pillars of
+the spiritual life. The rise of the three famous parties, the
+Sadducees, the Pharisees, and the Essenes, by no means testifies, as
+many would have us believe, to national disintegration, but rather to
+the intense spiritual activity of the people. The three tendencies
+afforded opportunity for the self-consciousness of the nation to
+express itself in all its variety and force. The unbending religious
+dogmatism of the Sadducees, the comprehensive practical sense of the
+Pharisees in religious and Rational concerns, the contemplative
+mysticism of the Essenes, they are the most important offshoots from
+the Jewish system as held at that time. In consequence of the external
+conditions that brought about the destruction of the Maccabean
+state[12] after a century's existence (165-63 B. C. E.), the Pharisee
+tendency, which had proved itself the best in practice, won the upper
+hand. When Judea was held fast in the clutches of the Roman eagle, all
+hope of escape being cut off, the far-seeing leaders of the people
+gained the firm conviction that the only trustworthy support of the
+Jewish nation lay in its religion. They realized that the preservation
+of national unity could be effected only by a consistent organization
+of the religious law, which was to envelop and shape the whole
+external life of the people. This explains the feverish activity of
+the early creators of the Mishna, of Hillel, Shammai, and others, and
+it interprets also the watchword of still older fame, "Make a fence
+about the Law." If up to that moment religious usage in its
+development had kept abreast of the requirements of social and
+individual life, the requirements out of which it had grown forth, it
+now became a national function, and its further evolution advanced
+with tremendous strides. For the protection of the old "Mosaic Laws,"
+a twofold and a threefold fence of new legal ordinances was erected
+about them, and the cult became more and more complicated. But the
+externals of religion did not monopolize all the forces. The moral
+element in the nation was promoted with equal vigor. Hillel, the head
+of the Pharisee party, was not a legislator alone, he was also a model
+of humane principles and rare moral attainments.
+
+ [12] The external causes of the downfall of the Maccabean state,
+ dynastic quarrels, are well known. Much less light has been
+ thrown upon the inner, deeper-lying causes of the catastrophe.
+ These are possibly to be sought in the priestly-political
+ dualism of the Judean form of government. The ideal of a
+ nation educated by means of the Bible was a theocratic state,
+ and the first princes of the Maccabean house, acting at once
+ as regents and as high priests, in a measure reached this
+ ideal. But the attempts of other nations had demonstrated
+ conclusively enough that a dualistic form of government cannot
+ maintain itself permanently. Sooner or later one of the two
+ elements, the priestly or the secular, is bound to prevail
+ over the other and crush it. In the Judean realm, with its
+ profoundly religious trend, the priestly element obtained the
+ ascendency, and political ruin ensued. The priestly-political
+ retreated before the priestly-national form of government.
+ Though the religious element was powerless to preserve the
+ _state_ from destruction, we shall see that it has
+ brilliantly vindicated its ability to keep the _nation_
+ intact.
+
+While Judaism, in its native country was striving to isolate itself,
+and was seizing upon all sorts of expedients to insure this end, it
+readily entered into relations, outside of Judea, with other systems
+of thought, and accepted elements of the classical culture. Instead of
+the violent opposition which the Palestinian Judaism of the
+pre-Maccabean period, that is, the period of strife, had offered to
+Hellenism, the tendency to make mutual concessions, and pave the way
+for an understanding between the two theories of life, asserted itself
+in Alexandria. In the capital city of the hellenized world the Jews
+constituted one of the most important elements of culture. According
+to Mommsen, the Jewish colony in Alexandria was not inferior, in point
+of numbers, to the Jewish population of Jerusalem, the metropolis.
+Influenced by Greek civilization, the Jews in turn exercised decisive
+influence upon their heathen surroundings, and introduced a new
+principle of development into the activity of the cultivated classes.
+The Greek translation of the Biblical writings formed the connecting
+link between Judaism and Hellenism. The "Septuaginta," the translation
+of the Pentateuch, in use since the third century before the Christian
+era, had acquainted the classical world with Jewish views and
+principles. The productions of the Prophets and, in later centuries,
+of the other Biblical authors, translated and spread broadcast, acted
+irresistibly upon the spirit of the cultivated heathen, and granted
+him a glimpse into a world of hitherto unknown notions. On this soil
+sprang up the voluminous Judeo-Hellenic literature, of which but a
+few, though characteristic, specimens have descended to us. The
+intermingling of Greek philosophy with Jewish religious conceptions
+resulted in a new religio-philosophic doctrine, with a mystic tinge,
+of which Philo is the chief exponent. In Jerusalem, Judaism appeared
+as a system of practical ceremonies and moral principles; in
+Alexandria, it presented itself as a complex of abstract symbols and
+poetical allegories. The Alexandrian form of Judaism might satisfy the
+intellect, but it could not appeal to the feelings. It may have made
+Judaism accessible to the cultivated minority, to the upper ten
+thousand with philosophic training; for the masses of the heathen
+people Judaism continued unintelligible. Yet it was pre-eminently the
+masses that were strongly possessed by religious craving. Disappointed
+in their old beliefs, they panted after a new belief, after spiritual
+enlightenment. In the decaying classical world, which had so long
+filled out life with materialistic and intellectual interests, the
+moral and religious feelings, the desire for a living faith, for an
+active inspiration, had awakened, and was growing with irresistible
+force.
+
+Then, from deep out of the bosom of Judaism, there sprang a moral,
+religious doctrine destined to allay the burning thirst for religion,
+and bring about a reorganization of the heathen world. The originators
+of Christianity stood wholly upon the ground of Judaism. In their
+teachings were reflected as well the lofty moral principles of the
+Pharisee leader as the contemplative aims of the Essenes. But the same
+external circumstances that had put Judaism under the necessity of
+choosing a sharply-defined practical, national policy, made it
+impossible for Judaism to fraternize with the preachers of the new
+doctrine. Judaism, in fact, was compelled to put aside entirely the
+thought of universal missionary activity. Instead, it had to devote
+its powers to the more pressing task of guarding the spiritual unity
+of a nation whose political bonds were visibly dropping away.
+
+For just then the Jewish nation, gory with its own blood, was
+struggling in the talons of the Roman eagle. Its sons fought
+heroically, without thought of self. When, finally, physical strength
+gave out, their spiritual energy rose to an intenser degree. The state
+was annihilated, the nation remained alive. At the very moment when
+the Temple was enwrapped in flames, and the Roman legions flooded
+Jerusalem, the spiritual leaders of Jewry sat musing, busily casting
+about for a means whereby, without a state, without a capital, without
+a Temple, Jewish unity might be maintained. And they solved the
+difficult problem.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE TERTIARY TALMUDIC OR NATIONAL-RELIGIOUS PERIOD
+
+
+The solution of the problem consisted chiefly in more strictly
+following out the process of isolation. In a time in which the worship
+of God preached by Judaism was rapidly spreading to all parts of the
+classical world, and the fundamental principles of the Jewish religion
+were steadily gaining appreciation and active adherence, this intense
+desire for seclusion may at first glance seem curious. But the
+phenomenon is perfectly simple. A foremost factor was national
+feeling, enhanced to a tremendous degree at the time of the
+destruction of Jerusalem. Lacking a political basis, it was
+transferred to religious soil. Every tradition, every custom, however
+insignificant, was cherished as a jewel. Though without a state and
+without territory, the Jews desired to form a nation, if only a
+spiritual nation, complete in itself. They considered themselves then
+as before the sole guardians of the law of God. They did not believe
+in a speedy fulfilment of the prophetical promise concerning "the end
+of time" when all nations would be converted to God. A scrupulous
+keeper of the Law, Judaism would not hear of the compromises that
+heathendom, lately entered into the bosom of the faith, claimed as its
+due consideration. It refused to sacrifice a single feature of its
+simple dogmatism, of its essential ceremonies, such as circumcision
+and Sabbath rest. Moreover, in the period following close upon the
+fall of the Temple, a part of the people still nursed the hope of
+political restoration, a hope repudiating in its totality the
+proclamation of quite another Messianic doctrine. The delusion ended
+tragically in Bar Kochba's hapless rebellion (135 C. E.), whose
+disastrous issue cut off the last remnant of hope for the restoration
+of an "earthly kingdom." Thereafter the ideal of a spiritual state was
+replaced by the ideal of a spiritual nation, rallying about a peculiar
+religious banner. Jewry grew more and more absorbed in itself. Its
+seclusion from the rest of the world became progressively more
+complete. Instinct dictated this course as an escape from the danger
+of extinction, or, at least, of stagnation. It was conscious of
+possessing enough vitality and energy to live for itself and work out
+its own salvation. It had its spiritual interests, its peculiar
+ideals, and a firm belief in the future. It constituted an ancient
+order, whose patent of nobility had been conferred upon it in the days
+of the hoary past by the Lord God Himself. Such as it was, it could
+not consent to ally itself with _parvenus_, ennobled but to-day,
+and yesterday still bowing down before "gods of silver and gods of
+gold." This white-haired old man, with a stormy past full of
+experiences and thought, would not mingle with the scatter-brained
+crowd, would not descend to the level of neophytes dominated by
+fleeting, youthful enthusiasm. Loyally this weather-bronzed,
+inflexible guardian of the Law stuck to his post--the post entrusted
+to him by God Himself--and, faithful to his duty, held fast to the
+principle _j'y suis, j'y reste_.
+
+As a political nation threatened by its neighbors seeks support in its
+army, and provides sufficient implements of war, so a spiritual nation
+must have spiritual weapons of defense at its command. Such weapons
+were forged in great numbers, and deposited in the vast arsenal called
+the Talmud. The Talmud represents a complicated spiritual discipline,
+enjoining unconditional obedience to a higher invisible power. Where
+discipline is concerned, questions as to the necessity for one or
+another regulation are out of place. Every regulation is necessary, if
+only because it contributes to the desired end, namely, discipline.
+Let no one ask, then, to what purpose the innumerable religious and
+ritual regulations, sometimes reaching the extreme of pettiness, to
+what purpose the comprehensive code in which every step in the life of
+the faithful is foreseen. The Talmudic religious provisions, all taken
+together, aim to put the regimen of the nation on a strictly uniform
+basis, so that everywhere the Jew may be able to distinguish a brother
+in faith by his peculiar mode of life. It is a uniform with insignia,
+by which soldiers of the same regiment recognize one another. Despite
+the vast extent of the Jewish diaspora, the Jews formed a
+well-articulated spiritual army, an invisible "state of God"
+(_civitas dei_). Hence these "knights of the spirit," the
+citizens of this invisible state, had to wear a distinct uniform, and
+be governed by a suitable code of army regulations.
+
+As a protection for Jewish national unity, which was exposed to the
+greatest danger after the downfall of the state, there arose and
+developed, without any external influence whatsoever, an extraordinary
+dictatorship, unofficial and spiritual. The legislative activity of
+all the dictators--such as, Rabbi Jochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Akiba,
+the Hillelites, and the Shammaites--was formulated in the Mishna, the
+"oral law," which was the substructure of the Talmud. Their activity
+had a characteristic feature, which deserves somewhat particularized
+description. The laws were not laid down arbitrarily and without
+ceremony. In order to possess binding force, they required the
+authoritative confirmation to be found in the Mosaic Books. From
+these, whether by logical or by forced interpretation of the holy
+text, its words, or, perchance, its letters, they had to be derived.
+Each law, barring only the original "traditions," the _Halacha
+le-Moshe mi-Sinai_, was promulgated over the supreme signature, as
+it were, that is, with the authentication of a word from the Holy
+Scriptures. Or it was inferred from another law so authenticated. The
+elaboration of every law was thus connected with a very complicated
+process of thought, requiring both inductive and deductive reasoning,
+and uniting juridical interpretation with the refinements of
+casuistry. This legislation was the beginning of Talmudic science,
+which from that time on, for many centuries, growing with the ages,
+claimed in chief part the intellectual activity of Jewry. The schools
+and the academies worked out a system of laws at once religious and
+practical in character, which constituted, in turn, the object of
+further theoretic study in the same schools and academies. In the
+course of time, however, the means became the end. Theoretic
+investigation of the law, extending and developing to the furthest
+limits, in itself, without reference to its practical value, afforded
+satisfaction to the spiritual need. The results of theorizing often
+attained the binding force of law in practical life, not because
+circumstances ordered it, but simply because one or another academy,
+by dint of logic or casuistry, had established it as law. The number
+of such deductions from original and secondary laws increased in
+geometric progression, and practical life all but failed to keep up
+with the theory. The "close of the Mishna," that is, its reduction to
+writing, had no daunting effect upon the zeal for research. If
+anything, a new and strong impetus was imparted to it. As up to that
+time the text of the Holy Scriptures had been made the basis of
+interpretation, giving rise to the most diverse inferences, so the
+rabbis now began to use the law book recently canonized as a new basis
+of interpretation, and to carry its principles to their utmost
+consequences. In this way originated first the "Palestinian Gemara."
+Later, when the Patriarchate in Palestine was stripped of its glory by
+persecutions, and, in consequence, the centre of activity had to be
+transferred from the Talmud academies of Palestine to those of
+Babylonia, supreme place and exclusive dominion were obtained by the
+"Babylonian Gemara," put into permanent form about the year 500 C. E.,
+a gigantic work, the result of two hundred years of mental labor.
+
+This busy intellectual activity was as comprehensive as it was
+thoroughgoing. Talmudic legislation, the Halacha, by no means confines
+itself to religious practices, extensive as this field is. It embraces
+the whole range of civil and social life. Apart from the dietary laws,
+the regulations for the festivals and the divine service, and a mass
+of enactments for the shaping of daily life, the Talmud elaborated a
+comprehensive and fairly well-ordered system of civil and criminal
+law, which not infrequently bears favorable comparison with the famous
+_rationi scriptae_ of the Romans. While proceeding with extreme
+rigor and scrupulousness in ritual matters, the Talmud is governed in
+its social legislation by the noblest humanitarian principles.
+Doubtless this difference of attitude can be explained by the fact
+that religious norms are of very much greater importance for a nation
+than judicial regulations, which concern themselves only with the
+interests of the individual, and exercise but little influence upon
+the development of the national spirit.
+
+The most sympathetic aspects of the Jewish spirit in that epoch are
+revealed in the moral and poetic elements of the Talmud, in the Agada.
+They are the receptacles into which the people poured all its
+sentiments, its whole soul. They are a clear reflex of its inner
+world, its feelings, hopes, ideals. The collective work of the nation
+and the trend of history have left much plainer traces in the Agada
+than in the dry, methodical Halacha. In the Agada the learned jurist
+and formalist appears transformed into a sage or poet, conversing with
+the people in a warm, cordial tone, about the phenomena of nature,
+history, and life. The reader is often thrown into amazement by the
+depth of thought and the loftiness of feeling manifested in the Agada.
+Involuntarily one pays the tribute of reverence to its practical
+wisdom, to its touching legends pervaded by the magic breath of poesy,
+to the patriarchal purity of its views. But these pearls are not
+strung upon one string, they are not arranged in a complete system.
+They are imbedded here and there, in gay variety, in a vast mass of
+heterogeneous opinions and sentiments naive at times and at times
+eccentric. The reader becomes aware of the thoughts before they are
+consolidated. They are still in a fluid, mobile state, still in
+process of making. The same vivacious, versatile spirit is revealed in
+the Midrashim literature, directly continuing the Agada up to the end
+of the middle ages. These two species of Jewish literature, the Agada
+and the Midrashim, have a far greater absolute value than the Halacha.
+The latter is an official work, the former a national product. Like
+every other special legislation, the Halacha is bound to definite
+conditions and times, while the Agada concerns itself with the eternal
+verities. The creations of the philosophers, poets, and moralists are
+more permanent than the work of legislators.
+
+Beautiful as the Agada is, and with all its profundity, it lacks
+breadth. It rests wholly on the national, not on a universal basis. It
+would be vain to seek in it for the comprehensive universalism of the
+Prophets. Every lofty ideal is claimed as exclusively Jewish. So far
+from bridging over the chasm between Israel and the other nations,
+knowledge and morality served to widen it. It could not be otherwise,
+there was no influx of air from without. The national horizon grew
+more and more contracted. The activities of the people gathered
+intensity, but in the same measure they lost in breadth. It was the
+only result to be expected from the course of history in those ages.
+Let us try to conceive what the first five centuries of the Christian
+era, the centuries during which the Talmud was built up, meant in the
+life of mankind. Barbarism, darkness, and elemental outbreaks of man's
+migratory instincts, illustrated by the "great migration of races,"
+are characteristic features of those centuries. It was a wretched
+transition period between the fall of the world of antique culture and
+the first germinating of a new Christian civilization. The Orient, the
+centre and hearth of Judaism, was shrouded in impenetrable darkness.
+In Palestine and in Babylonia, their two chief seats, the Jews were
+surrounded by nations that still occupied the lowest rung of the
+ladder of civilization, that had not yet risen above naive mysticism
+in religion, or continued to be immersed in superstitions of the
+grossest sort.
+
+In this abysmal night of the middle ages, the lamp of thought was fed
+and guarded solely and alone by the Jews. It is not astonishing, then,
+that oblivious of the other nations they should have dispensed light
+only for themselves. Furthermore, the circumstance must be considered
+that, in the period under discussion, the impulse to separate from
+Judaism gained ground in the Christian world. After the Council of
+Nicaea, after Constantine the Great had established Christianity as
+the state-church, the official breach between the Old Testament and
+the New Testament partisans became unavoidable.
+
+Thus the Jews, robbed of their political home, created a spiritual
+home for themselves. Through the instrumentality of the numberless
+religious rules which the Talmud had laid down, and which shaped the
+life of the individual as well as that of the community, they were
+welded into a firmly united whole. The Jewish spirit--national feeling
+and individual mental effort alike--was absorbed in this pursuit of
+unification. Head, heart, hands, all human functions of the Jew, were
+brought under complete control and cast into fixed forms, by these
+five centuries of labor. With painful exactitude, the Talmud
+prescribed ordinances for all the vicissitudes of life, yet, at the
+same time, offered sufficient food for brain and heart. It was at once
+a religion and a science. The Jew was equipped with all the
+necessaries. He could satisfy his wants from his own store. There was
+no need for him to knock at strange doors, even though he had thereby
+profited. The consequences of this attitude, positive as well as
+negative consequences, asserted themselves in the further course of
+Jewish history.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE GAONIC PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE ORIENTAL JEWS (500-980)
+
+
+With the close of the Talmud, at the beginning of the sixth century,
+the feverish intellectual activity abated. The Jewish centre of
+gravity continued in Babylonia. In this country, in which the Jewish
+race had heard its cradle song at the dawn of existence, and later on
+_Judaea capta_ had sat and wept remembering Zion, Judaism, after
+the destruction of the second Temple and hundreds of years of trials,
+was favored with a secure asylum. In the rest of the diaspora,
+persecution gave the Jews no respite, but in Babylonia, under Persian
+rule, they lived for some centuries comparatively free from
+molestation. Indeed, they enjoyed a measure of autonomy in internal
+affairs, under a chief who was entitled Exilarch (_Resh-Galutha_).
+The Law and the word of God went forth from Babylonia for the Jews of
+all lands. The Babylonian Talmud became the anthoritative code for the
+Jewish people, a holy book second only to the Bible. The intellectual
+calm that supervened at the beginning of the sixth century and lasted
+until the end of the eighth century, betrayed itself in the slackening of
+independent creation, though not in the flagging of intellectual activity
+in general. In the schools and academies of Pumbeditha, Nahardea,
+and Sura, scientific work was carried on with the same zest as before,
+only this work had for its primary object the sifting and exposition of
+the material heaped up by the preceding generations. This was the
+province of the Sabureans and the Geonim, whose relation to the Talmud
+was the same as that of the Scribes (the _Soferim_) of the Second
+Temple to the Bible (see above, ch. vi). In the later period, as in the
+earlier, the aim was the capitalization of the accumulated spiritual
+treasures, an undertaking that gives little occasion for movement and
+life, but all the more for endurance and industry.
+
+This intellectual balance was destroyed by two events: the appearance
+of Islam and the rise of Karaism. Islam, the second legitimate
+offspring of Judaism, was appointed to give to religious thought in
+the slumbering Orient the slight impulse it needed to start it on its
+rapid career of sovereign power. Barely emancipated from swaddling
+clothes, young Hotspur at once began to rage. He sought an outlet for
+his unconquerable thirst for action, his lust for world-dominion. The
+victorious religious wars of the followers of Allah ensued. This
+foreign movement was not without significance for the fate of the
+Jews. They were surrounded no longer by heathens but by Mohammedans,
+who believed in the God of the Bible, and through the mouth of their
+prophet conferred upon the Jews the honorable appellation of "the
+People of the Book." In the eighth century the wars ceased, and the
+impetuous energy of the rejuvenated Orient was diverted into quieter
+channels. The Bagdad Khalifate arose, the peaceful era of the growth
+of industry, the sciences, and the arts was inaugurated. Endowed with
+quick discernment for every enlightening movement, the Jews yielded to
+the vivifying magic of young Arabic culture.
+
+Partly under the influence of the Arabic tendency to split into
+religio-philosophic sects, partly from inner causes, Karaism sprang up
+in the second half of the eighth century. Its active career began with
+a vehement protest against the Talmud as the regulator of life and
+thought. It proclaimed the creators of this vast encyclopedia to be
+usurpers of spiritual power, and urged a return to the Biblical laws
+in their unadulterated simplicity. The weakness of its positive
+principles hindered the spread of Karaism, keeping it forever within
+the narrow limits of a sect and consigning it to stagnation. What gave
+it vogue during the first century of its existence was its negative
+strength, its violent opposition to the Talmud, which aroused
+strenuous intellectual activity. For a long time it turned Judaism
+away from its one-sided Talmudic tendency, and opened up new avenues
+of work for it. True to their motto: "Search diligently in the Holy
+Scriptures," the adherents of Karaism applied themselves to the
+rational study of the Bible, which had come to be, among the
+Talmudists, the object of casuistic interpretation and legendary
+adornment. By the cultivation of grammar and lexicography as applied
+to the Biblical thesaurus of words, they resuscitated the Hebrew
+language, which, ousted by the Aramaic dialect, had already sunk into
+oblivion. By the same means they laid the foundation of a school of
+rejuvenated poetry. In general, thought on religious and philosophic
+subjects was promoted to a higher degree by the lively discussions
+between them and the Talmudists.
+
+By imperceptible steps Talmudic Judaism, influenced at once by the
+enlightened Arabs and the protesting Karaites, departed from the "four
+ells of the Halacha," and widened its horizon. Among the spiritual
+leaders of the people arose men who occupied themselves not only with
+the study of the Talmud but also with a rational exegesis of the
+Bible, with philology, poetry, philosophy. The great Gaon Saadiah
+(892-942) united within himself all strands of thought. Over and above
+a large number of philological and other writings of scientific
+purport, he created a momentous religio-philosophic system, with the
+aim to clarify Judaism and refine religious conceptions. He was an
+encyclopedic thinker, a representative of the highest Jewish culture
+and of Arabic culture as well--he wrote his works in Arabic by
+preference. In this way Jewish thought gained ground more and more in
+the Orient. It was in the West, however, that it attained soon after
+to the climax of its development.
+
+Gradually the centre of gravity of Jewry shifted from Asia Minor to
+Western Europe. Beginning with the sixth century, the sparsely sown
+Jewish population of Occidental Europe increased rapidly in numbers.
+In Italy, Byzantium, France, and Visigothic Spain, important Jewish
+communities were formed. The medieval intolerance of the Church,
+though neither so widespread nor so violent as it later became,
+suffered its first outbreak in that early century. The persecutions of
+the Jews by the Visigothic kings of Spain and the Bishops Avitus of
+Clermont and Agobard in France (sixth to the ninth century) were the
+prelude to the more systematic and the more bloody cruelties of
+subsequent days. The insignificant numbers of the European Jews and
+the insecurity of their condition stood in the way of forming an
+intellectual centre of their own. They were compelled to acknowledge
+the spiritual supremacy of their Oriental brethren in faith. With the
+beginning of the tenth century the situation underwent a change.
+Arabic civilization, which had penetrated to Spain in previous
+centuries, brought about a radical transformation in the character of
+the country. The realm of the fanatic Visigoths, half barbarous and
+wholly averse to the light of progress, changed into the prosperous
+and civilized Khalifate of the Ommeyyades. Thither the best forces of
+Oriental Jewry transferred themselves. With the growth of the Jewish
+population in Arabic Spain and the strengthening of its communal
+organization, the spiritual centre of the Jewish people gradually
+established itself in Spain. The academies of Sura and Pumbeditha
+yielded first place to the high schools of Cordova and Toledo.
+
+The Jewry of the East resigned the national hegemony to the Jewry of
+the West. The Geonim withdrew in favor of the Rabbis. After centuries
+of seclusion, the Jewish spirit once more asserted itself, and enjoyed
+a period of efflorescence. The process of national growth became more
+complex, more varied.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE RABBINIC-PHILOSOPHICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE SPANISH JEWS
+(980-1492)
+
+
+The five centuries marked at their beginning by the rise of
+Arabic-Jewish civilization in Spain and at their end by the banishment
+of the Jews from Spain (980-1492), offer the Jewish historian an
+abundance of culture manifestations and intellectual movements so
+luxuriant that it is well-nigh impossible to gather them up in one
+formula. The monotony formerly prevailing in Jewish national life,
+both in its external and in its internal relations, was succeeded by
+almost gaily checkered variety. Swept along by the movement towards
+enlightenment that dominated their surroundings, the Jews of Arabic
+Spain threw themselves into energetic work in all the spheres of life
+and thought. While they had political ground more or less firm under
+their feet, and for the most part enjoyed peace and liberty, the Jews
+in the Christian lands of Europe stood upon volcanic soil, every
+moment threatening to swallow them up. Exposed constantly to
+persecutions, they lived more or less isolated, and devoted themselves
+to one-sided though intense intellectual activity. Sombre shadows and
+streaks of bright light alternate with each other in this period. In
+its second half, the clouds massed themselves heavily upon the
+darkening horizon. Even the "privileged" Spanish Jews suffered an
+untoward change in their affairs at the beginning of the thirteenth
+century: gradually they were withdrawn from under the sovereignty of
+the Arabs, and made subject to the power of the Catholic monarchs.
+They became thenceforward the equal partners of their brethren in
+faith in the rest of Europe. All without distinction had a share in
+the spiritual martyrdom which is the greenest bayleaf in the crown of
+Jewish history. To think and to suffer became the watchword of the
+whole nation.
+
+At first, as we have said, a considerable portion of the Jewish people
+enjoyed the happy possibility of thinking. This was during the
+classical epoch of the Arabic-Jewish Renaissance, which preceded the
+Italian Renaissance by four centuries. There is a fundamental
+difference between the two Renaissance periods: the earlier one was
+signalized by a re-birth of the sciences and of philosophy, the later
+one pre-eminently of the arts and of literature. The eleventh and
+twelfth centuries marked the meridian of the intellectual development
+of medieval Judaism. As once, in Alexandria, the union of Judaic with
+Hellenic culture brought in its train a superabundance of new ideas of
+a universal character, so again the amalgamation, on Spanish soil, of
+Jewish culture with Arabic gave rise to rich intellectual results,
+more lasting and fruitful than the Alexandrian, inasmuch as, in spite
+of their universal character, they did not contravene the national
+spirit. The Jewish people dropped its misanthropy and its leaning
+toward isolation. The Jews entered all sorts of careers: by the side
+of influential and cultivated statesmen, such as Chasdai ibn Shaprut
+and Samuel Hanagid, at the courts of the Khalifs, stood a brilliant
+group of grammarians, poets, and philosophers, like Jonah ibn Ganach,
+Solomon Gabirol, and Moses ibn Ezra. The philosophic-critical
+scepticism of Abraham ibn Ezra co-existed in peace and harmony with
+the philosophic-poetic enthusiasm of Jehuda Halevi. The study of
+medicine, mathematics, physics, and astronomy went hand in hand with
+the study of the Talmud, which, though it may not have occupied the
+first place with the Spanish Jews of this time, by no means
+disappeared, as witness the compendium by Alphassi. Unusual breadth
+and fulness of the spiritual life is the distinction of the epoch.
+This variety of mental traits combined in a marvelous union to form
+the great personality of Maimonides, the crown of a glorious period.
+With one "Strong Hand," this intellectual giant brought order out of
+the Talmudic chaos, which at his word was transformed into a
+symmetrical, legal system; with the other, he "guided the Perplexed"
+through the realm of faith and knowledge. For rationalistic clarity
+and breadth of view no counterpart to the religio-philosophic doctrine
+which he formulated can be found in the whole extent of medieval
+literature. The main feature of the philosophy of Maimonides and of
+the systems based upon it is rationalism, not a dry, scholastic,
+abstract rationalism, but a living rationalism, embracing the whole
+field of the most exalted psychic phenomena. It is not philosophy pure
+and simple, but religious philosophy, an harmonization, more or less
+felicitous, of the postulates of reason with the dogmas of faith. It
+is reason mitigated by faith, and faith regulated by reason. In the
+darkness of the middle ages, when the Romish Church impregnated
+religion with the crudest superstitions, going so far as to forbid its
+adherents to read the Bible, and when the greatest philosopher
+representatives of the Church, like Albertus Magnus, would have
+rejected offhand, as a childish fancy or, indeed, as an heretical
+chimera, any attempt to rescue the lower classes of the people from
+their wretched state of spiritual servitude--in a time like this, the
+truly majestic spectacle is presented of a philosophy declaring war on
+superstition, and setting out to purify the religious notions of the
+people.
+
+Not a breath of this ample spiritual development of the Jews of Arabic
+Spain reached the Jews living in the Christian countries of Europe.
+Their circumstances were too grievous, and in sombreness their inner
+life matched their outer estate. Their horizon was as contracted as
+the streets of the Jewries in which they were penned. The crusades
+(beginning in 1096) clearly showed the Jews of France and Germany what
+sentiments their neighbors cherished towards them. They were the first
+returns which Christianity paid the Jewish people for its old-time
+teaching of religion. The descendants of the "chosen people," the
+originators of the Bible, were condemned to torture of a sort to
+exhaust their spiritual heritage. Judaism suffered the tragic fate of
+King Lear. Was it conceivable that the horrors--the rivers of blood,
+the groans of massacred communities, the serried ranks of martyrs, the
+ever-haunting fear of the morrow--should fail to leave traces in the
+character of Judaism? The Jewish people realized its imminent danger.
+It convulsively held fast to its precious relics, clung to the pillars
+of its religion, which it regarded as the only asylum. The Jewish
+spirit again withdrew from the outer world. It gave itself up wholly
+to the study of the Talmud. In northern France and in Germany,
+Talmudic learning degenerated into the extreme of scholastic pedantry,
+the lot of every branch of science that is lopped off from the main
+trunk of knowledge, and vegetates in a heavy, dank atmosphere, lacking
+light and air. Rashi (1064-1105), whose genial activity began before
+the first crusade, opened up Jewish religious literature to the
+popular mind, by his systematic commentaries on the Bible and the
+Talmud. On the other hand, the Tossafists, the school of commentators
+succeeding him, by their petty quibbling and hairsplitting casuistry
+made the Talmudic books more intricate and less intelligible. Such
+being the intellectual bias of the age, a sober, rationalistic
+philosophy could not assert itself. In lieu of an Ibn Ezra or a
+Maimonides, we have Jehuda Hachassid and Eliezer of Worms, with their
+mystical books of devotion, _Sefer Chassidim, Rokeach_, etc.,
+filled with pietistic reflections on the other world, in which the
+earth figures as a "vale of tears." Poetry likewise took on the dismal
+hue of its environment. Instead of the varied lyrical notes of Gabirol
+and Halevi, who sang the weal and woe, not only of the nation, but
+also of the individual, and lost themselves in psychologic analysis,
+there now fall upon our ear the melancholy, heartrending strains of
+synagogue poetry, the harrowing outcries that forced themselves from
+the oppressed bosoms of the hunted people, the prayerful lamentations
+that so often shook the crumbling walls of the medieval synagogues at
+the very moment when, full of worshipers, they were fired by the
+inhuman crusaders. A mighty chord reverberates in this poetry:
+_Morituri te salutant_.
+
+One small spot there was, in the whole of Europe, in which Jews could
+still hope to endure existence and enjoy a measure of security. This
+was Southern France, or the Provence. The population of Provence had
+assimilated the culture of the neighboring country, Arabic Spain, and
+become the mediator between it and the rest of Europe. This work of
+mediation was undertaken primarily by the Jews. In the twelfth century
+several universities existed in Provence, which were frequented in
+great numbers by students from all countries. At these universities
+the teachers of philosophy, medicine, and other branches of science
+were for the most part Jews. The rationalistic philosophy of the
+Spanish Jews was there proclaimed _ex cathedra_. The Tibbonides
+translated all the more important works of the Jewish thinkers of
+Spain from Arabic into Hebrew. The Kimchis devoted themselves to
+grammatical studies and the investigation of the Bible. In
+Montpellier, Narbonne, and Lunel, intellectual work was in full swing.
+Rational ideas gradually leavened the masses of the Provencal
+population. Conscience freed from intellectual trammels began to
+revolt against the oppression exercised by the Roman clergy. Through
+the Albigensian heresy, Innocent III, founder of the papal power, had
+his attention directed to the Jews, whom he considered the dangerous
+protagonists of rationalism. The "heresy" was stifled, Provence in all
+her magnificence fell a prey to the Roman mania for destruction, and,
+on the ruins of a noble civilization, the Dominican Inquisition raged
+with all its horrors (1213).
+
+Thenceforward the Catholic Church devoted herself to a hostile watch
+upon the Jews. Either she persecuted them directly through her
+Inquisition, or indirectly through her omnipotent influence on kings
+and peoples. In the hearts of the citizens of medieval Europe, the
+flame of religious hatred was enkindled, and religious hatred served
+as a cloak for the basest passions. Jewish history from that time on
+became a history of uninterrupted suffering. The Lateran Council
+declared the Jews to be outcasts, and designed a peculiar,
+dishonorable badge for them, a round patch of yellow cloth, to be worn
+on their upper garment (1215). In France the Jews became by turns the
+victims of royal rapacity and the scapegoats of popular fanaticism.
+Massacres, confiscations, banishments followed by dearly purchased
+permission to return, by renewed restrictions, persecutions, and
+oppressions--these were the measures that characterized the treatment
+of the Jews in France until their final expulsion (1394). In Germany
+the Jews were not so much hated as despised. They were _servi
+camerae_, serfs of the state, and as such had to pay oppressive
+taxes. Besides, they were limited to the meanest trades and to usury
+and peddling. They were shut up in their narrow Jewries, huddled in
+wretched cabins, which clustered about the dilapidated synagogue in a
+shamefaced way. What strange homes! What gigantic misery, what
+boundless suffering dumbly borne, was concealed in those crumbling,
+curse-laden dwellings! And yet, how resplendent they were with
+spiritual light, what exalted virtues, what lofty heroism they
+harbored! In those gloomy, tumbledown Jew houses, intellectual
+endeavor was at white heat. The torch of faith blazed clear in them,
+and on the pure domestic hearth played a gentle flame. In the abject,
+dishonored son of the Ghetto was hidden an intellectual giant. In his
+nerveless body, bent double by suffering, and enveloped in the shabby
+old cloak still further disfigured by the yellow wheel, dwelt the soul
+of a thinker. The son of the Ghetto might have worn his badge with
+pride, for in truth it was a medal of distinction awarded by the papal
+Church to the Jews, for dauntlessness and courage. The awkward, puny
+Jew in his way was stronger and braver than a German knight armed
+cap-a-pie, for he was penetrated by the faith that "moves mountains."
+And when the worst came to the worst, he demonstrated his courage.
+When his peaceful home was stormed by the bestialized hordes of
+Armleder, or the drunken bands of the Flagellants, or the furious
+avengers of the "Black Death," he did not yield, did not purchase life
+by disgraceful treason. With invincible courage he put his head under
+the executioner's axe, and breathed forth his heroic spirit with the
+enthusiastic cry: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is One."
+
+At length the turn of the Spanish Jews arrived. For the unbroken peace
+they had enjoyed, they had to atone by centuries of unexampled
+suffering. By degrees, the Arabs were forced out of the Pyrenean
+Peninsula, and the power they had to abdicate was assumed by the
+Catholic kings of Castile and Aragon. In 1236 occurred the fall of
+Cordova, the most important centre of Arabic Jewish culture.
+Thereafter Arab power held sway only in the province of Granada. The
+fortunes of the Spanish Jews underwent a calamitous change. The kings
+and the upper ten thousand were, indeed, favorably disposed toward
+them. At the courts of Castile and Aragon, the Jews were active as
+ministers, physicians, astronomers. But the people, incited by the
+propaganda of the clerics, nursed frightful hatred against the Jews,
+not only as "infidels," but also as intellectual aristocrats. The rage
+of the populace was the combustible material in the terrific
+explosions that occurred periodically, in the bloody saturnalia of the
+Pastouraux (1320), in the Black Death riots (1348), in the massacre of
+Seville (1391).
+
+Dire blows of fortune were unable to weigh down the Spanish Jew,
+accustomed to independence, as they did the German Jew. He carried his
+head proudly on high, for he was conscious that in all respects he
+stood above the rabble pursuing him, above its very leaders, the
+clerics. In spite of untoward fate his mental development proceeded,
+but inevitably it was modified by the trend of the times. By the side
+of the philosophic tendency of the previous age, a mystical tendency
+appeared in literature. The Kabbala, with its mist-shrouded symbolism,
+so grateful to the feelings and the imagination, chimed in better than
+rationalistic philosophy with the depressed humor under which the
+greater part of the Jews were then laboring. Another force
+antagonistic to rationalistic philosophy was the Rabbinism
+transplanted from France and Germany. The controversy between
+Rabbinism and philosophy, which dragged itself through three-quarters
+of a century (1232-1305), ended in the formal triumph of Rabbinism.
+However, philosophic activity merely languished, it did not cease
+entirely; in fact, the three currents for some time ran along parallel
+with one another. Next to the pillars of Rabbinism, Asheri, Rashba,
+Isaac ben Sheshet, loomed up the philosophers, Gersonides (Ralbag),
+Kreskas, and Albo, and a long line of Kabbalists, beginning with
+Nachmanides and Moses de Leon, the compiler of the Zohar, and ending
+with the anonymous authors of the mysterious "Kana and Pelia."
+
+The times grew less and less propitious. Catholicism steadily gained
+ground in Spain. The scowling Dominican put forward his claim upon the
+Jewish soul with vehement emphasis, and made every effort to drag it
+into the bosom of the alone-saving Church. The conversion of the Jews
+would have been a great triumph, indeed, for Catholicism militant. The
+conversion methods of the Dominican monk were of a most insinuating
+kind--he usually began with a public religious disputation.
+Unfortunately, the Jews were experts in the art of debate, and too
+often by their bold replies covered the self-sufficient dignitaries of
+Rome with confusion. The Jews should have known, from bitter
+experience, that such boldness would not be passed over silently. From
+sumptuous debating hall to Dominican prison and scaffold was but a
+short step. In 1391, one of these worthy soul-catchers, Bishop
+Ferdinando Martinez, set the fanatical mob of Seville on the Jews, and
+not without success. Terrorized by the threat of death, many accepted
+Catholicism under duress. But they became Christians only in
+appearance; in reality they remained true to the faith of their
+fathers, and, in secret, running the risk of loss of life, they
+fulfilled all the Jewish ordinances. This is the prologue to the
+thrilling Marrano tragedy.
+
+Finally, the moment approached when gloomy Catholicism attained to
+unchallenged supremacy in the Pyrenean Peninsula. On the ruins of the
+enlightened culture of the Arabs, Ferdinand the Catholic and Isabella
+of Castile reared the reactionary government of medieval Rome. The
+Inquisition was introduced (1480). Torquemada presided as high priest
+over the rites attending the human sacrifices. _Ad gloriam
+ecclesiae_, the whole of Spain was illuminated. Everywhere the
+funeral pyres of the Inquisition flared to the skies, the air was rent
+by the despairing shrieks of martyrs enveloped in flames or racked by
+tortures, the prisons overflowed with Marranos,--all instruments of
+torture were vigorously plied.
+
+At last the hour of redemption struck: in 1492 all Jews were driven
+from Spain, and a few years later from Portugal. Jewish-Arabic culture
+after five centuries of ascendency suffered a sudden collapse. The
+unhappy people again grasped its staff, and wandered forth into the
+world without knowing whither.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE RABBINIC-MYSTICAL PERIOD, OR THE HEGEMONY OF THE GERMAN-POLISH
+JEWS (1492-1789)
+
+
+The expulsion from Spain was a stunning blow. The hoary martyr people
+which had defied so many storms in its long life was for a moment
+dazed. The soil of Europe was quaking under its feet. At the time when
+the medieval period had formally come to a close for Occidental
+Christendom, and the modern period had opened, the middle ages
+continued in unmitigated brutality for the Jews. If anything, the life
+of the Jews had become more unendurable than before. What, indeed, had
+the much-vaunted modern age to offer them? In the ranks of the
+humanistic movement Reuchlin alone stood forth prominently as the
+advocate of the Jews, and he was powerless before the prejudices of
+the populace. The Reformation in Germany and elsewhere had illuminated
+the minds of the people, but had not softened their hearts. Luther
+himself, the creator of the Reformation, was not innocent of hating
+the followers of an alien faith. The Jews especially did not enjoy too
+great a measure of his sympathies. The wars growing out of the
+Reformation, which in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
+devastated Europe in the name of religion, were not calculated to
+favor the spread of tolerance and milder manners. The conflict raging
+in the bosom of the Church and setting her own children by the ears,
+was yet insufficient to divert her maternal care from her
+"unbelieving" stepchildren. In Spain and Portugal, stakes continued to
+burn two centuries longer for the benefit of the Marranos, the false
+Christians. In Germany and Austria, the Jews were kept in the same
+condition of servitude as before. Their economic circumstances were
+appalling. They were forced to emigrate _en masse_ to Poland,
+which offered the adherents of their faith a comparatively quiet life,
+and by and by was invested with the Jewish hegemony. Some of the
+smaller states and independent towns of Italy also afforded the Jews
+an asylum, though one not always to be depended upon. A group of
+hard-driven Spanish exiles, for instance, under the leadership of
+Abarbanel had found peace in Italy. The rest had turned to Turkey and
+her province Palestine,
+
+For a time, indeed, the Jewish spiritual centre was located in Turkey.
+What Europe, old, Christian, and hardhearted, refused the Jews, was
+granted them by Turkey, young, Mussulman, and liberal. On hearing of
+the banishment of the Jews from Spain, Sultan Bajazet exclaimed: "How
+can you call Ferdinand of Aragon a wise king, the same Ferdinand who
+has made his land poor and enriched ours?" His amazement characterizes
+the relation of Turkey to the Jews of the day. The one-time Marrano,
+Joseph Nassi, rose to be a considerable dignitary at the court of
+Sultan Selim (1566-1580). Occasionally he succeeded, by diplomatic
+means, in wreaking vengeance upon European courts in retaliation for
+the brutal tortures inflicted upon his people. With the generosity of
+a Maecenas, he assembled Jewish scholars and poets, and surrounded
+himself with a sunlit atmosphere of intellectuality and talent. All
+other Jewish communities looked up to that of Constantinople. Now and
+again its rabbis played the part of Patriarchs of the synagogue. To
+this commanding position the rabbis of Palestine especially were
+inclined to lay claim. They even attempted to restore the
+Patriarchate, and the famous controversy between Jacob Berab and Levi
+ben Chabib regarding the _Semicha_ is another evidence of the
+same assertive tendency. Among the Spanish exiles settled in the Holy
+Land a peculiar spiritual current set in. The storm-tossed wanderers,
+but now returned to their native Jordan from the shores of the
+blood-stained Tagus and Guadalquivir, were mightily moved at the sight
+of their ancestral home. Ahasuerus, who on his thorn-strewn pilgrim's
+path had drained the cup of woe to the dregs, suddenly caught sight of
+the home of his childhood razed level with the ground. The precious,
+never-to-be-forgotten ruins exhaled the home feeling, which took
+possession of him with irresistible charm. Into his soul there flowed
+sweet memories of a golden youth, past beyond recall. The impact of
+these emotions enkindled passionate "longing for Zion" in the heart of
+the forlorn, homeless martyr. He was seized by torturing thirst for
+political resurrection. Such melancholy feelings and vehement
+outbursts found expression in the practical Kabbala, originating with
+Ari (Isaac Luria) and his famous Safed school. A mystical belief in
+the coming of Messiah thenceforward became one of the essential
+elements of the Jewish spirit. It vanquished the heart of the learned
+Joseph Karo, who had brought Rabbinism to its climax by the
+compilation of his celebrated ritual code, the Shulchan Aruch. With
+equal force it dominated the being of Solomon Molcho, the enthusiastic
+youth who, at one time a Marrano, on his public return to Judaism
+proclaimed the speedy regeneration of Israel. He sealed his faith in
+his prophecy with death at the stake (1532). The Marranos beyond the
+Pyrenees and the unfortunate Jews of Italy, who, in the second half of
+the sixteenth century had to bear the brunt of papal fanaticism, on
+the increase since the Reformation, were kept in a state of constant
+excitement by this Messianic doctrine, with its obscure stirrings of
+hope. A mournful national feeling pervades the Jewish literature of
+the time. Recollections of torments endured enflamed all hearts. A
+series of chronicles were thus produced that record the centuries of
+Jewish martyrdom--_Jocha-sin, Shebet Jehuda, Emek ha-Bacha_, etc.
+The art of printing, even then developed to a considerable degree of
+perfection, became for the dispersed Jews the strongest bond of
+spiritual union. The papal _index librorum prohibitorum_ was
+impotent in the face of the all-pervading propaganda for thought and
+feeling carried on by the printing press.
+
+After Palestine and Turkey, Holland for a time became the spiritual
+centre of the scattered Jews (in the seventeenth century). Holland was
+warmly attached to the cause of liberty. When it succeeded in freeing
+itself from the clutches of fanatical Spain and her rapacious king,
+Philip II, it inaugurated the golden era of liberty of conscience, of
+peaceful development in culture and industry, and granted an asylum to
+the persecuted and abandoned of all countries. By the thousands the
+harassed Ghetto sons, especially the Marranos from Spain and Portugal,
+migrated to Holland. Amsterdam became a second Cordova. The
+intellectual life was quickened. Freedom from restraint tended to
+break down the national exclusivism of the Jew, and intercourse with
+his liberal surroundings varied his mental pursuits. Rabbinism, the
+Kabbala, philosophy, national poetry--they all had their prominent
+representatives in Holland. These manifold tendencies were united in
+the literary activity of Manasseh ben Israel, a scholar of extensive,
+though not intensive, encyclopedic attainments. Free thought and
+religious rationalism were embodied in Uriel Acosta. To a still higher
+degree they were illustrated in the theory of life expounded by the
+immortal author of the "Theologico-Political Tractate" (1640-1677).
+This advanced state of culture in Holland did not fail to react upon
+the neighboring countries. Under the impulse of enthusiasm for the
+Bible Puritan England under Cromwell opened its portals to the Jews.
+In Italy, in the dank atmosphere of rabbinical dialectics and morbid
+mysticism, great figures loom up--Leon de Modena, the antagonist of
+Rabbinism and of the Kabbala, and Joseph del Medigo, mathematician,
+philosopher, and mystic, the disciple of Galileo.
+
+These purple patches were nothing more than the accidents of a
+transition period. The people as a whole was on the decline. The
+Jewish mind darted hither and thither, like a startled bird seeking
+its nest. Holland or Turkey was an inadequate substitute for Spain, if
+only for the reason that but a tiny fraction of the Jews had found
+shelter in either. The Jewish national centre must perforce coincide
+with the numerical centre of the dispersed people, in which, moreover,
+conditions must grant Jews the possibility of living undisturbed in
+closely compacted masses, and of perfecting a well-knit organization
+of social and individual life. Outside of Spain these conditions were
+fulfilled only by Poland, which gradually, beginning with the
+sixteenth century, assumed the hegemony over the Jewry of the world.
+This marks the displacement of the Sephardic (Spanish, in a broader
+sense, Romanic) element, and the supremacy of the Ashkenazic
+(German-Polish) element.
+
+Poland had been a resort for Jewish immigrants from Germany since the
+outbreak of the Crusades, until, in the sixteenth century, it rose to
+the position of a Jewish centre of the first magnitude. As the
+merchant middle class, the Jews were protected and advanced by the
+kings and the Szlachta. The consequent security of their position
+induced so rapid a growth of the Jewish element that in a little while
+the Jews of Poland outnumbered those of the old Jewish settlements in
+Occidental Europe. The numerous privileges granted the Jews, by
+Boleslaus of Kalish (1246), Kasimir the Great (1347-1370), Witowt
+(1388), Kasimir IV (1447), and some of their successors, fortified
+their position in the extended territory covered by Poland, Lithuania,
+and the Ukraine. Their peculiar circumstances in Poland left an
+impress upon their inner life. An intense mental activity was called
+forth. This activity can be traced back to German beginnings, though
+at the same time it is made up of many original elements. For a space
+Rabbinism monopolized the intellectual endeavors of the Polish Jews.
+The rabbi of Cracow, Moses Isserles, and the rabbi of Ostrog, Solomon
+Luria (d. 1572), disputed first place with the foremost rabbinical
+authorities of other countries. Their decisions and circular letters
+regarding religious and legal questions were accorded binding force.
+Associates and successors of theirs founded Talmud academies
+throughout the country, and large numbers of students attended them.
+Commentators upon the Talmud and expounders of classical works in
+Jewish theological literature appeared in shoals. Jewish printing
+establishments in Cracow and Lublin were assiduous in turning out a
+mass of writings, which spread the fame of the Polish rabbis to the
+remotest communities. The large autonomy enjoyed by the Polish and
+Lithuanian Jews conferred executive power upon rabbinical legislation.
+The _Kahal_, or Jewish communal government, to a certain degree
+invested with judicial and administrative competence, could not do
+without the guiding hand of the rabbis as interpreters of the law. The
+guild of rabbis, on their side, chose a "college of judges," with
+fairly extensive jurisdiction, from among their own members. The
+organization of the Rabbinical Conferences, or the "Synods of the Four
+Countries," formed the keystone of this intricate social-spiritual
+hierarchy. The comprehensive inner autonomy and the system of Talmud
+academies (_Yeshiboth_) that covered the whole of Poland remind
+one of the brilliant days of the Exilarchate and the Babylonia of the
+Geonim. One element was lacking, there was no versatile, commanding
+thinker like Saadia Gaon. Secular knowledge and philosophy were under
+the ban in Poland. Rabbinism absorbed the whole output of intellectual
+energy. As little as the Poles resembled the Arabs of the "golden
+age," did the Polish Jews resemble their brethren in faith in the
+Orient at Saadia's time or in the Spain of Gabirol and Maimonides.
+Isolation and clannishness were inevitable in view of the character of
+the Christian environment and the almost insuperable barriers raised
+between the classes of Polish society. But it was this exclusiveness
+that gave peculiar stability and completeness to the life of the Jew
+as an individual and as a member of Jewish society, and it was the
+same exclusiveness that afforded opportunity for the development of a
+sharply defined culture, for its fixation to the point of resisting
+violent shocks and beyond the danger point of extinction through
+foreign invasion.
+
+The fateful year 1648 formed a turning point in the history of the
+Polish Jews, as in the history of the countries belonging to the
+Polish crown. The Cossack butcheries and wars of extermination of
+1648-1658 were the same for the Polish Jews that the Crusades, the
+Black Death, and all the other occasions for carnage had been for the
+Jews of Western Europe. It seemed as though history desired to avoid
+the reproach of partiality, and hastened to mete out even-handed
+justice by apportioning the same measure of woe to the Jews of Poland
+as to the Jews of Western Europe. But the Polish Jews were prepared to
+accept the questionable gift from the hands of history. They had
+mounted that eminence of spiritual stability on which suffering loses
+the power to weaken its victim, but, on the contrary, endues him with
+strength. More than ever they shrank into their shell. They shut
+themselves up more completely in their inner world, and became morally
+dulled against the persecutions, the bitter humiliations, the deep
+scorn, which their surroundings visited upon them. The Polish Jew
+gradually accustomed himself to his pitiable condition. He hardly knew
+that life might be other than it was. That the Polish lord to whom he
+was a means of entertainment might treat him with a trace of respect,
+or that his neighbors, the middle class merchant, the German guild
+member, and the Little Russian peasant, might cherish kindly feelings
+toward him, he could not conceive as a possibility. Seeing himself
+surrounded by enemies, he took precautions to fortify his camp, not so
+much to protect himself against hostile assaults from without--they
+were inevitable--as to paralyze the disastrous consequences of such
+assaults in his inner world. To compass this end he brought into play
+all the means suggested by his exceptional position before the law and
+by his own peculiar social constitution. The _Kahal_, the
+autonomous rabbinical administration of communal affairs, more and
+more assumed the character of an inner dictatorship. Jewish society
+was persistently kept under the discipline of rigid principles. In
+many affairs the synagogue attained the position of a court of final
+appeal. The people were united, or rather packed, into a solid mass by
+purely mechanical processes--by pressure from without, and by drawing
+tight a noose from within. Besides this social factor tending to
+consolidate the Jewish people into a separate union, an intellectual
+lever was applied to produce the same result. Rabbinism employed the
+mystical as its adjutant. The one exercised control over all minds,
+the other over all hearts. The growth of mysticism was fostered both
+by the unfortunate conditions under which the Polish Jews endured
+existence and by the Messianic movements which made their appearance
+among the Jews of other countries.
+
+In the second half of the seventeenth century, mysticism reached its
+zenith in Turkey, the country in which, had stood the cradle of the
+"practical Kabbala." The teachings of Ari, Vital, and the school
+established by them spread like wildfire. Messianic extravagances
+intoxicated the baited and persecuted people. In Smyrna appeared the
+false Messiah, Sabbatai Zebi. As by magic he attracted to himself a
+tremendous company of adherents in the East and in the West. For a
+quarter of a century (1650-1676), he kept the Jewish communities
+everywhere in a state of quivering suspense.
+
+The harassed people tossed to and fro like a fever patient, and raved
+about political re-birth. Its delirious visions still further heated
+its agitated blood. It came to its senses but slowly. Not even the
+apostasy and death of Sabbatai Zebi sufficed to sober all his
+followers. Under the guise of a symbolic faith in a Messiah, many of
+them, publicly or secretly, continued the propaganda for his
+doctrines.
+
+This propaganda prepared the fertile soil from which, in the
+eighteenth century, shot up Messianic systems, tending to split
+Judaism into sects. Nowhere did the mystical teachings evoke so ready
+a response as in Poland, the very centre of Judaism. At first an ally
+of the rabbinical school, mysticism grown passionate and
+uncontrollable now and again acted as the violent opponent of
+Rabbinism. Secret devotion to the Sabbatian doctrines, which had made
+their home in Poland, sometimes led to such extremes in dogma and
+ethics that the rabbis could not contain themselves. Chayyim Malach,
+Judah Chassid, and other Galician mystics, in the second decade of the
+eighteenth century brought down upon themselves a rabbinical decree of
+excommunication. The mystical tendency was the precursor of the
+heretical half-Christian sect of Frankists, who ventured so far as to
+lift a hand against the fundamentals of Judaism: they rejected the
+Talmud in favor of the Zohar (1756-1773). At the same time a much more
+profound movement, instinct with greater vitality, made its appearance
+among the Polish-Jewish masses, a movement rooted in their social and
+spiritual organization. The wretched, debased condition of the average
+Jew, conjoined with the traditions of the Kabbala and the excrescences
+of Rabbinism, created a foothold for Chassidic teaching. Chassidism
+replaced Talmudic ratiocination by exalted religious sentiment. By the
+force of enthusiasm for faith, it drew its adherents together into a
+firmly welded unit in contrast with Rabbinism, which sought the same
+goal by the aid of the formal law. Scenting danger, the rabbinical
+hierarchy declared war upon the Kabbala. Emden opposed Eibeschuetz, the
+Polish Sabbatians and Frankists were fought to the death, the Wilna
+Gaon organized a campaign against the Chassidim. Too late! Rabbinism
+was too old, too arid, to tone down the impulsive outbreaks of passion
+among the people. In their religious exaltation the masses were
+looking for an elixir. They were languishing, not for light to
+illumine the reason, but for warmth to set the heart aglow. They
+desired to lose themselves in ecstatic self-renunciation. Chassidism
+and its necessary dependence upon the Zaddik offered the masses the
+means of this forgetfulness of self through faith. They were the
+medium through which the people saw the world in a rosy light, and the
+consequences following upon their prevalence were seen in a marked
+intensification of Jewish exclusiveness.
+
+The same aloofness characterizes the Jews of the rest of the
+eighteenth century diaspora. Wherever, as in Germany, Austria, and
+Italy, Jews were settled in considerable numbers, they were separated
+from their surroundings by forbidding Ghetto walls. On the whole, no
+difference is noticeable between conditions affecting Jews in one
+country and those in another. Everywhere they were merely tolerated,
+everywhere oppressed and humiliated. The bloody persecutions of the
+middle ages were replaced by the burden of the exceptional laws, which
+in practice degraded the Jews socially to an inferior race, to
+citizens of a subordinate degree. The consequences were uniformly the
+same in all countries: spiritual isolation and a morbid religious
+mood. During the first half of the "century of reason," Jewry
+presented the appearance of an exhausted wanderer, heavily dragging
+himself on his way, his consciousness clouded, his trend of thought
+obviously anti-rationalistic. At the very moment in which Europe was
+beginning to realize its medieval errors and repent of them, and the
+era of universal ideals of humanity was dawning, Judaism raised
+barricades between itself and the world at large. Elijah Gaon and
+Israel Besht were the contemporaries of Voltaire and Rousseau.
+Apparently there was no possibility of establishing communication
+between these two diametrically opposed worlds. But history is a
+magician. Not far from the Poland enveloped in medieval darkness, the
+morning light of a new life was breaking upon slumbering Jewry in
+German lands. New voices made themselves heard, reverberating like an
+echo to the appeal issued by the "great century" in behalf of a
+spiritual and social regeneration of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+THE MODERN PERIOD OF ENLIGHTENMENT (THE NINETEENTH CENTURY)
+
+
+Two phenomena signalized the beginning of the latest period in Jewish
+history: the lofty activity of Mendelssohn and the occurrence of the
+great French Revolution. The man stands for the spiritual emancipation
+of the Jews, the movement for their political emancipation. At bottom,
+these two phenomena were by no means the ultimate causes of the social
+and spiritual regeneration of the Jewish people. They were only the
+products of the more general causes that had effected a similar
+regeneration in all the peoples of Western Europe. The new currents,
+the abandonment of effete intellectual and social forms, the
+substitution of juster and more energetic principles, the protest
+against superstition and despotism--all these traits had a common
+origin, the resuscitation of reason and free thought, which dominated
+all minds without asking whether they belonged to Jew or to Christian.
+It might seem that the rejuvenation of the Jews had been consummated
+more rapidly than the rejuvenation of the other peoples. The latter
+had had two centuries, the period elapsing since the middle ages, that
+is, the period between the Reformation and the great Revolution, in
+which to prepare for a more rational and a more humane conduct of
+life. As for the Jews, their middle ages began much later, and ended
+later, almost on the eve of 1789, so that the revolution in their
+minds and their mode of life had to accomplish itself hastily, under
+the urgence of swiftly crowding events, by the omission of
+intermediate stages. But it must be taken into consideration that long
+before, in the Judeo-Hellenic and in the Arabic-Spanish period, the
+Jews had passed through their "century of reason." In spite of the
+intervening ages of suffering and gloom, the faculty of assimilating
+new principles had survived. For the descendants of Philo and
+Maimonides the rationalistic movement of the eighteenth century was in
+part a repetition of a well-known historical process. They had had the
+benefit of a similar course of studies before, and, therefore, had no
+need to cram on the eve of the final examination.
+
+In point of fact, the transformation in the life of the Jews did take
+place with extraordinary swiftness. It was hastened in France by the
+principles of the Revolution and the proclamation of the civil
+equality of Jews with the other citizens. In Germany, however, it
+advanced upon purely spiritual lines. Mendelssohn and Lessing, the
+heralds of spiritual reform, who exposed old prejudices, carried on
+their labors at a time in which the Jews still stood beyond the pale
+of the law, a condition which it did not occur to Frederick II, "the
+philosopher upon the throne," to improve. A whole generation was
+destined to pass before the civil emancipation of the German Jews was
+accomplished. Meantime their spiritual emancipation proceeded apace,
+without help from the ruling powers. A time so early as the end of the
+eighteenth century found the German Jews in a position to keep step
+with their Christian fellow-citizens in cultural progress. Enlightened
+Jews formed close connections with enlightened Christians, and joined
+them in the universal concerns of mankind as confederates espousing
+the same fundamental principles. If they renounced some of their
+religious and national traditions, it was by no means out of
+complaisance for their neighbors. They were guided solely and alone by
+those universal principles that forced non-Jews as well as Jews to
+reject many traditions as incompatible with reason and conscience.
+Non-Jews and Jews alike yielded themselves up to the fresh inspiration
+of the time, and permitted themselves to be carried along by the
+universal transforming movement. Mendelssohn himself, circumspect and
+wise, did not move off from religious national ground. But the
+generation after him abandoned his position for that of universal
+humanity, or, better, German nationality. His successors intoxicated
+themselves with deep draughts of the marvelous poetry created by the
+magic of Goethe and Schiller. They permitted themselves to be rushed
+along by the liberty doctrines of 1789, they plunged head over heels
+into the vortex of romanticism, and took an active part in the
+conspicuous movements of Europe, political, social, and literary, as
+witness Borne, Heine, and their fellow-combatants.
+
+The excitement soon evaporated. When the noise of the liberty
+love-feasts had subsided, when the cruel reaction (after 1814) had
+settled heavily upon the Europe of the nineteenth century, and God's
+earth had again become the arena of those agents of darkness whom
+dreamers had thought buried forever beneath the ruins of the old
+order, then the German Jews, or such of them as thought, came to their
+senses. The more intelligent Jewish circles realized that, in devotion
+to the German national movement, they had completely neglected their
+own people. Yet their people, too, had needs, practical or spiritual,
+had its peculiar national sphere of activity, circumscribed, indeed,
+by the larger sphere of mankind's activities as by a concentric
+circle, but by no means merged into it. To atone for their sin,
+thinking Jews retraced their steps. They took in hand the transforming
+of Jewish inner life, the simplification of the extremely complicated
+Jewish ritual, the remodeling of pedagogic methods, and, above all,
+the cultivation of the extended fields of Jewish science, whose head
+and front is Jewish historical research in all its vastness and
+detail. Heine's friend, Zunz, laid the cornerstone of Jewish science
+in the second decade of the nineteenth century. His work was taken up
+by a goodly company of zealous and able builders occupied for half a
+century with the task of rearing the proud edifice of a scientific
+historical literature, in which national self-consciousness was
+sheltered and fostered. At the very height of this reforming and
+literary activity, German Jewry was overwhelmed by the civil
+emancipation of 1848. Again a stirring movement drew them into
+sympathy with a great general cause, but this time without drawing
+them away from Jewish national interests. Cultural and civil
+assimilation was accomplished as an inner compelling necessity, as a
+natural outcome of living. But spiritual assimilation, in the sense of
+a merging of Judaism in foreign elements, was earnestly repudiated by
+the noblest representatives of Judaism. It was their ideal that
+universal activity and national activity should be pursued to the
+prejudice of neither, certainly not to the exclusion of one or the
+other, but in perfect harmony with each other. In point of fact, it
+may be asserted that, in spite of a frequent tendency to go to the one
+or the other extreme, the two currents, the universal and the
+national, co-exist within German Jewry, and there is no fear of their
+uniting, they run parallel with each other. The Jewish genius is
+versatile. Without hurt to itself it can be active in all sorts of
+careers: in politics and in civil life, in parliament and on the
+lecture platform, in all branches of science and departments of
+literature, in every one of the chambers of mankind's intellectual
+laboratory. At the same time it has its domestic hearth, its national
+sanctuary; it has its sphere of original work and its self-consciousness,
+its national interests and spiritual ideals rooted in the past of the Jew.
+By the side of a Lassalle, a Lasker, and a Marx towers a Riesser, a
+Geiger, a Graetz. The leveling process unavoidably connected with
+widespread culture, so far from causing spiritual desolation in
+German Judaism, has, on the contrary, furnished redundant proof
+that even under present conditions, so unfavorable to what is
+individual and original, the Jewish people has preserved its vitality
+to the full.
+
+An analogous movement stirred the other countries of Western
+Europe--France, Italy, and England. The political emancipation of the
+Jews was accomplished earlier in them than in Germany. The
+reconstruction of the inner life, too, proceeded more quietly and
+regularly, without leaps and bounds, and religious reform established
+itself by degrees. Yet even here, where the Jewish contingent was
+insignificant, the spiritual physiognomy of the Jews maintained its
+typical character. In these countries, as in Germany, the Jew
+assimilated European culture with all its advantages and its
+drawbacks. He was active on diplomatic fields, he devoted himself to
+economic investigations, he produced intellectual creations of all
+kinds--first and last he felt himself to be a citizen of his country.
+None the less he was a loyal son of the Jewish people considered as a
+spiritual people with an appointed task. Cremieux, Beaconsfield,
+Luzzatti are counterbalanced by Salvador, Frank, Munk, Reggio, and
+Montefiore. All the good qualities and the shortcomings distinctive of
+the civilization of modern times adhere to the Jew. But at its worst
+modern civilization has not succeeded in extinguishing the national
+spirit in Jewry. The national spirit continues to live in the people,
+and it is this spirit that quickens the people. The genius of Jewish
+history, as in centuries gone by, holds watch over the sons of the
+"eternal people" scattered to all ends of the earth. West-European
+Jewry may say of itself, without presumption: _Cogito ergo sum_.
+
+Russian Jewry, the Jewry that had been Polish, and that is counted by
+the millions, might, if necessary, prove its existence by even more
+tangible marks than Occidental Jewry. To begin with, the centre of
+gravity of the Jewish nation lies in Russia, whose Jews not only
+outnumber those of the rest of Europe, but continue to live in a
+compact mass. Besides, they have preserved the original Jewish culture
+and their traditional physiognomy to a higher degree than the Jews of
+other countries. The development of the Russian Jews took a course
+very different from that of the Jews of the West. This difference was
+conditioned by the tremendous contrast between Russian culture and
+West-European culture, and by the change which the external
+circumstances of Jews outside of Russia underwent during the modern
+period. The admission of the Polish provinces into the Russian Empire
+at the end of the eighteenth century found the numerous Jewish
+population in an almost medieval condition, the same condition in
+which the non-Jewish population of Russian Poland was at that time.
+The Polish regime, as we saw above, had isolated the Jews alike in
+civil and spiritual relations. The new order did not break down the
+barriers. The masses of Jews cooped up in the "Pale of Settlement"
+were strong only by reason of their inner unity, their firmly
+established patriarchal organization. The bulwark of Rabbinism and the
+citadel of Chassidism protected them against alien influences. They
+guarded their isolation jealously. True to the law of inertia, they
+would not allow the privilege of isolation to be wrested from them.
+They did not care to step beyond the ramparts. Why, indeed, should the
+Jews have quitted their fortress, if outside of their walls they could
+expect nothing but scorn and blows? The unfortunates encaged in the
+sinister Pale of Settlement could have been lured out of their
+exclusive position only by complete civil emancipation combined with a
+higher degree of culture than had been attained by Russian society, an
+impossible set of circumstances in the first half of the nineteenth
+century. The legislative measures of the time, in so far as they
+relate to the Jews, breathe the spirit of police surveillance rather
+than of enlightenment and humanity. To civilizing and intellectual
+influences from without the way was equally barred. Yet all this
+watchfulness was of no avail. Nothing could prevent the liberty
+principles espoused by the Jews of Western Europe from being smuggled
+into the Pale, to leaven the sad, serried masses. A sluggish process
+of fermentation set in, and culminated in the literary activity of
+Isaac Beer Levinsohn and of the Wilna reformers of the second and
+fourth decades of the nineteenth century. They were the harbingers of
+approaching spring.
+
+When spring finally came (after 1855), and the sun sent down his
+genial rays upon the wretched Jewry of Russia, life and activity began
+to appear at once, especially in the upper strata. As in Germany, so
+in Russia spiritual emancipation preceded political emancipation.
+Still shorn almost entirely of the elementary rights of citizens, the
+Russian Jews nevertheless followed their ideal promptings, and
+participated enthusiastically in the movement for enlightenment which
+at that time held the noblest of the Russians enthralled. In a
+considerable portion of the Russian Jewish community a process of
+culture regeneration began, an eager throwing off of outworn forms of
+life and thought, a swift adoption of humane principles. Jewish young
+men crowded into the secular schools, in which they came in close
+contact with their Christian contemporaries. Influenced by their new
+companions, they gave themselves up to Russian national movements,
+often at the cost of renunciation of self. Some of them, indeed, in
+one-sided aspiration strove to become, not Russians, but men. The
+influence exercised by literature was more moderate than that of the
+schools. Rabbinic and Chassidistic literature, on the point of dying
+out as it was, abandoned the field to the literature of enlightenment
+in the Hebrew language, a literature of somewhat primitive character.
+It consisted chiefly of naive novels and of didactic writings of
+publicists, and lacked the solid scientific and historical element
+that forms the crown of Western Jewish literature. It is indisputable,
+however, that it exerted an educational influence. Besides, it
+possesses the merit of having resuscitated one of the most valuable of
+Jewish national possessions, the Hebrew language in its purity, which
+in Russia alone has become a pliant instrument of literary expression.
+A still greater field was reserved for the Jewish-Russian literature
+that arose in the "sixties." It was called into being in order to
+present a vivid and true picture of the social and spiritual interests
+of the Jews. Proceeding from discussions of current political topics,
+this literature gradually widened its limits so as to include Jewish
+history, Jewish science, and the portrayal of Jewish life, and more
+and more approached the character of a normal European literature. All
+this was in the making, and the most important work had not yet begun.
+The lower strata of the people had not been touched by the fresh air.
+In time, if all had gone well, they, too, would have had their day.
+And if the minority of the Jewish people in the West in a short span
+of time brought forth so many notable workers in so many departments
+of life and thought, how much superior would be the culture
+achievements of the Eastern majority! How vigorously the mighty mental
+forces latent in Russian Jewry would develop when their advance was no
+longer obstructed by all sorts of obstacles, and they could be applied
+to every sphere of political, social, and intellectual life!
+
+Nothing of all this came to pass; exactly the opposite happened. Not
+only were the barriers in the way of a prosperous, free development of
+Jewry not removed, but fresh hindrances without number were
+multiplied. Some spectre of the middle ages, some power of darkness,
+put brakes upon the wheel of history. It first appeared in the West,
+under the name anti-Semitism, among the dregs of European society. But
+in its earliest abode it was and is still met with an abrupt rebuff on
+the part of the most intelligent circles, those whom even the present
+age of decadence has not succeeded in robbing of belief in lofty moral
+ideals. Anti-Semitism in the West is in _anima vili_. Its cult is
+confined to a certain party, which enjoys a rather scandalous
+reputation. But there are countries in which this power of darkness,
+in the coarser form of Judophobia[13], has cast its baleful spell upon
+the most influential members of society and upon the press. There it
+has ripened noxious fruit. Mocking at the exalted ideals and the
+ethical traditions of religious and thinking mankind, Judophobia
+shamelessly professes the dogma of misanthropy. Its propaganda is
+bringing about the moral ruin of an immature society, not yet
+confirmed in ethical or truly religious principles. Upon its victims,
+the Jews, it has the same effect as the misfortunes of the middle
+ages, which were meted out to our hoary people with overflowing
+measure, and against which it learnt to assume an armor of steel. The
+recent severe trials are having the same result as the persecutions of
+former days: they do not weaken, on the contrary, they invigorate the
+Jewish spirit, they spur on to thought, they stimulate the pulse of
+the people.
+
+ "The hammer shivers glass,
+ But iron by its blows is forged."[14]
+
+ [13] As anti-Semitism is called in Russia.
+ [14] Pushkin.
+
+The historical process Jewry has undergone repeatedly, it must undergo
+once again. But now, too, in this blasting time of confusion and
+dispersion, of daily torture and the horrors of international
+conflict, "the keeper of Israel slumbereth not and sleepeth not." The
+Jewish spirit is on the alert. It is ever purging and tempering itself
+in the furnace of suffering. The people which justly bears the name of
+the veteran of history withdraws and falls into a revery. It is not a
+narrow-minded fanatic's flight from the world, but the concentrated
+thought of a mourner. Jewry is absorbed in contemplation of its great,
+unparalleled past. More than ever it is now in need of the teachings
+of its past, of the moral support and the prudent counsels of its
+history, its four thousand years of life crowded with checkered
+experiences.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE TEACHINGS OF JEWISH HISTORY
+
+
+Let us return now to the starting point of our discussion, and
+endeavor to establish the thoughts and lessons to be deduced from the
+course of Jewish history.
+
+Above all, Jewish history possesses the student with the conviction
+that Jewry at all times, even in the period of political independence,
+was pre-eminently a spiritual nation, and a spiritual nation it
+continues to be in our own days, too. Furthermore, it inspires him
+with the belief that Jewry, being a spiritual entity, cannot suffer
+annihilation: the body, the mold, may be destroyed, the spirit is
+immortal. Bereft of country and dispersed as it is, the Jewish nation
+lives, and will go on living, because a creative principle permeates
+it, a principle that is the root of its being and an indigenous
+product of its history. This principle consists first in a sum of
+definite religious, moral, or philosophic ideals, whose exponent at
+all times was the Jewish people, either in its totality, or in the
+person of its most prominent representatives. Next, this principle
+consists in a sum of historical memories, recollections of what in the
+course of many centuries the Jewish people experienced, thought, and
+felt, in the depths of its being. Finally, it consists in the
+consciousness that true Judaism, which has accomplished great things
+for humanity in the past, has not yet played out its part, and,
+therefore, may not perish. In short, the Jewish people lives because
+it contains a living soul which refuses to separate from its
+integument, and cannot be forced out of it by heavy trials and
+misfortunes, such as would unfailingly inflict mortal injury upon less
+sturdy organisms.
+
+This self-consciousness is the source from which the suffering Jewish
+soul draws comfort. History speaks to it constantly through the mouth
+of the great apostle who went forth from the midst of Israel eighteen
+hundred years ago: "Call to remembrance the former days, in which,
+after ye were enlightened, ye endured a great conflict of sufferings;
+partly, being made a gazing-stock both by reproaches and afflictions;
+and partly, becoming partakers with them that were so used.... Cast
+not away therefore your boldness, which hath great recompense of
+reward" (Epistle to the Hebrews, x, 32-34, 35).
+
+Jewish history, moreover, arouses in the Jew the desire to work
+unceasingly at the task of perfecting himself. To direct his attention
+to his glorious past, to the resplendent intellectual feats of his
+ancestors, to their masterly skill in thinking and suffering, does not
+lull him to sleep, does not awaken a dullard's complacency or hollow
+self-conceit. On the contrary, it makes exacting demands upon him.
+Jewish history admonishes the Jews: "_Noblesse oblige_. The
+privilege of belonging to a people to whom the honorable title of the
+'veteran of history' has been conceded, puts serious responsibilities
+on your shoulders. You must demonstrate that you are worthy of your
+heroic past. The descendants of teachers of religion and martyrs of
+the faith dare not be insignificant, not to say wicked. If the long
+centuries of wandering and misery have inoculated you with faults,
+extirpate them in the name of the exalted moral ideals whose bearers
+you were commissioned to be. If, in the course of time, elements out
+of harmony with your essential being have fastened upon your mind,
+cast them out, purify yourselves. In all places and at all times, in
+joy and and in sorrow, you must aim to live for the higher, the
+spiritual interests. But never may you deem yourselves perfect. If you
+become faithless to these sacred principles, you sever the bonds that
+unite you with the most vital elements of your past, with the first
+cause of your national existence."
+
+The final lesson to be learned is that in the sunny days of mankind's
+history, in which reason, justice, and philanthropic instinct had the
+upper hand, the Jews steadfastly made common cause with the other
+nations. Hand in hand with them, they trod the path leading to
+perfection. But in the dark days, during the reign of rude force,
+prejudice, and passion, of which they were the first victims, the Jews
+retired from the world, withdrew into their shell, to await better
+days. Union with mankind at large, on the basis of the spiritual and
+the intellectual, the goal set up by the Jewish Prophets in their
+sublime vision of the future (Isaiah, ch. ii, and Micah, ch. iv), is
+the ultimate ideal of Judaism's noblest votaries. Will their radiant
+hope ever attain to realization? If ever it should be realized,--and
+it is incumbent upon us to believe that it will,--not a slight part of
+the merits involved will be due to Jewish history. We have adverted to
+the lofty moral and humanitarian significance of Jewish history in its
+role as conciliator. With regard to one-half of Jewish history, this
+conciliatory power is even now a well-established fact. The first part
+of Jewish history, the Biblical part, is a source from which, for many
+centuries, millions of human beings belonging to the most diverse
+denominations have derived instruction, solace, and inspiration. It is
+read with devotion by Christians in both hemispheres, in their houses
+and their temples. Its heroes have long ago become types, incarnations
+of great ideas. The events it relates serve as living ethical
+formulas. But a time will come--perhaps it is not very far off--when
+the second half of Jewish history, the record of the two thousand
+years of the Jewish people's life after the Biblical period, will be
+accorded the same treatment. This latter part of Jewish history is not
+yet known, and many, in the thrall of prejudice, do not wish to know
+it. But ere long it will be known and appreciated. For the thinking
+portion of mankind it will be a source of uplifting moral and
+philosophical teaching. The thousand years' martyrdom of the Jewish
+people, its unbroken pilgrimage, its tragic fate, its teachers of
+religion, its martyrs, philosophers, champions, this whole epic will
+in days to come sink deep into the memory of men. It will speak to the
+heart and the conscience of men, not merely to their curious mind. It
+will secure respect for the silvery hair of the Jewish people, a
+people of thinkers and sufferers. It will dispense consolation to the
+afflicted, and by its examples of spiritual steadfastness and
+self-denial encourage martyrs in their devotion. It is our firm
+conviction that the time is approaching in which the second half of
+Jewish history will be to the noblest part of _thinking_ humanity
+what its first half has long been to _believing_ humanity, a
+source of sublime moral truths. In this sense, Jewish history in its
+entirety is the pledge of the spiritual union between the Jews and the
+rest of the nations.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Jewish History, by S. M. Dubnow
+
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