The
history of the Jews of France
dates back over 2000 years. In the early
Middle Ages, France was a center of Jewish
learning, but persecution increased as the Middle Ages wore on.
France was the first country in Europe to emancipate its Jewish
population during the
French
Revolution, but, despite legal equality anti-Semitism remained
an issue, as illustrated in the
Dreyfus
affair of the late 19th century. Despite the death of a quarter
of the then French Jewish population in the
Holocaust, France currently has the largest
Jewish population in
Europe. By comparison, approximately two thirds of
the
Jews of Europe were killed.
The
Jewish community in France
presently numbers around 600,000, according to the World Jewish Congress and 500,000
according to the Appel Unifié Juif de France, and is found mainly
in the metropolitan areas of Paris
, Marseille
, Strasbourg
, Lyon
, and
Toulouse
.
Today, French Jews are mostly
Sephardi
and
Mizrahi who came from
North Africa and span a range of religious
affiliations, from the ultra-Orthodox
Haredi
communities to the large segment of Jews who are entirely
secular.
Roman-Gallic epoch
According to the
Jewish
Encyclopedia (1906), "The first settlements of Jews in
Europe are obscure. From 163 B.C. there is evidence of Jews in Rome
[...].
In
the year 6 C.E. there were Jews at Vienne
and Gallia
Celtica; in the year 39 at Lugdunum [i.e. Lyon
])."Further documents indicating the presence
of Jews in France before the fourth century are as yet unknown.
Hilary of Poitiers (died 366) is
praised for having fled from the Jewish society. A decree of the
emperors
Theodosius II and
Valentinian III, addressed to Amatius,
prefect of
Gaul (
July 9,
425), prohibited Jews and pagans from practising
law and from holding public offices ("militandi"), in order that
Christians should not be in subjection to them, and thus be incited
to change their faith. At the funeral of
Hilary, Bishop of Arles, in 449,
Jews and Christians mingled in crowds and wept, while the former
sang psalms in Hebrew. From the year 465 the Church took official
cognizance of the Jews.
Jews were found in Marseille
in the sixth century, at Arles
, at Uzès
, at Narbonne
, at Clermont-Ferrand
, at Orleans
, at Paris
, and at
Bordeaux
. These places were generally centers of
Roman administration, located on the great commercial routes, and
there the Jews possessed
synagogues. In
harmony with the
Theodosian code,
and according to an edict addressed in 331 to the decurions of
Cologne by the emperor
Constantine, the internal
organization of the Jews seems to have been the same as in the
Roman empire. They appear to have had priests (
rabbis or
ḥazzanim),
archisynagogues, patersynagogues, and other synagogue officials.
The Jews were principally merchants and slave-dealers; they were
also tax-collectors, sailors, and physicians.
They probably remained under the Roman law until the triumph of
Christianity, with the status established by
Caracalla, on a footing of equality with their
fellow citizens. The emperor Constantius (321) compelled them to
share in the
curia, a heavy burden imposed on
citizens of townships. There is nothing to show that their
association with their fellow citizens was not of an amicable
nature, even after the establishment of Christianity in Gaul. It is
known that the Christian clergy participated in their feasts;
intermarriage between Jews and Christians sometimes occurred; the
Jews made proselytes, and their religious customs were so freely
adopted that at the third
Council of Orléans (539) it was
found necessary to warn the faithful against Jewish
"superstitions", and to order them to abstain from traveling on
Sunday and from adorning their persons or dwellings on that
day.
In 629
King Dagobert proposed to drive
from his domains all Jews who would not accept Christianity, from
his reign to that of
Pepin the Short
no further mention of the Jews is found. But in the south of
France, which was then known as "Septimania" and was a dependency
of the
Visigothic kings of Spain, the Jews
continued to dwell and to prosper. From this epoch (689) dates the
earliest known Jewish inscription relating to France, that of
Narbonne. The Jews of Narbonne, chiefly merchants, were popular
among the people, who often rebelled against the Visigothic
kings.
Carolingian Period
It is
certain that the Jews were numerous in France
under
Charlemagne, their position being
regulated by law. Exchanges with the Orient strongly
declined with the advent of the
Saracen
in the Mediterranean
sea , while oriental products such as
gold,
silk, black pepper or
papyrus almost disappeared under the
Carolingians. The only real link between the
Orient and Occident was insured by the
Radhanites Jewish
traders.
A formula for the Jewish oath was fixed by Charlemagne. They were
allowed to enter into lawsuits with
Christians, and in their relations with the
latter were restrained only from making them work on
Sunday. They were not allowed to trade in
currency,
wine, or grain. Of
more importance is the fact that they were tried by the emperor
himself, to whom they belonged. They engaged in export trade, an
instance of this being found in the Jew whom Charlemagne employed
to go to
Palestine and bring back precious
merchandise. Furthermore, when the
Normans
disembarked on the coast of Narbonnese Gaul they were taken for
Jewish
merchants. They boast, says one
authority, of buying whatever they please from bishops and abbots.
Isaac the Jew, who was sent by Charlemagne in 797 with two
ambassadors to
Harun al-Rashid, the
fifth
Abbasid Caliph,
was probably one of these merchants. It is a curious fact that
among the numerous provincial councils which met during
Charlemagne's reign not one concerned itself with the Jews,
although these had increased in number.
In the same spirit as
in the above-mentioned legends he is represented as asking the
Baghdad calif for a rabbi to instruct the Jews whom he had allowed
to settle at Narbonne
(see History
of the Jews in Babylonia). Louis le Débonnaire (814–833),
faithful to the principles of his father, granted strict protection
to the Jews, to whom he gave special attention in their position as
merchants.
The first capets (987–1137)
First persecution of the Jews
Various costumes of medieval French Jews.
In 1010
Alduin,
Bishop of Limoges, offered
the Jews of his diocese the choice between
baptism and exile. For a month theologians held
disputations with them, but without much success, for only three or
four of the Jews abjured their faith; of the rest some fled into
other cities, while others killed themselves. A Hebrew text also
states that
Robert II "the
Pious" of France having concerted with his vassals to destroy
all the Jews on their lands who would not accept baptism, many were
put to death or killed themselves. Among the martyrs was the
learned Rabbi Senior. A rich and esteemed man in Rouen, Jacob b.
Jekuthiel, went to Rome to implore the protection of the pope in
favor of his coreligionists, and the pontiff sent a high dignitary
to put a stop to the persecution. Robert the Pious is well known
for his religious prejudice and for the hatred which he bore toward
heretics; it was he who first burned sectarians. There is probably
some connection between this persecution and a rumor which appears
to have been current in the year 1010. If Adhémar of Chabannes, who
wrote in 1030, is to be believed, in 1010 the Western Jews
addressed a letter to their Eastern coreligionists warning them of
a military movement against the
Saracens.
In the
preceding year the Church of the Holy Sepulcher
had been converted into a mosque by the Muslims, a
sacrilege which had aroused great feeling in Europe, and Pope
Sergius IV had sounded the alarm. The exasperation of the
Christians, it seems, brought into existence and spread the belief
in a secret understanding between the Muslims and the Jews. Twenty
years later
Raoul Glaber knew more
concerning this story.
According to him, Jews of Orleans
had sent to
the East through a beggar a letter which provoked the order for the
destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Glaber adds
that on the discovery of the crime the expulsion of the Jews was
everywhere decreed. Some were driven out of the cities, others were
put to death, while some killed themselves; only a few remained in
all the "Roman world". Five years later a small number of those who
had fled returned. Count Riant says that this whole story of the
relations between the Jews and the Mohammedans is only one of those
popular legends with which the chronicles of the time abound.
Another violent commotion arose about 1065. At this date
Pope Alexander II wrote to the Viscount of
Narbonne, Béranger, and to Guifred, bishop of the city, praising
them for having prevented the massacre of the Jews in their
district, and reminding them that God does not approve of the
shedding of blood. A crusade had been formed against the Moors of
Spain, and the Crusaders had killed without mercy all the Jews whom
they met on their route.
Franco-Jewish literature
During
this period, which continues till the First Crusade, Jewish culture was awakening,
and still showed a certain unity in the south of France
and the
north. Its domain did not embrace all human
knowledge; it included in the first place poetry, which was at
times purely liturgical—the echo of Israel's
sufferings and the expression of its invincible
hope—but which more often was a simple scholastic exercise without
aspiration, destined rather to amuse and instruct than to move—a
sort of dried sermon. Following this comes Biblical
exegesis, the simple interpretation of the text, with neither
daring nor depth, reflecting a complete faith in traditional
interpretation, and based by preference upon the Midrashim, despite
their fantastic character. Finally, and above all, their attention
was occupied with the
Talmud and its
commentaries. The text of this work, together with that of the
writings of the Geonim, particularly their responsa, was first
revised and copied; then these writings were treated as a
corpus juris, and were commented upon and
studied both as a pious exercise in dialectics and from the
practical point of view. There was no philosophy, no natural
science, no belles-lettres, among the French Jews of this
period.
Rashi
The great figure which dominates the second half of the 11th
century, as well as the whole rabbinical history of France, is
Rashi (Solomon b. Isaac) of Troyes
(1040-1106). He personified the genius of northern French Judaism:
its devoted attachment to tradition; its naive, untroubled faith;
its piety, ardent but free from mysticism. His works are
distinguished by their clarity, directness, and hatred of subtlety,
and are written in a simple, concise, unaffected style, suited to
his subject. His commentary on the
Talmud,
which was the product of colossal labor, and which eclipsed the
similar works of all his predecessors, by its clarity and soundness
made easy the study of that vast compilation, and soon become its
indispensable complement. His commentary on the Bible (particularly
on the Pentateuch), a sort of repertory of the
Midrash, served for edification, but also advanced
the taste for simple and natural exegesis.
The school which he
founded at Troyes
, his
birthplace, after having followed the teachings of those of
Worms
and Mainz
, immediately
became famous. Around his chair were gathered
Simḥah b. Samuel, R.
Samuel b. Meïr (Rashbam), and Shemaia, his
grandsons; likewise
Shemaria,
Judah b. Nathan, and
Isaac Levi
b. Asher, all of whom
continued his work. In his Biblical commentaries he availed himself
of the works of his contemporaries. Among them must be cited
Moses ha-Darshan, chief of the
school of Narbonne, who was perhaps the founder of exegetical
studies in France, and Menahem b. Ḥelbo. Thus the 11th century was
a period of fruitful activity in literature. Thenceforth French
Judaism became one of the poles of universal Judaism.
The Crusades
The Jews of France do not seem to have suffered much during the
Crusades, except, perhaps, during the first
(1096), when the Crusaders are stated to have shut up the Jews of
Rouen in a church and to have murdered them without distinction of
age or sex, sparing only those who accepted baptism. According to a
Hebrew document, the Jews throughout France were at that time in
great fear, and wrote to their brothers in the Rhine countries
making known to them their terror and asking them to fast and pray.
In the Rhineland thousands of Jews were killed by the crusaders
(see
German Crusade,
1096).
Expulsions and returns
Expulsion from France, 1182
The
First Crusade led to nearly
a century of accusations of
blood libel
against the Jews, many of whom were burned or attacked in France.
Immediately after the coronation of
Philip Augustus on March 14, 1181, the King
ordered the Jews arrested on a Saturday, in all their synagogues,
and despoiled of their money and their vestments. In the following
April, 1182, he published an edict of expulsion, but according the
Jews a delay of three months for the sale of their personal
property. Immovable property, however, such as houses, fields,
vines, barns, and wine-presses, he confiscated. The Jews attempted
to win over the nobles to their side, but in vain. In July they
were compelled to leave the royal domains of France (and not the
whole kingdom); their synagogues were converted into churches.
These successive measures were simply expedients to fill the royal
coffers. The goods confiscated by the king were at once converted
into cash.
During the century which terminated so disastrously for the Jews
their condition was not altogether bad, especially if compared with
that of their brethren in Germany. Thus may be explained the
remarkable intellectual activity which existed among them, the
attraction which it exercised over the Jews of other countries, and
the numerous works produced in those days. The impulse given by
Rashi to study did not cease with his death; his successors—the
members of his family first among them—brilliantly continued his
work. Research moved within the same limits as in the preceding
century, and dealt mainly with the
Talmud,
rabbinical jurisprudence, and Biblical exegesis.
Recalled by Philip Augustus, 1198
This
century, which opened with the return of the Jews to France
proper (then
reduced almost to the Isle of France
), closed with their complete exile from the country
in a larger sense. In July 1198, Philip Augustus, "contrary
to the general expectation and despite his own edict, recalled the
Jews to Paris and made the churches of God suffer great
persecutions" (Rigord). The king adopted this measure from no good
will toward the Jews, for he had shown his true sentiments a short
time before in the Bray affair. But since then he had learned that
the Jews could be an excellent source of income from a fiscal point
of view, especially as money-lenders. Not only did he recall them
to his estates, but he gave state sanction by his ordinances to
their operations in banking and pawnbroking. He placed their
business under control, determined the legal rate of interest, and
obliged them to have seals affixed to all their deeds. Naturally
this trade was taxed, and the affixing of the royal seal was paid
for by the Jews. Henceforward there was in the treasury a special
account called "Produit des Juifs," and the receipts from this
source increased continually. At the same time it was to the
interest of the treasury to secure possession of the Jews,
considered as a fiscal resource. The Jews were therefore made serfs
of the king in the royal domain, just at a time when the charters,
becoming wider and wider, tended to bring about the disappearance
of serfdom. In certain respects their position became even harder
than that of serfs, for the latter could in certain cases appeal to
custom and were often protected by the Church; but there was no
custom to which the Jews might appeal, and the Church laid them
under its ban. The kings and the lords said "my Jews" just as they
said "my lands", and they disposed in like manner of the one and of
the other. The lords imitated the king: "they endeavored to have
the Jews considered an inalienable dependence of their fiefs, and
to establish the usage that if a Jew domiciled in one barony passed
into another, the lord of his former domicil should have the right
to seize his possessions." This agreement was made in 1198 between
the king and the Count of Champagne in a treaty, the terms of which
provided that neither should retain in his domains the Jews of the
other without the latter's consent, and furthermore that the Jews
should not make loans or receive pledges without the express
permission of the king and the count. Other lords made similar
conventions with the king. Thence-forth they too had a revenue
known as the "Produit des Juifs," comprising the taille, or annual
quit-rent, the legal fees for the writs necessitated by the Jews'
law trials, and the seal duty. A thoroughly characteristic feature
of this fiscal policy is that the bishops (according to the
agreement of 1204 regulating the spheres of ecclesiastical and
seigniorial jurisdiction) continued to prohibit the clergy from
excommunicating those who sold goods to the Jews or who bought from
them.
Under Louis VIII

A gathering of thirteenth-century
French Rabbis (from the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris).
Louis VIII of France (1223–26),
in his
Etablissement sur les Juifs of 1223, while more
inspired with the doctrines of the
Church than his father, Philip
Augustus, knew also how to look after the interests of his
treasury. Although he declared that from November 8, 1223, the
interest on
Jews' debts should no
longer hold good, he at the same time ordered that the capital
should be repaid to the Jews in three years and that the debts due
the Jews should be inscribed and placed under the control of their
lords. The lords then collected the debts for the Jews, doubtless
receiving a commission. Louis furthermore ordered that the special
seal for Jewish deeds should be abolished and replaced by the
ordinary one.
Under Louis IX
In spite of all these restrictions designed to restrain, if not to
suppress
money lending,
Louis IX of France (1226–70), with his
ardent piety and his submission to the
Church, unreservedly condemned loans
at interest. He was less amenable than Philip Augustus to fiscal
considerations. Despite former conventions, in an assembly held at
Melun in December 1230, he compelled several lords to sign an
agreement not to authorize
Jews to
make any loan. No one in the whole
kingdom was allowed to detain a Jew
belonging to another, and each lord might recover a Jew who
belonged to him, just as he might his own
serf (
tanquam proprium servum), wherever he
might find him and however long a period had elapsed since the Jew
had settled elsewhere. At the same time the ordinance of 1223 was
enacted afresh, which only proves that it had not been carried into
effect. Both king and lords were forbidden to borrow from
Jews.
In 1234, Louis freed his subjects from a third of their registered
debts to Jews (including those who had already paid their debts),
but debtors had to pay the remaining two-thirds within a specified
time. It was also forbidden to imprison
Christians or to sell their real estate to
recover debts owed to Jews. The king wished in this way to strike a
deadly blow at usury.
In 1243,
Louis ordered, at the urging of Pope
Gregory IX, the burning in Paris
of some
12,000 manuscript copies of the Talmud and other Jewish
books.
In order to finance his first
crusade Louis
ordered the expulsion of all Jews engaged in
usury and the confiscation of their property, for use
in his crusade, but the order for the expulsion was only partly
enforced if at all. Louis left for the
Seventh Crusade in 1248.
However, he did not cancel the debts owed by Christians. Later,
Louis became conscience-stricken, and, overcome by scruples, he
feared lest the treasury, by retaining some part of the interest
paid by the borrowers, might be enriched with the product of usury.
As a result, one-third of the debts was forgiven, but the other
two-thirds was to be remitted to the royal treasury.
In 1251, while Louis was in captivity on the Crusade, a popular
movement rose up with the intention of traveling to the east to
rescue him; although they never made it out of northern France,
Jews were subject to their attacks as they wandered throughout the
country (see
Shepherds'
Crusade).
In 1257 or 1258 ("Ordonnances," i. 85), wishing, as he says, to
provide for his safety of soul and peace of conscience, Louis
issued a mandate for the restitution in his name of the amount of
usurious interest which had been collected on the confiscated
property, the restitution to be made either to those who had paid
it or to their heirs.
Later, after having discussed the subject with his son-in-law,
Thibaut,
King of Navarre and
Count of Champagne, Louis decided on
September 13, 1268 to arrest Jews and seize their property. But an
order which followed close upon this last (1269) shows that on this
occasion also Louis reconsidered the matter. Nevertheless, at the
request of Paul Christian (Pablo Christiani), he compelled the
Jews, under penalty of a fine, to wear at all times the
rouelle or badge decreed by the
Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. This
consisted of a piece of red felt or cloth cut in the form of a
wheel, four fingers in circumference, which had to be attached to
the outer garment at the chest and back.
The Medieval Inquisition
The
Inquisition, which had been
instituted in order to suppress the heresy of the
Albigenses, finally occupied itself with the Jews
of southern France who converted to Christianity. The popes
complained that not only were baptized Jews returning to their
former faith, but that Christians also were being converted to
Judaism. In March 1273,
Gregory X
formulated the following rules: relapsed Jews, as well as
Christians who abjured their faith in favor of "the Jewish
superstition", were to be treated by the Inquisitors as heretics.
The instigators of such apostasies, as those who received or
defended the guilty ones, were to be punished in the same way as
the delinquents.
In
accordance with these rules, the Jews of Toulouse
, who had buried a Christian convert in their
cemetery, were brought before the Inquisition in 1278 for trial,
with their rabbi, Isaac Males, being condemned to the stake.
Philip the Fair, as mentioned above,
at first ordered his
seneschals not to
imprison any Jews at the instance of the Inquisitors, but in 1299
he rescinded this order.
The Great Exile of 1306
Toward the middle of 1306 the treasury was nearly empty, and the
king, as he was about to do the following year in the case of the
Templars, decided to kill the goose
that laid the golden egg. He condemned the Jews to banishment, and
took forcible possession of their property, real and personal.
Their houses, lands, and movable goods were sold at auction; and
for the king were reserved any treasures found buried in the
dwellings that had belonged to the Jews. That
Philip the Fair intended merely to fill the
gap in his treasury, and was not at all concerned about the
well-being of his subjects, is shown by the fact that he put
himself in the place of the Jewish moneylenders and exacted from
their Christian debtors the payment of their debts, which they
themselves had to declare. Furthermore, three months before the
sale of the property of the Jews the king took measures to insure
that this event should be coincident with the prohibition of
clipped money, in order that those who purchased the goods should
have to pay in undebased coin. Finally, fearing that the Jews might
have hidden some of their treasures, he declared that one-fifth of
any amount found should be paid to the discoverer. It was on July
22, the day after
Tisha B'Av, a Jewish
fast day, that the Jews were arrested. In prison they received
notice that they had been sentenced to exile; that, abandoning
their goods and debts, and taking only the clothes which they had
on their backs and the sum of 12 sous tournois each, they would
have to quit the kingdom within one month. Speaking of this exile,
a French historian has said,
The expulsion of 1306 was, taking all things into
account, practically the revocation of the Edict of Nantes issued
by the Louis XIV of the Middle Ages [i.e., Philip the
Fair].
In striking at the Jews, Philip the Fair at the same
time dried up one of the most fruitful sources of the financial,
commercial, and industrial prosperity of his kingdom.
Although the history of the Jews of France in a way began its
course again a short time afterward, it may be said that in reality
it ceased at this date. It was specially sad for them that during
the preceding century the "domaine" of the king of France had
increased considerably in extent.
Outside the Isle of France
, it now comprised Champagne, the Vermandois,
Normandy, Perche, Maine, Anjou, Touraine, Poitou, the Marche,
Lyonnais, Auvergne, and Languedoc, reaching from the Rhône to the
Pyrénées. The exiles could not take refuge anywhere except
in Lorraine, the county of Burgundy, Savoy, Dauphiné, Roussillon,
and a part of Provence - all regions located in Empire. It is not
possible to estimate the number of fugitives; that given by Grätz,
100,000, has no foundation in fact.
Return of the Jews to France, 1315
Nine years had hardly passed since the expulsion of 1306 when
Louis X of France (1314–16)
recalled the
Jews. In an edict dated
July 28, 1315, he permitted them to return for a period of twelve
years, authorizing them to establish themselves in the cities in
which they had lived before their banishment. He issued this edict
in answer to the demands of the people. Geoffroy of Paris, the
popular poet of the time, says in fact that the Jews were gentle in
comparison with the
Christians who had
taken their place, and who had flayed their debtors alive; if the
Jews had remained, the country would have been happier; for there
were no longer any
moneylenders at all
(Bouquet, xxii. 118). The
king
probably had the interests of his
treasury
also in view. The profits of the former confiscations had gone into
the treasury, and by recalling the Jews for only twelve years he
would have an opportunity for ransoming them at the end of this
period. It appears that they gave the sum of 122,500 livres for the
privilege of returning. It is also probable, as Vuitry states, that
a large number of the debts owing to the Jews had not been
recovered, and that the holders of the notes had preserved them;
the decree of return specified that two-thirds of the old debts
recovered by the Jews should go into the treasury. The conditions
under which they were allowed to settle in the land are set forth
in a number of articles; some of the guaranties which were accorded
the Jews had probably been demanded by them and been paid for. They
were to live by the work of their hands or to sell merchandise of a
good quality; they were to wear the circular badge, and not discuss
religion with laymen. They were not to be molested, either with
regard to the chattels they had carried away at the time of their
banishment, or with regard to the loans which they had made since
then, or in general with regard to anything which had happened in
the past. Their
synagogues and their
cemeteries were to be restored to them on condition that they would
refund their value; or, if these could not be restored, the king
would give them the necessary sites at a reasonable price. The
books of the Law that had not yet been returned to them were also
to be restored, with the exception of the
Talmud. After the period of twelve years granted to
them the king might not expel the Jews again without giving them a
year's time in which to dispose of their property and carry away
their goods. They were not to lend on usury, and no one was to be
forced by the king or his officers to repay to them usurious loans.
If they engaged in pawnbroking, they were not to take more than two
deniers in the pound a week; they were to lend only on pledges. Two
men with the title "auditors of the Jews" were entrusted with the
execution of this ordinance, and were to take cognizance of all
claims that might arise in connection with goods belonging to the
Jews which had been sold before the expulsion for less than half of
what was regarded as a fair price. The king finally declared that
he took the Jews under his special protection, and that he desired
to have their persons and property protected from all violence,
injury, and oppression.
Expulsion of 1394
On September 17, 1394, Charles VI suddenly published an ordinance
in which he declared, in substance, that for a long time he had
been taking note of the many complaints provoked by the excesses
and misdemeanors which the Jews committed against Christians; and
that the prosecutors, having made several investigations, had
discovered many violations by the Jews of the agreement they had
made with him. Therefore he decreed as an irrevocable law and
statute that thenceforth no Jew should dwell in his domains
("Ordonnances," vii. 675). According to the "Religieux de St.
Denis," the king signed this decree at the instance of the queen
("Chron. de Charles VI." ii. 119). The decree was not immediately
enforced, a respite being granted to the Jews in order that they
might sell their property and pay their debts. Those indebted to
them were enjoined to redeem their obligations within a set time;
otherwise their pledges held in pawn were to be sold by the Jews.
The provost was to escort the Jews to the frontier of the kingdom.
Subsequently the king released the Christians from their
debts.
17th century
In the beginning of the 17th century Jews began again to reenter
France. This resulted in a new edict of April 23, 1615 whichforbade
Christians, under the penalty of death and confiscation, to shelter
Jews or to converse with them. Violent
anti-Semitic riots broke out in
Provence, resulting in Jews migrating to northern
France.
Alsace
and Lorraine were the home of a significant
number of Jews. In annexing the provinces in 1648,
Louis XIV was at first inclined toward the
banishment of the Jews living in those provinces, but thought
better of it in view of the benefit he could derive from them. On
September 25,
1675,
he granted these Jews
letters patent,
taking them under his special protection. This, however, did not
prevent them from being subjected to every kind of extortion, and
their position remained the same as it had been under the Austrian
government.
The
Regency was no less severe.
In 1683
Louis XIV expelled Jews from the newly acquired colony of Martinique
.
Beginnings of emancipation
In the course of the 18th century the attitude of the authorities
toward the Jews changed. A spirit of tolerance began to prevail,
which corrected the iniquities of the legislation. The authorities
often overlooked infractions of the edict of banishment; a colony
of
Portuguese and
German Jews was tolerated in Paris. The voices
of enlightened Christians who demanded justice for the proscribed
people, began to be heard. An
Alsatian
Jew named Cerf Berr, who had rendered great service to the
French government as purveyor
to the army, was the interpreter of the Jews before Louis XVI. The
humane minister Malesherbes summoned a commission of Jewish
notables to make suggestions for the amelioration of the condition
of their coreligionists. The direct result of the efforts of these
men was the abolition, in 1785, of the degrading poll-tax and the
permission to settle in all parts of France. Shortly afterward the
Jewish question was raised by two men of genius, who subsequently
became prominent in the French Revolution—Count Mirabeau and the
abbé Grégoire, the former of whom, while on a diplomatic mission in
Prussia, had made the acquaintance of
Moses Mendelssohn and his school
(see
Haskalah), who were then working
toward the intellectual emancipation of the Jews. In a pamphlet,
"Sur Moses Mendelssohn, sur la Réforme Politique des Juifs"
(London, 1787), Mirabeau refuted the arguments of the German
anti-Semites like Michaelis, and claimed for the Jews the full
rights of citizenship. This pamphlet naturally provoked many
writings for and against the Jews, and the French public became
interested in the question. On the proposition of Roederer the
Royal Society of Science and Arts of Metz offered a prize for the
best essay in answer to the question: "What are the best means to
make the Jews happier and more useful in France?" Nine essays, of
which only two were unfavorable to the Jews, were submitted to the
judgment of the learned assembly.
The Revolution and Napoleon
Meanwhile the
French Revolution
broke out.
The fall of the Bastille
was the signal for disorders everywhere in
Alsace. In certain districts the peasants attacked the
dwellings of the Jews, who took refuge in Basel. A gloomy picture
of the outrages upon them was sketched before the National Assembly
(Aug. 3) by the abbé
Henri
Grégoire, who demanded their complete emancipation. The
National Assembly shared the indignation of the prelate, but left
undecided the question of emancipation; it was intimidated by the
anti-Semitic deputies of Alsace, especially by a certain Rewbell,
who declared that the decree which granted the Jews citizens'
rights would be the signal for their destruction in Alsace. On
December 22, 1789, the Jewish question came again before the
Assembly in debating the question of admitting to public service
all citizens without distinction of creed. Mirabeau, Count Clermont
Tonnerre, and the abbé Grégoire exerted all the power of their
eloquence to bring about the desired emancipation; but the repeated
disturbances in Alsace and the strong opposition of the deputies of
that province and of the clericals, like
La
Fare,
Bishop of Nancy, the
abbé Maury, and others, caused the
decision to be again postponed. Only the Portuguese and the
Avignonese Jews, who had hitherto enjoyed all civil rights as
naturalized Frenchmen, were declared full citizens by a majority of
150 on January 28, 1790. This partial victory infused new hope into
the Jews of the German districts, who made still greater efforts in
the struggle for freedom. They won over the eloquent advocate
Godard, whose influence in revolutionary circles was considerable.
Through his exertions the National Guards and the diverse sections
pronounced themselves in favor of the Jews, and the abbé Malot was
sent by the General Assembly of the Commune to plead their cause
before the National Assembly. Unfortunately the grave affairs which
absorbed the Assembly, the prolonged agitations in Alsace, and the
passions of the clerical party kept in check the active propaganda
of the Jews and their friends. A few days before the dissolution of
the National Assembly (September 27, 1791) a member of the Jacobin
Club, formerly a parliamentary councilor, named Duport,
unexpectedly ascended the tribune and said,
I believe that freedom of worship does not permit any
distinction in the political rights of citizens on account of their
creed.
The question of the political existence of the Jews has
been postponed.
Still the Moslems and the men of all sects are admitted
to enjoy political rights in France.
I demand that the motion for postponement be withdrawn,
and a decree passed that the Jews in France enjoy the privileges of
full citizens.
This proposition was accepted amid loud applause. Rewbell
endeavored, indeed, to oppose the motion, but he was interrupted by
Regnault de Saint-Jean, president of the Assembly, who suggested
"that every one who spoke against this motion should be called to
order, because he would be opposing the constitution itself".
During the Reign of Terror
Judaism in France thus became, as the Alsatian deputy Schwendt
wrote to his constituents, "nothing more than the name of a
distinct religion". However, the reactionaries did not cease their
agitations, and the Jews were subjected to much suffering during
the
Reign of Terror. At Bordeaux
Jewish bankers, compromised in the cause of the Girondins, had to
pay considerable sums to save their lives; in Alsace there was
scarcely a Jew of any means who was not mulcted in heavy fines.
Forty-nine Jews were imprisoned at Paris as suspects; nine of them
were executed. The decree of the convention by which the Catholic
faith was annulled and replaced by the worship of Reason was
applied by the provincial clubs, especially by those of the German
districts, to the Jewish religion. Synagogues were pillaged, the
celebration of Sabbath and festivals interdicted, and rabbis
imprisoned. Meanwhile the French Jews gave proofs of their
patriotism and of their gratitude to the land which had emancipated
them. Many of them fell on the field of honor in combating in the
ranks of the Army of the Republic the forces of Europe in
coalition. To contribute to the war fund candelabra of synagogues
were sold, and many Jews deprived themselves of their jewels to
make similar contributions.
Attitude of Napoleon
Though the Revolution had begun the process of
Jewish emancipation,
Napoleon spread the concept across Europe,
liberating Jews from their
ghettos and
establishing relative equality for them in the lands he conquered.
Despite the positive effect, it is unclear whether Napoleon himself
was disposed favorably towards the Jews, or merely saw them as a
political tool. The net effect of his policies, however,
significantly changed the position of the Jews in Europe. Starting
in 1806, Napoleon passed a number of measures supporting the
position of the Jews in the French Empire, including assembling a
representative group elected by the Jewish community, the
Sanhedrin. In conquered countries, he abolished laws restricting
Jews to ghettos. In 1807, he made
Judaism,
along with
Roman Catholicism and
Lutheran and
Calvinist Protestantism, official religions of France.
Napoleon rolled back some reforms on 17 March 1808 by the so-called
décret infâme, declaring all debts with Jews annulled,
reduced or postponed, which caused the Jewish community to nearly
collapse. Jews, especially in the East of the
French Empire with all its annexations
in the
Rhineland and beyond (as of 1810),
were also restricted in where they could live, in hopes of
assimilating them into society. Many of these restrictions were
eased again in 1811 and finally abolished in 1818.
After the Restoration
The restoration of
Louis XVIII
did not bring any change in the political condition of the Jews.
Such of their enemies as cherished the hope that the Bourbons would
hasten to undo the work of the Revolution with regard to the Jews
were soon disappointed. Since the emancipation the French Jews had
made such progress that the most clerical monarch could not find
any pretext for curtailing their rights as citizens. They were no
longer poor, downtrodden peddlers or money-lenders, with whom every
petty official could do as he liked. Many of them already occupied
high positions in the army and the magistracy, and in the arts and
sciences. And a new victory was won by French Judaism in
1831.
State recognition
Of the faiths recognized by the state, only the Jewish had to
support its ministers, while those of the Catholic and Protestant
churches were supported by the government. This legal inferiority
was removed in that year, thanks to the intervention of the Duke of
Orleans, lieutenant-general of the kingdom, and to the campaign led
in Parliament by the deputies Rambuteau and Viennet. Encouraged by
these prominent men, the minister of education, on November 13,
1830, offered a motion to place Judaism upon an equal footing with
Catholicism and Protestantism as regards support for the synagogues
and for the rabbis from the public treasury. The motion was
accompanied by flattering compliments to the French Jews, "who",
said the minister, "since the removal of their disabilities by the
Revolution, have shown themselves worthy of the privileges granted
them". After a short discussion the motion was adopted by a large
majority. In January 1831, it passed in the Chamber of Peers by 89
votes to 57, and on
February 8 it was
ratified by King Louis Philippe, who from the beginning had shown
himself favorable to placing Judaism on an equal footing with the
other faiths. Shortly afterward the rabbinical college, which had
been founded at Metz in 1829, was recognized as a state
institution, and was granted a subsidy. The government likewise
liquidated the debts contracted by various Jewish communities
before the Revolution.
Assimilation

A French rabbi, late 19th or early
20th century.
Strangely enough, while the Jews had been thus placed in every
point the equals of their Christian fellow citizens, the oath
"
More Judaico" still continued to be
administered to them, in spite of the repeated protestations of the
rabbis and the consistory. It was only in 1846, owing to a
brilliant speech of the Jewish advocate
Adolphe Crémieux, pronounced before
the Court of Nimes in defense of a rabbi who had refused to take
this oath, and to a valuable essay on the subject by a prominent
Christian advocate of Strasburg, named Martin, that the
Court of Cassation removed this last
remnant of the legislation of the Middle Ages. With this act of
justice the history of the Jews of France merges into the general
history of the French people. The rapidity with which many of them
won affluence and distinction in the nineteenth century is without
parallel. In spite of the deep-rooted prejudices which prevailed in
certain classes of French society, many of them occupied high
positions in literature, art, science, jurisprudence, the
army—indeed, in every walk of life.
In 1870
all the Jews of Algeria
(except those from the M'zab
), at that
time a French department, were automatically granted French citizenship by the Crémieux decrees.
In the last decade of the nineteenth century the
reactionaries, having failed in every attempt to
overthrow the republic, had recourse to anti-Semitism, by means of
which they maintained a persistent agitation for over ten years.
The Jews were charged with the ruin of the country and with all the
crimes which the fertile imagination of a
Drumont (founder of the
Antisemitic League of France)
or a Viau could invent; and as the accused often disdained to
answer such slanderous attacks, the charges were believed by a
great number of people to be true.
A campaign was started against Jewish
army officers, which culminated in the Dreyfus affair, during which a Jewish
officer, Alfred
Dreyfus
, was accused of treason in favour of the German Empire
, before being exonerated at the turn of the
century.
At the turn of the century, the
1905 law
on the Separation of the Church and the State put an end to
state religion in France, all religions and philosophies being
considered by the state a matter of privacy,
tolerance and of
freedom of thought.
20th century
Before World War II

French Anti-Semitic Exposition during
Nazi occupation (1942).
By the early 1900s, the conditions of the Jews had improved
tremendously and a wave of Jewish immigration arrived in France,
mostly fleeing the
pogroms of Eastern
Europe. Immigration temporarily halted during
World War I, and Jews fought in French forces,
but resumed afterwards. Jews were prominent in art and culture
during this period—such as at the turn of the century, with such
artists as
Modigliani,
Soutine, and
Chagall. France
was also the first country to elect a Jewish Prime Minister,
Léon Blum (Benjamin Disraeli,
Britain's 19th century Prime Minister, had Jewish parents but had
been baptised in the Church of England), during the
Popular Front in 1936. Blum, however,
was attacked by segments of the
French
far-right, for his Jewishness, while the
Action française monarchist
movement,
far-right leagues and
the
Cagoule terrorist group engaged in
anti-Semitic propaganda.
French Jews and the Holocaust
In 1940, early in
World War II, France
and its allies in the
Low Countries
were defeated by
Nazi Germany, and the Jews
there fell victim to the Nazi
Holocaust.
In the early months of the war there were probably some 350,000
Jews living in France, some of whom were refugees from Germany. As
early as October 1940, without any request from the Germans, the
Vichy government began passing
anti-Jewish measures (the
Statute on
Jews), prohibiting them from moving, and limiting their access
to public places and most professional activities.
In 1941, the Vichy
government established a Commissariat General
aux Questions Juives which worked with the Gestapo
to begin rounding up Jews for the concentration camps.
Between 1942 and July 1944, nearly 76,000 Jews were deported to
concentration camps from France, of which only 2,500 survive.
Drancy
, outside of Paris, was the primary camp for Jews
being deported to the Nazi German death camps in Poland and Eastern
Europe. It was designed to hold 700 people, but at its peak
in 1940 it held more than 7,000. It is interesting to note,
however, that the majority of Jews deported from France and killed
during the Holocaust were non-French Jews. Until severe pressure
was brought to bear by Nazi Germany, Vichy sought in many instances
to protect its native French-born Jews, especially those who had
assimilated into the culture or converted to
Catholicism.
Late 20th Century
In the wake of the Holocaust 180,000 Jews remained in France, some
who were refugees from Eastern Europe. In 1951 the population was
250,000. In the 1940s and 1950s Jewish refugees from Europe
resettled in France. They were later joined by large numbers of
Sephardi and
Mizrahi
Jews from France's North African colonies who quickly assimilated
in France, their numbers increased after French
decolonization of its territories abroad in
1962 and anti-Semitism in these newly formed nation-states. By
1968, Jews of North African origin were a majority of the Jews of
France.
The North African Jews enjoyed a successful social and economic
integration in France while reinvigorating its Jewish life. Kosher
restaurants and Jewish schools multiplied, in particular since the
1980s and the religious renewal of the younger generation.
France
initially supported Israel
, voting for
its formation and supporting it militarily and technically.
After the
Six-Day War in 1967, however,
France progressively shifted towards a more pro-Arab view.
Today
There are between 490,000 to more than 600,000 Jews in France
today. In 2009, France's highest court, the council of state issued
a ruling recognising the state's responsibility in the deportation
of tens of thousands of Jews during World War II. The report cited
"mistakes" in the Vichy regime that had not been forced by the
occupiers, stating that the state "allowed or facilitated the
deportation from France of victims of anti-Semitism".
Aliyah
Between 2001 and 2004, an estimated 2,000 p.a. French Jews took
Aliyah to Israel. Several émigrés cited
anti-semitism and the growing Arab population as reasons for
leaving. At a welcoming ceremony for French Jews in the summer of
2004, then
Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon caused
controversy when he advised all French Jews to "move immediately"
to Israel and escape what he coined "the wildest anti-semitism" in
France.
Antisemitism
In 2004, France experienced rising levels of antisemitism and acts
that were publicized around the world.
In 2006, rising levels of antisemitism were recorded in French
schools. Reports related to the tensions between the children of
North African immigrants and Jewish children.
In 2007, over 7, 000 members of the community petitioned for asylum
in the United States, citing antisemitism in France.
Rises in antisemitism in modern France have been linked to the
intensifying
Israeli–Palestinian
conflict. Since the
Gaza War in 2009,
decreases in antisemitism have been reversed. A report compiled by
the Coordination Forum for Countering Anti-Semitism singled out
France in particular amongst Western countries for antisemitism.
Between the Israeli offensive in Gaza in late December and the end
of January, an estimated hundred antisemitic acts were recorded in
France. This compares with a total of 250 antisemitic acts in the
whole of 2007..
See also
References
- Henri
Pirenne, Mahomet et Charlemagne, pages 123-128
(Pirenne, Henri (2001). Mohammed and Charlemagne. Dover
Publications. ISBN 0-486-42011-6. A recent reprint of the 1937
classic).
- L'affaire de la "consonnance israélite" du nom de
famille - Journal d'un avocat
- France faces its guilt for deporting Jews in
war Sydney Morning Herald. 18 February 2009
- As attacks rise in France, Jews flock to Israel As
attacks rise in France, Jews flock to Israel USA Today. 22
November 2004
- French Jews leave with no regrets BBC. 23 January
2003
- French Jews 'must move to Israel' BBC. 18 July
2004
- French Jews caught up in a war of words The
Guardian. 20 July 2004
- Chirac vows to fight race attacks BBC. 9 July
2004.
- Anti-Semitism 'on rise in Europe' BBC. 31 March
2004
- French Jews petition U.S. for asylum JTA. 20
March 2007
- In January 2009, according to the French newspaper Liberation
an estimated 352 acts of antisemitism took place in comparison with
460 separate incidents in the whole of 2008. This phenomenon has
been linked to the war between Israel and Gaza. See [1]
Other references
Further reading
External links