The
Jews ( ,
Yehudim), also known as the
Jewish people, are an
ethnoreligious group originating in the
Israelites or
Hebrews of the
Ancient
Near East. The Jewish
ethnicity,
nationality, and
religion are strongly interrelated, as
Judaism is the traditional faith of the Jewish
nation.
Converts to Judaism, whose status as
Jews within the Jewish
ethnos is equal
to those born into it, have been absorbed into the Jewish people
throughout the millennia.
In Jewish tradition, Jewish ancestry is traced to the Biblical
patriarchs
Abraham,
Isaac and
Jacob in the second
millennium BCE.
The Jews have enjoyed three periods of
political autonomy in their national homeland, the Land of Israel, twice during ancient history, and currently once again,
since 1948, with the establishment of the
modern State of
Israel
. The first of the two ancient eras spanned
from 1350 to 586 BCE, and encompassed the periods of the Judges, the United
Monarchy, and the Divided Monarchy of the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, ending with the destruction of
the First
Temple
. The second era was the period of the
Hasmonean Kingdom spanning from 140 to 37
BCE. Since the destruction of the First Temple, the
diaspora has been the home of most of the
world's Jews. Except in the modern State of Israel, Jews are a
minority in every country in which they live, and they have
frequently experienced
persecution throughout history,
resulting in a population that fluctuated both in numbers and
distribution over the centuries.
According
to the Jewish Agency for
Israel, as of 2007 there were 13.2 million Jews worldwide, 5.4
million of whom lived in Israel
, 5.3 million
in the United
States
, and the remainder distributed in communities of
varying sizes around the world; this represents 0.2% of the current
estimated world population.
(Other sources cite higher estimates. For example, the
Israel Central Bureau of
Statistics estimates the number of Israeli Jews to be 5.6
million and the
U.S.
Census Bureau estimates
the American Jewish population to be as many as 6.4 million.) These
numbers include all those who consider themselves Jews whether or
not affiliated with a Jewish organization. The total world
Jewish population, however, is difficult
to measure. In addition to
halakhic considerations, there
are secular, political, and ancestral identification factors in
defining
who is a Jew that increase
the figure considerably.
Name and etymology
The English word
Jew continues
Middle English , a loan from
Old French , earlier , ultimately from
Latin .
The Latin simply means Judaean,
"from the land of Judaea
".The Latin term itself, like the
corresponding Greek , is a loan from
Aramaic , corresponding to ,
Yehudi
(
sg.); ,
Yehudim (
pl.), in origin the term for a member of the
tribe of Judah or the people of the
kingdom of Judah. The Hebrew word for Jew,
, is pronounced , with the stress on the final syllable.
The
Ladino name is ,
Djudio
(sg.); ,
Djudios (pl.); ; ,
Yidn (pl.).
The etymological equivalent is in use in other languages, e.g.,
"Jude" in
German, "juif" in
French, "jøde" in
Danish, "judío" in
Spanish, etc., but derivations of the word
"Hebrew" are also in use to describe a Jewish person, e.g., in
Italian (Ebreo), and ,
(
Yevrey). The German word "Jude" is pronounced , and is
the origin of the word Yiddish. (See
Jewish ethnonyms for a full
overview.)
According to the
The
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth
Edition (2000):
It is widely recognized that the attributive use of the
noun Jew, in phrases such as Jew lawyer or
Jew ethics, is both vulgar and highly
offensive.
In such contexts Jewish is the only acceptable
possibility.
Some people, however, have become so wary of this
construction that they have extended the stigma to any use of
Jew as a noun, a practice that carries risks of its
own.
In a sentence such as There are now several Jews on
the council, which is unobjectionable, the substitution of a
circumlocution like Jewish people or persons of Jewish
background may in itself cause offense for seeming to imply
that Jew has a negative connotation when used as a
noun.
Judaism
Judaism guides its adherents in both
practice and belief, and has been called not only a religion, but
also a "way of life," which has made drawing a clear distinction
between Judaism, Jewish culture, and Jewish identity rather
difficult.
Throughout history, in eras and places as
diverse as the ancient Hellenic
world, in Europe before and after The Age of Enlightenment (see
Haskalah), in Islamic Spain and Portugal
, in North Africa and
the Middle East, India, and China, or the contemporary United States and
Israel, cultural phenomena have developed that are in some sense
characteristically Jewish without being at all specifically
religious. Some factors in this come from within Judaism,
others from the interaction of Jews or specific communities of Jews
with their surroundings, others from the inner social and cultural
dynamics of the community, as opposed to from the religion itself.
This phenomenon has led to considerably different Jewish cultures
unique to their own communities, each as authentically Jewish as
the next.
Who is a Jew?
Judaism shares some of the characteristics
of a
nation, an
ethnicity, a
religion, and
a
culture, making the definition of who is a
Jew vary slightly depending on whether a religious or national
approach to identity is used. Generally, in modern secular usage,
Jews include three groups: people who were born to a Jewish family
regardless of whether or not they follow the religion, those who
have some Jewish ancestral background or lineage (sometimes
including those who do not have strictly
matrilineal descent), and people
without any Jewish ancestral background or lineage who have
formally
converted to Judaism
and therefore are followers of the religion. At times conversion
has accounted for a substantial part of Jewish population growth.
In the first century of the Christian era, for example, the
population more than doubled, from 4 to 8–10 million within the
confines of the Roman Empire, in good part as a result of a wave of
conversion.
Historical definitions of
Jewish
identity have traditionally been based on
halakhic definitions of matrilineal descent,
and halakhic conversions. Historical definitions of who is a Jew
date back to the codification of the
oral
tradition into the
Babylonian Talmud.
Interpretations of sections of the Tanakh, such as
Deuteronomy 7:1–5, by learned Jewish sages, are
used as a warning against intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews
because "[the non-Jewish male spouse] will cause your child to turn
away from Me and they will worship the gods of others."
Leviticus 24:10 says that the son in a marriage
between a Hebrew woman and an Egyptian man is "of the community of
Israel." This contrasts with
Ezra
10:2–3, where Israelites returning from Babylon vow to put aside
their gentile wives and their children. Since the
Haskalah, these
halakhic
interpretations of Jewish identity have been challenged.
Ethnic divisions
Within the world's
Jewish
population there are distinct ethnic divisions, most of which
are primarily the result of geographic branching from an
originating
Israelite population, and
subsequent independent
evolutions. An
array of Jewish communities were established by Jewish settlers in
various places around the
Old World, often
at great distances from one another resulting in effective and
often long-term isolation from each other. During the
millennia of the
Jewish
diaspora the communities would develop under the influence of
their local environments;
political,
cultural,
natural, and
populational. Today, manifestation of
these differences among the Jews can be observed in
Jewish cultural expressions of each
community, including
Jewish linguistic
diversity, culinary preferences, liturgical practices,
religious interpretations, as well as degrees and sources of
genetic admixture.
Jews are
often identified as belonging to one of two major groups: the
Ashkenazim, or "Germanics" (Ashkenaz meaning "Germany" in Medieval Hebrew, denoting their Central European base), and the Sephardim, or "Hispanics" (Sefarad meaning "Spain
/Hispania" or "Iberia
" in Hebrew,
denoting their Spanish, and Portuguese, base). The
Mizrahim, or "Easterners" (Mizrach
being "East" in Hebrew), that is, the diverse collection of Middle
Eastern and North African Jews, constitute a third major group,
although they are sometimes termed
Sephardi for liturgical
reasons.
Smaller
groups include, but are not restricted to, Indian Jews such as the Bene Israel, Bnei
Menashe, Cochin Jews, and Bene Ephraim; the Romaniotes of Greece; the Italian Jews ("Italkim" or
"Bené Roma"); the Teimanim from Yemen
and Oman
; various
African Jews, including
most numerously the Beta Israel of
Ethiopia
; and Chinese Jews, most notably the
Kaifeng Jews, as well as various other
distinct but now almost extinct communities.
The divisions between all these groups are approximate and their
boundaries are not always clear. The
Mizrahim for example, are a heterogeneous
collection of
North African,
Central Asian,
Caucasian, and Middle Eastern
Jewish communities that are often as unrelated to each other as
they are to any of the earlier mentioned Jewish groups. In modern
usage, however, the Mizrahim are sometimes termed
Sephardi
due to similar styles of liturgy, despite independent development
from Sephardim proper. Thus, among Mizrahim there are
Iraqi Jews,
Egyptian
Jews,
Berber Jews,
Lebanese Jews,
Kurdish
Jews,
Libyan Jews,
Syrian Jews,
Bukharian
Jews,
Mountain Jews,
Georgian Jews, and various others.
The
Teimanim from Yemen
and Oman
are
sometimes included, although their style of liturgy is unique and
they differ in respect to the admixture found among them to that
found in Mizrahim. In addition, there is a differentiation
made between Sephardi migrants who established themselves in the
Middle East and North Africa after the expulsion of the Jews from
Spain and Portugal in the 1490s and the pre-existing Jewish
communities in those regions.
Despite this diversity, Ashkenazi Jews represent the bulk of modern
Jewry, with at least 70% of Jews worldwide (and up to 90% prior to
World War II and the
Holocaust). As a result of their emigration from
Europe, Ashkenazim also represent the overwhelming majority of Jews
in the
New World continents, in countries
such as the United States, Canada, Argentina, Australia, and
Brazil. In France, emigration of Mizrahim from North Africa has led
them to outnumber the Ashkenazim and Sephardim.
Only in Israel
is the
Jewish population representative of all groups, a melting pot independent of each group's
proportion within the overall world Jewish population.
Jewish languages
Hebrew is the
liturgical language of Judaism (termed
lashon ha-kodesh, "the holy tongue"), the language in
which the Hebrew scriptures (
Tanakh) were
composed, and the daily speech of the Jewish people for centuries.
By the
fifth century BCE, Aramaic, a closely
related tongue, joined Hebrew as the spoken language in Judea
. By
the third century BCE, Jews of the diaspora were speaking
Greek. Modern Hebrew is now one of the two
official languages of the State of Israel along with
Arabic.
Hebrew was revived as a spoken language by
Eliezer ben Yehuda, who arrived in
Palestine in 1881.
It hadn't been used as a mother tongue since Tannaic
times.For over sixteen centuries Hebrew was
used almost exclusively as a liturgical language, and as the
language in which most books had been written on Judaism, with a
few speaking only Hebrew on the
Sabbath. For
centuries, Jews worldwide have spoken the local or dominant
languages of the regions they migrated to, often developing
distinctive
dialectal forms or branching off
as independent languages.
Yiddish is
the Judæo-German language developed by Ashkenazi Jews who migrated to Central Europe, and Ladino is the Judæo-Spanish language
developed by Sephardic Jews who
migrated to the Iberian
peninsula
. Due to many factors, including the impact
of
the Holocaust on European Jewry,
the
Jewish exodus from
Arab lands, and widespread emigration from other Jewish
communities around the world, ancient and distinct
Jewish languages of several communities,
including
Gruzinic,
Judæo-Arabic,
Judæo-Berber,
Krymchak,
Judæo-Malayalam and many others, have
largely fallen out of use.
The three most commonly spoken languages among Jews today are
English, Modern Hebrew, and Russian. Some Romance languages, such
as
French, and
Spanish are also widely used.
Yiddish has been spoken by more Jews in history than any other
language, closely followed by English and Hebrew (if modern and
biblical are counted as one variety).
Genetic studies
Genetic studies indicate various lineages found
in modern Jewish populations, however, most of these populations
share a lineage in common, traceable to an ancient population that
underwent geographic branching and subsequent independent
evolutions. While
DNA tests
have demonstrated inter-marriage in all of the various
Jewish ethnic divisions over the
last 3,000 years, it was substantially less than in other
populations. The findings lend support to traditional Jewish
accounts accrediting their founding to exiled Israelite
populations, and counters theories that many or most of the world's
Jewish populations were founded entirely by local populations that
adopted the Jewish faith, devoid of any actual Israelite genetic
input.
DNA analysis further determined that modern Jews of the priesthood
tribe—"
Kohanim"—share an ancestor dating back
about 3,000 years. This result is consistent for all Jewish
populations around the world.
The researchers estimated that the most recent common ancestor of
modern Kohanim lived between 1000 BCE (roughly the time of the Biblical Exodus) and 586 BCE, when the
Babylonians destroyed the First
Temple
. They found similar results analyzing DNA
from Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews. The scientists estimated the date
of the original priest based on genetic mutations, which indicated
that the priest lived roughly 106 generations ago, between 2,650
and 3,180 years ago depending whether one counts a generation as 25
or 30 years.
Although individual and groups of converts to Judaism have
historically been absorbed into contemporary Jewish populations —
in the Khazars' case, absorbed into the
Ashkenazim — it is unlikely that they formed a
large percentage of the ancestors of modern Jewish groups, and much
less that they represented their genesis as Jewish
communities.
Male lineages: Y chromosomal DNA
A study
published by the National Academy of Sciences
found that "the paternal
gene pools of Jewish communities from Europe, North Africa, and
the Middle East descended from a common Middle Eastern ancestral
population", and suggested that "most Jewish communities have
remained relatively isolated from neighboring non-Jewish
communities during and after the Diaspora". Researchers
expressed surprise at the remarkable genetic uniformity they found
among modern Jews, no matter where the
diaspora has become dispersed around the
world.
Other
Y-chromosome findings show that the
world's Jewish communities are closely related to Kurds, Syrians
and Palestinian. Skorecki and
colleague wrote that "the extremely close affinity of Jewish and
non-Jewish Middle Eastern populations observed ... supports the
hypothesis of a common Middle Eastern origin". According to another
study of the same year, more than 70% of Jewish men and half of the
Arab men (inhabitants of Israel and the territories only) whose DNA
was studied inherited their Y-chromosomes from the same paternal
ancestors who lived in the region within the last few thousand
years. The results are consistent with the Biblical account of Jews
and Arabs having a common ancestor. About two-thirds of Israeli
Arabs and Arabs in the territories and a similar proportion of
Israeli Jews are the descendants of at least three common ancestors
who lived in the Middle East in the
Neolithic period. However, the Palestinian Arab
clade includes two Arab modal haplotypes which are found at only
very low frequency among Jews, reflecting divergence and/or large
scale admixture from non-local populations to the
Palestinians.
Points in which Jewish groups differ is largely in the source and
proportion of genetic contribution from host populations. The
proportion of male indigenous European genetic admixture in
Ashkenazi Jews amounts to around 0.5% per generation over an
estimated 80 generations, and a total admixture estimate "very
similar to Motulsky's average estimate of 12.5%." More recent study
estimates an even lower European male contribution, and that only
5%–8% of the Ashkenazi gene pool is of European origin.
Female lineages: Mitochondrial DNA
Before 2006, geneticists largely attributed the genesis of most of
the
world's Jewish
populations to founding acts by males who migrated from the
Middle East and "by the women from each local population whom they
took as wives and converted to Judaism." However, more recent
findings of studies of maternally inherited
mitochondrial DNA, at least in Ashkenazi
Jews, has led to a review of this
archetype. This research has suggested that, in
addition to Israelite male and local female founders, significant
female founder ancestry might also derive from the Middle East. In
addition, Behar (2006) suggested that the rest of Ashkenazi mtDNA
is originated from about 150 women, most of those were probably of
Middle Eastern origin.
Research in 2008 found significant founder effects in many
non-Asheknazi Jewish populations. In
Belmonte,
Azerbaijani,
Georgian,
Bene
Israel and
Libyan Jewish communities
"a single mother was sufficient to explain at least 40% of their
present-day mtDNA variation". In addition, "the
Cochin and
Tunisian
Jewish communities show an attenuated pattern with two founding
mothers explaining >30% of the variation." In contrast,
Bulgarian,
Turkish,
Moroccan
and
Ethiopian Jews were heterogeneous
with no evidence "for a narrow founder effect or depletion of mtDNA
variation attributable to drift". The authors noted that "the first
three of these communities were established following the Spanish
expulsion and/or received large influxes of individuals from the
Iberian Peninsula and high variation presently observed, probably
reflects high overall mtDNA diversity among Jews of Spanish
descent. Likewise, the mtDNA pool of Ethiopian Jews reflects the
rich maternal lineage variety of East Africa." Jewish communities
from
Iraq,
Iran, and
Yemen
showed a "third and intermediate pattern... consistent with a
founding event, but not a narrow one".
In this and other studies Yemenite Jews differ from other
Mizrahim, as well as from Ashkenazim, in the
proportion of
sub-Saharan African
gene types which have entered their
gene
pools. African-specific Hg L(xM,N) lineages were found only in
Yemenite and Ethiopian Jewish populations. Among
Yemenites, the average stands at 35% lineages
within the past 3,000 years.
Demographics
Population centres
There are an estimated 13.2 million Jews worldwide. The table below
lists countries with significant populations. Please note that
these populations represent low-end estimates of the worldwide
Jewish population, accounting for around 0.2% of the
world's population.
| Country or Region |
Jewish population |
Total Population |
% Jewish |
Notes |
United States |
5,275,000 |
301,469,000 |
1.7% |
|
Israel |
5,393,000 |
7,117,000 |
75.8% |
|
| Europe |
1,506,000 |
710,000,000 |
0.2% |
|
France |
490,000 |
64,102,000 |
0.8% |
|
Canada |
374,000 |
32,874,000 |
1.1% |
|
United Kingdom |
295,000 |
60,609,000 |
0.5% |
|
Russia |
225,000 |
142,400,000 |
0.2% |
|
Argentina |
184,000 |
39,922,000 |
0.5% |
|
Germany |
120,000 |
82,310,000 |
0.1% |
|
| Australia |
104,000 |
20,788,000 |
0.5% |
|
Brazil |
96,000 |
188,078,000 |
0.05% |
|
Ukraine |
77,000 |
46,481,000 |
0.2% |
|
| South Africa |
72,000 |
47,432,000 |
0.2% |
|
Hungary |
49,000 |
10,053,000 |
0.5% |
|
Mexico |
40,000 |
108,700,000 |
0.04% |
|
| Asia (excl. Israel) |
39,500 |
3,900,000,000 |
0.001% |
|
Belgium |
31,200 |
10,419,000 |
0.3% |
|
Italy |
28,600 |
58,884,000 |
0.05% |
|
Turkey |
17,800 |
72,600,000 |
0.02% |
|
Iran |
10,800 |
68,467,000 |
0.02% |
|
Romania |
10,100 |
21,500,000 |
0.05% |
|
New Zealand |
7,000 |
4,306,400 |
0.04% |
|
Greece |
5,500 |
11,100,000 |
0.05% |
|
Cuba |
1,500 |
11,450,000 |
0.013% |
|
| Total |
13,156,500 |
6,455,078,000 |
0.2% |
|
State of Israel
Israel
, the Jewish
nation-state, is the only country in which Jews make up a majority
of the citizens. Israel was established as an independent
democratic state on May 14,
1948.
Of
the 120 members in its parliament, the Knesset
, currently, 12 members of the Knesset are Arab citizens of Israel, most
representing Arab political parties and one of Israel's Supreme
Court
judges is a Palestinian Arab. Between 1948 and
1958, the Jewish population rose from 800,000 to two million.
Currently, Jews account for 75.8% of the Israeli population, or 5.4
million people.The early years of the state of Israel were marked
by the
mass
immigration of
Holocaust
survivors and Jews fleeing Arab lands. Israel also has a large
population of
Ethiopian Jews, many of
whom were airlifted to Israel in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Between
1974 and 1979 nearly 227,258 immigrants arrived in Israel, about
half being from the Soviet
Union
. This period also saw an increase in
immigration to Israel from
Western Europe,
Latin America, and the United States A trickle
of immigrants from other communities has also arrived, including
Indian Jews and others, as well as some
descendants of
Ashkenazi Holocaust
survivors who had settled in countries such as the United States,
Argentina, Australia and South Africa. Some Jews have emigrated
from Israel elsewhere, due to economic problems or disillusionment
with political conditions and the continuing
Arab-Israeli conflict. Jewish Israeli
emigrants are known as
yordim.
Diaspora (outside Israel)
The waves
of immigration to the
United States and elsewhere at the turn of the nineteenth
century, the founding of Zionism and later
events, including pogroms in Russia, the
massacre of European Jewry during the
Holocaust, and the founding of the state of Israel
, with the subsequent Jewish exodus from Arab lands,
all resulted in substantial shifts in the population centers of
world Jewry by the end of the twentieth century.
Currently, the largest Jewish community in the world is located in
the United States, with 5.3 million or 6.4 million Jews by various
estimates.
Elsewhere in the Americas, there are also
large Jewish populations in Canada
, Argentina
, and Brazil
, and smaller
populations in Mexico
, Uruguay
, Venezuela
, Chile
, and
several other countries (see History of the Jews in
Latin America).
Western
Europe's largest Jewish community can be found in France, home to
490,000 Jews, the majority of whom are immigrants or refugees from
North African Arab countries such as Algeria
, Morocco
, and Tunisia
(or their descendants). There are 295,000
Jews in the United Kingdom.
In
Eastern Europe, there are anywhere from
350,000 to one million Jews living in the former Soviet Union
, but exact figures are difficult to
establish. The fastest-growing Jewish community in the
world, outside Israel, is the one in Germany, especially in Berlin,
its capital.
Tens of thousands of Jews from the former
Eastern Bloc have settled in Germany
since the fall of the Berlin
Wall
.
The
Arab countries of
North Africa and
the
Middle East were home to around 900,000 Jews in 1945. Fueled by
anti-Zionism after the founding of
Israel, systematic persecution caused almost all of these Jews to
flee to Israel, North America, and Europe in the 1950s (see
Jewish exodus from Arab
lands). Today, around 8,000 Jews remain in all Arab nations
combined.
Iran
is home to
around 10,800 Jews, down from a population of 100,000 Jews before
the 1979 revolution.
After the
revolution some of the Iranian Jews
emigrated to Israel or Europe but most of them emigrated (with
their non-Jewish Iranian compatriots) to the United States
(especially Los
Angeles
, where the principal community is called "Tehrangeles
").
Outside Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, and the rest of
Asia, there are significant Jewish populations in Australia and
South
Africa.
Demographic changes
Assimilation
Since at least the time of the Ancient Greeks, a proportion of Jews
have assimilated into the wider non-Jewish society around them, by
either choice or force, ceasing to practice Judaism and losing
their
Jewish identity. Assimilation
took place in all areas, and during all time periods, with some
Jewish communities, for example the
Kaifeng Jews of China, disappearing entirely.
The advent of the Jewish Enlightenment of the 1700s (see
Haskalah) and the subsequent
emancipation of the Jewish populations
of Europe and America in the 1800s, accelerated the situation,
encouraging Jews to increasingly participate in, and become part
of, secular society. The result has been a growing trend of
assimilation, as Jews marry non-Jewish spouses and stop
participating in the Jewish community. Rates of
interreligious marriage vary widely:
In the United States, they are just under 50%, in the United
Kingdom, around 53%, in France, around 30%, and in Australia and
Mexico, as low as 10%. In the United States, only about a third of
children from intermarriages affiliate themselves with Jewish
religious practice. The result is that most countries in the
Diaspora have steady or slightly
declining religiously Jewish populations as Jews continue to
assimilate into the countries in which they live.
War and persecution
- Related articles: Antisemitism,
History of antisemitism,
New antisemitism

Right
The Jewish people and
Judaism have
experienced various
persecutions
throughout
Jewish history. During
late
Antiquity and the early
Middle Ages the
Roman Empire (in its later phases known as the
Byzantine Empire) repeatedly
repressed the Jewish population, first by ejecting them from their
homelands during the pagan
Roman era and
later by officially establishing them as
second-class
citizens during the Christian Roman era. According to
James Carroll, "Jews accounted for 10% of
the total population of the
Roman
Empire. By that ratio, if other factors had not intervened,
there would be 200 million Jews in the world today, instead of
something like 13 million." Of course, there are many other complex
demographic factors involved; the rate of population growth,
epidemics,
migration,
assimilation, and
conversion could all have played major
roles in the current size of the global Jewish population.
Later in
medieval Western Europe, further
persecutions of Jews in the name of Christianity occurred, notably
during the Crusades—when Jews all over
Germany were massacred—and a series of expulsions from England,
Germany, France, and, in the largest expulsion of all, Spain and
Portugal after the Reconquista (the
Catholic Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula
), where both unbaptized Sephardic Jews and the
ruling Muslim Moors were
expelled. In the Papal States
, which existed until 1870, Jews were required to
live only in specified neighborhoods called ghettos. In the 19th and (before the end of
World War II) 20th centuries, the Roman Catholic Church adhered to
a distinction between "good antisemitism" and "bad antisemitism".
The "bad" kind promoted hatred of Jews because of their descent.
This was considered un-Christian because the Christian message was
intended for all of humanity regardless of ethnicity; anyone could
become a Christian. The "good" kind criticized alleged Jewish
conspiracies to control newspapers, banks, and other institutions,
to care only about accumulation of wealth, etc.
Islam and Judaism have a complex
relationship. Traditionally Jews and Christians living in Muslim
lands, known as
dhimmis, were allowed to
practice their religions and to administer their internal affairs,
but subject to certain conditions. They had to pay the
jizya (a per capita tax imposed on free adult
non-Muslim males) to the Islamic state. Dhimmis had an inferior
status under Islamic rule. They had several social and legal
disabilities such as prohibitions against bearing arms or giving
testimony in courts in cases involving Muslims. Many of the
disabilities were highly symbolic.
The one described by Bernard Lewis as "most degrading" was the
requirement of distinctive clothing,
not found in the Qur'an or hadith but invented in early medieval Baghdad
; its enforcement was highly erratic. On the
other hand, Jews rarely faced martyrdom or exile, or forced
compulsion to change their religion, and they were mostly free in
their choice of residence and profession.
Notable exceptions
include the massacre of Jews and/or forcible conversion of some
Jews by the rulers of the Almohad dynasty in
Al-Andalus
in the 12th century, as well as in Islamic Persia, and the forced
confinement of Morrocan Jews to walled quarters known as mellahs beginning from the 15th century and
especially in the early 19th century. In modern times, it
has become commonplace for standard antisemitic themes to
be conflated with anti-Zionist publications and pronouncements
of Islamic movements such as Hezbollah and
Hamas, in the pronouncements of various
agencies of the Islamic Republic of Iran
, and even in the newspapers and other publications
of Turkish Refah Partisi." Muslim
Anti-Semitism by Bernard Lewis (Middle East Quarterly) June
1998
Throughout history, many rulers, empires and nations have oppressed
their Jewish populations or sought to eliminate them entirely.
Methods employed ranged from expulsion to outright genocide; within
nations, often the threat of these extreme methods was sufficient
to silence dissent.
The history of antisemitism includes the
First Crusade which resulted in the
massacre of Jews; the Spanish
Inquisition (led by Torquemada) and
the Portuguese Inquisition,
with their persecution and Auto de
fé against the New
Christians and Marrano Jews; the
Bohdan Chmielnicki Cossack massacres in Ukraine
; the Pogroms backed by the
Russian Tsars; as well as expulsions from
Spain, Portugal, England, France, Germany, and other countries in
which the Jews had settled. The persecution reached a peak in
Adolf Hitler's Final Solution, which led to the Holocaust and the slaughter of
approximately 6 million Jews from 1939 to 1945.According to a
recent study published in the American Journal of Human
Genetics 19.8% of the modern Iberian
population has Sephardic Jewish ancestry,
indicating that the number of conversos may
have been much higher than originally thought.
The most notable modern day persecution of Jews remains the
Holocaust — the state-led systematic
persecution and
genocide of European Jews (and certain communities
of North African Jews in
European
controlled North Africa) and other
minority groups of Europe during
World War II by
Nazi
Germany and its
collaborators.
The persecution and
genocide were
accomplished in stages.
Legislation to
remove the Jews from civil society was enacted years before the
outbreak of World War II.
Concentration camps were
established in which inmates were used as slave labour until they
died of exhaustion or disease.
Where the Third
Reich conquered new territory in eastern Europe, specialized
units called Einsatzgruppen
murdered Jews and political opponents in mass
shootings. Jews and
Roma were
crammed into
ghettos before being
transported hundreds of miles by freight train to
extermination camps where, if they
survived the journey, the majority of them were killed in gas
chambers. Every arm of Germany's bureaucracy was involved in the
logistics of the mass murder, turning the country into what one
Holocaust scholar has called "a genocidal nation."
Migrations

Right
Throughout Jewish history, Jews have repeatedly been directly or
indirectly expelled from both their original homeland, and the
areas in which they have resided. This experience as both
immigrants and
emigrants
(see:
Jewish refugees) have shaped
Jewish identity and religious
practice in many ways, and are thus a major element of Jewish
history. An incomplete list of such migrations includes:
- The
patriarch Abraham was a migrant to the land
of Canaan from Ur
of the
Chaldees.
- The Children of Israel
experienced the Exodus (meaning
"departure" or "exit" in Greek) from ancient Egypt, as recorded in the Book of Exodus.
- The Kingdom of Israel was sent
into permanent exile and scattered all over the world (or at least
to unknown locations) by Assyria.
- The
Kingdom of Judah was exiled by
Babylonia
, then returned to Judea
by Cyrus the Great of the Persian Achaemenid Empire, and then many were
exiled again by the Roman
Empire.
- The 2,000 year dispersion of the Jewish diaspora beginning under the Roman Empire, as Jews were spread throughout
the Roman world and, driven from land to land, and settled wherever
they could live freely enough to practice their religion.
Over the
course of the diaspora the center of Jewish life moved from
Babylonia to the
Iberian
Peninsula to Poland to the United States and, as a result of Zionism,
to Israel
.
- Many expulsions during the Middle Ages and Enlightenment in
Europe, including: 1290, 16,000 Jews were expelled from England,
see the (Statute of
Jewry); in 1396, 100,000 from France; in 1421 thousands
were expelled from Austria. Many of these Jews settled in Eastern Europe, especially Poland.
- Following the Spanish
Inquisition in 1492, the Spanish population of around 200,000
Sephardic Jews were expelled by the Spanish
crown and Catholic church,
followed by expulsions in 1493 in Sicily (37,000 Jews) and Portugal
in 1496. The expelled Jews fled mainly to the Ottoman Empire, the Netherlands, and North Africa, others migrating to Southern Europe and the Middle East.
- During the 19th century, France's policies of equal citizenship
regardless of religion led to the immigration of Jews (especially
from Eastern and Central Europe).
- The arrival of millions of Jews in the New
World, including immigration of over two million Eastern
European Jews to the United States from 1880–1925, see History of the Jews in
the United States and History of
the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union.
- The Pogroms in Eastern Europe, the rise
of modern Anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, and the rise of Arab nationalism all served to fuel the
movements and migrations of huge segments of Jewry from land to
land and continent to continent, until they arrived back in large
numbers at their original historical homeland in Israel.
- The Islamic Revolution of
Iran forced many Iranian Jews to
flee Iran. Most found refuge in the US (particularly Los Angeles,
CA) and Israel. Smaller communities of Persian Jews exist in Canada and Western
Europe.
- When the Soviet
Union collapsed, many of the Jews in the affected territory
(who had been refuseniks) were suddenly
allowed to leave. This produced a wave of migration to Israel in
the early 1990s.
Growth
Israel is the only country with a consistently growing Jewish
population due to natural population increase, though the Jewish
populations of other countries in Europe and North America have
recently increased due to immigration. In the Diaspora, in almost
every country the Jewish population in general is either declining
or steady, but
Orthodox and
Haredi Jewish communities, whose members
often shun
birth control for religious
reasons, have experienced rapid population growth.
Orthodox and Conservative Judaism discourage proselytization to
non-Jews, but many Jewish groups have tried to reach out to the
assimilated Jewish communities of the Diaspora in order for them to
reconnect to their Jewish roots. Additionally, while in principle
Reform Judaism favors seeking new members for the faith, this
position has not translated into active proselytism, instead taking
the form of an effort to reach out to non-Jewish spouses of
intermarried couples. There is also a trend of Orthodox movements
pursuing secular Jews in order to give them a stronger
Jewish identity so there is less chance of
intermarriage. As a result of the efforts by these and other Jewish
groups over the past twenty-five years, there has been a trend of
secular Jews becoming more religiously observant, known as the
Baal Teshuva movement, though
the demographic implications of the trend are unknown.
Additionally, there is also a growing movement of
Jews by Choice by
gentiles who make the decision to head in the
direction of becoming Jews.
Jewish leadership
There is no single governing body for the Jewish community, nor a
single authority with responsibility for religious doctrine.
Instead, a variety of secular and religious institutions at the
local, national, and international levels lead various parts of the
Jewish community on a variety of issues.
Notable Jews
Jews have made contributions in a broad range of human endeavors,
including the sciences, arts, politics, and business. The number of
Jewish
Nobel prize winners is far out of
proportion to the percentage of Jews in the world's
population.
History of the Jews
- See also: Timeline of
Jewish history and Schisms
among the Jews
The Hebrew noun "Yehudi" (plural
Yehudim) originally
referred to the tribe of Judah. Later, when the Northern
Kingdom of Israel split from the Southern
Kingdom of Israel, the Southern Kingdom of Israel began to refer to
itself by the name of its predominant tribe, or as the
Kingdom of Judah. The term originally
referred to the people of the southern kingdom, although the term
B'nei Yisrael (Israelites) was still used for both groups.
After the
Assyrians conquered the
northern kingdom leaving the southern kingdom as the only Israelite
state, the word
Yehudim gradually came to refer to the
Jewish people as a whole, rather than those specifically from the
tribe or Kingdom of Judah. The English word
Jew is
ultimately derived from
Yehudi (see
Etymology). Its first use in the
Tanakh (
Hebrew Bible) to
refer to the Jewish people as a whole is in the
Book of Esther.
The origin of the Jews is traditionally traced to the
Biblical Patriarchs Abraham,
Isaac and
Jacob, in
Midrash tradition
dated to the second millennium BCE. The
Merneptah Stele, dated to 1200 BCE, is one
of the earliest archaeological records of the Jewish people in the
Land of Israel, where Judaism,
sometimes dubbed "the first
monotheistic
religion", originates.
According to Biblical accounts, the Jews
enjoyed periods of self-determination first under the
Biblical judges from Othniel Ben Kenaz through Samson, then circa 1000 BCE King
David established Jerusalem
as the capital of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah, also
known as the United Monarchy, and from there ruled the
Twelve Tribes of
Israel.
In 970 BCE, David's son
Solomon became
king of Israel.
Within a decade,
Solomon began to build the Holy Temple
known as the First Temple. Upon
Solomon's death (c. 930 BCE), the
ten
northern tribes split off to form the
Kingdom of Israel. In 722 BCE the
Assyrians conquered the Kingdom of Israel and exiled
its Jews, starting a
Jewish
diaspora. At a time of limited mobility and travel, Jews became
some of the first and most visible immigrants.
The First
Temple period ended around 586 BCE as the Babylonians conquered the
Kingdom of Judah and destroyed the
Jewish
Temple
. In 538 BCE, after fifty years of
Babylonian captivity,
Persian King Cyrus the Great permitted the Jews to return
to rebuild Jerusalem and the holy temple. Construction of the
Second Temple was completed in 516 BCE
during the reign of
Darius the
Great seventy years after the destruction of the First
Temple.
Kingdoms of Israel and Judah
Jews descend mostly from the ancient
Israelites (also known as
Hebrews), who settled in the
Land of Israel. The Israelites traced their
common lineage to the
biblical patriarch
Abraham through
Isaac
and
Jacob. A
United
Monarchy was established under
Saul and continued under
King David and
Solomon.
King
David conquered Jerusalem
(first a Canaanite, then a
Jebusite town) and made it his
capital. After Solomon's reign, the nation split into two
kingdoms, the
Kingdom of Israel
(in the north) and the
Kingdom of
Judah (in the south). The
Kingdom
of Israel was conquered by the
Assyrian
ruler
Shalmaneser V in the 8th century
BCE and spread all over the Assyrian empire, where they were
assimilated into other cultures and came to be known as the
Ten Lost Tribes.
The Kingdom of Judah continued as an
independent state until it was conquered by a Babylonian army in
the early 6th century BCE, destroying the First Temple
that was at the centre of Jewish worship.
The Judean elite was exiled to Babylonia, but later at least a part
of them returned to their homeland after the subsequent conquest of
Babylonia by the Persians seventy years later, a period known as
the
Babylonian Captivity. A new
Second Temple was constructed funded
by Persian Kings, and old religious practices were resumed.
Greek, and Roman rule
- See related article Jewish-Roman wars.
When
Alexander the Great
conquered the
Persian Empire, the
Land of Israel fell under
Hellenistic
Greek control, eventually falling to the
Ptolemaic dynasty who lost it to the
Seleucids. The Seleucid attempt to
recast Jerusalem as a
Hellenized polis came to a head in 168 BCE with the successful
Maccabean revolt of
Mattathias the
High
Priest and his five sons against
Antiochus Epiphanes, and their
establishment of the
Hasmonean Kingdom in
152 BCE with Jerusalem again as its capital.
The
Seleucid Kingdom, which arose after the
Persians were defeated by
Alexander
the Great, sought to introduce Greek culture into the Persian
world. When the
Greeks under
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, supported by
Hellenized Jews (those who had adopted
Greek culture), attempted to convert the Jewish Temple to a temple
of
Zeus, the Jews revolted under the leadership
of the
Maccabees.
The Hasmonean Kingdom lasted over one hundred years, but then as
Rome became stronger it installed
Herod as a Jewish
client king. The Herodian Kingdom also
lasted over a hundred years.After their victory, the Jews
rededicated the Temple to God (hence the origins of
Hanukkah) and created an independent Jewish
state known as the
Hasmonaean
Kingdom, which lasted from 165 BCE to 63 BCE, when it came
under influence of the
Roman Empire.
During the early part of Roman rule, the Hasmonaeans remained in
power, until the family was annihilated by
Herod the Great. Herod came from a wealthy
Idumean family and became a very successful
client king under the Romans. He
significantly expanded the Temple in Jerusalem.
Upon his death in 4 BCE the Romans directly ruled Judea and there
were frequent changes of policies by conflicting and
empire-building
Caesars, generals,
governors, and consuls who often acted cruelly or attempted to
maximize their own wealth and power. Rome's attitudes swung from
tolerance to hostility against its Jewish subjects, who had since
moved throughout the Empire. The Romans, worshiping a
large pantheon, could not readily accommodate
the exclusive
monotheism of Judaism, and
the religious Jews could not accept Roman
polytheism.
(It was in this tumultuous climate that
Christianity first emerged, among a
small group of Jews.) After a famine and riots in 66 CE, the Jews
in Judea
began a
revolt against Rome.
The revolt was smashed by
Titus Flavius, the
son and successor of the
Roman emperor
Vespasian.
In Rome the Arch of Titus
still stands, showing enslaved Judeans and a
menorah being brought to
Rome. It is customary for Jews to walk around, rather than
through, this arch.
The
Romans destroyed most of Jerusalem
but left the Western Wall
, a retaining wall of the Temple Mount
. After the end of this first revolt, the
Jews continued to live in their land in significant numbers, and
were allowed to practice their religion.
In the second century the Roman Emperor
Hadrian began to rebuild Jerusalem as a pagan city
while restricting some Jewish practices. Angry at this affront, the
Jews again revolted led by
Simon Bar
Kokhba.
Hadrian responded with
overwhelming force, putting down the revolt and killing as many as
half a million Jews. After the Roman Legions prevailed in 135, Jews
were not allowed to enter the city of Jerusalem and most Jewish
worship was forbidden by Rome. Following the destruction of
Jerusalem and the expulsion of the Jews, Jewish worship stopped
being centrally organized around the Temple, and instead the rabbis
took on a more prominent position as teachers and leaders of
individual communities. No new books were added to the Jewish Bible
after the Roman period, instead major efforts went into
interpreting and developing the
Halakhah,
or oral law, and writing down these traditions in the
Talmud, the key work on the interpretation of Jewish
law, written during the first to fifth centuries CE.
In 212, all Jews were made citizens of the Roman empire.
Christianity became the sole state religion of the declining Roman
empire, when
Theodosius I became
Emperor in 395 CE. Jewish and Christian life evolved in
"diametrically opposite directions" during the final centuries of
Roman empire. Jewish life became autonomous, decentralized, and
community-centered, in contrast to Christian life, which became a
rigid hierarchical system under the supreme authority of the Pope
and the Roman Emperor.
Defeats suffered by the Jews in the
First revolt in 70
CE, the first of the
Jewish–Roman Wars, and the
Bar Kokhba revolt in 135 CE
notably contributed to the numbers and
geography of the diaspora population. Significant
numbers of Jews in the Land of Israel left, were expelled or sold
into
slavery throughout the
Roman Empire. Since then, Jews have lived in
most countries of the world, primarily in Europe, the wider Middle
East and later, North America. In the various countries in which
they have lived, the Jews have survived periods of discrimination,
oppression, poverty, and even
genocide
(see:
Antisemitism,
The Holocaust).
There have also been
periods of cultural, economic, and individual prosperity in various
locations; these include Islamic Spain and Portugal
, Germany and Poland during Haskalah, and in the traditionally liberal or constitutional democracies of
the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia, amongst
others.
Jewish life after the fall of Israel was basically democratic.
Rabbis in the Talmud interpreted
Deuteronomy 29:9, "your heads, your tribes, your
elders, and your officers, even all the men of Israel" as "Although
I have appointed for you heads, elders, and officers, you are all
equal before me" (Tanhuma). The
Talmud
stressed that rights always entailed responsibilities: "you are all
responsible for one another."
Jewish survival in the face of external pressures from the now
Catholic Roman empire and Persian
Zoroastrian empire is seen as "enigmatic" by
many historians. For example,
Wilhelm von Humboldt wrote "such an
extraordinary phenomenon in world history and the history of
religion that many a fine mind has doubted whether it can at all be
explained in merely human terms".
According to the famous Jewish historian,
Salo Wittmayer Baron, a number of
mechanisms of Jewish survival evolved during these crucial
centuries between the fall of Israel and
the fall of Rome. He describes
at least eight factors that strengthened Judaism and Jewish
society.
- Messianic faith. Belief in an ultimately positive outcome and
restoration of Israel.
- Doctrine of the Hereafter was increasingly elaborated. Belief
in an afterlife had been largely ignored during Biblical times. Now
it was discussed more by the sages. It reconciled Jews with
suffering in this world and helped them resist outside temptations
to convert.
- Suffering was given meaning through interpretation of Jewish
history and destiny.
- Doctrine of martyrdom and inescapability of persecution
transformed both into a source of communal solidarity.
- Jewish daily life was very satisfying. Although living
throughout the Roman empire and Persian empire and beyond, Jews
lived among Jews. In practice, in a lifetime, most Jews encountered
overt persecution only on a few dramatic occasions. They mostly
lived under discrimination that affected everyone, and to which
they were habituated. Daily life was governed by a multiplicity of
ritual requirements, so that Jews were constantly aware of their
relationship with God throughout the day. "For the most part, he
found this all-encompassing Jewish way of life so eminently
satisfactory that he was prepared to sacrifice himself ... for the
preservation of its fundamentals." Those commandments for which
Jews had sacrificed their lives, such as defying idolatry, not eating pork, observing circumcision, were the ones most strictly
adhered to.
- The corporate development and segregationist policies of late
Roman empire and Persian empire, helped keep Jewish community
organization strong.
- The Talmud provided an extremely effective force to sustain
Jewish ethics, law and culture, a benevolent
judicial and social welfare system, universal education, to develop
and sustain a strong, loving and sexually satisfying family life,
and a satisfying religious life from birth to death.
- The concentration of Jewish masses within "the lower middle
class" sustained middle class virtues
of sexual self-control. Jews, unlike the cultures around them,
followed a moderate path between ascetism and licentiousness. For
Jews, marriage formed a strong foundation of ethnic, and ethical,
life.
Thus, in these times hostility only helped cement Jewish unity and
internal strength and commitment.
Beginning of the Diaspora
Though Jews had settled outside Israel since the time of the
Babylonians, the results of the Roman response to the Jewish revolt
shifted the center of Jewish life from its ancient home to the
diaspora. While some Jews remained in Judea, renamed Palestine by
the Romans, some Jews were sold into
slavery, while others became citizens of other parts
of the
Roman Empire. This is the
traditional explanation to the
Jewish
diaspora, almost universally accepted by past and present
rabbinical or Talmudical scholars, who believe that Jews are almost
exclusively biological descendants of the Judean exiles. In the six
centuries before the rise of Islam, there was a mass migration out
of Palestine (devastated by war, and after the conversion of
Emperor Constantine in 313, the
pressure of the Christian mission) and into Syria, Babylonia and
the
Iranian Plateau, so that these
areas "received a tremendous admixture of Jewish blood.”
Some
secular historians speculate that a majority of the Jews in
Antiquity were most likely descendants of converts in the cities of
the Græco-Roman world, especially in
Alexandria and Asia
Minor
. They were only affected by the diaspora in
its spiritual sense and by the sense of loss and homelessness which
became a cornerstone of the Jewish creed, much supported by
persecutions in various parts of the world. Any such policy of
conversion, which spread the Jewish religion throughout Hellenistic
civilization, seems to have increased following the destruction of
the Jewish state, and to have ended only when Christianity came to
power. At the time of the Christian era the
Jews in Egypt may
have come to number about a million out of a total population of
about seven and a half million.
DNA evidence of this theory has been spotty, but some historians
believe based on some historical records that at the dawn of
Christianity as many as 10% of the
population of the Roman Empire were Jewish, a figure that could
only be explained by local conversion.
During the first few hundred years of the Diaspora, the most
important Jewish communities were in
Babylonia, where the
Babylonian Talmud was written, and where
relatively tolerant regimes allowed the Jews freedom. The situation
was worse in the Byzantine Empire which treated the Jews much more
harshly, refusing to allow them to hold office or build places of
worship.
In the belief of restoration to come, the
Jews made an alliance with the Persians who invaded Palestine in
614, fought at their side, overwhelmed the Byzantine garrison in
Jerusalem
, and for three years governed the city. But
the Persians made their peace with the Emperor
Heraclius. Christian rule was re-established, and
those Jews who survived the consequent slaughter were once more
banished from Jerusalem.
The conquest of much of the Byzantine Empire and Babylonia by
Islamic armies generally improved the life of the Jews, though they
were still considered second-class citizens. In response to these
Islamic conquests, the
First Crusade of 1096 attempted to reconquer
Jerusalem, resulting in the destruction of many of the remaining
Jewish communities in the area. The Jews were among the most
vigorous defenders of Jerusalem against the Crusaders. When the
city fell, the Crusaders gathered the Jews in a synagogue and
burned them.
The Jews almost single-handedly defended
Haifa
against the Crusaders, holding out in the besieged
town for a whole month (June-July 1099). At this time, a
full thousand years after the fall of the Jewish state, there were
Jewish communities all over the country.
Fifty of them are
known to historians; they include Jerusalem, Tiberias
, Ramleh, Ashkelon
, Caesarea
, and Gaza
.
Middle Ages: Europe
Jews settled in Europe during the time of the Roman Empire. Early
medieval society, before the Church became fully organized, was
tolerant. Between 800 and 1100 there were 1.5 million Jews in
Christian Europe. They were fortunate in not being part of the
feudal system as
serfs or knights, thus were
spared the oppression and constant warfare that made life miserable
for most Christians. Unlike lay Christians, most Jews were
literate. In relations with the Christian society, they were
protected by kings, princes and bishops, because of the crucial
services they provided in three areas: financial, administrative
and as doctors. Christian scholars interested in the Bible would
even consult with Talmudic rabbis. All this changed with the
reforms and strengthening of the Roman Catholic Church, especially
the creations of the Franciscan and Dominican preaching monks, and
the rise of envious and competitive middle-class, town-dwelling
Christians. By 1300 the friars and local priests were using the
Passion Plays at Easter time, which depicted Jews in contemporary
dress killing Christ, to teach the general populace to hate and
murder Jews. It was at this point that persecution and exile became
endemic. As the
Black Death epidemics
devastated Europe in the mid-14th century, annihilating more than a
half of the population, Jews were taken as scapegoats. Finally
around 1500, Jews found security and a renewal of prosperity in
Poland.
Norman
Roth makes the point that more Jews lived in Spain
than in all
the countries of Europe combined. Some historians have
calculated that in the 12th century
Sephardi Jews made up 90% of all the world's
Jewry, though that percentage declined rapidly.
The Crusaders routinely attacked Jewish communities, and
increasingly harsh laws restricted Jews from most economic activity
and land ownership, leaving open only money-lending and a few other
trades. Jews were subject to expulsions from England, France, and
the Holy Roman Empire after 1300,
with most of the population moving to Eastern Europe and especially
Poland,
which was uniquely
tolerant of the Jews through the 1700s. By 1764, there were
about 750,000 Jews in the
Polish–Lithuanian
Commonwealth. The worldwide Jewish population was estimated at
1.2 million.
The final
mass expulsion of the Jews, and the
largest, occurred after the Christian conquest (Reconquista) of Iberia
in 1492 (see History of the Jews in Spain
and History of the Jews
in Portugal). After the end of the expulsions in the
17th century, individual conditions varied from country to country
and time to time, but, as rule, Jews in Western Europe generally
were forced, by decree or by informal pressure, to live in highly
segregated
ghettos and
shtetls.
By the beginning of the twentieth century,
most European Jews lived in the so-called Pale of Settlement, the Western frontier
of the Russian
Empire
consisting generally of the modern-day countries of
Poland, Lithuania, Belarus and neighboring regions.
Middle Ages: Islamic Europe, North Africa, Middle East
In the
Iberian
Peninsula
, under
Muslim rule, Jews had the freedom to make great advances in
mathematics, astronomy, philosophy, chemistry, and
philology. This era is sometimes referred to as the
Golden age
of Jewish culture in the Iberian Peninsula.
During early Islam,
Leon Poliakov
writes, Jews enjoyed great privileges, and their communities
prospered. There was no legislation or social barriers preventing
them from conducting commercial activities. Many Jews migrated to
areas newly conquered by Muslims and established communities there.
The
vizier of Baghdad
entrusted his capital with Jewish bankers.
The Jews were put in charge of certain parts of maritime and slave
trade.
Siraf
, the
principal port of the caliphate in the 10th century CE, had a
Jewish governor.
Since the 11th century, there have also been instances of pogroms
against Jews.
Examples include the 1066 Granada massacre, where the
entire Jewish quarter in that Andalucian
city was razed. In North Africa, there were instances of violence
against Jews in the Middle Ages, and in
other Arab lands including Egypt
, Syria
, and
Yemen
.
The
Almohads, who had taken control of much
of Islamic Iberia by 1172, were far more fundamentalist in outlook
than the
Almoravides, and they treated
the
dhimmis harshly.
Jews and Christians
were expelled from Morocco
and Islamic
Spain
. Faced with the choice of either death or
conversion, some Jews, such as the family of
Maimonides, fled south and east to the more
tolerant Muslim lands, while others went northward to settle in the
growing Christian kingdoms. Jewish population were confined to
mellahs in Morocco beginning in the 15th
century.
Enlightenment and emancipation
During the
Age of
Enlightenment, significant changes occurred within the Jewish
community. The
Haskalah movement paralleled
the wider Enlightenment, as Jews began in the 1700s to abandon
their exclusiveness and acquire the knowledge, manners, and
aspirations typical of the wider European society. Secular and
scientific education was added to the traditionally religious
instruction received by students. Interest in a national Jewish
identity, including a revival in the study of Jewish history and
Hebrew, started to grow.
The Haskalah movement influenced the birth of all the modern Jewish
denominations. At the same time, Haskalah contributed to
encouraging cultural assimilation into the countries in which Jews
resided, and the nineteenth century
Reform movement in Judaism. About
the same time another movement was born, one preaching almost the
opposite of Haskalah,
Hasidic
Judaism. Hasidic Judaism began in the 1700s by Israel ben
Eliezer, the
Baal Shem Tov, and
quickly gained a following with its exuberant, mystical approach to
religion. These two movements, and the traditional orthodox
approach to Judaism from which they spring, formed the basis for
the modern divisions within Jewish observance.
Concurrently, the outside world was changing. In 1791, France
became the first European country to
emancipate its Jewish population,
granting them equal rights under the law.
Napoleon further spread emancipation, inviting Jews
to leave the
Jewish
ghettos in Europe and seek refuge in the newly created tolerant
political regimes (see
Napoleon
and the Jews). Other countries such as Denmark, England, and
Sweden also adopted liberal policies toward Jews during the period
of Enlightenment, with some resulting immigration.
By the mid-19th
century, almost all Western European countries had emancipated their Jewish populations,
with the notable exception of the Papal States
, but persecution continued in Eastern Europe
including massive pogroms at the end of the
19th century and throughout the Pale
of Settlement. The persistence of anti-semitism, both
violently in the east and socially in the west, led to a number of
Jewish political
movements, culminating in
Zionism.
Zionism and emigration from Europe
Zionism is an international
political movement that supports
a
homeland for the Jewish
People in the
Land of Israel.
Although its origins are earlier, the movement was formally
established by the Austrian journalist
Theodor Herzl in the late nineteenth century.
The
international movement was eventually successful in establishing
the State of
Israel
in 1948, as the world's first and only modern
Jewish State. It continues
primarily as support for the state and government of Israel and its
continuing status as a homeland for the Jewish people. Described as
a "
diaspora nationalism," its proponents regard it as a
national liberation
movement whose aim is the
self-determination of the Jewish
people.
While Zionism is based in part upon
religious
tradition linking the Jewish people to the Land of Israel,
where the concept of Jewish
nationhood is
thought to have first evolved somewhere between 1200 BCE and the
late
Second Temple era (that is, up to
70 CE), the modern movement was mainly
secular, beginning largely as a response by
European Jewry to rampant
antisemitism across Europe.
In addition to responding politically, during the late 19th
century, Jews began to flee the persecutions of Eastern Europe in
large numbers, mostly by heading to the United States, but also to
Canada and Western Europe. By 1924, almost two million Jews had
emigrated to the US alone, creating a large community in a nation
relatively free of the persecutions of rising European
antisemitism (see
History of the Jews in
the United States). Over 1,172,000 Jewish soldiers served in
the Allied and Central Power forces in
World
War I, including 450,000 in czarist Russia and 275,000 in
Austria-Hungary.
World War II and the Holocaust
This antisemitism reached its most destructive form in the policies
of
Nazi Germany, which made the
destruction of the Jews a priority, culminating in the killing of
approximately six million Jews during
the
Holocaust from 1941 to 1945.
At first the Nazis used death squads or
Einsatzgruppen
to conduct massive open-air killings of Jews and
others in territory they conquered. By 1942, the Nazi
leadership decided to implement the
Final
Solution, the
genocide of the Jews of
Europe, and to increase the pace of the Holocaust by establishing
extermination camps specifically
to kill Jews. This was an industrial method of genocide. Millions
of Jews who had been hitherto confined to diseased and massively
overcrowded
ghettos were transported (often
by train) to
Nazi death camps
where some were herded into a specific location (often a
gas chamber), then either gassed or shot.
Afterwards, their remains were buried or burned. Others were
interned in the camps, where they were given little food and
disease was common.
As many as 1.4 million Jewish soldiers fought in the
Allied armies. Of these,
approximately 40% served in the
Red Army.
More than 30,000
Palestinian Jews
volunteered for the
Jewish Brigade
that fought for Britain.
Israel
In 1948,
the Jewish state of Israel
was founded,
creating the first Jewish nation since the Roman destruction of
Jerusalem
. After the
1948 Arab-Israeli War, the majority of
the 850,000 Jews previously living in North Africa and the Middle
East fled to Israel, joining an increasing number of immigrants
from post-War Europe (see
Jewish exodus from Arab
lands). By the end of the 20th century, Jewish population
centers had shifted dramatically, with the United States and Israel
being the centers of Jewish secular and religious life.
See also
More complete guides to topics related to the Jews is available
from the guide at the or of this page. Some topics of interest
include:
Notes
References
- Baron, Salo Wittmayer
(1952). A Social and Religious History of the Jews, Volume
II, Ancient Times, Part II. Philadelphia: Jewish
Publication Society of America.
- Lewis, Bernard (1984). The
Jews of Islam. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN
0-691-00807-8
- Lewis, Bernard (1999). Semites and Anti-Semites: An Inquiry
into Conflict and Prejudice. W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN
0-393-31839-7
- Poliakov, Leon (1974). The
History of Anti-semitism. New York: The Vanguard Press.
- Stillman, Norman (1979). The
Jews of Arab Lands: A History and Source Book. Philadelphia:
Jewish Publication Society of America. ISBN 0-8276-0198-0
External links
General
Secular organizations
Religious organizations
Zionist organizations