privileges all over France. The Jews were no longer aliens. The
Jews in turn reciprocated with great fervor by their devotion to
the State and ”la patrie”. They enlisted in the armed forces and
even sold candelabra of synagogues to contribute to the war
fund. With rapid industrialization and mass production of goods
manufacturers became the kingpins of the market. The
industrialization ushered a levelling process between communities;
enterprise, profit and quick turnover became the key-words.
Individuals with capital and a spirit of enterprise came to the 70 INDIA AND /SRAEL CHAPTER 3 Iy forefront and the Jews’ industrial talents, capacity for hard work I ; and possession of capital put them in the forefront of economic >l activities and power./Gradually industrial power replaced the fl :; landed aristocracy. The Jews broke through the old feudal I ;j restrictions and with the expansion of capitalism old prejudices ’ 11 gradually faded away, bestowing political equality on the Jews. • Noted among the great Jewish entrepreneurs were the I Rothschilds, the House of Shammai and the House of Hillel. | i|; j Snide remarks were often heard that a small Jewish clique was I ! i! controlling the International finance, and dominated the class of ! f capitalists and bankers. This financial clout bestowed political I! powers to the Jews as they rose up in the social ladder. These . , financial giants were no selfish preachers but they did their best >- fS ;| j to improve the lot of the remaining Jews the world over. The I] ! ’ Montefiores, the Goldsmids, the Salomons in England, the v\ Pereires in France, the Bischoffsheims in Germany and the Rothschilds everywhere in Europe, contributed actively and
1 world. Rothschild, in particular, became the jewel in the crown 1 of his race as he obtained a seat in the Parliament leading to a (remark by Lord Macaulay,” How was it possible to deny a
Rothschild a seat on the grounds of his race when his signatures
• ” on the back of a piece of paper was worth more than the royal word of three kings!” Towards the end of 19th century the great
:, Jewish middle class came into being, and the enormous Jewish ; J i enterprise, abandoning its old degraded means of livelihood, j occupied the centre stage in the world industry and finance, and no effort of reactionary governments could reverse this process.
The revolutionary spirit in France which had so far helped ’;• ’’ the Jews, however, died down after Nepoleon’s defeat at Waterloo. , The conservatism returned and the Jews resigned themselves to a low intensity struggle for democratic reforms of 1830-1848i However, this period produced some eminent Jews who did •^ ; their community proud. Disraeli, though a converted Jew by _, * ,] confession, rose from the lowest rank to become the Prime #? ” ! Minister of England. After a bright career in Victorian history he i ’ I became a liberal Tory of distinction. He indirectly helped the if . ,.. £J^ER2HISTORY OF ISRAEL71 cause of the Jews and improved their living conditions, remarking
ew later ’converted’ was the great poet and philosopher Heinrich
Heine. He broke away from the sedate literary style of his
contemporaries and contributed in a very large measure to the
political discourse of the times. He described himself as a soldier
in the war for liberalism. A fitting tribute to the man was the
following famous epigram from Matthew Arnold: ”The spirit of the world
Beholding the absurdity of men, Their vaunts, their feats, let a sardonic smile, For one short moment, wander o’er his lips. That smile was Heine!” Heinejoved Jewish lore and denounced the” chiropody” of the
so called’nationalists. His ”Confessions” ’ is a vibrant testimony
to his loyalty and genuineness to the Jewish cause. Regarding his
conversion he often said that” I was merely baptized, not
converted”. This” German Aristophanes” rebelled against the
existing institutions with a sharp tongue mainly targeting the
religious hypocrites. Of profound thoughts, he could be fervently
flippant, as he wrote,” AjT_Engnshrmn_l_oves liberty like his lawfully
wedded wife. She is a possession; he may not treat her with
much tenderness, but he knows how to defend her. A Frenchman
loves liberty like his sweetheart, and he will do a thousand follies
for her sake. A Cerrnan loves liberty like his old grandmother”.
The greatest influence in politics and literature on the new liberal
Germany was of one man alone and that man was Heine.
Another prominent Jew of the post-Waterloo era was Karl Ludwig
Borne who like hieing, had a keen incisive pen and a vigorous
like Heine was a converted Jew, but fumed against the inequalities
heaped on his people when he said,” What you call human
n’ghts, which, it must be conceded, you grant Jews, are only
animal rights. The rights of seeking food, of devouring it, of 72 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 2 ^Hii sleeping, of multiplying, are enjoyed also by the beasts of the ^Bll field, until they are slain, and to the Jews you grant no more”. ^11 | The French Revolution inspired him to write, in 1830, his famous ^^^H j I: ”Letters from Paris” in which he made war on social and ^^H || intellectual abuses of the times. ^^^^^^Rt !i ! ^^H| | In Hungary the Jews rebelled with the local population against ^^B AustrjjLn_Jule. in 1848 and were treated decently by the ^^H Hungarians. Soon political rights were granted to them but the ^^H[ | freedom was short-lived as Russia and Austria again combined ^^B to suppress Hungary. This bondage continued for a period of ^^H : , two decades, until autonomy was granted by the Ausgleich, and ^^•f ; official equality was proclaimed in 1895-96. However, in Italy j^^H i freedom came to the Jews piecemeal as Italy struggled to free ^^B | |; , itself from the domination of Austria. The great statesman Count :^H| i ’ ’ Cavour and the fighter Garibaldi, the heroes of the freedom |Hl i struggle, greatly helped the Jewish cause. mi f, II The Jews in England, however, did not suffer severe restrictions I as in other countries, though denied admissions to the bar, high 11 , rank in the armed forces or positions in municipal offices, * i I admissions to Oxford and Cambridge and the right to a seat in I j the Parliament. Struggle went on till 1837 when at the time of J ,i coronation of Queen Victoria, except for a seat in Parliament, H | other restrictions were gradually removed. This mainly was due |1 in to the efforts of Macaulay, Russell and Disraeli. At last, after a rl ’’ jl decade the Jews were allowed to become members of the House I ’ ’ of Commons and Lionel Rothschild became the first Jewish ’! I member of Parliament. Later, his son was admitted to the peerage. The Conservatives of the Victorian period were pleasantly surprised when Lord Reading, formerly Sir Rufus Isaacs, became ,:* the Viceroy of the Indian empire, while Sir Herbert Samuel, as High Commissioner in Palestine, was appointed Arbitrator on £_ \ the disputes of races and religions. Upheavals in social and ^t I economic order changed the lives of men. A number of | inventions came up to tame nature and provide machines to .11 *• • replace human labour. * ’I -• „ ’ After Ihfi-American Civil War in the eighties a large Russian ^ 11 population migrated to the States bringing their philanthropic ^- 0 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 73 CHAPTER * ^^^____^________^^__^_ . jucational institutions with them. But the tide really started
30 when after the May laws and violent rjpgro.ms tens of h usands of Jews fled Russia seeking a sanctuary in the United c tes Around twenty thousand Jews entered America each ar and after the enunciation of the policy of wholesale xnulsion, wave after wave of Jews reached the American shores.
Between 1881 and 1900 about 600,000 Russian and Romanian
lews reachecTthe United States soaring their population to more
than a million, and by the violent pogroms, consequent to the
Russian Revolution and slaughter by the Black Hundreds, the
wave turned into a torrent and about a million more Jews
reached the shores of United States. Thus America became a
safe haven and one of the most important settlements of the
Jews in their entire history. The early settlers, two hundred
thousand Sephardic and German Jews, were literally submerged
in the two million migrants from the eastern Europe. While
assimilation was easier for the earlier tricklers, the new waves
had to settle in their own ghettos in the larger towns of the East.
Alarmed by this mass scale of migrants, the American
Administration from 1906 to 1913 legislated certain restrictive
measures, such as literacy tests arid”certificates of character from
the home country. The difficulty of obtaining these certificates
slowed down the process of migration for some time but after
its repeal in 1913 by President Taft and supported by President
Wilson, the flow of the migrants remained unabated. Now tens
sought their living in this new land of opportunity; mostly as
manual workers, middle men and as other artisans. Life remained
a perpetual struggle, but the Jews never gave up. This was their
Promised Land, full of opportunities. The Jewish talent and
ambition could not be suppressed for long and almost the whole
°f textile industry passed into Jewish hands as the capitalisation
ln this sector rose from US $ 60 million by almost fifteen hundred
Percent between 1880 and 1916. Along with these industrial
activities came the era of Trade Unions and movement towards
fair wages and hygienic conditions at the shop floor. The_Trade
union movement of the Jews, radicalism in politics, in economic 74 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 2 outlook and religion, and compulsions of new industrial climate
resulted in a loosening of religious hold and emancipation from
rigidities of the Synagogue culture. In Russia. However, for nearly
a century and a half things remained much as before under the
pall of misery and despotic excesses. Hard as steel, not easy to
assimilate, stubborn as ever, most of the Jews in Russia remained
indigestible to the nationalists. Though the problem was
understandably difficult, it did not demand the butchery that
and permanently alienated them from the Russian despotism. /V-reYoJulion. in the religious thought of the world almost
exploded like a bomb with the publication of Darwin’s
monumental work The Origin of Species. His thesis agitated all
the countries in Europe and shook the foundations of genesis
and the other allied subjects in the Bible, it was not a frivolous
matter to a generation whose entire life was built around the
Holy Book. The Jewish world was no exception and soon there
was a conflict between those who believed in revelation and
those who changed to the evolutionary view of religion. This
churning of religious thoughts gave an impetus to scientific criticism
of the Bible. Judaism, whose religious genius was perpetually
unfolding itself, could now study the Bible from a new angle. It
was inevitable that the Biblical instances and teachings had to be
reviewed rationally, discarding all dogma and in the process,
reconciling the temple of creed with the temple of science.
Though parts of Bible were discarded under the new scientific
scrutiny, its magnificent ethical writ remains a spiritual repository.
While some miracles and stories were to be viewed in the proper
perspective, the identity of Moses and his laws continued to
inspire ’the Jewish religious system. The Haskalah actually
remained a source of intense nationalism among the Jews,
reinforced as it was by the cultural revival amongst the Jewish
nationality in the Balkans, Italy, Hungary and Ireland. The central
position of Haskalah during these turbulent times became the
precursor of the later day ’Zionism’. As a sequel, the Jewish
cultural renaissance inculcated amongst its youth a love for
Hebrew language, and a sense of Jewishness. This phenomenon CHAPTER 2 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 75 forms an interesting contrast with today’s India’s hybrid culture
wherein the youth in their blind craze of aping Western values
have lost all sense of national identity and culture. In his book
The Eternal People, Smolenskin, in 1873, for the first time,
made out a thesis that the Jews are a nation and Palestine was
their natural home to develop their genius, and the Messianic
dream could only be realised if the Jews achieved political and
moral emancipation in their own land. Nahman Haym Bialik,
the profoundest of Jewish poets, stirred the conscience of the
Jews through Hebrew language as he gave voice to the painful
longings of his times. The massacre of Kishinev incited him to his
most radical work City of Slaughter, a strong denouncement of